Labour shortage, pandemic savings to soften blow of short-lived recession: report
Deloitte predicts 6% unemployment, technical recession
- By: Nojoud Al Mallees, Canadian Press
- September 28, 2022 September 28, 2022
- 11:52
Deloitte predicts 6% unemployment, technical recession
The lifeco is expanding its Vitality program to universal life and par policies
European regulators warn industry to pay special attention to inflation in disclosure and suitability
Majority of active managers outperformed in first half of 2022, S&P reports
Wellington-Altus adds Todd Ferguson to leadership team
Registrant Advisory Committee calls for new members
Proposals would allow fund managers to post financial statements and management reports on designated websites
The financing will be put toward expansion, the firm said
Authorities allege crypto firm traded securities without registration
The exchange will shut down TSX NAVEx at the end of this year
SEC, DoJ allege that market manipulation drove penny stock to outlandish valuation
Rents are still 12.9% higher than levels seen before the Covid pandemic
They rose 2.3% in 2025, while business insolvencies fell by 21.8%
Precious metals action calms, while Dow Jones tops 50K
Unique provision aims to balance interests, provide greater certainty
Agency seeks feedback on new due diligence standards, enforcement
Regulators flag retail investor issues, market structure, resilience for 2026
187 mutual funds, 117 ETFs and 114 seg funds were recognized
GoSmart targets newer investors, excludes mutual funds, GICs, bonds, options
Plus, GreenShield buys Kii Health's Canadian mental health services segment
Plus, moves at Our Family Office, Harvest ETFs, Manulife Wealth, Canada Life and more
Plus, Wellington-Alus Private Counsel and Ninepoint Partners add new talent
Also, moves at Mackenzie Investments, Edward Jones Canada and the CSA
Plus, National Bank changes diversified equity fund
Net monthly ETF inflows reach $22B in January: report
Plus, other firms launch new products, tweak their fund lineups