logo
Canada Goose Announces Participation in the Baird 2025 Global Consumer, Technology and Services Conference

Canada Goose Announces Participation in the Baird 2025 Global Consumer, Technology and Services Conference

National Post30-05-2025
Article content
TORONTO — Canada Goose Holdings Inc. (NYSE, TSX: GOOS) today announced that it will participate in the Baird 2025 Global Consumer, Technology and Services conference being held at the InterContinental New York Barclay in New York, NY on June 3, 2025. We will host a fireside chat presentation at 3:45 pm ET and participate in one-on-one meetings. Neil Bowden, Chief Financial Officer will attend the conference.
Article content
Article content
The fireside chat presentation will be webcast live on our investor relations website, http://investor.canadagoose.com. An archived webcast will be available after the conclusion of the presentation.
Article content
Article content
Article content
Article content
Article content
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Allied Announces August 2025 Distribution
Allied Announces August 2025 Distribution

Globe and Mail

time25 minutes ago

  • Globe and Mail

Allied Announces August 2025 Distribution

TORONTO, Aug. 15, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Allied Properties REIT ('Allied') (TSX: announced today that the Trustees of Allied have declared a distribution of $0.15 per unit for the month of August 2025, representing $1.80 per unit on an annualized basis. The distribution will be payable on September 15, 2025, to unitholders of record as at August 29, 2025. About Allied Allied is a leading owner-operator of distinctive urban workspace in Canada's major cities. Allied's mission is to provide knowledge-based organizations with workspace that is sustainable and conducive to human wellness, creativity, connectivity and diversity. Allied's vision is to make a continuous contribution to cities and culture that elevates and inspires the humanity in all people. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT:

Happy 90th birthday Trader Cliff: Still alive, still well, still loving the Maple Leafs
Happy 90th birthday Trader Cliff: Still alive, still well, still loving the Maple Leafs

National Post

time25 minutes ago

  • National Post

Happy 90th birthday Trader Cliff: Still alive, still well, still loving the Maple Leafs

