Canada

The receiver of Blockbuster Canada Co is seeking an order from the Ontario Superior Court to wind down the video rental company's operations and shut its 253 remaining retail stores, Reuters reported. Blockbuster Inc's Canadian unit, which used to operate nearly 400 stores in Canada, had filed for protection from a New York bankruptcy court in May, a month after its U.S. parent was acquired by Dish Network for $320 million.
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Hart Stores Inc. has obtained an initial order for court protection from creditors under the Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act, CanadianBusiness.com reported on a Canadian Press story. The company, which owns mid-sized department stores throughout Eastern Canada, said that the move will allow its locations to operate while it restructures. Hart Stores received approval from the Quebec Superior Court for protection under CCAA until Sept. 29, though extensions could be granted. RSM Richter Inc. was appointed as the monitor.
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BDO Canada Ltd. has acquired KPMG's consumer insolvency practice for an undisclosed price, making it one of the country's largest providers of such bankruptcy and credit counselling services, The Globe and Mail reported on a Canadian Press story. The integrated services — which offer trustees in consumer bankruptcy, proposal administrators and credit counsellors — began operating under the BDO Canada Ltd. name effective last Friday. BDO is the fifth-largest single national accounting and advisory partnership in Canada.
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Further clarity emerged this week as to what regulators will require from banks to make bank capital instruments compliant under Basel 3 when Canada released its rules on non-viability contingent capital, Reuters reported. However, while the release provided clues on how regulators will define non-viability, the implications for Europe are not obvious while current market conditions would make any issuance extremely difficult, if not impossible.
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Pensions A Hot Topic At CBA Conference

Changing demographics, increasingly vocal retirees, and the prospect of more companies finding themselves in trouble have all combined to create more interest than ever in pension law, a leading practitioner said this morning, the Canadian Lawyer Legal Feeds blog reported. “I have often marvelled myself at the interest in pension law,” Andrew Hatnay of Toronto’s Koskie Minsky LLP said at the Canadian Bar Association conference in Halifax.
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Nortel Networks Corp., which has been selling off all of its businesses under court protection from creditors, said Thursday it lost US$115 million in its latest quarter, the Winnipeg Free Press reported on a Canadian Press story. The former telecom hardware maker, which keeps its books in U.S. dollars, said the loss amounted to 23 cents per share in the quarter ended June 30 compared with a loss of $1.6 billion or $3.22 per share a year ago. Revenue totalled $1 million for the quarter compared with $145 million in the second quarter of 2010.
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The Canadian government ruled Tuesday its rules governing foreign investment don't apply in the $4.5 billion sale of patents belonging to Nortel Networks Corp, Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review reported. In a statement, Industry Minister Christian Paradis said the acquisition of 6,000 patents by a consortium primarily of giant foreign technology companies led by Apple Inc. and Sweden's Telefon AB L.M. Ericsson didn't trigger a government review because the book value of the assets was less than the C$312 million ($325 million) threshold established under Canadian law.
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A court has delayed a hearing that will decide whether Blockbuster Canada can legally use the brand name as it goes through receivership, The Canadian Press reported. The hearing had been scheduled for Wednesday, but has been bumped to July 26 in a New York City court. The new owner of Blockbuster USA, which did not buy Blockbuster Canada, says it does not want the Canadian retailer to use the name. The receiver in charge of selling Blockbuster Canada has argued that stripping the chain of that right would "devastate" business.
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