July 2, 2013 Newsletter

Dear Friends,

Tangents:

A new month – July ~ The seventh month, named by Mark Anthony in honour of Julius Caesar.  It was formerly called Quintilis, as it was the fifth month of the Roman year.  The old Dutch name for it was Hooy-maand, “hay month”, while the Anglo-Saxons knew it as Moedmonath, “meadow month”, because the cattle were turned into the meadows to feed then.  In the French Revolutionary Calendar the equivalent was Messidor, “harvest gift”, corresponding to the period June 20th to July 19th.  Until the 18th century, July was accented on the first syllable.  Even as late as 1798 Wordsworth wrote:

In March, December, and in July,

‘Tis all the same with Harry Gill;

The neighbours tell, and tell you truly,

His teeth they chatter, chatter still.

“Goody Blake and Harry Gill.”

-from Brewar’s Dictionary of Phrase & Fable, 16th ed.

And on July 2nd, in…

1887: Writer Herman Hesse was born.  Eternity is a mere moment, just long enough for a joke. – Hermann Hess

1964: Civil Rights Act passed, outlawing racial segregation and discrimination.

1956: Model Jerry Hall was born.

1776: Declaration of Independence.

1937: Aviator Amelia Earhart disappears.

Photos of the Day –July 2nd, 2013

Fireworks celebrating Canada Day are seen over downtown Vancouver, as seen from Cypress Mountain in West Vancouver, British Columbia, Monday. Canadians were celebrating their country’s 146th birthday. Andy Clark/Reuters

A farmer carries freshly-picked sunflowers at a farm on the outskirts of Havana, Cuba, Monday. Desmond Boylan/Reuters

Market Closes for July 2nd, 2013

Market 

Index

Close Change
Dow 

Jones

14932.41 -42.55 

 

-0.28%

S&P 500 1614.08 -0.88 

 

-0.05%

NASDAQ 3433.396 -1.094 

 

-0.03%

TSX 12178.38 +49.27

 

+0.41%

 

International Markets

Market 

Index

Close Change
NIKKEI 14098.74 +246.24

 

+1.78%

 

HANG 

SENG

20658.65 -144.64

 

-0.70%

 

SENSEX 19463.82 -113.57

 

-0.58%

 

FTSE 100 6303.94 -3.84

 

-0.06%

 

Bonds

Bonds % Yield Previous % Yield
CND. 

10 Year Bond

2.407 2.439
CND.  

30 Year

Bond

2.853 2.896
U.S.  

10 Year Bond

2.4693 2.4857
U.S.  

30 Year Bond

3.4729 3.4994

Currencies

BOC Close Today Previous
Canadian $ 0.94760 0.95097

 

US  

$

1.05530 1.05156
Euro Rate 

1 Euro=

Inverse 

Canadian  

$

1.36926 0.73032
US 

$

1.29752 0.77070

Commodities

Gold Close Previous
London Gold  

Fix

1243.65 1234.57
Oil Close Previous 

 

WTI Crude Future 99.60 96.56
BRENT 104.16 102.30

 

Market Commentary:

Canada

By Eric Lam

July 2 (Bloomberg) — Canadian stocks rose a third day, reaching the highest close in almost two weeks, as health-care shares surged and energy producers rallied on higher crude prices to offset losses among metal producers.

Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Inc. added 4.8 percent after setting up a physician loyalty program in the U.S. with Mentor Worldwide LLC. Penn West Petroleum Ltd. and Athabasca Oil Corp. jumped more than 5 percent as crude rallied to a 14-month high on concern that protests in Egypt will threaten supplies. Barrick Gold Corp. and Silvercorp Metals Inc. plunged at least 7.1 percent as prices for the metals retreated.

The Standard & Poor’s/TSX Composite Index rose 49.27 points, or 0.4 percent, to 12,178.38 at 4 p.m. in Toronto, the highest since June 19. The gauge has fallen 2.1 percent this year. Trading volume was in line with the 30-day average.

