Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

North American Stock Markets Rebound In Early Trading After Global Tumult

The Canadian Press, 25 Aug, 2015 11:52 AM
    TORONTO — The Toronto Stock Exchange's main index rebounded Tuesday morning, making up much of the 420-point drubbing it got in the previous day's tumult as traders adjusted to persistent concerns about the strength of China's economy.
     
    The TSX/S&P composite index was ahead 274.16 points at 13,326.90 after 90 minutes of trading Tuesday, up 2.1 per cent from Monday's close.
     
    Canada's dollar wavered between gains and losses, and was up about one-tenth of a cent (0.12) at 75.28 cents U.S.
     
    The Dow Jones industrial average was up 2.0 per cent or 321.02 points at 16,192.30, the broader S&P 500 index was up nearly 2.2 per cent or 41.37 points at 1,934.58 and the Nasdaq 100 was up about 3.4 per cent or 137.67 points at 4,176.29 points.
     
    Major markets through Europe were also higher and several in Asia also made gains, but China's Shanghai market dropped another 7.6 per cent and Japan's Nikkei 225 dropped nearly four per cent before it closed Tuesday's trading session.
     
    The Shanghai index dropped to an eight-month low following a series of recent plunges that took it below the 3,000 mark for the first time since December.
     
    China's central bank took a step to provide economic stimulus later Tuesday, cutting interest rates for a fifth time in nine months.
     
    Given that China's demand for oil, gas, metals and minerals has been a source of strength for Canada's exporters, there has been a ripple effect on commodity prices including oil — which recently hit multi-year lows below US$39 a barrel.
     
     
    On Tuesday, the October crude contract was up $1 at US$39.24 a barrel and October natural gas contracts were up two cents at US$2.68. The December gold contract was down $17.60 at US$1,136.
     
    China's economic slowdown started as a side effect of the Communist Party's plan to steer the world's second-largest economy to a "new normal" of lower, steadier growth. It has turned into a nosedive that the party is struggling to reverse.
     
    The party's plans call for economic growth at close to seven per cent this year — high by North American and European standards but low for China — with reduced reliance on trade and investment and increased domestic consumption.
     
    China's exports were supposed to grow by six per cent this year, but instead they are shrinking. New industries such as e-commerce are still too small to offset job losses in traditional businesses, such as manufacturing.
     
    "There are pockets of extreme weakness in China's economy but also areas of strength," Mark Williams, a London-based  economist for Capital Economics, told The Associated Press.
     
    "The services sector seems to be doing well, but industry is really struggling."
     
     
    By the numbers: North American stocks rebound a day after worldwide losses
     
    TORONTO — North American markets rebounded on Tuesday, a day after plunging Chinese stocks triggered a worldwide sell-off. Here are some key numbers:
     
    TORONTO STOCKS: The Toronto Stock Exchange posted triple-digit gains in early trading, up 309.91 points, or 2.4 per cent, from Monday's close. The TSX fell by as much as 5.7 per cent Monday before staging a small rally to close down 3.12 per cent at 13,052.74.
     
    NEW YORK STOCKS: The Dow Jones industrial average rose 2.1 per cent in early trading, after losing 3.57 per cent of its value on Monday. The Standard & Poor's 500 index climbed more than two per cent, after ending down 3.94 per cent Monday.
     
    ASIAN MARKETS: China's Shanghai market dropped another 7.6 per cent and Japan's Nikkei 225 dropped nearly four per cent before they closed Tuesday's trading session. That followed losses the day before of 8.5 per cent and 4.6 per cent, respectively.
     
     
    EUROPEAN MARKETS: Germany's DAX rose 4.8 per cent, the CAC-40 in France rose 4.18 per cent and Britain's FTSE 100 rose 2.87 per cent. All three markets ended Monday in the red.
     
    CANADIAN DOLLAR: Canada's dollar wavered between gains and losses, at one point down one-hundredth of a cent at 75.4 cents U.S.
     
    OIL: The October crude contract was up 92 cents at US$39.16 a barrel.
     
    OTHER COMMODITIES: The October natural gas contract rose two cents to US$2.67, while the December gold contract was down $16 at US$1,137.60.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Stephen Harper, Kathleen Wynne Lock Horns Again Over New Ontario Pension Plan

    Stephen Harper, Kathleen Wynne Lock Horns Again Over New Ontario Pension Plan
    Premier Kathleen Wynne says Stephen Harper is standing in the way of an Ontario pension plan, while the prime minister says he's happy to block what he calls "an enormous tax hike."

    Stephen Harper, Kathleen Wynne Lock Horns Again Over New Ontario Pension Plan

    Chris Hyndman's Obit Recalls His Charisma, Wit, Smile

    Chris Hyndman's Obit Recalls His Charisma, Wit, Smile
    An obituary honouring the charisma, wit and smile of TV personality Chris Hyndman is drawing hundreds of comments from fans online.

    Chris Hyndman's Obit Recalls His Charisma, Wit, Smile

    Justin Trudeau Campaigns On Senate Cleanup, PM Touts Anti-Drug Policy

    Justin Trudeau Campaigns On Senate Cleanup, PM Touts Anti-Drug Policy
    On the eve of the resumption of the Mike Duffy trial, Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau is promising to clean up the scandal-tainted Senate and make appointments more transparent.

    Justin Trudeau Campaigns On Senate Cleanup, PM Touts Anti-Drug Policy

    Alliance Pipeline Aims For Thursday Restart After Hydrogen Sulphide Shut Line

    Alliance Pipeline Aims For Thursday Restart After Hydrogen Sulphide Shut Line
     A major cross-border natural gas pipeline is expected to restart on Thursday, nearly a week after it was forced to close because dangerous gas mistakenly got into the system.

    Alliance Pipeline Aims For Thursday Restart After Hydrogen Sulphide Shut Line

    Nigel Wright, Emails To Fill In The Senate Scandal Blanks At Mike Duffy Trial

    Nigel Wright, Emails To Fill In The Senate Scandal Blanks At Mike Duffy Trial
    The moment has arrived for Nigel Wright to fill in the blanks on his controversial dealings with Sen. Mike Duffy, but the prime minister's former chief of staff won't be the only one with fresh details this week.  

    Nigel Wright, Emails To Fill In The Senate Scandal Blanks At Mike Duffy Trial

    Surrey-Newton MP Jinny Sims Clears Air On Discriminating Job Ad For Punjabi-Speaking Callers

    Sims, who represents the electoral district of Surrey-Newton in the Canadian House of Commons, blamed the subcontractor for the discrepancy

    Surrey-Newton MP Jinny Sims Clears Air On Discriminating Job Ad For Punjabi-Speaking Callers