Kamis, 30 Juni 2022

Stock market news lives updates: Stocks fall, S&P 500 heads for worst first half in 52 years - Yahoo Canada Finance

US stocks dipped on Thursday, with the major averages on track to post steep declines for the month of June and first half of 2022 as concerns over heightened inflation and the prospects of a recession weighed on risk assets.

The S&P 500 fell by about 0.2% as of 12:48 p.m. ET, coming off session lows when the index was down as much as 2.1%. The Dow dropped about 100 points, or 0.3%, and the Nasdaq declined by about 0.4%.

Stocks held lower in early trading after a new report showed core personal consumption expenditures — the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge — decelerated slightly more than expected in May. This metric rose by 4.7% over last year compared to the 4.8% increase anticipated, according to Bloomberg data. Headline inflation, which includes energy and food price changes, also rose slightly less than expected, or at a 6.3% annual rate to match April's pace. However, separate data showed real personal spending fell by a larger-than-expected 0.4% in May after a rise of 0.7% in April, suggesting consumers were pulling back on some spending with inflation at current levels.

The risk-off mood in equities extended to other asset classes including oil. West Texas intermediate crude futures fell back below $110 per barrel, and bitcoin prices sank to just over $19,000.

Thursday's price action extended a streak of declines for US equities. These have been hit hard for months now as investors have weighed persistently hot inflation against risks of an economic downturn, as the Federal Reserve responds to inflation with faster tightening. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell this week reaffirmed that the central bank's main goal is bringing down inflation running at its fastest rate in over 40 years, suggesting that this aim will take priority over fully preserving activity elsewhere in the economy.

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JUNE 23:  Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange during morning trading on June 23, 2022 in New York City. Stocks opened on a positive note this morning after ending lower yesterday ahead of today's testimony by Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell before a House panel to discuss the state of inflation in the United States. (Photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JUNE 23: Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange during morning trading on June 23, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

“Is there a risk we would go too far? Certainly there’s a risk,” Powell said at the European Central Bank’s annual economic policy roundtable conference in Portugal on Wednesday. “The bigger mistake to make — let’s put it that way — would be to fail to restore price stability.”

Powell earlier in June suggested either a 50 or 75 basis point interest rate hike would most likely be on the table following the Fed's July meeting. And in the weeks since, a number of other key central bank officials have affirmed that the latter will probably be the most appropriate option, with inflation and consumer inflation expectations each remaining elevated.

Amid the myriad concerns facing markets as of late, stocks are on track to close out the worst first half of a year in decades. Based on Wednesday's closing prices, the S&P 500 is set to post a 19.9% decline for the first six months of the year — its worst performance since 1970. For the month of June alone, the index is on track to slide by 7.6%.

All 11 major sectors in the index are heading toward monthly losses, with the cyclical energy, materials and financials sectors among the worst performers as fears over a recession have resurged. That leadership also reversed what was seen earlier this year, when energy stocks and outperformed amid oil and other energy commodities' march higher. The more defensive health-care, consumer staples and utilities sectors outperformed in June.

Both the Dow and Nasdaq Composite also headed for marked monthly and year-to-date losses. As of Thursday's close, the Dow had fallen 14.6% for the first half of the year, and the Nasdaq shed nearly 29%.

On the move

  • Bed Bath & Beyond (BBBY) shares extended losses after a more than 23% decline in the stock on Wednesday. The retailer reported same-store sales that sank more than 20% in the most recent quarter, and also announced CEO Mark Tritton would be leaving the company and the board, effective immediately, and that board member Sue Gove would take over on an interim basis.

  • RH (RH) shares tumbled after the furniture company slashed its full-year outlook to forecast a revenue decline, citing "the deteriorating macro-economic environment" and lower-than-expected demand. RH now sees revenue falling between 2% and 5% this year, versus a prior outlook for sales to come in flat to up 2%.

  • Constellation Brands (STZ) turned lower even after the beverage company posted first-quarter results that exceeded estimates on most major metrics. Comparable earnings per share came in at $2.66 versus the $2.50 expected, according to Bloomberg data, and beer net sales of $1.9 billion were $160 million better than expected.

Emily McCormick is a reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Twitter.

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2022-06-30 13:33:43Z
1485256638

Air Canada Cutting Back Summer Flights to Deal with High Airport Traffic - VOCM

Air Canada is cutting schedules through July and August in order to reduce passenger volume in light of a series of flight delays, cancellations and general chaos in the airline industry.

Reports indicate that more than half of flights at some Canadian airports have been cancelled or delayed. While the phenomenon is being experienced throughout North America, some of the worse scenarios have played out at Toronto Pearson. The situation is so bad, federal Transport Minister Omar Alghabra has called the baggage chaos experienced at Canada’s busiest airport “unacceptable.”

President and Chief Executive Officer of Air Canada, Michael Rousseau says the surge in travel has created unprecedented and unforeseen strains on all aspects of the global aviation system.

Recurring flight delays are being experienced around the world, says Rousseau, resulting in airport congestion and a “complex array” of persistent factors affecting airlines and their partners. Rousseau says the result has been flight cancellations and customer service shortfalls for which they “sincerely apologize.”

He says the schedule reductions through the busy summer months are intended to help reduce traffic volumes even though they will result in further flight cancellations affecting travellers.

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2022-06-30 10:16:00Z
1478712649

Air Canada to reduce July, August flights in response to travel congestions - Global News

Air Canada will make “meaningful reductions” to its flight schedule in July and August to handle ongoing flight delays and airport congestions, according to a statement released on Wednesday.

In the statement emailed to customers, Air Canada president and CEO Michael Rousseau said the airline’s operations and its ability to serve customers with its normal standards of care have been affected.

Read more: Half of domestic flights to Canada’s big airports delayed, cancelled last week

“The COVID-19 pandemic brought the world air transport system to a halt in early 2020,” said Rousseau. “Now, after more than two years, global travel is resurgent, and people are returning to flying at a rate never seen in our industry.”

He said the increase in travel “has created unprecedented and unforeseen strains on all aspects of the global aviation system,” in which the airport demand exceeds the system’s capacity.

Over the past months, airports worldwide have been experiencing a travel surge as COVID-19 restrictions for travellers loosen up in many countries.

Analytics firm Data Wazo revealed Wednesday that 54 per cent of flights to Canada’s four largest airports were either delayed or cancelled last week, with Toronto Pearson Airport facing the biggest travel chaos.

Despite cancelled flights, passengers have also been experiencing long waits at the border and baggage delays.

In addition, understaffing at airports and within airlines has strained the travel industry.

Click to play video: 'Passengers at Toronto Pearson Airport experiencing baggage backlogs' Passengers at Toronto Pearson Airport experiencing baggage backlogs
Passengers at Toronto Pearson Airport experiencing baggage backlogs

Rousseau said although Air Canada has tried its best, including offering flexible ticket policies, quick hiring and investments in aircraft and equipment, the airline’s operation is not able to meet its customers’ demands.

