â–ş Listen Live
â–ş Listen Live

TSX Finishes Lower For Fifth Session In A Row

The TSX finished the day lower for a fifth straight session off 59 to 16,016.

The U.S. Markets are closed today for the Memorial Day holiday but tomorrow we may see some volatility from Wall Street over the on again, off again summit between North Korea and the US.  As of today, US President Trump says it is back on.

Back on Bay Street, healthcare stocks, particularly marijuana stocks are the only sector moving higher today.  Canopy Growth is up 3.9 percent to $36.39 a share, Aurora Cannabis and Med Relief are both up 1.1 percent.

BMO shares are down $0.27 and CIBC’s Simplii stocks are off $0.22 on news of a data breach at both financial institutions.

Commodities are trading electronically with oil down a $1.41 to $66.47 a barrel, gold is down over $6 to $1,297.50 an ounce and the loonie finishes the day down 12/100 of a cent to 0.76953 U.S.

Continue Reading

cjci Now playing play

cirx Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

PG RCMP looking into several cases of sewing needles found in Halloween candy

No injuries have been reported because of the tampered items.

Joint task force to develop supports for tariff-hit forestry sector

A joint federal and provincial task force will work to determine how to support Canada’s forestry sector amid potentially devastating U.S. tariff rates on softwood lumber. The post Joint task force to develop supports for tariff-hit forestry sector appeared first on AM 1150.

T-Wolves, Golden Bears split a pair of nailbiters in MBB; Alberta eases past UNBC in WBB

Next for UNBC is another home weekend Friday (6 and 8pm) and Saturday (4 and 6pm) against Trinity Western at the Northern Sports Centre.

BC Coroners Service says Prince George up to 39 drug overdose deaths in 2025

Throughout the first nine months of 2025, toxic drugs have claimed the lives of 1,384 people in BC – last year, the final tally was 2,315.

Forests summit planned in Vancouver amid mounting U.S. tariffs on wood

Federal and provincial ministers are set to meet in Vancouver Monday for a forestry summit, as the sector braces for a major hit from new U.S. tariffs.  The post Forests summit planned in Vancouver amid mounting U.S. tariffs on wood appeared first on AM 1150.
- Advertisement -