The parent company of Montreal’s Just For Laughs comedy festival, Groupe Juste Pour Rire Inc., has agreed to sell select assets as part of a court-directed bankruptcy protection, the Hollywood Reporter reported. Quebec City-based ComediHa! announced it picked up unspecified assets as part of a sale and solicitation process initiated Just for Laughs as it looks to restructure. The sales agreement awaits the approval of the Québec Superior Court, with a hearing set for June 3. Until that court date, both parties said they will not comment publicly on the proposed asset sale.
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An Ontario judge issued an order on Tuesday that recognizes and enforces Red Lobster’s U.S. bankruptcy protection proceedings in Canada, the Canadian Press reported. The order from Judge Michael Penny was requested by lawyers for the beleaguered seafood restaurant chain's Canadian business, who told a virtual court their client is working to steady its operations. "Everything we are trying to do today is to stabilize the business," said Linc Rogers, a lawyer representing Red Lobster Canada, Inc.
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While expectations for lower borrowing costs are building, it will take as long as three quarters for interest-rate cuts “to really bear fruit” for bank customers, according to a Bank of Nova Scotia executive, Bloomberg News reported. “There’s some talk about rate decreases in June and July,” Scotiabank Chief Risk Officer Phil Thomas said Tuesday on the lender’s fiscal second-quarter earnings call, referring to moves by the Bank of Canada.
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Canadian consumer spending sharply rebounded last month, according to preliminary data, after weaker-than-expected retail sales in the first quarter, Bloomberg News reported. Receipts for retailers jumped 0.7% in April, the fastest pace since September, according to the advance estimate from Statistics Canada released Friday. That followed a 0.2% drop in March. With a larger-than-forecast decline in March, retail sales were down 0.2% overall in the first quarter. Despite the April bounce, retail sales are still below levels seen in December.
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Canada’s banking watchdog warned that many homeowners who took out mortgages when rates were near zero during the pandemic will soon face a reckoning as those loans renew, Bloomberg News reported. The “payment shock” faced by some borrowers is among the most important risks currently in the financial system, according to the latest risk outlook from the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions, released Wednesday. The regulator said that 76% of outstanding residential mortgages as of February will be coming up for renewal by the end of 2026.
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Canada’s annual rate of core inflation eased for a fourth straight month, bolstering a case for policymakers to begin an easing cycle in the coming months, but a slight increase in the monthly pace may keep a June rate cut from being a certainty, Bloomberg News reported. The Bank of Canada’s two core inflation measures slowed in April to an average yearly pace of 2.75%, down from 3.05% a month earlier, Statistics Canada reported Tuesday in Ottawa. That’s slightly slower than the 2.8% expected in a Bloomberg survey of economists.
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Canadian business insolvencies have climbed to levels not seen since the financial crisis of 2008, driven by indebted companies struggling with interest rates and softened consumer demand. But even those official insolvency statistics don’t tell the full picture, according to a commentary in The Globe and Mail. Economists and professionals who work with small and medium-sized businesses warn that the actual number of businesses that fail is much higher, with other data suggesting the problem is growing.
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Aiden Pleterski, the self-proclaimed “Crypto King” who collected millions of dollars from investors, only to spend it on luxury goods, has been arrested on fraud charges in Canada, Bloomberg News reported. Pleterski, who lives in the Toronto suburb of Whitby, Ontario, was charged with fraud and laundering the proceeds of crime and held for a bail hearing, according to a statement Wednesday from the provincial securities regulator. Another man, Colin Murphy of Oshawa, Ontario, was charged with one count of fraud.
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The company that operates retailers Ted Baker, Lucky Brand and Brooks Brothers plans to close a number of stores in Canada and the U.S. after months of declining sales pushed the operations into insolvency proceedings, the Globe and Mail reported. Ted Baker Canada announced the launch of liquidation sales on Friday, covering nine out of 25 Ted Baker stores in Canada and all of the brand’s locations in the U.S. The sales also affect all Brooks Brothers and Lucky Brand stores in Canada. The company has shut down its e-commerce operations for the time being.
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Canada should take steps to introduce more mortgages with longer renewal terms, according to the country’s largest financial co-operative, Bloomberg News reported. More mortgage options, specifically those with 10-year terms, would help contain “payment shocks” faced by households when they renew their debt obligations after interest rates have increased, according to a report released Monday by Desjardins.
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