What's inside this month
Report on Business Magazine: The December issue
Published
Last updated
Scroll through a gallery of features and articles from the new issue
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CEO of the Year: The final stretch
by Timothy Taylor
Let the 1% have their Porsches, their Rolexes, their Tiffany trinkets. Lululemon’s Christine Day knows that what the masses truly covet is the world’s most luxurious sweatpants
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Ever so humble. Ready to rumble
by Iain Marlow
Its products are largely invisible. Its technology is merely “good enough.” What is it about Huawei that gives North American telecom manufacturers the sweats? We discover why China’s first homegrown multinational success story is sure to be followed by others.
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Where asbestos is just a fact of life
by John Gray and Stephanie Nolen
This much is true: Asbestos can kill you. But as one journalist discovered in Quebec, and another confirmed in India, fortunes are tied to the trade of this notorious mineral. Denial, it seems, is a very powerful force.
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Massive leverage/average investor
by John Daly
Those two just don’t go together. For hobby investors looking to make fortunes trading currencies, the business comes with some hard lessons.
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Six questions: Full steam ahead
by Bertrand Marotte
Hey, Pierre Beaudoin, how’s business at Bombardier?
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Big idea: A question of balance
by Timothy Taylor
The 99% raised at least one very important concern: income disparity. But they’re going to hate the solution
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What's good for the Greeks...
by Eric Reguly
The other reason Germany won’t let the Greeks default: That would mean letting them off scot-free
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As Canadian as... banking?
by Derek DeCloet
The myth of the brilliant Canadian banker: The truth is, it’s actually hard to screw up around here
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Taking a flier
by Fabrice Taylor
Any press is good press, right? Before you take a flier on a business, take a peek behind the headlines
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Portrait of a red-hot art market
by Matt O'Grady
The contemporary art market is on a multimillion-dollar tear. And for once, Damien Hirst had nothing to do with it
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Exit interview: Might as well jump
by Gordon Pitts
Dynamic Group’s David Taylor on what to do when you don’t love your new family tree: Leave
