No smooth road to trust conversions
CALGARY, Alberta (Reuters) - Two cases, coming in less than a week, show that investors need to be wary as Canada's income trusts, with their tax breaks set to end, convert themselves back into corporations. The tax breaks ceded to trusts, which distribute most of their cash to unitholders, are to expire 2011.
Fed cuts growth forecast due to global woes
OTTAWA/TORONTO (Reuters) - Canada's government has slashed its forecast for economic growth in 2008 to 1.1 percent from 1.7 percent, citing global economic woes it said were beyond its control. "We are feeling the impacts of global economic factors beyond the control of any one individual or government," Finance Minister Jim Flaherty said in his department's fiscal update on Friday, which also noted that Ottawa returned to a budget surplus in June.
Buffett says has no "buy order" on oil sands firms
CALGARY, Alberta (Reuters) - Warren Buffett toured Canada's
oil sands with his friend Bill Gates this week to understand
how the resources are developed, but the billionaire investor
said on Friday he had no plan to buy into the sector. In an
interview on CNBC television, Buffett said he and the Microsoft
Derivatives flagged as Canadian regulatory issue
TORONTO (Reuters) - A large institutional investor and Canada's central bank suggest that Canadian securities rules may need to be broadened to deal with derivative instruments. In submissions to an advisory panel on securities regulation, the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan, which manages more than C$100 billion in assets, and the Bank of Canada each lauded the new Derivatives Act in the province of Quebec, which was passed in June.
Maple Leaf confirmed source of deadly Canada meat
TORONTO (Reuters) - A food poisoning outbreak that has killed four Canadians and sickened at least 21 others has been genetically linked to meat produced at a plant owned by Maple Leaf Foods Inc, authorities said on Saturday. The company, one of Canada's biggest meat processors, had been considered the likely source of the deli-style meat that had been contaminated by listeria bacteria.
RBC may reach ARS deal with regulators: report
TORONTO (Reuters) - Royal Bank of Canada
Oil falls 5.4 percent in biggest drop since 2004
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Crude oil prices fell more than 5.4 percent on Friday in the biggest one-day slide since 2004 as dealers turned their focus to rising supply levels and weakening global demand. A rebound in the U.S. dollar encouraged the sell-off, applying downward pressure across the commodities markets by weakening the purchasing power of buyers using other currencies, dealers said.
Toronto stocks fall on weaker oil, metals prices
TORONTO (Reuters) - Toronto stocks finished a strong week on a losing note on Friday, retreating on the back of sagging oil and metals prices, with losses offset partly by stronger financial issues. A 5.4 percent drop in oil prices -- the biggest drop since 2004 -- yanked the TSX's heavily-weighted energy subgroup down 2.35 percent, while weaker prices for metals such as copper and gold dragged the materials group down 2.34 percent.
Canada dollar falls as oil prices ease, bonds drop
TORONTO (Reuters) - The Canadian dollar ended lower against the U.S. dollar on Friday, given a weaker commodity price backdrop, but the big gains it made on Thursday were enough to allow it to close higher for the week. Domestic bond prices, with no economic data to trigger a move, finished lower across the curve alongside the bigger U.S. Treasury market as U.S. stocks rose sharply.
Harvest looks huge, but quality unclear
WINNIPEG, Manitoba (Reuters) - Canadian farmers are poised to harvest about 27 percent more wheat this year and a record crop of canola, Statistics Canada said Friday in its first estimate of 2008 grain production. But farmers and traders are anxiously watching to see how weather affects the quality of harvest, which has just begun in the Prairie grain belt, one of the world's largest grain-exporting regions.
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