“There’s concern in Egypt, oil is up,” said Ian Nakamoto, director of research with MacDougall MacDougall & MacTier Inc. in Toronto. The firm manages about C$4 billion ($3.8 billion).

“We’re waiting for Friday’s non-farm payroll reports. The best thing for the equity market is if the U.S. economy continues to improve, but at a slower pace than the Fed expects, which will push out the end of QE.”

Markets in Toronto were closed yesterday for the Canada Day holiday, while the S&P 500 rose 0.5 percent in the U.S.

Investors there continue to weigh data and statements from Federal Reserve officials to determine whether the world’s largest economy is strong enough for the central bank to scale back stimulus measures. The S&P 500 slipped 0.1 percent, ahead of the monthly jobs report on July 5. The U.S. is Canada’s largest trading partner.

Seven of 10 industries in the S&P/TSX advanced, extending the index’s three-day rally to 1.9 percent. Health-care stocks paced gains, adding 3.1 percent. The group has surged 40 percent this year and closed today at its highest since 2000.

Valeant Pharmaceuticals jumped 4.8 percent to C$95, the biggest jump since May 27. The company’s Medicis skin care division is introducing a five-year loyalty program in the U.S. that will include Mentor’s line of breast implant products. The program gives physicians incentives for using Medicis and Mentor products.

Telus Corp. rallied 3.1 percent to C$31.66 after analysts with Canaccord Financial Inc. said investors had overestimated how much Verizon Communications Inc. may shake up Canada’s wireless market. Verizon said last month it was considering entering the Canadian mobile-phone market, and the Globe and Mail reported June 26 the company had submitted a bid for Toronto-based Wind Mobile.

Telus plunged 8 percent on the June 26 report, and Rogers Communications Inc., the largest wireless carrier in Canada, retreated 9.2 percent that day. Rogers added 2.8 percent to C$42.37 today.

Penn West Petroleum climbed 5 percent to C$11.65 and Athabasca Oil rose 6.1 percent to C$6.91, driving the S&P/TSX Energy Index to a 1.4 percent gain, the most in six weeks.

The price of crude rallied 1.6 percent to $99.60 a barrel, the highest settlement since May 2012, on speculation U.S. inventories may have dropped 2.25 million barrels last week to the lowest level since May 31, according to a Bloomberg survey before a report tomorrow. Oil extended gains as the political showdown escalated in Egypt, which controls the Suez Canal, a key transit point for oil tankers.

Raw-materials producers led declines in the S&P/TSX, falling 2.1 percent as a group. Gold slid for the first time in three sessions and silver futures slumped 1.4 percent. Endeavour Silver Corp. tumbled 9.9 percent to C$3.28 after surging 16 percent June 28. Silvercorp Metals plunged 7.1 percent to C$2.74.

Barrick Gold, the world’s largest producer, slumped 7.7 percent to C$15.32, the lowest level since 1992. Jefferies LLC analyst Peter Ward downgraded the stock to hold from buy. The gold miner on June 28 said it may write down as much as $5.5 billion on its Pascua-Lama project in the Andes after the price of the metal plunged close to a three-year low.

Barrick is also likely to take other “significant” impairment charges for the second quarter as it reviews goodwill and other assets, the Toronto-based company said.

BlackBerry slumped 7.3 percent to C$10.22, its lowest close since November. The BlackBerry 10 smartphone maker has plunged 35 percent in the past three days, after reporting a surprise loss in its first quarter due to lackluster sales of the Z10 touchscreen phone.

US

By Lu Wang and Katie Brennan

July 2 (Bloomberg) — U.S. stocks fell, erasing earlier gains, as the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index failed to hold above its average level from the past 50 days and investors awaited a monthly jobs report and the start of corporate earnings.

DaVita HealthCare Partners Inc. tumbled 5.9 percent after the government proposed reducing payments to dialysis-center operators. Constellation Brands Inc. slumped 3.6 percent after posting first-quarter earnings that trailed analysts’ estimates.

