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Big Banc Split Corp T.BNK

Alternate Symbol(s):  T.BNK.PR.A

The investment objectives for the Preferred Shares are to provide their holders with fixed cumulative preferential monthly cash distributions in the amount of $0.05 per Preferred Share ($0.60 per annum or 6.0% per annum on the issue price of $10.00 per Preferred Share) until November 30, 2023 (the Maturity Date) and to return the original issue price of $10.00 to holders on the Maturity Date. The Company will invest on an approximately equally-weighted basis in Portfolio Shares of the following publicly traded Canadian banks: Bank of Montreal; Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce; National Bank of Canada; Royal Bank of Canada; The Bank of Nova Scotia; and The Toronto-Dominion Bank. The Portfolio will generally be rebalanced on a quarterly basis, starting on September 30, 2020, so that as soon as practicable after each calendar quarter the Portfolio Shares will be held on an approximately equal weight basis.


TSX:BNK - Post by User

Post by nexthinkon Dec 08, 2015 6:07am
172 Views
Post# 24364096

Oil price slump: can it still fall further?- INTERESTING

Oil price slump: can it still fall further?- INTERESTING

The oil price broke lower again yesterday and set a new nadir for the year, at a level not seen since early 2009.

Opec's decision on Friday not to cut its production target - in fact to offer no certainty on a production ceiling at all - has shaken up traders.

The cartel appears in utter discord and comments from its president that it is in "wait and watch" mode until next year have convinced many it is no longer in control of the market.

As the market is awash with oil - onshore reserves are at record levels and tankers are queuing at ports in the US and Asia - this adds up to a very bearish case.

Throw in a rise in the already-mighty dollar on Monday, which makes oil more expensive for foreign buyers, and you have a recipe for a major sell-off.

International benchmark Brent Crude fell sharply in London and then by five per cent in New York, eventually reaching $40.75.

This is almost $2 below the near-six-year low it had reached in August. US benchmark West Texas Intermediate slumped to less than $38 a barrel. Can oil go lower?

The short answer is yes: analysts have been warning that we will not see a true bottom until Iran has re-entered the market and that, in the short term, any breach of key resistance at around $40 for WTI could presage a major crash.

The Times is this morning warning of an "all-out panic" that could trigger a "freefall" to previously forecast levels around $20 a barrel.

Euan Mearns, editor of OilPrice.com, also says there is "little in the numbers to hope that $40 may hold" and that $20 is a realistic possibility in the near future.

Patrick Pouyanne, the boss of French oil giant Total, told the BBC that oil supply would continue to outstrip demand until at least the second half of 2016, meaning that there would be no recovery in prices next year.

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