July 27, 2023
Posts
-
-
July 27, 2023
Bank of Canada publishes its 2024 schedule for policy interest rate announcements and other major publications
The Bank of Canada today published its 2024 schedule for policy interest rate announcements and the release of the quarterly Monetary Policy Report. It also reconfirmed the scheduled interest rate announcement dates for the remainder of this year. -
Cryptoasset Ownership and Use in Canada: An Update for 2022
We find that Bitcoin ownership declined from 13% in 2021 to 10% in 2022. This drop occurred against a background of steep price declines and an increasingly tight regulatory atmosphere. -
July 26, 2023
Summary of Governing Council deliberations: Fixed announcement date of July 12, 2023
This is an account of the deliberations of the Bank of Canada’s Governing Council leading to the monetary policy decision on July 12, 2023. -
July 26, 2023
Release of the Bank of Canada’s summary of deliberations
On Wednesday, July 26, 2023, the Bank of Canada will publish a summary of the deliberations that took place ahead of its interest rate decision on July 12, 2023. -
July 24, 2023
Market Participants Survey—Second Quarter of 2023
The Market Participants Survey results are based on questionnaire responses from about 30 financial market participants. -
-
July 18, 2023
Treasury Bill 2023.07.18 auction rescheduled
Following the cancellation today of the 2023.07.18 Treasury Bill Auction, the Bank has resolved the technical difficulties and is rescheduling the auction on Wednesday, July 19 at 10:30 a.m -
July 18, 2023
Operation Cancellation – Treasury Bill 2023.07.18
Due to technical difficulties, the Treasury Bill Auction scheduled for 2023.07.18 at 10:30 has been cancelled. -
Is Climate Transition Risk Priced into Corporate Credit Risk? Evidence from Credit Default Swaps
We study whether the credit derivatives of firms reflect the risk from climate transition. We find that climate transition risk has asymmetric and significant economic impacts on the credit risk of more vulnerable firms, and negligible effects on other firms.