(Adds details on specific stocks, updates prices)
* TSX down 27.16 points, or 0.18 percent, at 15,442.75
* Six of TSX's 10 main groups fall; energy down 1.7 percent
* Index gains 0.17 percent on week
By Solarina Ho
TORONTO, June 2 (Reuters) - Canada's main stock index fell on Friday, dragged lower by weakness in energy stocks as oil prices fell and a modest dip in heavyweight financial shares after U.S. jobs growth came in below expectations.
The Toronto Stock Exchange's S&P/TSX composite index .GSPTSE close 27.16 points down, or 0.18 percent, at 15,442.75. Of the index's 10 main industry groups, six were in negative territory.
The index gained 0.17 percent on the week.
"Just about everything here is hitting a rough patch," said John Kinsey, portfolio manager at Caldwell Securities Ltd. "We may be hitting the summer doldrums a little early."
The energy group gave up 1.7 percent, as oil prices fell on concerns that U.S. drilling could accelerate after President Donald Trump's decision to abandon the Paris climate pact, exacerbating a persistent global glut. O/R
Cenovus Energy Inc CVE.TO fell 5.3 percent to C$11.61 and was the most influential drag on the index.
Cardinal Energy Ltd CJ.TO sank 8 percent to C$5.31 after agreeing to buy Canadian light oil assets from Apache Corp (NYSE:APA) for C$330 million ($244 million) in cash. financials group slipped 0.1 percent, weighed down most heavily by insurers as a smaller-than-forecast increase in U.S. payrolls growth in May pushed bond yields lower. Financial Corp MFC.TO pared earlier losses, but still ended 1 percent lower at C$23.58. Rival Sun Life Financial Inc SLF.TO slipped 0.9 percent to C$44.28.
Kinsey said lingering concerns over the Canadian housing market also factored into the group's performance. Financial stocks have retreated about 7 percent since hitting 2017 highs.
Canadian exports climbed to a record in April and first-quarter labor productivity approached a three-year high, data showed, offering further evidence the domestic economy is recovering after a long slump caused by low oil prices. the upside, Bombardier Inc BBDb.TO shares jumped to a near four-month high, rising 3.6 percent to C$2.56. The plane and train maker was the most shorted stock on the TSX as of May 15, though some of the short positions have recently been covered, TMX data showed.
Canada Goose GOOS.TO surged 15.8 percent to C$29.17 after the maker of expensive winter jackets reported a smaller-than-expected quarterly loss in its first earnings report as a publicly listed company. Gold Inc AKG.TO pared earlier gains but still finished up 5 percent to C$2.12, as it recovered some of its sharp losses since the release of a short-seller report this week ($1 = 1.3520 Canadian dollars)