Ford Motor Co. and Abercrombie & Fitch Co. added at least 2.8 percent amid optimism over sales. Zynga Inc. jumped 6.5 percent after naming a new chief executive officer.

The S&P 500 slipped 0.1 percent to 1,614.08 in New York, after rising as much as 0.6 percent earlier. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 42.55 points, or 0.3 percent, to 14,932.41. More than 6.1 billion shares traded hands on U.S. exchanges today, or 6.9 percent below the three-month average.

“The market is trying to find some ability to hold in there,” Jason Cooper, who helps oversee $2.5 billion in South Bend, Indiana, at 1st Source Investment Advisors, said in a phone interview. “It’s going to take some actual data to come in to at least reassure investors that the economy is doing OK and people are getting jobs. Corporate America is going to be the important one right now. The Fed has pretty much said what they have to say and not rock the boat any more.”

Stocks climbed earlier as factory orders topped estimates and the Federal Reserve’s William Dudley reiterated that the central bank may prolong bond purchases if needed. The S&P 500 reversed gains after momentarily rising above its 50-day moving average near 1,624. The benchmark gauge also pared gains yesterday after briefly exceeding the technical level.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. cut its growth forecast for second-quarter U.S. gross domestic product by 1/10 to 1.7 percent after a slower-than-estimated expansion in manufacturing inventories.

Data tomorrow from the ADP Research Institute may indicate American companies increased employment in June. Investors will watch the monthly U.S. labor report later this week for further signs of economic strength. Employers in the U.S. probably created 165,000 jobs in June, almost the same as in the prior month, according to the median forecast of economists in a Bloomberg survey ahead of July 5 figures from the Labor Department. The unemployment rate probably fell to 7.5 percent, matching April’s four-year low.

Alcoa Inc. will unofficially start the second-quarter earnings season after the market close on July 8, as the biggest U.S. aluminum producer becomes the first company in the Dow to report results. Profits from S&P 500 companies probably grew 2.4 percent, according to analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

That’s down from a projected increase of 6.2 percent at the beginning of the quarter.

“The recent economic news has been solid but now the market will look to see where earnings come in to drive the next leg up if we continue in this trend,” said James Dunigan, who helps oversee $112 billion as chief investment officer in Philadelphia at PNC Wealth Management. “We have rebounded nicely after the stumble from the Fed meeting in June so we will start to run into some resistance as we head higher.”

The S&P 500 has dropped 3.3 percent since May 21, the day before Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke signaled the central bank could scale back asset purchases if the economy improves in line with forecasts. The benchmark gauge rallied 13 percent in the first half of the year, the best performance since a 17 percent gain in the first six months of 1998.

The Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index, or VIX, added 0.4 percent today to 16.44. The equity volatility gauge, which moves in the opposite direction as the S&P 500 about 80 percent of the time, reached a six-year low in March and has since surged 45 percent.

Four out of 10 S&P 500 industries fell as industrial and raw-material companies dropped more than 0.3 percent. Energy and telephone stocks climbed at least 0.2 percent.

DaVita HealthCare tumbled 5.9 percent to $114. Dialysis- center operators may see U.S. payments reduced 9.4 percent in 2014 under a Medicare proposal. The government will consider phasing reductions over more than a year, the Health and Human Services Department said yesterday in a regulatory filing. The proposal is subject to public comment and may change before taking effect.

Constellation Brands lost 3.6 percent to $51.25. The wine company reported adjusted first-quarter earnings of 38 cents a share, missing the average analyst estimate of 40 cents.

Mead Johnson Nutrition Co. slipped 5.7 percent to $74.90.

The world’s largest baby-formula maker said the National Development and Reform Commission, China’s top economic planning agency, carried out a review of documents related to product pricing at Mead Johnson’s China unit recently. The U.S. company said it’s providing “full” cooperation.

China is probing foreign milk-powder companies including Danone and Nestle SA for possibly violating anti-monopoly laws and setting prices too high, the People’s Daily reported.

