Jumat, 15 November 2019

CN Rail slashes jobs as weakening economy cuts into freight volumes - CBC.ca

Canadian National Railway Co. is confirming job cuts as it deals with a weakening North American economy that has eroded demand for railroad transportation.

The company, whose headquarters are in Montreal, said it is "adjusting its resources to demand" but wouldn't say how many people will be affected.

It said some employees will be placed on furlough, and there will be reductions in both management and union job numbers.

In October, Canada's largest railroad operator cut its adjusted earnings per share outlook percentage for 2019 to the high single digits, down from predictions of low double-digit growth.

Freight volumes came in below expectations in the third quarter, and manufacturing has also fallen off, it said.

CN Rail also said it was affected by a slowdown in the British Columbia forestry sector, where high log prices and dwindling timber supply have prompted shutdowns or curtailments in more than two dozen mills, and due to the weather-delayed grain crop on the Prairies.

"As explained during CN's Q3 results, the company is adjusting its resources to demand," said spokesperson Alexandre BoulĂ©, in a statement.

"This includes the difficult decision of adjusting its workforce to demand levels by placing some employees on furlough and reducing both management and union job numbers due to a weakening of many sectors of the economy. These adjustments have already started to take place across the network."



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November 16, 2019 at 04:23AM

Elizabeth May calls out Jason Kenney: ‘There is no planet called Alberta’ - Global News

Federal Green Party Leader Elizabeth May made her position on the western separation movement and Jason Kenney’s approach to climate change very clear while speaking in Ottawa on Friday.

May was answering media questions following her meeting with Justin Trudeau, as the prime minister tries to find common ground with opposition leaders.

The Liberals will return to Parliament in December with a minority government, where the Green party will hold three seats in the House. Alberta will be represented by 33 Conservative MPs and one New Democrat MP.

READ MORE: Tory blue wave sweeps Alberta, Saskatchewan, bringing challenges with Liberal minority

May was asked about anger in the west and the separation movement.

“Jason Kenney and western separatists will have to recognize there is no planet called Alberta.

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“They can separate — which I don’t think they will and I don’t think there’s much appetite for — but we’re all on the same planet,” May said.

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“The biosphere is going to go into meltdown. Alberta is not exempt. Alberta’s already experienced the Fort McMurray wildfires; Alberta’s already experienced the Calgary floods; Alberta is experiencing the rapid retreat of glaciers.”

READ MORE: Green Party wins historic 3 seats in election dominated by climate change

May said there is power in taking an honest and science-based approach to climate change, saying that’s what earned her party one million votes from Canadians across the country.

“We have got to really talk to other premiers who don’t grasp this in a way that respects their intelligence — Jason Kenney is plenty intelligent, so he has to be able to understand the science,” she said. “The discussions have to be grounded in, ‘What does this mean if we continue down the path that says fossil fuels have an economic future?’

“Fossil fuels have no economic future and they are a threat to our survival. We have to go off fossil fuels.”

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READ MORE: Climate change plays ‘major role’ in wildfires, study shows. But Alberta’s premier says it’s ‘complex’

“This is not the first time that economies has had to face this in Canada,” she said, citing the shutdown of asbestos mines in Quebec.

“Economically, that was the reason the federal government defended asbestos for decades after we knew it was a killer.”

In a statement from the premier’s office, a spokesperson for Kenney said it seems May has “difficulty understanding some basic facts.”

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“Economic projections from around the world show that the demand for oil is increasing, not decreasing, and is expected to so for years to come,” Christine Myatt said. “Further, once global demand peaks, it is still expected to consume more than 110 million barrels of oil per day.

“So the question is not about the economic future of oil, it’s about where will the world be getting the energy products to meet its demand.

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“They can choose Alberta, a province in the liberal democracy of Canada, that has already reduced carbon intensity by 29 per cent since 2000 and is expected to reduce by another 20 per cent in the short term, where oil producers like MEG and CNRL have committed to 0 net emissions by 2040, or they can get it from OPEC dictatorships and places like Russia and Venezuela who continue to have deplorable records on human rights and environmental standards.

“To us, and to most Albertans, and indeed Canadians, the choice is clear,” Myatt wrote.

READ MORE: Diversifying Alberta’s energy sector top of mind on the campaign trail

In a speech to the Canadian Association of Oilwell Drilling Contractors, Kenney reiterated his government’s support of the industry.

