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TSX Concludes Week of Heavy Losses

Precision, Iamgold in Focus

The TSX Composite tumbled 521.7 points, or 2.8%, to finish the week at 18,490.98. Over the last five sessions, the index lost its grip on 905 points, or 4.67%.

The Canadian dollar sank 0.63 cents to 73.59 cents U.S.

Energy stocks weighed heavily on the market, with Precision Drilling caving $8.02, or 10.5%, to $68.28, while Paramount Resources lost $2.73, or 10.5%, to $23.33.

Gold fell, as Iamgold handed back 15 cents, or 9.9%, to $1.37, while Seabridge Gold dipped $1.60, or 9.6%, to $15.13.

Among materials, Capstone Mining docked 31 cents, or 9.6%, to $2.92, while Lundin Mining lost 56 cents, or 8%, to $6.47.

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On the economic slate, Statistics Canada reported retail trade decreased 2.5% to $61.3 billion in July, the first decline in seven months.

Sales were down in nine of 11 subsectors and were driven by lower sales at gasoline stations and clothing and clothing accessories stores.

ON BAYSTREET

The TSX Venture Exchange dropped 24.88 points, or 4.1%, to 578.06, for a loss on the week of 52 points, or 8.3%.

All 12 TSX subgroups lost their grip as the closing bell neared, as energy collapsed 7.6%, materials fell 4.7%, and gold regressed a loss of 3.8%.

ON WALLSTREET

Stocks tumbled on Friday to close out a brutal week for financial markets as surging interest rates and foreign currency turmoil heightened fears of a global recession.

The Dow Jones Industrials withered 486.27 points, or 1.6%, to 29,590.41.

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The Dow notched a new low for the year and closed below 30,000 for the first time since June 17. The 30-stock index fell 19.9% on an intraday basis and flirted with bear market territory.

The S&P 500 retreated 64.76 points, or 1.7%, to 3,693.23, a new 2022 closing low.

The NASDAQ Composite moved sharply into the red, 198.88 points, or 1.8%, to 10,867.93.

Friday marked the fourth negative session in a row for the major averages. The Fed on Wednesday enacted another super-sized rate hike of 75 basis points and indicated it would do another at its November meeting.

The major averages are on pace for their fifth decline in the last six weeks. The Dow has given up about 4.5% this week, while both the S&P tunneled 5.2%, and the NASDAQ fell 5.5%.

Shares of APA Corp. dipped 12.3%, and Marathon Oil led the S&P’s losses, slumping 11.3% to lead the S&P’s losses.

Consumer discretionary names like Royal Caribbean and Norwegian Cruise Line also shed more than 5%, adding to the losses in the benchmark index.

Just 42 stocks held on to modest gains heading into the close, with shares of Generac and Domino’s Pizza up about 3% each.

Treasury prices regained lost ground, sending yields back down to Thursday’s 3.70%. Treasury prices and yields move in opposite direction.

Oil prices dragged $4.44 to $79.05 U.S. a barrel.

Gold prices sagged 30 dollars to $1,651.10 U.S. an ounce.