Achillion Pharmaceuticals Inc. plunged 25 percent to $6.26.

The company said U.S. regulators stopped the clinical trial of one of its drugs for hepatitis C after some patients experienced elevated liver enzymes.

Linn Energy LLC, the oil and natural gas partnership that agreed to buy Berry Petroleum Co. in February, plunged 19 percent to $27.05, after disclosing a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission inquiry of the transaction and its accounting.

Ford rose 2.8 percent to $16.18. The automaker’s sales of cars and light trucks climbed 13 percent to 234,917 last month, beating the 12 percent increase that was the average of 11 estimates.

Retailers advanced. U.S. sales at stores open at least one year rose 2.9 percent from a year earlier during the week ended June 29 as concern over increased inventory and markdowns eased, Johnson Redbook Research said.

Abercrombie & Fitch climbed 3.8 percent to $47.93. The teen retailer may see acceleration in margin expansion amid sales stabilization and cost reductions, Piper Jaffray Cos. wrote in a note, reiterating the stock as a top pick.

Zynga jumped 6.5 percent to $3.27. The maker of social- networking games named Don Mattrick, the former head of Microsoft’s entertainment division, as its new CEO. Mattrick will start July 8, the company said.

Nielsen Holdings NV, the biggest provider of U.S. television ratings, increased 2.1 percent to $33.97. The company will replace Sprint Nextel Corp. in the S&P 500 after the end of trading July 8, S&P said in a statement.

iPhone maker Apple Inc. climbed 2.3 percent to $418.49 for a third straight day of gains. The world’s most valuable technology company is nearing a deal with Time Warner Cable Inc. to give subscribers of the cable television service access to channels via Apple TV, people with knowledge of the negotiations said.

Apple’s shares have retreated 40 percent from a record high in September amid concern that Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook has taken too long to deliver a new breakthrough product to help make up for stiffer iPhone competition.

 

Have  a wonderful evening everyone.

 

Be magnificent!

 

To understand pleasure is not to deny it.

We are not condemning it or saying it is right or wrong but if we pursue it,

let us do so with our eyes open, knowing that a mind that is all the time seeking pleasure

must inevitably find its shadow in pain.

They cannot be separated, although we run after pleasure and try to avoid pain.

Krishnamurti,1895-1986


As ever,

 

Carolann

 

Patience is bitter, but its fruit is sweet.

-Jean-Jacques Rousseau, 1712-1778


Carolann Steinhoff, B.Sc., CFP®, CIM, FCSI

Senior Vice-President &

Senior Investment Advisor

Queensbury Securities Inc.,

St. Andrew’s Square

Suite 340A, 730 View St.,

Victoria, B.C. V8W 3Y7

 

 

June 28, 2013 Newsletter

Dear Friends,

Tangents:

Interesting item in the Wall Street Journal today:

  • Scientists unlock mystery in evolution of pitchers. Scientists say that the “classic overhand throw used by baseball players” is an evolutionary adaptation preceded by anatomical changes that first appeared 1.8 million years ago. The secret is not muscle strength—otherwise Major League Baseball would be recruiting chimpanzees—but the ability of the shoulder, arm and the rest of the body, including the waist, to store elastic energy. “It works just like a slingshot would. You’re actually stretching the ligaments,” the author of a recent report tells the New York Times’s James Gorman. It would be over a million and half years after the appearance of the open shoulder and twistable waist that “homo sapiens, the species that would eventually form both the American and National Leagues,” would appear on the scene, Gorman notes. And even then, humans “did not evolve the intellectual power and wisdom to invent the rules of baseball until the 19th century.” Evolution took a small step back in 1973 with the adoption of the designated-hitter rule.

