While large corporations navigate complex trade rules with ease, small businesses face overwhelming barriers: regulatory complexity, limited resources, and poor awareness of how to leverage these agreements effectively.
"Remember, reinvention doesn’t always roar; it often starts with a quiet decision to demand more from yourself and your surroundings. So go ahead, make that subtle move that changes everything." Love, Leah
This season reminds us that abundance doesn’t come from luck—it comes from planting consistently, nurturing relationships, and adapting when the weather (or the market) turns.
Today’s not your average Monday, boss; it’s got that high-vibe, handshake-energy kind of start. We’re walking tall, smiling easily, maybe even tossing a little generosity into the mix. But don’t get too cozy: by early evening, the emotional tide shifts faster than a market swing at closing bell.
After losing her home in a fire, Debbie Balfour celebrates her first Thanksgiving back home, reminding us all to unplug, reconnect, and live our “why.”
The numbers don't lie. With US-Canada trade tensions escalating and near-universal tariffs threatening in 2025, most Canadian businesses are freezing operations and hoping for the best. That's exactly the wrong move.
While large corporations navigate complex trade rules with ease, small businesses face overwhelming barriers: regulatory complexity, limited resources, and poor awareness of how to leverage these agreements effectively.
Global business confidence is being reset by AI funding risk, energy volatility, extreme heat, and slower trade momentum. Investors are no longer only asking what can grow—they are asking what can be funded, insured, shipped, cooled, and protected.
AI demand is now moving from a growth story to cost pressure. Markets are reacting as chip shortages, IPO uncertainty, energy risk, extreme heat, and trade policy all hit business planning simultaneously.
Extreme weather, infrastructure stress, AI competition, central bank uncertainty, and capital flows are shaping today’s global business outlook. The strongest signal is no longer only markets. It is the rising pressure on systems that businesses depend on.
A U.S. Senate vote regarding Iran, the release of Federal Reserve bank stress tests, continued weakness in technology shares, and growing questions surrounding artificial intelligence investment are creating a more complex environment for businesses and investors worldwide.
Expect a few verbal curveballs today, folks. This is not the market for snap decisions or “sounds good to me” agreements. Slow down, read the fine print, and actually listen to what people are saying, not what you hope they’re saying. Commit carefully.
A social media exchange about creativity, employment, and artificial intelligence highlights growing concerns among artists and creative professionals. The discussion may be an early signal of a broader debate about how technology will reshape creative work in the coming decade.
While large corporations navigate complex trade rules with ease, small businesses face overwhelming barriers: regulatory complexity, limited resources, and poor awareness of how to leverage these agreements effectively.
"Remember, reinvention doesn’t always roar; it often starts with a quiet decision to demand more from yourself and your surroundings. So go ahead, make that subtle move that changes everything." Love, Leah
This season reminds us that abundance doesn’t come from luck—it comes from planting consistently, nurturing relationships, and adapting when the weather (or the market) turns.
Today’s not your average Monday, boss; it’s got that high-vibe, handshake-energy kind of start. We’re walking tall, smiling easily, maybe even tossing a little generosity into the mix. But don’t get too cozy: by early evening, the emotional tide shifts faster than a market swing at closing bell.
After losing her home in a fire, Debbie Balfour celebrates her first Thanksgiving back home, reminding us all to unplug, reconnect, and live our “why.”
The numbers don't lie. With US-Canada trade tensions escalating and near-universal tariffs threatening in 2025, most Canadian businesses are freezing operations and hoping for the best. That's exactly the wrong move.