
Canada’s main stock exchange futures edged marginally lower Thursday, slipping back from record highs with bank earnings in the spotlight.
Toronto Stock Exchange’s S&P/TSX composite index closed Wednesday 0.3%, or 93 points, higher at 28,433.00, at a record closing high, and the S&P/TSX 60 index standard futures contract fell slightly Thursday.
Toronto Dominion Bank (NYSE:TD) and Canadian Imperial Bank Of Commerce (NYSE:CM) became the latest domestic lenders on Thursday to report a rise in third-quarter profit.
Royal Bank of Canada (BMV:RYN), Canada’s largest bank, released blockbuster earnings on Wednesday, and earlier this week, the country’s fourth- and fifth-biggest lenders, Bank of Montreal (NYSE:BMO) and Bank of Nova Scotia (NYSE:BNS), also posted upbeat quarterly earnings.
Nvidia in spotlight
On Wall Street, the spotlight will be on Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) after the chip designer and AI bellwether forecasted third-quarter revenue that was higher than Wall Street estimates.
However, a miss on data centre revenue and questions over China forecasts caused investors to question the company’s elevated valuation, resulting in its shares sliding in after-hours trading.
Additionally, the economic data calendar includes the release of weekly jobless claims as well as quarterly gross domestic product, ahead of the PCE price index on Friday - the Fed’s preferred inflation measure - and the monthly payrolls report a week later.
Crude falls as end of U.S. driving season nears
Oil prices fell on expectations for lower U.S. fuel demand as the summer driving season draws near, even after a sharp drop in U.S. crude inventories.
At 07:55 ET, Brent futures slipped 0.1% to $67.36 a barrel, and U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures fell 0.1% to $64.08 a barrel.
Both contracts climbed in the prior session after the Energy Information Administration reported that U.S. crude inventories fell by 2.4 million barrels in the week ended August 22, a larger draw than the 1.9 million barrels forecast by analysts.
The drop signaled strong demand ahead of the upcoming U.S. Labor Day long weekend. However, this typically marks the unofficial end of the summer driving season and the onset of lower U.S. demand.
Gold prices steadied near a two-week high, underpinned by bets on a September interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve.
Spot prices rose back above $3,400 an ounce, with heightened uncertainty over the Fed’s independence was a major driver of gold this week, after Trump attempted to fire Governor Lisa Cook.
Spot gold gained 0.2% to $3,405.70/oz, while gold futures for October rose 0.4% to $3,463.50/oz.
Source :
https://www.investing.com/news/stock-market-news/tsx-seen-lower-bank-stocks-nvidia-in-spotlight-4214574