He added that Air Canada believes the decision to reduce flights could lower the passenger volume to a level that the air transport system can accommodate.

“We are convinced these changes will bring about the improvements we have targeted,” said Rousseau.

“But to set expectations, it should also be understood the real benefits of this action will take time and be felt only gradually as the industry regains the reliability and robustness it had attained prior to the pandemic.”

— with files from The Canadian Press

© 2022 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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2022-06-30 02:25:57Z
1478712649

Rabu, 29 Juni 2022

Stock market news live updates: Stocks mixed in choppy session amid lingering inflation, growth concerns - Yahoo Canada

US stocks finished Wednesday's session mixed with none of the major averages logging changes larger than 0.3%.

The S&P 500 fell 0.1%, the Dow gained 0.2%, and the Nasdaq fell 0.03%.

Bitcoin was among the day's biggest movers, falling below $20,000 at one point and settling just above this key level at the US stock market close. West Texas intermediate crude oil futures briefly rose above $113 per barrel for the first time in two weeks before dropping, while the 10-year Treasury yield dropped below 3.15%.

The latest bout of volatility across markets came amid renewed jitters over inflation's impact on growth prospects in the US economy. On Wednesday, first-quarter US GDP was revised down to show a 1.6% annualized contraction, as personal consumption came in weaker than previously reported. And a separate report earlier this week showed a slide in US consumer confidence to a 16-month low and a deterioration in short-term expectations to a 9-year low, raising concerns that consumers will curb spending in anticipation of persistently high prices.

Given these and other recent reports, some Federal Reserve officials have flagged the risk that inflation expectations will become entrenched among consumers, making the case for the central bank to maintain its hawkish posture for now.

"The fact that the salient prices of gasoline and food remain elevated suggests that there is some risk that longer-term inflation expectations of households and businesses will continue to rise," Cleveland Federal Reserve President Loretta Mester said in remarks Wednesday.

She suggested she would back another 75 basis point interest rate hike in July if economic conditions look similar through the Fed's meeting next month, echoing the support of other officials as of late for such a hike. Markets are currently pricing in a more than 80% probability that a 75 basis point rate hike will ultimately occur in July, according to CME Group data.

These expectations for a series of larger-than-typical rate hikes have remained a point of pressure for technology stocks especially, which are valued heavily on prospects for future earnings growth. The Nasdaq Composite remains firmly in a bear market, down 28.5% for the year-to-date, and both the tech-heavy information technology and communication services sectors within the S&P 500 have lagged the broader index.

"Inflation fears remain, and the Fed is gonna have to step in more aggressively and drive up interest rates further, and that's very, very bad for tech stocks," Opimas CEO Octavio Marenzi told Yahoo Finance Live on Tuesday. "The Fed is not finished with its interest rate hikes by any stretch of the imagination ... I'm not expecting any turnaround anytime soon here. I think this is a down market that's got some legs."

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JUNE 27: Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on June 27, 2022 in New York City. The Dow Jones Industrial Average opened lower in morning trading coming off lasts week's market rally. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JUNE 27: Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on June 27, 2022 in New York City. The Dow Jones Industrial Average opened lower in morning trading coming off lasts week's market rally. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

On the move

  • Pinterest (PINS) shares gained 1.3% after the company said Google and PayPal executive Bill Ready will take the place of Pinterest co-founder Ben Silbermann as CEO of the social media platform. Analysts have suggested Ready's experience suggests he may help further Pinterest's expansion plans to build out shopping capabilities on its platform.

  • Nio (NIO) shares fell 2.2% on Wednesday, extending losses after short-seller Grizzly Research issued a report claiming the electric car-maker was involved in "accounting shenanigans" to meet financial targets. Nio responded with a statement saying the report "is without merit and contains numerous errors."

  • Upstart Holdings (UPST) shares fell 10% on Wednesday after Morgan Stanley downgraded the stock to Underweight from Equal-Weight and cut the firm's price target to $19 per share from $88 seen previously, according to Bloomberg. Morgan Stanley suggested the consumer lending platform would come under pressure due to the cyclical nature of the business.

Emily McCormick is a reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Twitter.

Click here for the latest stock market news and in-depth analysis, including events that move stocks

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2022-06-29 18:44:16Z
1485256638

U.S. communications regulator wants TikTok removed from app stores over spying concerns - CBC News

A commissioner with the U.S. communications regulator is asking Apple and Google to consider banning TikTok from their app stores over data security concerns related to the Chinese-owned company.

Brendan Carr, a commissioner with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), has written a letter to the CEOs of both companies, alerting them that the wildly popular video-sharing app does not comply with the requirements of their app store policies.

"TikTok is not what it appears to be on the surface. It is not just an app for sharing funny videos or meme. That's the sheep's clothing," Carr said in the letter. "At its core, TikTok functions as a sophisticated surveillance tool that harvests extensive amounts of personal and sensitive data."

"It is clear that TikTok poses an unacceptable national security risk due to its extensive data harvesting being combined with Beijing's apparently unchecked access to that sensitive data."

In the letter, Carr lists multiple instances of the company running afoul of various privacy and data security laws around the world. He's asking Google and Apple to remove the ability to use the app on their phones. 

If they refuse to do so by July 8, he's demanding a response from them explaining "the basis for your company's conclusion that the surreptitious access of private and sensitive U.S. user data by persons located in Beijing, coupled with TikTok's pattern of misleading representations and conduct, does not run afoul of any of your app store policies."

The letter comes after U.S. news outlet Buzzfeed reported last week that data on U.S. users has been repeatedly accessed by entities in mainland China. TikTok subsequently announced that it plans "to delete U.S. users' private data from our own data centres and fully pivot to Oracle cloud servers located in the U.S.," the company said. 

China has 'unfettered access' to data

John Zabiuk, chair of the cybersecurity program at the Northern Alberta Institute of Technology, says that move to domicile the servers in the U.S. may seem like an easy fix, but it doesn't address the root of the problem.

"The problem is who still has access to that data? It's still TikTok," he told CBC in an interview, noting that if the company has access to the data, it's safe to assume the Chinese government does, too.

"It captures so much personal information about users and the data gets stored in a lot of cases in mainland China where the government has unfettered access."

It is not the first time that the company has come under fire in the U.S. for its links to the Chinese government. Former U.S. president Donald Trump railed repeatedly against the company, going as far as trying to ban the company via executive order.

WATCH | Trump tried to ban TikTok and WeChat in the U.S.: 

Trump's TikTok, WeChat ban on hold

2 years ago

Duration 3:02

Chinese-based company ByteDance is looking to make a deal with Oracle and Walmart, but the arrangement might fall short of what U.S. President Donald Trump demanded of the company.

