The sale of Canada's largest English-language daily newspaper chain has attracted some of the country's financial heavyweights as potential suitors, the Financial Post reported. Among the shortlist of bidders for Canwest Limited Partnership, the newspaper division of Winnipeg-based Canwest Global Communications Corp., are Alberta Investment Management Corp.
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Europe moved ahead of the United States on Tuesday in advocating new measures to ban certain types of financial speculation after concerns surfaced that traders used complex financial instruments to push Greece deeper into a fiscal crisis and threaten the European economy, The Washington Post reported. The European Commission said it would back a proposal to restrict trading in a type of financial instrument, known as a credit default swap, that is linked to the prices of government and corporate debt.
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A day before he meets with President Obama, Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou on Monday called for "decisive and collective action" between Europe and the United States to curb the financial speculation believed by many to have exacerbated the debt crisis now hitting Greece and other financially troubled nations in Europe, The Washington Post reported. "Together with my European partners, we have taken a common initiative to strengthen financial regulation, particularly vis-a-vis speculation," Papandreou said, according to a copy of his speech.
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AbitibiBowater Inc. has struck a new deal with its main union that a labour leader says will help it stave off collapse as it prepares to file a plan by the end of the month to vault out of bankruptcy protection, The Vancouver Sun reported. The insolvent paper giant, which has been under creditor protection since last April, agreed to a tentative work agreement covering 8,000 workers with the Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union of Canada following arduous negotiations, the union said Sunday.
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General Motors of Canada Ltd. should match its parent company and reinstate some of the 240 dealerships that were terminated last year when the auto maker was struggling to stay out of bankruptcy protection in Canada, the Canadian Automobile Dealers Association (CADA) says, the Globe and Mail reported. General Motors Co. offered Friday to permit as many as 660 of the 2,000 U.S. dealers it terminated last year to set up shop again and its Canadian unit should follow suit, says CADA, which represents a total of about 3,000 new vehicle dealers in Canada.
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The owner of a British Columbia newspaper group has joined the bidding for bankrupt Canwest Global Communications Corp's newspaper assets, Reuters reported on a Globe and Mail story. The bid from David Black, founder of Black Press Ltd, will compete with offers from at least six other bidders for publications including Canwest's flagship National Post, the Ottawa Citizen and Montreal Gazette, the Globe report said. Platinum Equity LLC, a California private equity firm, is the most likely backer of Black's bid, the Globe reported, citing unnamed sources.
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Nortel Networks Corp said it received U.S. and Canadian court approval for the sale of its carrier Voice over Internet Protocol and application solutions business to Genband Inc for about $182 million, Reuters reported. The company received orders from the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware and the Ontario Superior Court of Justice approving the asset sale agreement with Genband, Nortel said in a statement.
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New Brunswick's finance minister is cautiously optimistic that a rescue plan can be found for the Atcon group of companies, the Winnipeg Free Press reported on a Canadian Press story. Greg Byrne says he is pleased a court-appointed monitor has been given two weeks to seek a solution to keep the Miramichi-based companies afloat. Scotiabank is seeking creditor protection for three of the Atcon group of companies and a receiver for the rest, but on Monday a judge appointed Ernst and Young Inc. to determine how, or if, the companies can be restructured or sold.
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Courts in Canada and the United States have rebuffed a British pension regulator's attempt to drag Nortel Networks Corp. into a separate legal battle in the United Kingdom over a multibillion-dollar claim, a Nortel lawyer said, allowing the company to focus on the liquidation of its global assets, The Globe and Mail reported. The British Pensions Regulator had been trying to argue a $3.4-billion claim on behalf of Nortel's 40,000-plus pensioners in the U.K., where Nortel's collapse triggered a pension crisis.
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A Gatineau newsprint mill followed its owner into bankruptcy protection Wednesday, the latest victim of hard times in the newspaper industry, The Ottawa Citizen reported. Papier Masson is one of three mills in Quebec and another in Virginia affected by the decision of White Birch Paper, the parent company, to seek protection from creditor suits in the U.S. and Canada. The Papier Masson mill, formerly owned by James Maclaren Industries and Noranda, had 195 employees when White Birch bought it in 2005.
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