“At least here in Alberta, you have a government that has your back, that will fight without relent for the future of the women and men who work in Alberta’s oil and gas sector,” the premier said.

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“I also want you to understand that we are not isolated. We are not alone. We have the significant majority of the provinces and territories in Canada who agree with us on the urgent need for responsible resource development,” Kenney said in the speech, which was shared on his Facebook page.

READ MORE: If Wexit were to happen, Alberta would top in greenhouse gas emissions per capita

May said she spoke with Trudeau about some ways to address frustration in Western Canada and some things the federal government could do to address western alienation.

New Alberta separation group meets in Calgary
New Alberta separation group meets in Calgary

“I think it would be useful to add up all the federal subsidies that went to creating the oilsands in the first place so that it’s very clear to Albertans that this is not just a project of their own government or their own industry, but was massively subsidized by the federal taxpayer.

“We’re in this together, in other words,” May added. “We have a lot of toxic liabilities from abandoned and orphaned wells.

READ MORE: ‘Ticking time bomb:’ Alberta group wants aging oil wells to be election issue

“They [Alberta governments] have to carry these liabilities on the books. I did suggest to the prime minister that there might be a role for the federal government in the cleanup of toxic sites which would have an immediate impact on helping the budget of the province of Alberta.”

© 2019 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.



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November 16, 2019 at 03:41AM

Pot companies reel from week of bloodletting as darker clouds loom - Article - BNN - BNNBloomberg.ca

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It was one of the worst weeks for the legal cannabis sector since pot became legal in Canada.

After more than a dozen Canadian-based pot companies reported quarterly results over the past five days, it became increasingly clear the risks that had faced the industry have manifested themselves, resulting in what one analyst described as a “bloodletting.” A lack of legal retail stores, notably in Ontario, combined with a glut of cannabis held by provincial wholesalers and a decline in prices, led to a series of disappointments for investors.

The results were staggering: Half of those companies - including leading producers Canopy Growth Corp. and Aurora Cannabis Inc. - reported sequential revenue declines, and no publicly-traded company was immune from a broad investor selloff in the space. The top five cannabis companies on the market – Canopy, Aurora, Aphria Inc., Tilray Inc., and Cronos Group Inc. – saw a total of $5 billion in market capitalization disappear, according to Bloomberg data.

“What you’ve seen is a market that is uncertain on where to go from here,” said Michael Singer, executive chairman of Aurora Cannabis, in an interview with BNN Bloomberg.

Analysts widely believe that the worst isn’t over, despite the upcoming launch of next-generation cannabis products in December. Pot companies are betting ‘cannabis 2.0’ will bring greater revenues than what the gains they have seen in the first year of legalization.

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Het Shah, managing director for New Leaf Data Services, a cannabis data consultancy, said that the major producers’ results show that cannabis consumption in Canada is not keeping pace with the accelerated growth in supply. Shah told BNN Bloomberg in an interview the total amount of cannabis produced in the quarter by the big four producers reporting this week - Tilray, Cronos, Aurora, and Canopy – rose nearly 20 per cent, while sales volumes only increased 5.6 per cent.

“This makes us believe that more product is being pushed to storage and eventually will have to be written down,” Shah said.

Nearly every cannabis producer cited lack of physical pot shops - 24 to date - as not providing nearly enough real estate space to meet consumer demand in the country’s biggest marijuana market. Canopy Growth Chief Executive Officer Mark Zekulin said he assumes Ontario will open up the licensing process as early as January and expects 40 new stores will open their doors per month, despite no such announcement having yet been made by the provincial government.

“We truly believe the challenges faced here in Canada are short term. Stores will come. Cannabis 2.0 will come. Provincial accumulated inventory is getting to the right spot,” Zekulin said in a phone interview with BNN Bloomberg. “If we’re a little bit delayed, through adjustments we’ll still be able to meet our objectives.”

However, even if store licences were granted at a quicker pace, it still wouldn’t justify some of the valuations major pot companies are trading at, according to Rahul Sarugaser, an analyst at Raymond James.

“The Canadian market is not big enough to warrant the valuations, particularly of the big five [producers],” Sarugaser said in a phone interview with BNN Bloomberg. “These multi-billion dollar valuations cannot lean on just the Canadian market.”