That led to talks between U.S. companies including Oracle, Microsoft and even Walmart about buying the company, but those talks fell apart after legal challenges, and then the plan was shelved by the incoming Biden administration, which ordered a national security review of the app, which is ongoing.

As recently as last week, six Republican senators asked the Treasury Department for an update on how that review is proceeding.

If the push is successful, it won't even be the first time TikTok has been banned from a country. India banned the app in 2020, on national security concerns. And Australia is currently contemplating doing the same.

Zabiuk says it certainly looks like the app runs afoul of Google and Apple's own rules for apps because of the way it is built.

"They can make changes to the code and every time you launch the app … it may be doing different things," he said.

WATCH | Why this Canadian TikToker says it would be hard to quit: 

TikToker says it would be hard to leave

3 hours ago

Duration 1:06

Vancouver based content producer Danielle Ryan says TikTok has helped her business grow by leaps and bounds in a way that wouldn't be possible on other platforms.

'It's part of my livelihood'

Despite those concerns, TikTok user Danielle Ryan says it would take a lot for her to stop using the app, since it has quickly evolved from a bit of silly fun into a full time job as a content creator.

"I started TikTok almost two years ago now, just as a joke really, then it very quickly escalated into something a lot bigger, and now it's part of my livelihood," Ryan told CBC News in an interview.

Ryan, who lives in Vancouver, used other social media channels to promote previous businesses, including a yoga studio, but never managed to expand her reach beyond a certain threshold.

It was only when she started making TikToks about growing her business that she found a growing and engaged audience of small business owners looking for help.

Now she runs a coaching service for small business owners, and she says she's "entirely dependent" on TikTok to find and serve her customers.

"Shifting would be like starting over again essentially," she said. "The growth potential for businesses is a lot different on TikTok versus any other social media app that currently exists." 

Canada would likely follow U.S. ban: expert

TikTok isn't the only Chinese-controlled company that has faced criticism for its data security. Earlier this summer, Canada forbade Chinese telecom component maker Huawei from being installed on any 5G networks in Canada.

The rationale for that decision was the same as what's being cited in the case of TikTok: national security.

Government officials allege that because of its links to the Chinese regime, giving Huawei access to sensitive communications networks in Canada poses a security risk. 

Zabiuk says if the U.S. moves to ban TikTok, Canada likely follow suit.

"It's a hugely popular app and it would make a lot of people upset [but] if we look at the architecture and the way it works, it is an extremely dangerous application," he said.

CBC reached out to the Ministry of Canadian Heritage, which governs telecom regulator the CRTC, and to Canadian representatives of TikTok for comment. Those inquiries were not returned.

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2022-06-29 20:26:18Z
1482980819

Pearson facing 'unacceptable' baggage chaos | CTV News - CTV News Toronto

Canada's transport minister is speaking out about the "unacceptable issues" that continue to result in significant delays at Canadian airports after images surfaced on social media showing hundreds of pieces of luggage piled up at Toronto Pearson International Airport.

The Greater Toronto Airports Authority, which operates Toronto Pearson, told CP24 on Tuesday that a number of issues over the past several days have led to "challenges with baggage," including "flight delays and cancellations, staff shortages and temporary mechanical disruptions with the baggage system."

So far, dozens of people have spoken out about losing their luggage at Pearson, including one woman who said that her bag was lost once on the way to Phoenix and then again on the way back to Toronto, resulting in a frustrating "suitcase scavenger hunt" that ultimately proved fruitless.

There have also been numerous images shared on social media showing huge piles of luggage in the baggage claim area at Pearson, which travellers have had to search through in the hopes of finding their missing bags.

"What we are seeing today is that while many of those Canadian Air Transport Security Authority and Canadian Border Security Agency issues have significantly improved we continue to see delays, cancellations and luggage issues," Transport Minister Omar Alghabra told reporters at an unrelated announcement on Wednesday.

"I have had conversations with the four largest airports and the two largest airlines just on Thursday and I will be having follow up conversations with them soon. They know that they need to add more resources and they are working on that and we are offering our support to address these issues. But these are unacceptable issues."

Toronto Pearson has been plagued by delays for months now amid increased demand and some staffing shortages.

Alghabra said at this point the federal government has done everything in its control to address the issues at airports, including increasing staffing at customs and at security checkpoints.

He said that his government is also looking at "possibly extending the suspension" of random COVID-19 testing, which was supposed to be lifted on July 1.

That, he said, is because it is taking longer than expected to address the logistics of moving the testing off-site.

"What we are seeing is the surge of demand for air travel beyond what anybody expected and that is honestly good news. But the surge in demand is outpacing the ability for airlines and airports to enhance the resources that they need to accommodate that surge," he said. "So we are working with airlines and airports to ensure that the resources needed, that the scheduling adjustments that are needed are addressed. Because we are also seeing extreme peaks at certain hours of the day."

TORONTO MAYOR TO SPEAK WITH AIR CANADA

Many of the luggage issues at Toronto Pearson have reportedly involved Air Canada flights.

In a statement provided to CP24 on Tuesday, Air Canada said "that avoiding baggage delays is a top priority" as they are "disruptive and inconvenient" for customers and lead to added costs that the airline ultimately has to bear.

A photo of luggage piled up at Pearson International Airport over the weekend

But they said that with the "well-documented issues" plaguing airports and resulting in last-minute flight cancellations there are simply more instances of delayed bags.

"I think the overall record is better today at the airport than it was a few weeks ago and I think there is every reason to believe that progress will continue," Toronto Mayor John Tory told reporters at a news conference on Wednesday.

"I am not personally familiar with the precise way baggage is handled but certainly from my limited knowledge it occurs to me that most of the responsibility rests with the airlines, so I will, undertake in light of what has happened to be in touch with Air Canada and find out from their perspective what the problem is, what they are doing to solve their part of it and if they believe that governments in the broadest sense can be helpful in making things work better so those baggage issues don’t arise."

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2022-06-29 18:08:00Z
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OLG reveals where winning Lotto Max ticket for $70M jackpot was bought in Ontario - CTV News Toronto

Someone in Ontario is waking up $70-million richer after Tuesday's Lotto Max jackpot was won by a single ticket holder in the province.

The winning ticket was sold somewhere in Toronto, the OLG says.

Also, two Maxmillions tickets, each worth $1 million, were sold in Toronto and Etobicoke.

As for the two Lotto Max second prize winning tickets, each worth $625,178.40, those were sold in Timiskaming/Cochrane District and Simcoe County.

This comes just over a month after a woman in Hamilton, Ont. became a multimillionaire after she won the $60-million jackpot.

On May 26, Leah Murdoch-Gerics took home the largest cheque ever awarded to a Lotto Max jackpot winner who purchased their ticket online.

She bought the $5 "quick pick" ticket on OLG.ca for the April 19 draw.

Her earnings come on the heels of a $1 million Lotto Max ticket bought in Toronto expiring after a year of going unclaimed.

