Search

Content Types

Topics

JEL Codes

Locations

Departments

Authors

Sources

Statuses

Published After

Published Before

9186 Results

December 3, 2015

Framework for market operations and liquidity provision

Learn about the Bank’s policies for financial market operations and tools for providing liquidity to the financial system. This includes routine and emergency liquidity tools provided as part of the Bank’s role as lender of last resort.
November 3, 2015

Canadian Fixed-Income Forum

CFIF is a group set up by the Bank of Canada to facilitate the sharing of information between market participants and the Bank on the Canadian fixed-income market.
September 4, 2015

Portraits in time

As we honour Queen Elizabeth II’s historic reign with a commemorative $20 note, explore eight decades of her portraits on Canada’s bank notes.
May 1, 2015

Collateral policies

Access our listings of current and historical assets eligible as collateral under the Bank of Canada's Standing Liquidity Facility.
August 31, 2017

Agreement on the Inflation-Control Target

In 1991, the Bank of Canada and the Minister of Finance agreed on an inflation-control target framework to guide Canadian monetary policy. The target agreement has been renewed several times since, most recently in 2021 to the end of 2026.
September 30, 2023

Info Source

This document provides information about the functions, programs, activities and related information holdings of government institutions subject to the Access to Information Act and the Privacy Act.
August 20, 2010

Bank notes: Multimedia

Access videos about our bank notes, along with images past and present. Images in this gallery are available for non-commercial use only.
September 10, 2010

1935 series

The Bank of Canada was founded in 1934 and given responsibility, through an Act of Parliament, to regulate the country's money supply and to "promote the economic and financial welfare of Canada."
September 13, 2010

1937 series

The creation of a second series of bank notes, only two years after the first, was prompted by changes in Canadian government legislation that required the Bank of Canada to produce bilingual bank notes.
Go To Page