Home » 2016 » March (page 13)

Monthly Archives: March 2016

Canadians without company pension plan face uphill battle to stay out of poverty, study finds

senior.jpg

Many aging Canadians don’t have nearly enough in the bank for retirement, new research in the Broadbent Institute suggests. Canadians without an employee pension represent 47 per cent of those aged 55-64 in the united states. Only 15-20 percent within this group are middle-class with enough savings to comfortably retire in Ten years. The study says anyone outside this bracket ...

Read More »

Trudeau promotes spending to boost economy as economists warn of weak outlook

0212trudeau.jpg

OTTAWA – Justin Trudeau is talking in the need for more federal spending to assist the economy on a day experts are sharing their downgraded forecasts with his government. The prime minister says the country’s economic woes mean it’s more important than ever before for that Liberal government to spend on growth-generating projects like infrastructure. Trudeau’s remarks in Toronto came ...

Read More »

The bleeding isn’t over for the energy sector, despite the Saudi Arabia-Russia oil deal

oil-cc.jpg

ANALYSIS CALGARY ? A deal between top oil producers Saudi Arabia and Russia to freeze oil output at current levels may signal that oil prices have recently flattened – but that doesn’t mean the end of pain for that oil and gas sector. Sure, the Doha deal is flawed, but here’s why it could really make a difference to oil prices ...

Read More »

Counting down the Canadian energy industry’s 2015 lowlights

0212suncor.jpg

How bad was 2015 for the Canadian energy industry? Try a 42 percent decline in oil export revenues. Or perhaps an 88 percent drop in propane prices. Even wind and solar capacity had an unremarkable year, despite the policy momentum within their favour. The National Energy Board’s “Highlights of 2015” published Friday, documents the woes of the Canadian energy industry. ...

Read More »

No need for market gloom on China — the eurozone is the real economic disaster to worry about

eurozone.jpg

Regular readers would not normally turn to me like a source of optimism. Yet, in the middle of the current all-enveloping gloom concerning the world economic outlook, while not exactly optimistic, I’ve found myself nothing beats as pessimistic because the markets appear to be. Why the next recession could be different – and more dangerous Joe Chidley: If these signals ...

Read More »

Canadian Pacific Railway gives in, seeks ruling on Norfolk Southern deal from U.S. oversight board

0216cp.jpg

After months of wrangling, Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd. has reluctantly decided to ask U.S. regulators to weigh in around the first step of its planned takeover of Norfolk Southern Corp. CP’s takeover offer, which NS has repeatedly rejected, proposes putting the Canadian railroad right into a voting trust so that its veteran CEO may take the helm of NS before ...

Read More »

More pain looming for Canadian oil producers as hedges shielding them from oil rout expire

0211crescent.jpg

A defence Canadian oil producers had from the plunging cost of crude is crumbling as hedges expire amid projections that crude continues to say no. Hedges that shielded companies such as Crescent Point Energy Corp. and Whitecap Resources Inc. from the full pain of US$30 oil are winding down this season and then. Nineteen small-to-mid-sized producers have an average of ...

Read More »

Kevin Libin: Might Quebec’s maple syrup rebels dream of tasting sweet freedom?

0216syrup.jpg

A sweet new day is dawning on Quebec’s maple forests. Producers disgruntled with the province’s existing maple syrup supply-management regime can take heart. The federal government – having helped to create a system that has seen Quebec syrup producers lose substantial global share of the market, exports to the dominant U.S. market stagnate, and their revenue per pound drop below ...

Read More »