Science > Art:

“Score another one for Wolfgang Amadeus,” says Pacific Standard magazine.  “Researchers report the soothing sounds of a Mozart minuet boost the ability of children and seniors to focus on a task and ignore extraneous information.  Dissonant music has the opposite effect, according to Nobuo Masataka of Japan’s Kyoto University and Leonard Perlovsky of Harvard University.  Their findings help make the case that music, sometimes thought of as a pleasant byproduct of evolution, has in fact played an active role in human development.”

Photos of the Day –June 28th, 2013

Dories built at Lowell’s Boat Shop (in background) bob on the Merrimack River in Amesbury, Mass. Lowell’s is the oldest continuously operating boat shop in the country and has been cited as the birthplace of the fishing dory. Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff

Brushes hang in front of a paint-splattered wall in the paint shop. Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff

Market Closes for June 28th, 2013

Market 

Index

Close Change
Dow 

Jones

14909.60 -114.89 

 

-0.76%

S&P 500 1606.28 -6.92 

 

-0.43%

NASDAQ 3403.247 +1.384 

 

+0.04%

TSX 12129.11 +123.33

 

+1.03%

 

International Markets

Market 

Index

Close Change
NIKKEI 13677.32 +463.77

 

+3.51%

 

HANG 

SENG

20803.29 +363.21

 

+1.78%

 

SENSEX 19395.81 +519.86

 

+2.75%

 

FTSE 100 6215.47 -27.93

 

-0.45%

 

Bonds

Bonds % Yield Previous % Yield
CND. 

10 Year Bond

2.439 2.414
CND.  

30 Year

Bond

2.896 2.893
U.S.  

10 Year Bond

2.4857 2.4721
U.S.  

30 Year Bond

3.4994 3.5344

Currencies

BOC Close Today Previous
Canadian $ 0.95097 0.95439

 

US  

$

1.05156 1.04779
Euro Rate 

1 Euro=

Inverse 

Canadian  

$

1.36808 0.73095
US 

$

1.30100 0.76864

Commodities

Gold Close Previous
London Gold  

Fix

1234.57 1200.82
Oil Close Previous 

 

WTI Crude Future 96.56 97.05
BRENT 102.30 102.61

 

Market Commentary:

Canada

By Eric Lam

June 28 (Bloomberg) — Canadian stocks rose for a second day, snapping a streak of four losing weeks, as phone companies rallied after a BCE Inc. deal got regulatory approval and materials producers surged on higher metals prices.

BCE, Canada’s largest telephone company, rose 2.8 percent after regulators accepted its bid to acquire Astral Media Inc. for C$3 billion. Astral, a Quebec broadcaster, gained 3.6 percent. Yamana Gold Inc. added 9.3 percent as the precious metal rebounded from a 34-month low. BlackBerry plunged 27 percent after reporting a first-quarter loss and weaker-than estimated sales of its BB10 smartphones.

The Standard & Poor’s/TSX Composite Index rose 123.33 points, or 1 percent, to 12,129.11 at 4 p.m. in Toronto. The gauge gained 1.1 percent for the week and pared its monthly loss to 4.1 percent. The S&P/TSX fell 4.9 percent in the second quarter, the first drop in a year. Trading volume was 26 percent higher than the 30-day average at this time of the day.

“There’s a bounce in the gold sector today which has been decimated, and some stabilization in the telcos, which were knocked hard by the Verizon chatter,” said Bob Decker, fund manager with Aurion Capital Management in Toronto. He helps manage C$6 billion ($5.7 billion) at the firm. “The debate on the timing of quantitative easing tapering is driving things and gold has found a round number it likes. There’s a bit of short covering and bottom fishing today.”

U.S. Federal Reserve officials assured investors yesterday that stimulus efforts would remain in place until economic growth hit the central bank’s targets.

Canada’s economy grew for a fourth straight month in April, rising 0.1 percent, data today showed. The gain marks the longest string of monthly expansions since September 2011, signaling a further revival from a slump in the second half of last year that was led by investment and exports.