The jackpot for the next draw on July 1 will be an estimated $21 million.

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2022-06-29 14:41:14Z
1468323914

Accounting firm EY to pay $100M US fine after auditors caught cheating on ethics exams - CBC News

Accounting firm Ernst & Young will pay $100 million US to settle U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) charges that its auditors cheated on certified public accounting (CPA) exams and that it misled the agency's investigators.

The London-based auditor admitted to the charges and agreed to pay what the SEC said is its largest fine against an auditor.

"EY acknowledges the findings determined by the SEC," said Brendan Mullin, EY media relations director, adding that the firm's response has been "thorough, extensive and effective."

"At EY, nothing is more important than our integrity and our ethics."

The CPA is the key qualification for accountants in the United States.

EY has also agreed to "undertake extensive remedial measures to fix the firm's ethical issues," the SEC said.

49 people got test answers ahead of time

The Wall Street watchdog found that 49 EY professionals "obtained or circulated" answer keys to CPA licence exams, while hundreds of others cheated to complete the continuing professional education components relating to CPA ethics.

"This action involves breaches of trust by gatekeepers ... entrusted to audit many of our nation's public companies. It's simply outrageous that the very professionals responsible for catching cheating by clients cheated on ethics exams," said Gurbir Grewal, the SEC's enforcement director, in a statement.

"And it's equally shocking that Ernst & Young hindered our investigation of this misconduct," added Grewal.

EY submitted to the SEC that it did not have issues with cheating when, in fact, the firm had been informed of potential cheating on a CPA ethics exam by a member of staff, the SEC said.

It added that EY admitted it did not correct its submission even after an internal EY investigation confirmed there had been cheating, and even after its senior lawyers discussed the matter with the firm's senior management.

The SEC's order also finds that EY violated a Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB) rule requiring the firm to maintain integrity in the performance of a professional service.

The SEC has ordered EY to retain two independent consultants to help remediate its deficiencies. One will review the firm's policies and procedures relating to ethics and integrity. The other will review EY's conduct regarding its disclosure failures, including whether any EY employees contributed to the firm's failure to correct its misleading submission, the SEC said.

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2022-06-29 15:12:50Z
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Pearson airport facing luggage 'challenges' | CTV News - CTV News Toronto

What was supposed to be a fun weekend trip with friends to Arizona has turned into a nightmarish five-day, “suitcase scavenger hunt” for Toronto resident Jehaanara Kurji.

Last Friday, Kurji boarded a flight at Pearson airport to Phoenix to attend a bachelorette party. However, when she arrived there, her checked bag was no where to be found.

Kurji, who moved to Toronto from Kenya a month ago, tried to make the best of the situation. She said the airline offered to her some compendation to buy things she needed that were inside the lost luggage.

She said the carrier, Air Canada, never contacted her about her missing luggage.

“On Sunday night, I returned to the airport to go home and that’s when I found out my suitcase had arrived in Arizona on Saturday,” she told CP24.

That bag was loaded onto the plane back to Toronto, but somehow went MIA for a second time due to a "baggage handler issue" and remains lost.

“I wish I had not even carried that piece of luggage,” said Kurji, who sifted through massive piles of suitcases in Pearson’s baggage claim area for more than an hour Sunday night, but never found her bag.

Kurji, who headed back to the Mississauga airport Tuesday afternoon in the hope of resuming her search, said she then joined the lost luggage line, but was ultimately told to go home and submit a claim online.

“I have no idea what happened to my bag. I tried calling Air Canada several times but due to high call volumes I can’t even wait on hold,” she said.

“Right now I don’t even know how I’m going to get it back.”

In a statement provided to CP24, Air Canada said they “make every effort to ensure (bags arrive with their owners) and, while in the vast majority of cases we succeed, we continue to work very hard both internally and in cooperation with our partners to further improve the system.”

The airline said suitcases sometimes do not arrive at their destination for many reasons, “a lot of them outside the airlines’ control.”

“But be assured that avoiding baggage delays is a top priority for us. We know very well delays are disruptive and inconvenient for our customers. Bear in mind too that each delayed bag is costly for us to handle and deliver post-flight, so we are doubly incentivized to have bags arrive with the customers,” Air Canada said.

The carrier went on to went on to say with the resumption of travel, there are simply more instances of delayed bags. They said currently 120,000 or more people a day fly with Air Canada, compared to just 23,000 a year ago.

“More impactfully, the operating environment globally has changed from what it was prior to the pandemic, notably the well-documented issues such as security and customs lines, aircraft being held at gates unable to unload passengers at airports, and limitations on the number of flights by air traffic control that force airlines to make last minute cancellations,” said Air Canada, which recently announced steps to improve “the customer journey, including baggage handling.”

“All these and other events, such as a severe storm, can interrupt our schedule and the flow of not only passengers but also their baggage, which moves in a parallel, but more complicated flow than customers.”

Greater Toronto Airports Authority, which operates Pearson International Airport, said a “number of issues over the past several days” have led to “challenges with baggage.”

“This includes flight delays and cancellations, staff shortages with our airline partners and temporary mechanical disruptions with the baggage system,” The GTAA said in a statement provided to CP24.

“We have worked with the airlines to ensure unclaimed bags are removed from the carousels and staged in the baggage hall to make room for bags from other flights.”

The operator said while they handle baggage infrastructure and system maintenance, it’s ultimately the responsibility of airlines to reunite passengers with their luggage.

CP24 has requested specific comment from the airline about Kurji’s lost luggage situation, but we have yet to hear back.

Kurji is not alone as dozens of travellers have recently taken to social media to share stories and photos about the massive piles of luggage in Pearson’s baggage claim areas.

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2022-06-28 22:52:00Z
1480262705

Selasa, 28 Juni 2022

Bank regulator beefs up rules for some types of home loans - CBC News

Canada's top banking regulator is changing the rules that cover certain types of home loans to make sure that lenders and borrowers are able to stay on top of their obligations at a time when the country's housing market is looking vulnerable.

The Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions (OFSI) is implementing new guidelines for certain types of real estate loans, including shared equity mortgages, reverse mortgages and conventional mortgages that are paired with revolving credit lines.

The biggest change targets so-called combined loans, which are conventional mortgage loans paired with revolving lines of credit known as HELOCs that home owners can dip into as they see fit, without being obligated to pay that portion back on any sort of schedule.

The new regulations will kick in once a readvanceable loan exceeds 65 per cent of the underlying home's value. Currently, an owner can technically borrow up to 80 per cent on such a loan, but the new rules will functionally ratchet that ceiling down to 65 per cent by forcing the borrower to start paying back some of the principal if they go above that line.

If that happens, the change will make it so that once the loan's value exceeds 65 per cent of the home, the loan "will operate more like a traditional mortgage where the borrower makes principal and interest payments until the [loan gets back below] 65 per cent," an official told CBC News at a technical briefing.

