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TSX Displays Oomph Thursday on U.S. Inflation News

Magna, Metro in Vogue

Further clearing of the inflation picture south of the border sent beams of hope onto stock markets on both sides of the border.

The TSX Composite Index marched ahead 272.71 points, or 1.2%, to wind up Thursday at 23,032.72.

The Canadian dollar removed 0.08 cents to 72.83 cents U.S.

In corporate news, billionaire investor William Ackman said he acquired new stakes in sportswear company Nike and investment management firm Brookfield in the second quarter. Brookfield shares in Toronto captured 29 cents, or 1.4%, to $63.82.

Elsewhere, Capstone Copper shares jumped 55 cents, or 6.3%, to $9.29, after reporting second-quarter results.

In tech stocks, the leading subgroup, Celestica vaulted $5.42, or 7.6%, to $77.08, while Shopify hiked $4.41, or 4.5%, to $102.65.

In consumer discretionary stocks, Magna International, up $2.08, or 3.8%, to $56.21, while Pet Valu Holdings captured 82 cents, or 3.3%, to $25.37.

In consumer staples, Metro hiked $1.86, or 2.3%, to $84.02, while North West Company climbed 71 cents, or 1.6%, to $45.38.

The lone naysayer was communications, in which Rogers lost 33 cents to $54.28, while TELUS dipped two cents to $21.94.

On the economic beat, Statistics Canada told us wholesale trade Wholesale sales fell 0.6% to $82.4 billion in June, while motor vehicle sales paled to 168,000 last month from 184,700 the previous month. The Canadian Real Estate Association reported home sales activity recorded over Canadian MLS® Systems edged back by 0.7% on a month-over-month basis in July, giving back a small portion of June’s post-first rate cut gain.

ON BAYSTREET

The TSX Venture Exchange moved forward 10.03 points, or 1.8%, to 558.32.

All but one of the 12 TSX subgroups were gainers, led by information technology, up 2.6%, consumer discretionary stocks, picking up 1.8%, and consumer staples, higher 1.3%.

Only communications missed the boat, losing 0.1%.

ON WALLSTREET

Stocks rallied on Thursday as investors regained confidence in the economy following encouraging consumer and labour data that helped ease recession worries.

The Dow Jones Industrial index popped 554.93 points, or 1.4%, to close Thursday at 40,563.32

The S&P 500 index picked up 88.01 points, or 1.6%, to 5,543.22, its sixth straight winning session. The broad market index has advanced roughly 8% from its intraday bottom on Aug. 5.

The NASDAQ rocketed 401.89 points, or 2.3%, to 17,594.50.

After a 3% gain this week, the S&P 500 is now less than 3% below its record. The three major U.S. indexes are now trading above their Aug. 2 closing level, which was the session before the global stock market rout on Aug. 5 that was largely driven by investors’ concerns about an economic slowdown and an unwinding of a popular hedge fund currency trade.

Dow component Walmart added to the momentum, with a raised outlook and an earnings report that topped analyst estimates, sending shares up more than 6%. Elsewhere, Cisco Systems jumped more than 6% after announcing a fiscal fourth-quarter earnings and revenue beat and cuts to its global workforce.

Retail sales increased 1% in July, far surpassing an estimate from Dow Jones that forecast a 0.3% uptick. Also separately, weekly jobless claims fell for the week. The data served as a boon to investors and a broader market trying to mount a comeback from an August rout tied to concerns about a slowing economy that arose following July’s disappointing jobs report on August 2.

Prices for the 10-year Treasury withered, raising yields to 3.92% from Wednesday’s 3.82%. Treasury prices and yields move in opposite directions.

Oil prices gained 96 cents at $77.94 U.S. a barrel.

Gold prices rallied $13.60 to $2,495.10.