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...In the aftermath of the recent financial crisis, many efforts are under way to improve the ...
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The Statistics Canada figures show Manitoba had the second biggest year-over-year increase in wholesale sales among the country's 10 provinces. Its wholesalers shipped out $1.09 billion worth of goods during the month, which was an 8.6 per cent improvement over the previous August's total of $1 billion.
A senior Canadian finance department official said the causes of -- and the response to -- the recent financial market "crisis" will be the focus of talks at the annual IMF and World Bank meetings this weekend in Washington, at which there will also be meetings of the Group of Seven finance ministers and central bank governors, including Finance Minister Jim Flaherty and Bank of Canada governor David Dodge.
While the official refused to speculate on the outcome, it's expected that the me...
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... moving away from the global carbon market and towards local initiatives, such asregional car..., arrived at a global consensus on using financial measures to combat climate change. The Kyoto plan ... suggest, the hangover from the financial crisis, the global carbon market is showing signs of stal...
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I look at my portfolio like it's a chicken on a spit dripping cash. Everything has to pay me a dividend," O'[Leary] says. "I don't own stocks that don't pay dividends -- ever.
At the moment, however, green investing has become very unprofitable. "It's been sidestepped by the financial crisis, unemployment and other concerns in the market, so I don't think this is a great time to be investing in businesses that don't generate cash anymore," he says. "And unfortunately, experimental environmental technologies fall under that category." But at some point, green entrepreneurs and investors are going to have to step up. "If they don't, there won't be an environment."
Both [Dennis Gartman] and O'Leary are investment-industry bigwigs, and getting them to make private appearances isn't easy. ...
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... amendments to take into account financial institution accounting changes;. (c) extends the g... the financial system, including financial markets, in Canada. Division 2 of Part 5 amends the Canada... situations of international humanitarian crisis (resulting from either natural disaster or complex...
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I look at my portfolio like it's a chicken on a spit dripping cash. Everything has to pay me a dividend," O'[Leary] says. "I don't own stocks that don't pay dividends -- ever.
At the moment, however, green investing has become very unprofitable. "It's been sidestepped by the financial crisis, unemployment and other concerns in the market, so I don't think this is a great time to be investing in businesses that don't generate cash anymore," he says. "And unfortunately, experimental environmental technologies fall under that category." But at some point, green entrepreneurs and investors are going to have to step up. "If they don't, there won't be an environment."
Both [Dennis Gartman] and O'Leary are investment-industry bigwigs, and getting them to make private appearances isn't easy. ...
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At the end of the 20th century, Chinese-foreign cooperation in running schools has appeared. Especially after our country's accession to WTO, the development of Chinese-foreign cooperation in running schools has remarkably developed with a larger size appearance over time. As a result, the educational levels constantly improve and educational models increasingly diversify. However, with the profound development of Chinese-foreign cooperation in running schools, various new questions emerge. The existing researches have broad discussed and proposed some constructive strategies and suggestions. Thus, those researches concentrate on the existing problems in Chinese-foreign cooperation in running schools with specific regional observation and lack of general analysis.
... sovereign and opening the education market, open the field of service trade under some condit... of depression caused by global financial crisis, the excellent teaching quality and high-go...
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We are not talking about things that will bring down the financial system and it's more broadly dispersed than probably any other financial crisis we've had in the past 25 years.
In the late '90s, a derivatives market emerged that allowed banks to sell risk associated with loans without actually changing the ownership of the debt. As a result, clients could now essentially trade "risk" connected to different levels of corporate and subprime debt.
"We've had a four-year, really good bull market where people have made an obscene amount of money and a subprime market in the U.S. that was out of control, tied to a credit derivatives market that has never been tested in any kind of crisis," she said.
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...The stock market crash of 1987 and the Asian (and later, the world)) financial crisis of 1997 and 1998 led some of the most augus...
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[Jim Flaherty] refused to "speculate" on fears the credit crunch could plunge the U.S. economy into a consumer-led recession.
But ... in none of these cases did the U.S. economy slip into a recession and there is no reason yet to expect it will this time," a summary of the report by TD senior economist Richard Kelly noted.
"This is no longer an issue about subprime mortgages, (or) the U.S. housing market ... this is a crisis of confidence in the financial system," it said, adding that explains why the global economy is "walking on eggshells.