The new rules won't be in force until late 2023, but OSFI says that as things stand now, data from the Bank of Canada suggests there's $200 billion worth of HELOC that is currently outside of that 65 per cent threshold. That's out of $1.8 trillion of total housing debt.

Consumers will not see an increase to their monthly payment requirements as a result of this change, the official said, and the changes will not impact new home buyers.

WATCH | Rising interest rates leading to more expensive mortgages:

Rising interest rates cool down Canada's housing market

13 days ago

Duration 2:05

Higher interest rates are leading to more expensive mortgages, with sales in May down nine per cent compared to April and down 22 per cent compared to the same time last year.

Changes to shared equity and reverse mortgages

The regulator is also tinkering with the rules for shared equity mortgages, and reverse mortgages. Shared equity mortgages are programs that pair home buyers with third parties to help them come up with cash for a down payment, in exchange for an equity stake.

The federal government rolled out a government-backed shared equity loan program in 2019, and non-profit and other community groups have since rolled out a version of them. OSFI's announcement on Tuesday isn't a new rule change so much as it is a clarification of existing requirements: that such products must in fact be legitimate equity stakes — not simply another loan — and that they must be "on equal footing with the borrower's equity," the official said.

The final announcement governs so-called reverse mortgages, which allow home owners to access the equity in their homes up front, without having to sell. The popularity of such loans has exploded in recent years, largely because they typically do not require any part of the loan to be paid back until the owner decides to sell. 

The new guideline caps the amount that a homeowner can take out on a reverse mortgage at 65 per cent at origination. 

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2022-06-28 17:25:47Z
1483384075

Credit Suisse top energy stock picks include two Canadian companies - The Globe and Mail

Daily roundup of research and analysis from The Globe and Mail’s market strategist Scott Barlow

Like Scotiabank Monday, Credit Suisse analyst Manav Gupta thinks now is the time to add energy stocks.

Mr. Gupta also provided a list of top picks which includes two Canadian stocks,

“We continue to believe that in a post Russia-Ukraine conflict world, we are short of crude oil, refined products and natural gas. We estimate global oil market was undersupplied by ~1.5MMb/d in 2Q 22 and will remain undersupplied by ~0.8MMb/d in 2H 22 and this will continue to support higher prices in the near-term. While IEA still believes markets will be somewhat balanced in 2022/2023, in our opinion, IEA is overestimating supply growth from certain regions (including OPEC) and still underestimating total global demand… World is short of refining capacity and we expect US refiners will likely be one of the biggest beneficiaries of that as European peers struggle to source replacement of Russian barrels … Our favorite names… also highlight investment cases for our favorite names. Integrated oil – XOM, CVX, SU [Suncor Energy Inc.] and CVE [Cenovus Energy Inc.]. Upstream – COP, OVV and CHK. Midstream – LNG, PAA and TRGP. Refiners – VLO, MPC, DINO, PSX and VTNR.”

***

Wells Fargo strategist Chris Haverland details what I think is the biggest short term equity market risk – earnings downgrades,

“After growing by 9% in the first quarter of 2022, S&P 500 Index earnings are expected to have grown by 5.7% in the second quarter of 2022 … It would be the slowest quarter for growth since the fourth quarter of 2020... The energy, industrials, and materials sectors should lead the way with energy earnings expected to growth by a remarkable 205%. Excluding the energy sector, overall S&P 500 Index earnings are expected to contract by 2%... Forward guidance will be key as many companies continue to deal with rising input prices, a tight labour market and continued global supply chain constraints.”

“WF on Q2 earnings” – (research excerpt) Twitter

***

The longer-term outlook for copper stocks is bright because of electrification, but it would be hard to tell that as miners and the commodity price continue to fall. The RBC research team discussed the trend,

“The North American Base Metals have almost fully caught up to the copper price and are now down 6% year-to-date (copper -11.7% ytd) but are still outperforming the broader market (S&P 500 -18.7% ytd, TSX -9.4% ytd). The North American Base Metals stocks are trading at an 18% discount to NAV, above trough levels around a 40% discount but near the historical avg. discount of 22% (see page 6). While the volatility could continue, we believe this pull back creates an opportunity to add high quality names which stand to benefit from the positive copper fundamentals in the coming years.

***

Diversion: “9 Invasive Plants You Should Rip to Shreds” – Gizmodo

Tweet of the day:

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2022-06-28 12:15:41Z
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Stock market news live updates: Stocks slip after last week's rebound - Yahoo Canada

U.S. stocks closed a choppy session lower Monday, weighed down by losses in technology shares, after the major indexes failed to sustain momentum from last week’s rally.

The S&P 500 fell 0.3%, and Dow Jones Industrial Average dipped 60 points, or 0.2% after each benchmark wavered between the red and the green throughout the trading day. The Nasdaq Composite declined 0.9%.

The moves follow a sharp rebound Friday that saw the S&P 500 surge 3% during the session and over 6% for the week, its second-best week this year and its first weekly rise since late May. Still, the benchmark index is on pace for its worst opening six months since 1970.

During the previous session, the Dow rose more than 800 points, or 2.7%, while the Nasdaq increased by more than 3.3%, leading to weekly gains for the indexes of more than 5% and 7%, respectively.

Some Wall Street strategists are hopeful that markets may have found a bottom.

“As bad as [this year] has been for investors, the good news is previous years that were down at least 15% at the midway point to the year saw the final six months higher every single time, with an average return of nearly 24%,” LPL Financial chief market strategist Ryan Detrick said in a note last week.

J.P. Morgan strategist Marko Kolanovic also predicted that U.S. equities may climb as much as 7% this week as investors rebalance portfolios amid the end of the month, second quarter, and first half of the year.

While sentiment on Wall Street appears optimistic, investors are in for a bevy of key economic reports and earnings that may sway markets this week and put hopes of a comeback to the test.

Quarterly results from Nike (NKE) and Micron (MU) will be closely watched for signs of rising inventories and slowing orders like Target and some other retailers have warned about recently, which may renew worries of an economic slowdown among Corporate America.

Traders also face a fairly loaded economic calendar this week, with the latest read on core PCE inflation – the Federal Reserve's preferred measure of consumer prices, the Conference Board’s consumer sentiment survey, and manufacturing and housing reports due out through Friday.

A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange NYSE in New York, the United States, June 16, 2022. U.S. stocks fell sharply on Thursday as steep sell-off continued on Wall Street amid rising recession fears. (Photo by Michael Nagle/Xinhua via Getty Images)

A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange NYSE in New York, the United States, June 16, 2022. U.S. stocks fell sharply on Thursday as steep sell-off continued on Wall Street amid rising recession fears. (Photo by Michael Nagle/Xinhua via Getty Images)

On the move

  • Robinhood Markets (HOOD)'s stock surged 14% to close at $9.12 per share following a report from Bloomberg that cryptocurrency exchange FTX is considering a deal to acquire digital trading platform. Earlier in the day, Robinhood was in the spotlight after Goldman Sachs upgraded the brokerage to Neutral, about two months after the bank downgraded shares to Sell.

