Toronto stocks slip after rising 100 points at open
TORONTO (Reuters) - The Toronto Stock Exchange's main index slid in early trade on Friday, after jumping 100 points immediately after the open, as financials fell and resource shares came off earlier gains along with commodities. The S&P/TSX composite index <.GSPTSE> was down 7.43 points at 13,198.70.
Loblaw profit hurt by weak sales, price cuts
OTTAWA (Reuters) - Second-quarter profit at Loblaw
Companies Ltd
Air Canada and Continental ink code-sharing pact
TORONTO (Reuters) - Air Canada
Oil prices seen masking Canada "export recession"
OTTAWA (Reuters) - Oil prices will continue falling and dip below $100 a barrel by the end of this year, unmasking an "export recession" in Canada that will result in anemic growth, a government export agency said on Thursday. Export Development Canada forecast export growth this year of 4.2 percent in terms of value. But that is an artificially pretty picture based entirely on the dramatic surge in oil prices, EDC said in its quarterly Global Export Forecast.
Rio Tinto says eyeing 10% of world potash market
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Rio Tinto Ltd/Plc
Norbord posts bigger second-quarter loss
TORONTO (Reuters) - Norbord Inc
Ford posts $8.7 billion second-quarter loss on truck slump
DETROIT (Reuters) - Ford Motor Co
Harbinger seeks to combine Inmarsat with SkyTerra
LONDON (Reuters) - U.S. hedge fund Harbinger plans to bid
for British satellite communication firm Inmarsat
Canada dollar recedes, headed for weekly loss
TORONTO (Reuters) - The Canadian dollar eased against the U.S. dollar on Friday given lingering effects of lower equity markets, and with no key data to offer hope of a rebound, it was headed for a weekly loss of about 1 percent. Domestic bond prices, with no Canadian data to trigger any sort of move, were flat to slightly higher as dealers tried to play catch-up with the bigger U.S. Treasury market.
Canadian bank profits vulnerable, analyst says
VANCOUVER, British Columbia (Reuters) - While it may be tempting to argue that the worst is over for Canadian bank stocks, several factors could still put pressure on earnings growth at the banks, an analyst said on Thursday. "We maintain our cautious view on Canadian bank stocks," RBC Capital Markets analyst Andre-Philippe Hardy said in a research note.
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