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Loblaw to compensate Bangladeshi factory collapse victims


Canadian grocer Loblaw laid out plans on Thursday to pay more compensation for the collapse of a Bangladeshi factory that killed almost 1,130 people, as protesters demanded other brands follow suit.

Manhattan to get first Teavana tea bar since Starbucks deal


Coffee pot, meet tea kettle.

Bank of Canada drops rate-hike talk amid slow recovery


The Bank of Canada abandoned on Wednesday an 18-month stretch of rate-hike talk in a dramatic policy shift that highlighted lower-than-expected growth and the risk of persistently weak inflation.

Court to decide if Detroit is really broke


In a federal court building in downtown Detroit, beginning on Wednesday morning, the largest municipal bankruptcy filing in U.S. history comes down to a single question: Is Detroit bankrupt?

Carl Icahn sells half of stake in Netflix


Investors turned on Netflix Inc on Tuesday, reversing early gains that had driven the shares to a record high, in a flurry of selling that bore the hallmark of momentum traders getting out of the high-flying stock.

Sobeys-Safeway deal approved by Canada's Competition Bureau


Empire Co Ltd, the operator of Canadian grocery chain Sobeys, said on Tuesday that Canada's competition watchdog approved its acquisition of substantially all of Safeway Inc's assets in Canada.

Protests could derail balanced budget plans


Finance Minister Jim Flaherty promises a balanced federal budget in 2015, but aboriginal protests against natural resource development projects may yet derail his projections.

Tim Hortons ranked in top 100 most loved companies


Tim Hortons has been named one of the 100 most loved companies in the world.

Planning for a crisis: An unexpected illness or disability can devastate finances


Pondering the possibility of a personal health crisis is not easy and despite the growing prevalence of debilitating illnesses and other disabling events, many people put it on the backburner.

British government spends $25 billion on nuclear plants


French utility EDF and the British government have signed an agreement to build two nuclear reactors for a total cost of 16 billion pounds ($25.9 billion), EDF said in a statement on Monday.

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