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Ontario says lender misappropriated funds and that CEO took payments

Eric Nuttall s Top Picks: April 30, 2021 Stocks pare biggest monthly rally since November Doing the right thing pays off for ethical investors How to build a portfolio that outperforms for a century Jaime Carrasco s Top Picks: April 29, 2021 Stephen Takacsy s Top Picks: April 28, 2021 Varun Anand s Top Picks: April 27, 2021 Tech weighs on U.S. stocks ahead of megacap earnings Jamie Murray s Top Picks: April 26, 2021 JPMorgan is preparing to offer a bitcoin fund to wealthy clients Biden to set US$1M threshold for capital gains tax hike Wall Street splits on dollar’s fate amid economic growth debate China’s biggest IPO this year looks to be in renewable power

Scandal rocks Bridging Finance as court puts PWC in control

Stocks pare gains as Nasdaq 100 drops; bonds rise Chasing red-hot profit growth is a recipe for stock-market pain Stocks that soared on COVID treatments are coming back to Earth Eric Nuttall s Top Picks: April 30, 2021 Stocks pare biggest monthly rally since November Doing the right thing pays off for ethical investors How to build a portfolio that outperforms for a century Jaime Carrasco s Top Picks: April 29, 2021 Stephen Takacsy s Top Picks: April 28, 2021 Varun Anand s Top Picks: April 27, 2021 Tech weighs on U.S. stocks ahead of megacap earnings Jamie Murray s Top Picks: April 26, 2021 JPMorgan is preparing to offer a bitcoin fund to wealthy clients

Canada to go big on budget spending as pandemic lingers, election looms

4 Min Read OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canada’s Liberal government will deliver on its promise to spend big when it presents its first budget in two years next week amid a fast-rising third wave of COVID-19 infections and ahead of an election expected in coming months. FILE PHOTO: Canada s Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance Chrystia Freeland speaks to news media before unveiling her first fiscal update, the Fall Economic Statement 2020, in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada November 30, 2020. REUTERS/Blair Gable/File Photo Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland has pledged to do “whatever it takes” to support Canadians, and in November promised up to C$100 billion ($79.8 billion) in stimulus over three years to “jump-start” an economic recovery in what is likely to be a crucial year for her party.

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