Early strength in the commodity market could not keep Canada’s main stock index in the green on Friday.

Ahead of a long weekend on Bay Street, high inflation and weakness in the latest manufacturing numbers could continued to keep investors on their toes and the TSX ended the week lower.

Despite a strong start, US indexes also closed sharply lower, though banks and megacap growth shares rose on the last day of a week that saw heightened volatility over concerns about the impact of higher inflation and rate hikes deployed to tame it. Retailers’ disappointing forecasts from major retailers didn’t help and only rattled market sentiment this week, proving that rising prices have started hurting consumers’ purchasing power.

Today in the Markets

TSX20,197.61+15.69TSX
 
TSXV702.09-3.49TSXV
 
CSE335.79+11.70TSXV
 
DJIA31,261.90+8.77DJIA
 
NASDAQ11,354.62-33.88NASDAQ
 
S&P 5003,901.36+0.57S&P 500
 

The Canadian dollar traded for 78.13 cents US compared to 78.11 cents US on Thursday.

Crude oil prices were down 0.01 to $112.20.

The price of gold was up 0.22 to $1,842.48.

In world markets, the Nikkei was up 336.19 points to 26,739.03 the Hang Seng was up 596.56 points to 20,717.24 the FTSE was up 87.24 points to 7,389.98, and the DAX was up 99.61 points to 13,981.91.

More From The Market Online

Canadian vehicle sales surged in March, but did automotive stocks?

In a new report by DesRosiers Automotive Consultants, it was revealed that vehicle sales across Canada saw a substantial uptick in March 2024.
Max Resource - Copper and silver mineralization at the URU district in 2022.

A junior copper stock on the cusp of world-class discoveries

Junior copper stock Max Resource (TSXV:MAX) is at an almost total loss since 2019 despite the district-scale potential of its CESAR Project.

This gambling tech stock is future-proofing the world’s casinos

Supported by the universal thrill of a quick payout and the need for leisure, gambling stocks make a compelling case for long-term returns.