Publication
La Cour suprême du Canada tranche : les cadres ne pourront se syndiquer au Québec
Le 19 avril dernier, la Cour suprême du Canada a rendu une décision fort attendue en matière de syndicalisation des cadres.
Mondial | Publication | June 3, 2016
Welcome to Essential Corporate News, our weekly news service covering the latest developments in the UK corporate world.
On May 30, 2016 the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) published a new Q&A, which provides responses to questions posed by the general public and competent authorities in relation to the practical application of the Market Abuse Regulation (MAR) framework. The Q&A is aimed at competent authorities to ensure that their supervisory activities and their actions are converging along the lines of the responses adopted by ESMA and at helping issuers, investors and other market participants by providing clarity on the content of the market abuse rules.
The Q&A currently includes one question which clarifies the scope of firms subject to the provision in Article 16(2) of MAR requiring them to detect and report suspicious orders and transactions. ESMA confirms that this requirement applies broadly and “persons professionally arranging or executing transactions” will include buy side firms such as UCITS management companies, alternative investment fund managers (AIFMs) and firms professionally engaged in trading on own account.
The Q&A will be updated where relevant as and when new questions or issues arise.
(ESMA, Q&A on the Market Abuse Regulation (ESMA/2016/738), 30.05.16)
On May 31, 2016, the European Commission published additional non-binding Q&A on the implementation of the new statutory audit framework which will apply from June 17, 2016. These Q&A are in addition to those published in September 2014 and February 2016.
The Q&A discuss the following:
Publication
Le 19 avril dernier, la Cour suprême du Canada a rendu une décision fort attendue en matière de syndicalisation des cadres.
Publication
Le budget 2024 propose d’élargir la portée de certains pouvoirs permettant à l’ARC de demander des renseignements aux contribuables tout en prévoyant de nouvelles conséquences pour les contribuables contrevenants.
Publication
L'impôt minimum de remplacement (IMR) est un impôt sur le revenu additionnel prévu dans la Loi de l’impôt sur le revenu (Canada) (la « Loi ») auquel sont assujettis les particuliers et certaines fiducies qui pourraient autrement avoir recours à certaines déductions et exemptions et à certains crédits pour réduire leur impôt sur le revenu fédéral canadien régulier.
Abonnez-vous et restez à l’affût des nouvelles juridiques, informations et événements les plus récents...
© Norton Rose Fulbright LLP 2023