To keep cannabis flowing to consumers while competing with a still-thriving black market, producers have drastically lowered the price of their pot. Both Tilray and Cronos have slashed their price-per-gram by almost half, while Village Farms International Inc. - a produce maker which has quickly emerged as a leading low-cost producer of cannabis - slashed wholesale prices from $4 to $2 per gram in its latest quarter.

Zekulin said Canopy pays close attention to consumer behaviour and pricing, noting the company just launched its value brand called “Twd.” However, he stated there could be some “artificial impact“ caused by the retail shortfall in Ontario that may be skewing the price of cannabis on the open market.

“We’re not in a growing demand situation,” he said. “It’s hard to draw conclusions on medium-to-long-term pricing based on that.”

Ashley Chiu, a manager at Ernst & Young who specializes in the cannabis sector, said that licensed producers likely took advantage of the jubilation at the onset of legalization last year and were able to convince wholesalers to let them set prices much higher than what the black market offered.

“Given the shortage of legal products at the time, producers may have been able to get away with that,” Chiu said in a phone interview with BNN Bloomberg. “Now, these prices are coming down as a function of supply and demand.”

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With a disastrous third quarter in the books, some analysts are now coming up with cannabis company “dead pools” to identify which companies will still be around in another year. Mackie Research said in a recent research report that 21 out of 50 publicly-traded cannabis companies the firm analyzed have less than six months of cash left to burn. One industry consultant who declined to be named given their involvement in the sector said they expect 30 to 40 per cent of pot companies will soon become distressed, go bankrupt or be acquired by another company.

Sarugaser goes even further, saying the next five years will see only eight cannabis companies account for 80 per cent of the market, while the remaining 20 per cent will be shared among niche craft producers.

“We’re going to see massive consolidation and attrition over the next five years,” he said.

Cannabis Canada is BNN Bloomberg’s in-depth series exploring the stunning formation of the entirely new – and controversial – Canadian recreational marijuana industry. Read more from the special series here and subscribe to our Cannabis Canada newsletter to have the latest marijuana news delivered directly to your inbox every day. 



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November 16, 2019 at 03:07AM

Stocks- S&P 500 Soars to 6th Weekly Gain By - Investing.com

© Reuters. © Reuters.

Investing.com – Stocks surged Friday setting new closing and intraday highs, as investors cheered decent economic news and were relieved when the White House said trade negotiations with China were progressing.

The , up 0.8%, closed at a record 28,005, as it finished with its fourth-weekly gain in a row. The , up 0.77%, finished higher for a sixth-straight week. The rose 0.73% and finished higher for a seventh-straight week.

All three indexes, plus the Index and the , saw new intraday highs as well.

For the year, the is up 24.5%, with the up 20% and the Nasdaq up 28.7%. The market has spent much of 2019 recovering from the slump that hit stocks in the fourth quarter of 2018. The major averages are well on track to see their biggest one-year gains since 2013.

There was a downside to the market rally. The relative strength indexes for the S&P 500, Dow and Nasdaq all topped 70, a level that is a warning the market could be overbought and vulnerable to a pullback.

A host of stocks hit all-time intraday highs during the day, including Apple (NASDAQ:), Microsoft (NASDAQ:), paint-maker Sherwin-Williams (NYSE:), Google parent Alphabet (NASDAQ:), Applied Materials (NASDAQ:), Walmart (NYSE:) and Walt Disney (NYSE:).

The catalysts on the day were assurances from White House economic advisor Larry Kudlow late Thursday that negotiations on a U.S.-Chinese trade deal were progressing. President Donald Trump, however, has not yet assented to the terms.

China is balking about agreeing to a dollar amount of purchases of U.S. farm products. It also wants tariffs set for the December rescinded.

Meanwhile, the government said retail sales for October were up 0.3%, a solid, if not great showing after a decline in September. The report helped many investors put away their fears of a recession.

A downside on the economy was that industrial production fell 0.8%, its third monthly decline in a row. Most economists see that as a function of the trade fight.

Health, industrial and technology stocks powered the market, especially the Dow.

Oil prices moved higher, as did interest rates.

The rose to 1.834%, from Thursday's 1.815%. The yield is 8.66% higher for the month but off 5.7% for the week.

crude moved up 95 cents to $57.72 a barrel, a six-week high. crude, the global benchmark, gained $1.02 to $63.30.

Gold fell $4.90 an ounce to $1,468.50 an ounce in New York, as investors looked to put money in stocks and related assets. Gold rose 0.4% on the week but is down 3.1% so far in November.