Eight of 10 groups in the S&P/TSX advanced today. Phone stocks rallied 2.5 percent, paring the industry’s worst weekly loss in four years. A report that Verizon Communications Inc. had placed a bid for Wind Mobile to enter the Canadian market sent the group tumbling 6 percent on June 26.

BCE gained 2.8 percent to C$43.12 and Astral advanced 3.6 percent to C$49.96. The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission approved a union between the two media companies yesterday, as long as BCE agrees to conditions including investing C$247 million in programming and not withholding content from competitors.

Telus jumped 3 percent to C$30.71 after dropping 11 percent in the previous two sessions. Rogers Communications Inc., Canada’s largest wireless carrier, rose 2.1 percent to C$41.20.

Shaw Communications Inc. climbed 5.6 percent to C$25.24 after reporting third-quarter sales that topped analysts’ estimates. The company also raised its year-end forecast for cash flow.

Materials producers rallied 4.7 percent, the biggest gain since April. The S&P/TSX Gold Index surged 8.9 percent, the most since 2009, as all 25 stocks advanced. The gold gauge rose 0.3 percent this week, snapping three weeks of losses.

China Gold International Resources Corp. jumped 12 percent to C$2.80 and Yamana Gold surged 9.3 percent to C$10.03. The price of gold rebounded from a 34-month low.

First Quantum Minerals Ltd. added 2.3 percent to C$15.60 as the price of copper rose as much as 1 percent before closing 0.1 percent lower in New York. Fortuna Silver Mines Inc. jumped 19 percent as silver prices jumped.

BlackBerry, formerly known as Research In Motion Ltd., sank 27 percent to C$11.03, the biggest loss since December. The company shipped 6.8 million smartphones last quarter, including about 2.7 million BlackBerry 10 models. Analysts had estimated total shipments of 7.5 million, with 3.6 million BlackBerry 10 units.

Technology stocks, which include BlackBerry, slumped 7.8 percent, the most in 21 months.

US

By Nikolaj Gammeltoft

June 28 (Bloomberg) — U.S. stocks fell, with the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index snapping a streak of seven monthly gains, as comments from Federal Reserve Governor Jeremy Stein spurred concern the central bank may begin to reduce stimulus in September.

Accenture Plc, the world’s second-largest technology- consulting company, slumped 10 percent after its quarterly sales forecast missed analysts’ estimates. International Business Machines Corp. lost 2.3 percent for the biggest retreat in the Dow Jones Industrial Average. BlackBerry, the Canadian smartphone maker, fell the most in 12 years after reporting a surprise quarterly loss.

The S&P 500 fell 0.4 percent to 1,606.28 at 4 p.m. in New York. The index extended today’s decline into the close of trading as investors adjusted positions at end of the quarter.

The Dow lost 114.89 points, or 0.8 percent, to 14,909.60 today.

About 10.1 billion shares changed hands on U.S. exchanges, 53 percent above the three-month average.

“People are hearing all these various Fed governors speak and the message they’re trying to send isn’t necessarily any clearer than what was talked about by Bernanke last week,” Robert Pavlik, chief market strategist at Banyan Partners LLC, said by phone. His firm manages about $1.4 billion. “I didn’t really seen a reason to step up to be a buyer on the pullback we had and I didn’t see a lot of follow through at least on the institutional level.”

The S&P 500 yesterday capped the biggest three-day rally since early January on better-than-estimated economic data and assurances on stimulus efforts from Fed officials. Stein said today the central bank is providing more clarity about how it will wind down its $85 billion in monthly bond buying as unemployment falls toward 7 percent.

If the Fed makes a decision to begin reducing purchases in September, Stein said in New York, “it will give primary weight to the large stock of news that has accumulated since the inception of the program and will not be unduly influenced by whatever data releases arrive in the few weeks before the meeting.”

Fed Reserve Bank of Richmond President Jeffrey Lacker, who dissented against additional stimulus at every Fed meeting last year, said financial markets will remain volatile as policy makers debate how and when to curtail the central bank’s asset purchases program.

The Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index, the measure of options on the S&P 500 known as the VIX, has climbed 49 percent since hitting a six-year low in March. The gauge was unchanged at 16.86 today.

The S&P 500 has rallied 13 percent so far this year, the best performance since a 17 percent gain in the first six months of 1998. It has dropped 3.8 percent since May 21 as Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke signaled the central bank could taper quantitative easing as the economy improves. The gauge slid 1.5 percent in June, its first monthly decline since October.

Business activity in the U.S. cooled more than projected in June, a regional report showed. The MNI Chicago Report’s business barometer dropped to 51.6 from 58.7 in May, which was the highest in more than a year. A reading of 50 is the dividing line between expansion and contraction. The median forecast of 55 economists surveyed by Bloomberg was 55.

Consumer sentiment fell less than forecast in June from an almost six-year high a month earlier. The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan said its final index of confidence eased to 84.1 this month from 84.5 at the end of May, which was the highest since July 2007. The median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of economists called for 83 in the gauge after a preliminary reading of 82.7.

“I’m not surprised to see some pullback from three days of strength,” Michael James, a managing director of equity trading at Wedbush Securities Inc. in Los Angeles, said in an interview.

“But bulls are still not willing to let things come in too much with the end of quarter today. Only thing we can count on for the rest of today and next week is continued trader-driven volatility, in both directions.”

U.S. stock trading accelerated into the close, with about 3.8 billion shares, or 38 percent of today’s total, changing hands after 3:59 p.m. Trading volume averaged about 7.1 billion shares this month, the busiest since November 2011, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The volume figure got a boost today as Russell Investments concluded the annual revisions to its equity benchmark gauges.

Russell’s annual revisions usually spur one of the busiest sessions of the year. Today’s total was the second highest in 2013 after 10.8 billion shares changed hands June 21, an options expiration day. Last year’s reconstitution on June 22 helped fuel a jump in volume to 9.73 billion shares, the highest total of the year.

Russell’s global stock indexes, including the Russell 1000 Index and the Russell 2000 Index, are used as benchmarks for $4.1 trillion in assets, according to the company’s website. In three of the previous four years, the reconstitution day ranked in the top 20 busiest trading sessions, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

Health-care shares and phone companies fell the most today, losing more than 0.7 percent, as eight of 10 industries retreated. Energy stocks and companies that rely on consumer discretionary spending gained, adding at least 0.4 percent.

Accenture tumbled 10 percent to $71.96 after saying fiscal fourth-quarter revenue will be $6.7 billion to $7 billion. That fell short of the $7.36 billion average estimate of analysts, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. IBM, the world’s largest seller of computer services, fell 2.3 percent to $191.11.

BlackBerry fell 28 percent to $10.46, the biggest decline since April 2000. The company reported a quarterly loss and lower-than-projected sales, hurt by sluggish demand and currency restrictions in Venezuela. The loss in the three months through June 1 was 13 cents a share, excluding some items. Analysts had estimated a profit of 8 cents on average, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Molycorp Inc., a producer of rare-earth minerals, jumped 11 percent to $6.20. The company said the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission recommended no enforcement action be taken after completing an investigation into Molycorp’s public disclosures.

 

Have a wonderful weekend everyone.

 

Be magnificent!

 

We would be happy to do the millions of things that we are not able to do.

The will is there, but we are not able to fulfill our desire.  Thus when we feel a desire,

but we are unable to realize that desire, we undergo a reaction we call suffering.

What is the cause of desire?  I am, only me.

As a result, I myself am the cause of all of the suffering that I have known.

Swami Vivekananda, 1863-1902


As ever,

 

Carolann

 

Attitude determines the altitude of life.

-Edwin Louis Cole, 1922-2002


Carolann Steinhoff, B.Sc., CFP®, CIM, FCSI

Senior Vice-President &

Senior Investment Advisor

Queensbury Securities Inc.,

St. Andrew’s Square

Suite 340A, 730 View St.,

Victoria, B.C. V8W 3Y7