  • Coinbase (COIN) shares plunged nearly 10.8% to $55.96 after analysts at Goldman Sachs on Monday downgraded the cryptocurrency exchange to Sell from Neutral and slashed their price target on the stock to $45 from $70. Goldman also noted that while Coinbase recently announced it would cut 18% of staff, these layoffs will not be enough to bring the company's costs in line with lowered sales.

  • AMC Entertainment (AMC) rallied to cap trading up 13.6% despite a turbulent session for the broader markets. The stock rose amid increased mentions across forums such as Reddit’s WallStreetBets and Stocktwits. AMC was also added to the Russell 1000 Index after an annual rebalancing.

Alexandra Semenova is a reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Twitter @alexandraandnyc

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2022-06-27 20:04:08Z
1475090380

Man uses Apple Airtags to find stolen Range Rover | CTV News - CTV News Toronto

An Ontario man whose car was stolen from his driveway in midtown Toronto twice in three months is revealing how he tracked and located his second vehicle.

“It’s pretty scary, but you can’t live your life in fear,” Lorne, whose surname CTV News Toronto has omitted due to safety concerns, said on Monday.

On April 1, his family moved to the Avenue Road and Lawrence Avenue area.

The following day, employees from an electronics company arrived at his house to install televisions. He placed the keys of his Range Rover Autobiography into a faraday box, which is designed to prevent criminals from copying a key fob and gaining access to a vehicle.

However, within minutes of the employees leaving his house, his car was stolen in broad daylight.

“The thieves were able to disable the tracker in my car, put there by the manufacturer,” Lorne said.

Meanwhile, his wallet, along with his kids phones, which were in the car, were thrown out of the vehicle before it was stolen, which Lorne said he believes was a preventive measure to avoid him from tracking the location of his car.

His Range Rover was never recovered.

Thirty days later, he got a new car of the same model, but this time, he placed three Apple AirTag tracking devices inside – one in the glovebox, another in his spare tire in the trunk and a third under his back seat.

While Lorne said he typically parks in his garage, last Wednesday night, he didn't.

At 8:30 a.m. the next morning, he said his kids ran into his bedroom screaming, ”Daddy, daddy, your car is gone.” 

Right away, he logged into his Find My app and located all three of his AirTags near Manville and Comsock roads in Scarborough, listed as a metal recycling plant. 

After dropping his kids at school, he headed to that location and called the police. With no success reaching an officer, he drove to the 41 Division police station.

Toronto police spokesperson David Hopkinson confirmed to CTV News Toronto that a report of this nature was received by police on Thursday.

“I pressed my panic button and you heard it going off,” Lorne said. “The next day I was told they recovered nine cars.”

Due to an ongoing investigation, police could not comment further on the incident.

This time, however, Lorne said police recovered his vehicle and he anticipates it should be back in his possession soon.

While he said his AirTags worked in this case, he anticipates car thefts will only get increasingly sophisticated.

“It’s not foolproof,” he said.

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2022-06-27 19:19:00Z
1483732941

Senin, 27 Juni 2022

Monday's analyst upgrades and downgrades - The Globe and Mail

Inside the Market’s roundup of some of today’s key analyst actions

Citing its exposure to European gas prices and improving relative valuation, Scotia Capital analyst Jason Bouvier raised his recommendation for Vermilion Energy Inc. (VET-T) on Monday.

Also expecting “a nice uplift in cash flow profile going into 2023 as acquisitions are completed and hedges roll over,” he moved the Calgary-based company to “sector outperform” from “sector perform” in a research note.

“WTI prices have fallen about $14 per barrel off their recent high. During this same time frame, European gas prices have risen by 50 per cent,” he said. “VET derives about 40-45 per cent of its cash flow from European gas prices. Given VET’s share price has fallen roughly in line with its peer group over the past couple of weeks the relative valuation of VET has improved materially.”

“In 2022, we estimate VET’s hedging losses at $616-million. Currently, the company has about 40 per cent of its production hedged in 2022. This falls to 10 per cent in 2023. No oil is hedged for 2023 and North American gas is hedged at higher prices than in 2022. As a result, even though we have major commodities falling from 2022 to 2023 (strip), VET’s cash flow actually increases from $2.2-billion in 2022 to $2.4-billion in 2023 (up 10 per cent).”

Mr. Bouvier is forecasting Vermilion to reach its net debt target of $1.2-billion in the third quarter this year and sees the potential to be debt free by the end of the 2023 fiscal year.

“After hitting their debt target, the company will be in a good position to increase shareholder returns. We expect both increased dividends and SBB over the next 1-2 years,” he said.

He maintained a $36 target for the company’s shares. The current average target on the Street is $36.46, according to Refinitiv data.

=====

With trade indicators looking “shaky,” CIBC World Markets analyst Stephanie Price downgraded Descartes Systems Group Inc. (DSGX-Q, DSG-T) to “neutral” from “outperformer,” seeing better relative return in other names elsewhere.

“We see risks to organic growth from slowing transportation volumes given that approximately 40 per cent of Descartes’ revenue is derived from transactional revenue,” said Ms. Price. “We expect that Descartes will look to offset slower organic growth with M&A (more than $200-million in net cash) and see limited risk in management’s 10-15-per-cent EBITDA growth target.

“However, Descartes’ premium to the S&P Software Index has typically narrowed during economic downturns, with the stock trading at a valuation below the S&P Software Index during the Great Financial Crisis, versus a seven-turn premium to the Index today.”

Her target for Descartes shares slid to US$71 from US$89 previously. The average on the Street is US$75.80.

=====

Believing its business model can “outperform its basic chemical peers through a recession,” Scotia Capital analyst Ben Isaacson upgraded Chemtrade Logistics Income Fund (CHE.UN-T) to “sector outperform” from “sector perform.”

In justifying his change, he pointed to several factors, including the expectation that demand for regen acid services should increase over the coming quarters; ultrapure sulphuric acid demand is “set to soar” in North America over the mid-term; a “relatively tight” outlook on caustic soda and “fairly stable margin variability” for its water chemical business.

“Chemtrade has proactively cleaned-up both its portfolio and balance sheet, which we think could result in slight multiple expansion over time,” said Mr. Isaacson. “Initiatives include the sale of its non-core specialty chemical business, the $10-million sale of an idled facility in Augusta, Georgia, as well as the closure of a chlorate plant in Quebec, due to slower post-COVID demand growth.”

He said Chemtrade’s 7.8-per-cent distribution yield has “strong support” and sees a “decent” valuation discount.