Applied Materials (NASDAQ:), health-insurance giants Anthem (NYSE:) and Humana (NYSE:) and managed-care company Centene (NYSE:) were among the top performers in the .

Electric-utility company CenterPoint Energy (NYSE:), appliance maker Whirlpool (NYSE:), seed-and-agricultural chemical company Corteva Inc (NYSE:) and chemical giant DuPont (NYSE:) were among the S&P 500 giants.



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November 16, 2019 at 04:56AM

US official signals first-phase China talks in final, hardest steps - BNNBloomberg.ca

White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow said negotiations over the first phase of a trade agreement with China were coming down to the final stages, with the two sides in close contact.

 Speaking after an event at the Council on Foreign Relations late Thursday in Washington, Kudlow told reporters that a deal was close though “not done yet.” President Donald Trump’s top trade advisers met on Thursday evening to discuss the China talks, said Kudlow, who heads Trump’s National Economic Council.

“We are coming down to the short strokes,” Kudlow said. “We are in communication with them every single day right now.”

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Robert Lighthizer (Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg)

The two sides have held working-level video conferences in recent days focused on issues ranging from the details and time line of Chinese purchases of U.S. agricultural goods such as pork and soybeans to commitments to curtail theft of intellectual property that Trump is demanding from China, according to people familiar with the discussions.

A U.S. demand that China spell out how it plans to reach as much as US$50 billion in agricultural imports annually has been one sticking point as have discussions over what action the U.S. will take to roll back tariffs in return for a phase one deal, people familiar said. China has reiterated its position that removing existing tariffs is a precondition of reaching a deal.

Still, both sides have sent signals that they are intent on an agreement. China has resumed significant purchases of U.S. farm exports since Trump first announced plans for the phase one deal Oct. 11. On Thursday, Beijing also lifted a ban on American poultry that began in 2015, after the U.S. Department of Agriculture made a similar decision to allow Chinese poultry into the U.S.

“This is great news for both America’s farmers and China’s consumers,” Robert Lighthizer, the U.S. trade representative leading the discussions with China, said in a statement after the lifting of the Chinese ban was announced. The government estimates American producers will be able to export more than US$1 billion worth of poultry to China annually, he said.

Separately, Kudlow said the president had not yet made a decision on whether to impose -- or delay, as many expect -- new auto tariffs on imported cars and parts from the European Union. The president received a report from Lighthizer’s office and “he is considering it”, Kudlow said.



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November 16, 2019 at 12:39AM

Taking stock: Hong Kong's investors feel the heat of protests - Aljazeera.com

Hong Kong, China -  Like many people in Hong Kong, Daisy Chan checks her stocks dozens of times every day. Over the past few months, as violent anti-government protests plunged Hong Kong into a major crisis, the stay-at-home mother continued to invest and kept a close eye on the stock market. 

And until this week, her investments in stocks have held up surprisingly well in the face of widespread social unrest. 

All that changed on Monday. The mounting violence sent stocks tumbling as investors worried that the economy of the Asian financial hub would go from bad to worse.

"I think the situation could potentially turn very bad, very quickly, so I am paying close attention to the news every day," Chan told Al Jazeera, noting that she is adopting various strategies to limit her losses, which she said had amounted to "tens of thousands" of Hong Kong dollars ($1 in United States currency is equivalent to roughly 7.8 Hong Kong dollars) at one point earlier in the year.

Since the protests - initially against a proposed and subsequently withdrawn extradition bill - turned violent in June, Hong Kong's benchmark stock index, the Hang Seng Index (HSI), has fallen nearly eight percent. 

From a recent peak last Thursday, $77.5bn worth of market value has been wiped off the stocks on the HSI, according to data provider Refinitiv.

The violence escalated this week as protesters brought their actions to the city's key business districts, blocking roads and paralysing public transport for three straight days during peak commuting times. 

On Monday morning, a protester was shot in the stomach. Hours later, a man was set on fire, seemingly for expressing anti-protest views. A police spokesman issued a warning during a briefing on Tuesday, saying that Hong Kong society "has been pushed to the brink of a total breakdown". 

The months of unrest have hit Hong Kong's economy hard. The city is already in a recession, its tourism  industry is reeling and its infamously high real estate prices - which have long been a source of discontent - have wobbled.

And all this is happening while China battles against US import tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars of its goods, many of which pass through Hong Kong on their way out of China.

