Toronto stocks ended down Friday, as resource indices continued to move lower, ending a tough week for the senior exchange.

The S&P/TSX composite index fell 24.82, or 0.22%, to 11,390.70. For the week, the market was off 4.4%.

Half of the 10 TSX main sub-groups were down.

The energy index gave up 0.77%.

Light, sweet crude for July delivery was up $1.28 at US$71.63 a barrel. Imperial Oil Ltd. gave up 69¢, or 1.78%, to $38.06.

The materials index went down 0.55%. Gold for August delivery fell $1 to US$612.80 an ounce.

Kinross Gold Corp. lost 20¢, or 1.79%, to $10.97.

In economic news, Statistics Canada reported that the economy added 97,000 jobs in May, driving the unemployment rate down to 6.1%, its lowest level in 36 years.

The Canadian dollar surged 1.33¢ to US90.45¢.

The S&P/TSX Venture Exchange index up 13.81, or 0.52%, to 2,654.48.

In New York, the market ended a positively bearish week that began with comments from Ben Bernanke, the U.S. Federal Reserve chairman, indicating he believed inflation was a concern. That stoked fears of a further interest rate hikes, which led to the sell off.

The Dow Jones industrial average fell 46.90 points to 10,891.92, the Nasdaq composite index fell 10.26 points to 2,135.06 and the S&P 500 Index lost 5.63 points to 1,252.30.

On the week, the Dow fell 3.2%, the Nasdaq composite dropped 3.8% while the S&P 500 declined 2.8%.