“When compared to all equities in the S&P TSX Materials with a market cap greater than $1-billion, CHE offers the second highest yield (its market cap is slightly less than $1-billion),” he said. “As of Q1/22, the rolling four-quarter distribution payout ratio is 48 per cent. Through the end of ‘23, we do not see the rolling four-quarter distribution payout ratio exceeding 60 per cent, providing strong support for a distribution of $0.15/unit per quarter.”

“CHE is trading at 6.1 times and 6.5x ‘22 and ‘23 EBITDA of $325-million and $305-million, respectively. This compares to five- and ten-year EV/NTM EBITDA multiples of 7.2 times and 7.4 times, respectively. The lower five-year multiple is due to the acquisition of Canexus, which brought more basic chemical volatility to the portfolio. However, if we look at the first full year of CHE post Canexus, through to the end of ‘23 (using Street estimates), the average EBITDA is $300-million, with very little variability. Accordingly, we see no reason why CHE’s forward multiple shouldn’t begin to return to 7.2 times over the next year. In fact, one could argue for a premium multiple over this amount, given that leverage has improved materially.”

Mr. Isaacson raised his target to $10.25 from $9.50. The average on the Street is $10.

“While waiting for (relative) outperformance, investors can enjoy a nearly-8-per-cent yield, well-supported by a rolling four-quarter payout ratio that shouldn’t exceed 60 per cent through ‘23,” he said.

=====

National Bank Financial analyst Vishal Shreedhar expects to see improving results from MTY Food Group Inc. (MTY-T) when it reports its second-quarter results in early July as casual dining trends rebound with an easing of pandemic-related restrictions.

However, he did warn a “solid” recovery in Canada could be partially offset by “tapering performance” from its Papa Murphy’s pizza chain.

“Investors will focus on evolving consumer behaviour as economies continue to reopen (year-over-year), particularly amid pervasive inflation, supply chain challenges, constrained labour conditions and concerns regarding slowing consumer spending,” said Mr. Shreedhar.

He’s forecasting adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization for the quarter of $46.6-million, above the consensus estimate of $45-million and up 7.2 per cent year-over-year from $43.5-million. Revenue is expected to grow to $154-million from $136-million, also topping the Street ($136-million).

“During the quarter, OpenTable data suggests a sharp recovery in seated diners in Canada as restrictions were gradually lifted. Solid recovery in Canada is anticipated to be partially offset by tapering demand at Papa Murphy’s (pent-up demand for dining out),” said Mr. Shreedhar.

Citing its “attractive valuation, operational progress and supportive capital allocation outcomes,” he said he remains “constructive” on MTY, though he did acknowledge “heightened risk related to inflation, supply chain, labour and macroeconomic conditions.”

Maintaining an “outperform” rating for its shares, Mr. Shreedhar cut his target to $63 from $70 in order to reflect a decrease in his valuation multiple “due to heightened uncertainty with the macroeconomic backdrop.” The average on the Street is $68.14.

=====

When Alimentation Couche-Tard Inc. (ATD-T) reports its fourth-quarter financial results after the bell on Tuesday, Desjardins Securities analyst Chris Li expects to see “strong fuel margins and solid merchandise sales and margin, offset by elevated opex, sluggish fuel volume and higher volatility in Europe.”

However, he expects investor attention to centre on the outlook and trends in the current first quarter given the spike in gas prices.

“While industry fuel margins have moderated from mid- to high US30cpg (January–April) to an average of US28–29cpg in May and June, we believe our low-US30cpg forecast is achievable in 1Q and FY23, supported by company-specific initiatives (fuel rebranding to Circle K, enhanced procurement through partnership with Musket, pricing optimization, and other sourcing and logistics capabilities). All else equal, a one-cent change in U.S. fuel margin impacts our FY23 EPS by US$0.08 (3 per cent). Fuel volume will be weighed down by high prices. While SG&A expenses will remain elevated in the near term due to higher labour costs and credit card fees, the pressures should start to ease in 2Q. We expect c-store sales and margins to remain solid, supported by cost pass-through and positive mix shift (single serve, private label, etc), partly offset by higher commodity costs (foodservice) and reduction in discretionary (ie carwash).”

With that change to his fuel margin estimate, Mr. Li raised his full-year earnings per share forecast for 2022 to $2.57 from $2.41 and 2023 to $2.56 from $2.51.

He maintained a “buy” rating and $60 target for Couche-Tard shares. The average on the Street is $62.72.

“While we expect earnings to remain volatile near-term due to macro uncertainties, we remain positive on ATD’s longer-term growth potential, supported by a strong pipeline of growth initiatives. Its strong balance sheet is valuable, especially in the current market, supporting capital return,” he said.

=====

CIBC World Markets analyst Scott Fromson, Sumayya Syed, Dean Wilkinson reduced their target prices for real estate equities on Monday.

Their changes included:

  • Allied Properties Real Estate Investment Trust (AP.UN-T, “outperformer”) to $47.50 from $50. The average on the Street is $49.35.
  • American Hotel Income Properties REIT (HOT.U-T/HOT.UN-T, “neutral”) to US$3.80 from US$4. Average: US$3.84.
  • Automotive Properties REIT (APR.UN-T, “neutral”) to $14.25 from $15. Average: $14.76.
  • Boardwalk REIT (BEI.UN-T, “neutral”) to $58 from $60. Average: $60.95.
  • Brookfield Asset Management Inc. (BAM-N/BAM.A-T, “outperformer”) to US$68 from US$75. Average: US$70.55.
  • CAP REIT (CAR.UN-T, “neutral”) to $55 from $60. Average: US$63.22.
  • Chartwell Retirement Residences (CSH.UN-T, “outperformer”) to $14.25 from $15. Average: $14.38.
  • Colliers International Group Inc. (CIGI-Q/CIGI-T, “outperformer”) to US$150 from US$170. Average: US$162.
  • Crombie REIT (CRR.UN-T, “outperformer”) to $18.25 from $19. Average: $19.42.
  • CT REIT (CRT.UN-T, “neutral”) to $18 from $19. Average: $18.79.
  • Dream Industrial REIT (DIR.UN-T, “outperformer”) to $17 from $18. Average: $18.44.
  • Dream Office REIT (D.UN-T, “outperformer”) to $27 from $28.50. Average: $27.08.
  • Dream Unlimited Corp. (DRM-T, “outperformer”) to $53 from $56. Average: $55.33.
  • European Residential REIT (ERE.UN-T, “outperformer”) to $5.35 from $6. Average: $5.74.
  • Extendicare Inc. (EXE-T, “neutral”) to $8 from $8.50. Average: $8.15.
  • First Capital REIT (FCR.UN-T, “outperformer”) to $19.50 from $21. Average: $20.54.
  • FirstService Corp. (FSV-Q/FSV-T, “neutral”) to US$140 from US$145. Average: US$160.
  • Granite REIT (GRT.UN-T, “outperformer”) to $102 from $106. Average: $107.90.
  • H&R REIT (HR.UN-T, “outperformer”) to $16.50 from $17.50. Average: $17.07.
  • InterRent REIT (IIP.UN-T, “neutral”) to $15.50 from $17. Average: $18.15.
  • Killam Apartment REIT (KMP.UN-T, “outperformer”) to $22.50 from $25. Average: $24.10.
  • Minto Apartment REIT (MI.UN-T, “outperformer”) to $23 from $24.50. Average: $25.05.
  • Morguard Corp. (MRC-T, “outperformer”) to $150 from $165. Average: $180.
  • Morguard North American Residential REIT (MRG.UN-T, “outperformer”) to $21.75 from $23. Average: $21.70.
  • Northwest Healthcare Properties REIT (NWH.UN-T, “outperformer”) to $14.75 from $15.50. Average: $15.22.
  • Pro REIT (PRV.UN-T, “outperformer”) to $7.75 from $8.25. Average: $7.93.
  • RioCan REIT (REI.UN-T, “outperformer”) to $25 from $26.50. Average: $26.25.
  • Sienna Senior Living Inc. (SIA-T, “neutral”) to $15.75 from $16.75. Average: $16.69.
  • Slate Office REIT (SOT.UN-T, “neutral”) to $5 from $5.25. Average: $5.19.
  • SmartCentres REIT (SRU.UN-T, “outperformer”) to $32.75 from $34.50. Average: $33.
  • Storagevault Canada Inc. (SVI-T, “outperformer”) to $7 from $8. Average: $7.86.
  • Summit Industrial Income REIT (SMU.UN-T, “neutral”) to $21 from $22.50. Average: $23.65.
  • Tricon Residential Inc. (TCN-T, “outperformer”) to $20.50 from $22. Average: $20.35.
  • True North Commercial REIT (TNT.UN-T, “neutral”) to $6.75 from $7. Average: $6.95.

