Canadian markets open lower amid global selloff aftershocks – National

Canadian markets are catching up to a global selloff on Tuesday that rocked major stock indices around the world the day before.

The benchmark S&P/TSX index fell 542 points to start trading on Tuesday, a decline of 2.44 per cent, before recovering some of those losses by 10 a.m.

The index also fell nearly 500 points in trading on a tumultuous Friday.

Markets in Canada were closed for a holiday on Monday, meaning Canadian stocks are only now catching up to a global selloff that continued to rock markets worldwide to start the week.

Weak jobs figures released in the United States on Friday stoked trading woes amid renewed fears of a recession hitting the economy. Tech stocks were hit particularly hard in the selloff.


Click to play video: 'Tech giant Apple hits $1 trillion in total value'


Tech giant Apple hits $1 trillion in total value


Both the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite posted losses of at least three per cent each in the previous session.

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But even as Canadian stocks slipped there were signs of recovery elsewhere on the markets.


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Wall Street’s main indices rose in volatile trading on Tuesday, as investors looked for bargains after a rout in the previous session, while dovish rate commentary from Federal Reserve officials also lifted the mood.

Most megacap and growth stocks, which together lost US$200 billion in market value on Monday, gained as Nvidia bounced back 2.3 per cent.

Apple slipped 1.9 per cent, extending a nearly five per cent drop on Monday after Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway cut its stake in the iPhone maker by half.

The Nikkei stock index soared on Tuesday in a relief rally after plummeting 12.4 per cent on Monday, its biggest percentage drop since the 1987 Black Monday crash. It ended Tuesday’s trade up 10.2 per cent at 34,675.46.

— with files from Reuters

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