Canadian Personal Finance Blog

Personal Finances and Consumer Concerns, essays, stories, examples and how to articles with a distinctly Canadian Point of View
June 20th, 2008

This Week in the Courts

BCE Decision Today at 4:30 PM

Care to wager a few shillings on the results? I am sure that is what a few traders will be doing, in either direction, with the Supreme Court ready to bring down a decision on an appeal of the Quebec Supreme Court’s ruling stopping the BCE sale. This ruling will either kill the sale or put it back on track for now. As a share holder, I would hope the sale would continue, but who knows what the highest court in the land might decide.

The Nortel Three and their Day in Court

Frank Dunn, Douglas Beatty and Michael Gollogly had their arraignment in court yesterday under Fraud charges brought by the RCMP. This is interesting to me, since I lived through those days, and am curious now to hear about what exactly may have transpired during that time at Nortel.

What happened to cause all employees to get their “Return to profitability” bonus? I will be reading the coverage of this case very closely.

Important to note that Nortel the company is not part of these proceedings as a defendant, and they have stated they are co-operating fully with the RCMP investigation.

The Globe and Mail Report:

The RCMP alleged Mr. Dunn, Mr. Beatty and Mr. Gollogly fraudulently misstated Nortel’s results. Among the accusations are that the three “made false entries and omitted materials particular in the books and documents in regards to the financial results of Nortel.”

It will be very interesting to see how this is proven in court, or refuted, because I suspect this is going to get into some very technical aspects of Corporate Accounting Practices in Canada. I have had some of this explained to me, and I can say as a non-accountant, it is very confusing.

Rates Staying the Same

So what did the new Governor of the Bank of Canada know that we didn’t last week when he refused to lower rates, when the majority of experts were sure the rates were going to drop? Maybe he figured out that Inflation might be coming back, like we found out yesterday?  Does Mark Carney have a good crystal ball, or good information collecting skills? Either way, looks like he hit the nail on the head with that call last week.

Given Scotiabank, TD and BMO are raising their long term Mortgage Rates, makes me wonder what they might know as well?

Related Articles

  1. Summer Spending Solstice...
  2. BCE Marches Ahead and Best Buy Warranties...
  3. BCE Sold but not for $427.50...
  4. We Are All Three Pay Cheques From Living On The Street...
  5. Random Thoughts and Comment Friday...

Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.

5 Responses to “This Week in the Courts”

  1. My best guess is that the law is on the side of the bondholders, but I’m wondering if the Supreme Court will find some way to create a compromise.

  2. Well Canajun, if you’re a shareholder and Michael is guessing the bondholders will win out … sounds like you might have a bet. Either way it will be very interesting and certainly precedent setting. I don’t think the Supreme Court will compromise. It’s their role to be decisive and unambiguous in order to be clear for future cases.

  3. Either way it is going to be interesting. Even if the Supreme Court goes against the BCE sale, the moneys held back from the dividends might be the carrot that the bondholders are waiting for.

    -C8j

  4. My guess is that you will win the bet.

  5. I don’t think I will lose here either way, but getting the original price of $42 per share would be nice.

    –C8j

Leave a Reply

www.financialwebring.com