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    1. Fall_Harvest on

      >The companies that benefited from those Canadian investments include: data analytics firm Palantir; major U.S. defence contractors General Dynamics and L3Harris; the IT firm CACI; and telecom giant AT&T. CoreCivic and Geo Group, which construct and manage detention centres, also benefited but to a lesser extent.
      Brooks said Canadian banks TD, RBC, Scotiabank, CIBC and BMO have collectively provided these companies with financing through loans and bonds worth more than US$23 billion since 2020. The banks, along with financial services firm Desjardins, together invested at least US$9.8 billion in the ICE-connected firms, he said.
      Public pensions have invested more than US$2.5 billion in these companies, Brooks said. The Canada Pension Plan is by far the biggest investor, followed by Caisse de Depot et de Placement du Quebec, British Columbia Investment Management and PSP investments, among others.

    2. ripe_plantain on

      > He said the federal government is currently “seized with creating an attractive domestic investment profile” and drawing more private investment into the country.

      That’s the ticket. Our own domestic profile for those that believe our money is best invested here. Our morals for investments.

    3. IdontNeedPants on

      Why would Canadian banks or pension funds not invest in companies like General Dynamics or AT&T? There are no sanctions on any of these companies.

    4. Wow this is a stretch. AT&T and General Dynamics, really? May as well complain about investing in Volkswagen.

    5. adamlaceless on

      This is a dumb article…I don’t have more to contribute to this because this is definitely up there for low bar clickbait

    6. because r/canada says they should be investing for highest returns possible despite payouts not being tied to performance

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