World Bank forecasts commodity prices to remain high through end of 2024
The war in Ukraine has led to the largest commodity shock since the 1970s
- By: The Canadian Press
- April 26, 2022 April 26, 2022
- 12:25
The war in Ukraine has led to the largest commodity shock since the 1970s
Inflation and the war in Ukraine may curb consumer spending this year
Testing this spring will include product comparisons, client onboarding
Margin, earnings boost to be offset by asset and credit quality deterioration, Moody's says
Private assets, systemic leverage added to performance
"Inflation is too high," Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem said
The expected amount to pay for a house increased by $100K since last year, a BMO survey says
Eligible seniors would receive up to $1,000 more annually
Life expectancy changes may reshape policy decisions
FSRA strikes deal for core assets of troubled firm
Mutual fund sales weak, but assets, ETF sales stay solid, IFIC reports
Crime controls, client checks deficient at "challenger" banks, the British bank regulator warns
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
GoSmart targets newer investors, excludes mutual funds, GICs, bonds, options
Plus, GreenShield buys Kii Health's Canadian mental health services segment
The honours will be presented Feb. 12, at the association's Embrace the Challenge event
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