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TSX drops over 2% after Trump selects new Fed Chair

Canada's main index fell over 2% on Friday. Mining shares plummeted, and gold dropped after U.S. president Donald Trump nominated Kevin Warsh, who is often seen as a hawkish Federal Reserve Chair.

As of 10:31 a.m., the S&P/TSX composite index was down 2.3% to 32,268.84. ET, amid a wider decline, was on course for its largest?one-day fall since April 25 when Washington's universal tariff threats roiled the global markets.

Despite today's?losses, which pushed the benchmark index to a weekly decline of 2.6%, the TSX rose 1.8% for the month and is poised to reach its ninth consecutive advance monthly, its longest run since 2017.

Trump has named Warsh, a former Fed Governor to succeed Jerome Powell at the end of his term in May. This gives a Fed critic who is a frequent critic an opportunity to put his "regime-change" idea for monetary policy into practice.

Shiraz Ahmed is the founder of Sartorial Wealth. He said, "He has historically been a hawkish, cautious person when it comes to inflation and the Fed’s balance sheet. But he's...become a more supportive person for lower short-term interest rates."

The gold sector dropped 7%. Spot gold fell 6.6%, after briefly falling below the $5,000 mark. Meanwhile, the U.S. Dollar strengthened following a recent decline.

Analysts have described the sell-off as a profit-taking. It also affected silver, copper and other base metals.

The materials index fell 6.2%, and it was on course for its biggest one-day decline since October 2025.

Imperial Oil, a major oil producer, fell by 4.5% among individual stocks after its fourth-quarter profit fell.

Bombardier's stock fell 6.7% when Trump threatened to decertify?its business planes and impose 50% import tariffs on any aircraft manufactured in Canada until Canada's regulator approved a certain number of planes made by its U.S. competitor Gulfstream.

The fall of the Canadian jet maker dragged down the Industrials Index by 1.7%.

Data showed that the economy slowed in November, as growth in service industries was offset by a weakness in the goods-producing sectors. (Reporting and editing by Jonathan Ananda, Vijay Kishore and Utkarsh Tushr Hathi)

(source: Reuters)