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- Selected: National Balance Sheet Accounts (4)
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All (4) ((4 results))
- Articles and reports: 13-605-X202100100003Description:
COVID-19's impact on the economy was far reaching. Canadian businesses borrowed money form multiple sources to help guide them through the pandemic. Using data derived from the National Economic Accounts Division, Bank of Canada, and International Accounts and Trade Division this paper examines trends observed in the business debt financing market leading up to and during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Release date: 2021-07-26 - Stats in brief: 11-001-X202120730803Description: Release published in The Daily – Statistics Canada’s official release bulletinRelease date: 2021-07-26
- Journals and periodicals: 11-010-XGeography: CanadaDescription:
This monthly periodical is Statistics Canada's flagship publication for economic statistics. Each issue contains a monthly summary of the economy, major economic events and a feature article. A statistical summary contains a wide range of tables and graphs on the principal economic indicators for Canada, the provinces and the major industrial nations. A historical listing of this same data is contained in the Canadian economic observer: historical supplement (Catalogue no. 11-210-XPB and XIB).
Release date: 2012-06-15 - 4. Recent Trends in Corporate Finance: Some Evidence from the Canadian System of National Accounts ArchivedArticles and reports: 13-604-M2006050Description:
Corporations have been posting record profits over much of the last decade. Meanwhile, business fixed capital investment has been relatively sluggish in recent years. This situation has led to a significant shift in the corporate sectors' net lending/borrowing position - from one of a chronic deficit position to one of sustained surplus. After having run deficits for almost 30 years, corporations have emerged with significant surplus positions in the last decade. This has placed the corporate sector in a new role - that of increasingly supplying funds to the rest of the economy.
This note looks at this development from a few angles, focusing on non-financial corporations. It identifies the underlying causes for, and the major effects of, the development of an expanding corporate surplus position. In short, non-financial corporations have taken advantage of record profits, historically low interest rates and relatively buoyant stock markets to substantially re-structure their balance sheets. It has reached the point where corporate finances, in aggregate, are the healthiest they have been in the last thirty years.
Release date: 2006-03-17
Stats in brief (1)
Stats in brief (1) ((1 result))
- Stats in brief: 11-001-X202120730803Description: Release published in The Daily – Statistics Canada’s official release bulletinRelease date: 2021-07-26
Articles and reports (2)
Articles and reports (2) ((2 results))
- Articles and reports: 13-605-X202100100003Description:
COVID-19's impact on the economy was far reaching. Canadian businesses borrowed money form multiple sources to help guide them through the pandemic. Using data derived from the National Economic Accounts Division, Bank of Canada, and International Accounts and Trade Division this paper examines trends observed in the business debt financing market leading up to and during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Release date: 2021-07-26 - 2. Recent Trends in Corporate Finance: Some Evidence from the Canadian System of National Accounts ArchivedArticles and reports: 13-604-M2006050Description:
Corporations have been posting record profits over much of the last decade. Meanwhile, business fixed capital investment has been relatively sluggish in recent years. This situation has led to a significant shift in the corporate sectors' net lending/borrowing position - from one of a chronic deficit position to one of sustained surplus. After having run deficits for almost 30 years, corporations have emerged with significant surplus positions in the last decade. This has placed the corporate sector in a new role - that of increasingly supplying funds to the rest of the economy.
This note looks at this development from a few angles, focusing on non-financial corporations. It identifies the underlying causes for, and the major effects of, the development of an expanding corporate surplus position. In short, non-financial corporations have taken advantage of record profits, historically low interest rates and relatively buoyant stock markets to substantially re-structure their balance sheets. It has reached the point where corporate finances, in aggregate, are the healthiest they have been in the last thirty years.
Release date: 2006-03-17
Journals and periodicals (1)
Journals and periodicals (1) ((1 result))
- Journals and periodicals: 11-010-XGeography: CanadaDescription:
This monthly periodical is Statistics Canada's flagship publication for economic statistics. Each issue contains a monthly summary of the economy, major economic events and a feature article. A statistical summary contains a wide range of tables and graphs on the principal economic indicators for Canada, the provinces and the major industrial nations. A historical listing of this same data is contained in the Canadian economic observer: historical supplement (Catalogue no. 11-210-XPB and XIB).
Release date: 2012-06-15
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