"From large corporates to small stalls, all have experienced the pressure brought by this 'economic typhoon'," Hong Kong Financial Secretary Paul Chan wrote in a blog post in August, referring to the US-China trade war.

A turning point?

Until this week, the trade war has had more of a bearing on the movements of the HSI than local events, analysts say. Most of the 50 companies on the stock-market index are either mainland Chinese or overseas companies, with little exposure to Hong Kong's domestic economy.

But as the protests have escalated in violence, moving to the centre of Hong Kong from its peripheries, and continuing during the working week rather than at the weekend, investors appear to have finally taken note of the violence on their doorsteps.

The HSI fell 2.6 percent on Monday, its worst one-day performance in three months, and continued falling on Tuesday and Wednesday.

A still image from a social media video shows a police officer aiming his gun at a protester in Sai Wan Ho, Hong Kong, China November 11, 2019. CUPID PRODUCER via REUTERS

A still image from a social media video shows a police officer aiming his gun at a protester in Hong Kong's Sai Wan Ho district [November 11: Social media via Reuters]

"There is no sign the protests will end any time soon and the recent escalation in violence was cited as the major headwind for Hong Kong stocks on Monday," said Philip Ho, director of BCP Investment Ltd. "I think the Hang Seng Index is underperforming mostly because of the ongoing unrest."

Even though mom-and-pop investors like Daisy Chan only contributed to around 16 percent of the stock exchange's trading volume last year - the rest mostly coming from large institutions - the market is something of an obsession for many of Hong Kong's people. 

While default topics of discussion may centre around food, the weather or sports in other cultures, in Hong Kong, it's the latest company gossip that fills many a lull. Taxi drivers trade stocks on their smartphones while stopped at red lights and senior citizens gather at neighbourhood bank branches to keep an eye on trading screens. 

As such, a prolonged decline in share prices could severely hurt many ordinary people, even if it hasn't started to do so yet.

"I guess people are not panic selling," Chan said. "I am closely monitoring the situation, but I am not selling too many of my stocks at the moment other than doing some fine-tuning." 

"I thought my investment in stocks in Hong Kong were safe," she added.

Many investors with far larger portfolios than Chan's are also bracing for an extended period of uncertainty.

"The worse thing is, I don't think anyone could say for sure just how bad the whole thing could end," Chin Ka Fei, executive director at YF Financial, told Al Jazeera. "The differences in values between the protesters and the government are just too huge."

'Reborn from the ashes'

But some companies looking to raise funds on the Hong Kong market are betting that the city will survive as one of the world's top financial centres in the long term.

In the first two weeks of September, eight companies filed applications for initial public offerings (IPOs) in Hong Kong. On September 30, Budweiser Brewing Company APAC, a unit of beer giant Anheuser-Busch InBev, launched a $5bn IPO, the second largest in the world this year.

Hong Kong protest

Despite the protests and the US-China trade war, some companies are still choosing to make their initial public offerings on the Hong Kong stock exchange [Tyrone Siu/Reuters]

And after several delays, mainland Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba is reportedly getting set to launch a roadshow for an IPO in Hong Kong that could be worth as much as $15bn. This would be Alibaba's second listing - the company's shares already trade in New York City - and by far the world's largest IPO this year, with the possible exception of Saudi Arabia's state oil company, Saudi Aramco. 

A spokesman for Alibaba declined to comment to Al Jazeera on the reports.

"Hong Kong has been rocked by many crises before, such as the Star Ferry riots in 1966, the SARS [severe acute respiratory syndrome] epidemic in 2003 and the global financial crisis in 2008, but the city recovered strongly, and I am confident this time it will be the same," Andy Chan, a director at accountancy firm Zhonghui ANDA CPA, told Al Jazeera. "Things will be affected in the short term, yes. But Hong Kong will be reborn from the ashes like a phoenix, I have no doubt of that."



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November 14, 2019 at 04:17AM

FDA issues warning to Dollar Tree about selling ‘potentially unsafe drugs’ - WJW FOX 8 News Cleveland

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FDA issues warning to Dollar Tree about selling ‘potentially unsafe drugs’  WJW FOX 8 News ClevelandView full coverage on Google News
https://fox8.com/2019/11/15/fda-issues-warning-to-dollar-tree-about-selling-potentially-unsafe-drugs/

2019-11-15 11:44:00Z
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