Junior oilsands developer Laricina Energy has been granted a final court order from the Court of Queen’s Bench of Alberta, exiting from protection under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act (Canada), Oilweek reported. The company has paid in full all accounts in respect of its CCAA proceedings and has set aside a reserve of $1.8 million to pay the remaining unpaid proven claims and outstanding disputed claim. Resolution of the disputed claim will continue on a timetable set by the parties or the court.
Read more
Resources Per Country
- Anguilla
- Bahamas
- Barbados
- Belize
- Bermuda
- British Virgin Islands
- Canada
- Cayman Islands
- Costa Rica
- Cuba
- Dominica
- Dominican Republic
- El Salvador
- Grenada
- Guadeloupe
- Guatemala
- Haiti
- Honduras
- Jamaica
- Mexico
- Montserrat
- Netherlands Antilles
- Nicaragua
- Panama
- Puerto Rico
- Saint Kitts and Nevis
- Saint Lucia
- Trinidad and Tobago
- Turks and Caicos Islands
- United States
- United States Virgin Islands
The uncertain future of Baha Mar, a $3.5 billion mega-resort nearing completion on Nassau’s white-sand Cable Beach, points to the challenges China faces as it finances and builds large-scale construction projects overseas amid language and cultural barriers, lack of regulation and allegations of graft. “The more problems there are and, in a way, the more media attention these problems attract, they erode positive attitudes towards Chinese presence in the region,” said Ariel C.
Read more
I refer, of course, to the 2007 takeover of Stelco, just one of a spree of foreign takeovers that substantially contributed to a diminishment of Ontario’s profile on the world economic stage, the Toronto Star reported. (Think Falconbridge, Inco, Rio Algom.) At the height of the foreign takeover mania, the federal government of the day offered repeated assurances that the Investment Canada Act provided all the protections necessary to ensure such transactions would be of “net benefit” to Canada. In remaking Stelco into U.S.
Read more
A Calgary-based oilfield services company with 112 employees at six locations as of the end of 2014 has been placed in receivership, an apparent victim of the current drilling downturn prompted by low oil and gas prices, The Calgary Herald reported. Great Prairie Energy Services Inc. announced late Friday that Grant Thornton Ltd. had been appointed receiver by the Court of Queen’s Bench and that all of its directors and officers had resigned.
Read more
Policy makers at the Bank of Canada were leaning toward another rate cut when they began their deliberations ahead of Wednesday’s rate announcement, but ultimately decided to stand pat, Governor Stephen Poloz said, The Wall Street Journal reported. The central bank held the key rate at 0.5% after considering expectations for future government stimulus spending and the risks associated with the recent plunge in the value of the Canadian dollar, Mr. Poloz said.
Read more
Canadian policy makers are heading into a tough week as pressure mounts on them to revive an economy that has been among the hardest hit by the commodity rout, The Wall Street Journal reported. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his cabinet colleagues will convene in a seaside resort town on Canada’s east coast Monday amid more evidence growth may have stalled again after sputtering to life in last year’s third quarter. A recent string of dismal economic news—and a free-falling Canadian dollar—has led to calls for Mr.
Read more
Parties seeking a chunk of the $7 billion raised from the liquidation of former telecommunications giant Nortel Networks started talks on Thursday aimed at ending one of the most complex and costly legal disputes in history, Reuters reported. The money has been sitting in a New York bank account since Nortel Networks global businesses were sold piecemeal after the Ontario-based company filed for bankruptcy exactly seven years ago.
Read more
The quiet is almost spooky here on the outskirts of Nassau, where the waterscape frills of nearby Paradise Island give way to the vast ghost-resort that is Baha Mar, Bloomberg News reported. Just how the place ended up like this -- in a bankruptcy so colossal that it’s jeopardizing the Bahamas’s credit rating -- is the biggest business story to hit this Caribbean nation for as long as anyone here can remember. It stretches far beyond the white beaches and across time zones, to none other than the State Council of China.
Read more
Cuba has reached a deal with its creditors where the county will pay $2.6 billion in arrears over an 18-year period while $4 billion of its debt will be forgiven, The Wall Street Journal reported. The deal comes after months of negotiations between the Communist nation and the Paris Club, an informal group of developed creditor nations. The talks stem from Cuba’s lingering $16 billion debt which it defaulted in 1986.
Read more
Champion Iron Mine said Friday it will buy a Quebec iron ore mine for C$10.5 million ($7.65 million), just a sliver of the C$4.9 billion that Cliffs Natural Resources paid in 2011, when metal prices surged on booming Chinese demand, Reuters reported. The downturn in bulk commodities allowed Champion to negotiate a "competitive" bid, said Chief Executive Michael O'Keeffe in a statement, including C$10.5 million in cash, C$41.7 million for environmental reclamation and about C$1.1 million for bonds.
Read more