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Citing “permitting uncertainty” at its Fenix Gold Project after the Chilean Environmental Assessment Service recommended a rejection of its Environmental Impact Assessment report, Raymond James analyst Craig Stanley downgraded Rio2 Ltd. (RIO-X) by two levels to “market perform” from “strong buy.”

“The Consolidated Evaluation Report notes that Fenix ‘fulfills all the applicable environmental regulations and meets the environmental requirements for the granting of applicable sectorial environmental permits’ however, the company ‘has not provided enough information during the evaluation process to eliminate adverse impacts over the chinchilla, guanaco, and vicuña,’” he said.

“We note Gold Fields Salares Norte Gold Project was permitted but subsequently sanctioned over a botched relocation of 20 chinchillas.”

Mr. Stanley cut his target to 40 cents from $1.50. The average on the Street is $1.64.

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While he thinks Fission Uranium Corp. (FCU-T) is “likely to continue to do well on a backdrop of improving sentiment in the uranium space,” BMO Nesbitt Burns analyst Alexander Pearce downgraded its stock to “market perform” from “outperform,” seeing “better value elsewhere.”

“We believe near-term upside in uranium can be better gained through exposure to the producers and more advanced developers,” he said.

Mr. Pearce continues to see its Patterson Lake South uranium project as “attractive” with the “potential for a low-cost and large-scale uranium-producing asset.” However, he thinks its development timeframe and capex “do count against it slightly.”

“Amongst other key development projects in the Athabasca Basin, PLS is slightly behind our preferred project list due to its current development stage (FS ongoing),” he said. “Therefore, we have downgraded Fission.”

He maintained a 70-cent target for its shares. The average is $1.31.

“We would look to review this rating on any pullback in share price, given the positive outlook we have on the commodity price,” said Mr. Pearce.

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In other analyst actions:

* While he sees it “on track for another strong quarter” and sees “significant upside from current levels,” BMO Nesbitt Burns analyst Fadi Chamoun reduced his Bombardier Inc. (BBD.B-T) target to $63 from $71.25 with an “outperform” rating to “reflect overall lower market multiples.” The average is $53.97.

“Bombardier in-service fleet of aircraft saw significant increases in flight activities in Q2/22,” he said. “Deliveries of mid/large cabin aircraft increased in Q2/22 and are expected to accelerate in H2/22 and 2023 supported by a strong backlog, which we believe has expanded further in Q2/22. The strength in orders has also afforded BBD the ability to retire more debt and strengthen its financial position. While macro uncertainty continues to weigh on valuation in the immediate-term, BBD is executing well against its self-help opportunities and the company is on more solid footing.”

* CIBC’s Anita Soni reduced Equinox Gold Corp. (EQX-T) to “underperformer” from “neutral” with a $5.75 target, down from $9.25 and below the $12.31 average.

“Despite the fairly low trading P/NAV multiple, which reflects some risk at the Greenstone project, we believe that the company’s higher capex weighting implies risk and we do not see how it will trade in line with peers during a build-out,” said Ms. Soni.

* In response to its decision to halt additional construction activities at its Premier Gold project in the Golden Triangle of B.C., CIBC’s Allison Carson cut Ascot Resources Ltd. (AOT-T) to “neutral” from “outperformer” with an 80-cent target, down from $1.30. The average is $1.19.

“Although we remain confident on the technical and operational aspects of this project, due to the uncertainty around the financing and development we have lowered our rating,” she said.

* Touting it as a “good pass-through of oil prices to investors,” CIBC’s Christopher Thompson initiated coverage of Cardinal Energy Ltd. (CJ-T) with a “neutral” rating and $10 target, exceeding the average on the Street by 17 cents.

“Cardinal Energy’s low-decline-rate operating model generates impressive free cash flow and a leading dividend yield in the current commodity price environment,” he said. “That being said, when stress tested at lower commodity prices, we see relatively higher risk in the model because of the company’s higher relative cash costs. While we believe a valuation premium relative to peers is warranted given Cardinal’s leading capital intensity ratio, with the stock trading at 3.5 times 2023E EV/DACF on our price deck versus a peer average of 2.7 times, we would wait for a smaller gap.”

* After meetings with its management, BMO’s Devin Dodge cut his target for Finning International Inc. (FTT-T) to $32 from $38 with a “market perform” rating. The average is $44.67.

“We came away from the meetings incrementally more positive and believe FTT is poised to deliver improved and more sustainable earnings over the cycle. However, we believe escalating concerns for a recession and moderating commodity prices (though admittedly still at elevated levels) provide a challenging backdrop for the stock. We would consider a more constructive rating on improved visibility into economic conditions and/or mining sector investment in Chile, all else equal.

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMieGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnRoZWdsb2JlYW5kbWFpbC5jb20vaW52ZXN0aW5nL21hcmtldHMvaW5zaWRlLXRoZS1tYXJrZXQvYXJ0aWNsZS1tb25kYXlzLWFuYWx5c3QtdXBncmFkZXMtYW5kLWRvd25ncmFkZXMtMTk1L9IBAA?oc=5

2022-06-27 10:55:06Z
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