TSX rally stalls as oil volatility continues - Action News
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TSX rally stalls as oil volatility continues

The Toronto stock market reversed course Wednesday after two days of heavy losses, but stocks lost their momentum after oil prices stalled.

Canadian dollar falls after reports of wider trade deficit

Rising oil prices pushed the Toronto Stock Exchange higher on Wednesday after two days of heavy losses. (Frank Gunn/Canadian Press)

The Toronto stock market reversed course Wednesday after two days of heavy losses, but stocks lost their momentum after oil prices stalled.

The TSX was up as much as 170 points in morning trading, but by the close was ahead 28points to 14,285.

The Toronto index is down 2.4 per cent since the beginning of the year, but still up 5.1 per cent since the beginning of 2014.

The Canadian dollar fell to 84.57 cents US after Statistics Canada reported the countrys trade deficit was widening because of lower oil prices and declining crude exports.

The merchandise trade deficit was $644 million in November, up from a revised$327 million deficit in October.

Prospects for oil seemed to brighten on Wednesday, with the West Texas Intermediate contract traded in New York and Brent crude in London shootingupwards.

But a report from the U.S. Energy Information Administration put oil prices on a seesaw that took them down, then up, then down again. The EIA showed U.S. crude oil inventories of 382.4 million barrels, an unexpected fall in inventories from the previous week. However, supplies of gasoline and distillate were higher, showing demand has not yet picked up.

WTIwas up 89 cents from yesterday at $48.82 US a barrel and Brent was up two cents at $51.12..

Oil prices have been walloped by an oversupply of crude on world markets as a global downturn cuts demand.

OPEC said in November that it wouldnt cut its production and U.S. shale oil is being pumped out of the ground at record rates.

It could take a long time to slow U.S. oil production, as many projects nearing completion last year will come on stream this year.

Predictions of $35 oil

Some companies have signalled an intention to spend less, but a Wall Street Journal analysis today showed it will depend on the debt load being carried by some producers. Companies may have to keep producing, even as oil dives, because they need to income to pay down their debt.

In more bad news for oil, Bank of America Merrill Lynch said WTI prices could fall as low as $35 before finding a floor.

"We see a growing risk of WTI and Brent falling to $35 and $40 per barrel near-term to force either non-OPEC producers or Saudi to cut," the bank said in a research note on Tuesday.

It said both Saudi Arabia and U.S. producers must cut output or world demand must grow to reverse the downturn.

The TSX energy sector was up 2.15 per cent on todays higher oil prices.

A Conference Board of Canada report issued today predicted prices will rise again over the course of this year, probably to around the $60 level, well down from the $100 range it has traded at as recently as last summer.

The think-tank predicted the recovering U.S. economy and U.S. consumers would boost their demand for oil because of lower prices, while producers will cut back on investment slowing the new supply of crude.

New York stocks higher

New York markets also lifted today on better U.S. trade statistics and an improved labour picture.

The Dow closed 212points higher at17,584.52, the S&P rose 23points to 2,025and the Nasdaq jumped 57 points to 4,650.

Two days before the release of the government's employment report for December, payroll firm ADP reported that the private sector created 241,000 jobs last month. Economists expect that a total of 240,000 jobs were created, down from 321,000 in November.

Investors also anticipate the minutes of the U.S. Federal Reserve meeting last month to be released mid-afternoon. After last month's meeting, the Fed said it will be "patient" in deciding when to raise interest rates. The Fed is expected to this year raise interest rates for the first time since the 2008 financial crisis.

With files from The Canadian Press