Everywhere Doug Gilmour and Mats Sundin go, they are associated as members of the Toronto Maple Leafs. Associated for life. Both of them were brought to Toronto by general manager Cliff Fletcher in one-sided deals accomplished by the most astounding big name and big game trader in hockey history. Everywhere Lanny McDonald goes, everywhere his moustache is shown across Canada, he is associated with the Calgary Flames, the face of that franchise even though he played just 492 of his 1,111 National Hockey League games there. He was brought to Calgary in 1981, the second season after the club moved from Atlanta, in the deal that enabled Fletcher to begin the reshaping of the transferred franchise. All this – and so much more – will be talked about, laughed about, and toasted over as stories will be told on Fletcher's 90th birthday on Saturday with 18 family members and friends gathering for the weekend and longer in Laguna Beach, Calif. 'Has anyone else worked 70 years in the NHL?' asked his son, Chuck Fletcher, who still works as a senior executive with the New Jersey Devils. 'My dad started with the Montreal Canadiens in 1955. 'He's been drawing an NHL paycheque ever since.' Fletcher is on current payroll of the Maple Leafs in a role of senior advisor, although he admits it's not much of a role anymore. He has trouble walking and difficulty hearing these days but no trouble watching hockey, talking hockey, or certainly retelling the stories of his own remarkable Hall of Fame career. 'His memory is incredible,' said Chuck, who has worked in the front office of six NHL teams. 'He can tell you everything. You do all the things that he's done and to have the ability to recall all it in such vivid detail, it's very impressive.' What's impressive is the list of accomplishments for his dad along the way. Trading is almost a lost art in today's salary capped hockey world. But when it wasn't, Fletcher was a veritable master of the big deal. He stole Gilmour from Calgary just months after he had left the Flames for the Leafs. He all but stole Sundin for 13 Toronto seasons from Quebec in an emotional exchange for Wendel Clark and others in one of the most difficult trades he ever made. He stole McDonald from what was then the Colorado Rockies to begin the Flames footprint in Alberta. He did a lot of stealing along the way. But that wasn't all. In Calgary, he traded for Hall of Famer Joey Mullen and traded away the Hall of Famer Brett Hull. He traded for Grant Fuhr in Toronto and then dealt the Hall of Fame goalie to Buffalo for Hall of Fame winger Dave Andreychuk. He brought Tie Domi to the Leafs, traded for and traded away, Larry Murphy, traded Mike Gartner for Glenn Anderson and drafted Hall of Fame players Al MacInnis, Joe Nieuwednyk, Mike Vernon, Hull and Sergei Makarov with the Flames while also bringing borderline Hall players such as Gary Roberts, Gary Suter, Theo Fleury, Kent Nilsson and Paul Reinhart to the NHL. The resume has just one Stanley Cup, the 1989 victory by the Flames. And that seems wrong. It should have more. At least one more from Calgary. And who knows what might have happened had the refereeing turned out differently in the 1993 Leafs playoff series against Los Angeles. But when Fletcher looks back now at so many exceptional deals, he does so with a certain pride and reverence. 'For 2 1/2 years Gilmour was the best player in the NHL… I thought we brought instant credibility back to the franchise at that time. 'Lanny gave our franchise credibility (in Calgary) when we had this all-time juggernaut just 180 miles down the road in Edmonton and had to establish something to compete. 'Quebec had Joe Sakic and Peter Forsberg as its top two centres. Mats was the third centre on that team and they had just lost a playoff series to Montreal getting outmuscled pretty badly. They needed toughness. They needed someone like Wendel. I always thought the best way to make a trade sometimes was to figure out what your opponent needed to make their roster better and if worked for both of you, terrific. 'That happened with the Brett Hull trade. I said when we dealt him, that he would score 150 goals the next three seasons. Turned out I was wrong, I think he scored 160. But we wound up winning the Stanley Cup (with Rob Ramage). You never want to trade a player like that away, but that's my only championship and I'll take that deal any day of the week to get a Stanley Cup. You know I was able to trade Brett because we had Joey Mullen, a 50-goal scorer at right wing; we had Hakan Loob, a 50-goal scorer and we had Lanny, all on right wing.' Of all the famous deals made, the one that rarely gets mentioned is a deal close to Fletcher's heart. 'I won't call it my biggest trade, but it might be the most significant,' said Fletcher in a lengthy telephone interview. In August of 1987, Fletcher acquired defenceman Brad McCrimmon from Philadelphia in exchange for a first and third round draft pick. That was before his famous Draft Shmaft line in Toronto became famous. But the importance of the deal remains with Trader Cliff. 'We gave up a lot for Brad McCrimmon, but he did so much for us. He was our leader in the dressing room. He was our leader on the ice and a very physical presence. He ran the room. In a way he ran our team. You can't underestimate what he meant to us. 'The Flames team that won the Cup in '89 had six Hall of Fame players on it but we were almost eliminated in the first round to Vancouver who finished 40 points behind us. If Vernon doesn't make two career like stops in overtime, we're gone. There is no Stanley Cup. After that, we go on to beat LA in four, Chicago in five before beating Montreal in six. That's how close it can be between winning and losing. 'In 1986, things were different then. They didn't schedule days off between playoff series. We played St. Louis in the conference finals and went seven games with them, even though we should't have. The Final started right after Game 7. We ran out of gas by about Game 3. The way they schedule things today, with more time off, we might have won that year.' That was the year they knocked out the dynastic Edmonton Oilers, interrupting what could have been a run of five straight Stanley Cups. Those were the Oilers of Gretzky, Messier, Fuhr and Coffey. The Oilers they sometimes played 18 times a season. 'You have to understand, we move from Atlanta, we're the nobodies trying to establish ourselves and there's this all-time juggernaut building just down the highway. It was an incredible challenge to build a team that could compete with them, let alone win. 'I'm proud of what we accomplished in Calgary.' The hockey in Alberta in the 80s may have been the greatest NHL hockey ever played. When Fletcher decided to leave the Flames, where he had begun as expansion general manager in Atlanta, after the 1991 season, he thought he would take a year off and enjoy Florida life. Instead, he was immediately sought after by the two wealthiest teams in the NHL. Both the New York Rangers and Leafs offered him front office control of their hockey operations. He listened to both pitches. He chose Toronto. At the beginning of his second season with the Leafs, his first with full-time Gilmour, his first with Pat Burns coaching, the Blue Jays won their first of two consecutive World Series victories. 'Toronto was electric back then, sporting wise' said Fletcher, whose two children grew into adults in Toronto. (His daughter Kristy is the COO of the Juno Awards). 'What the Blue Jays did – we respected their operation so much – was incredible. Their excitement became part of our excitement.' As Fletcher gets ready to celebrate his 90th he knows that Pat Gillick, the architect of those Blue Jays teams, has a birthday coming up in just a few days. 'He's just a few years behind me. I think he's turning 88.' When Fletcher came to Toronto, he got to know one of the board members of the Leafs. Guy named Ted Rogers. All these years later, Ted has long since passed and the Leafs are corporately owned by Ted's, son Edward. The board Ted was part of was tossed aside when Steve Stavro took ownership control of the Leafs. And Fletcher, who had two different stints as GM, with Stavro and with Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment, has remained with the team through the past five general managers and while he doesn't travel much anymore, he doesn't miss a game on television. 'I know how seriously he takes this,' said Chuck. 'I've sat with him for a lot of those Leaf playoff games. And he's a diehard, He's all in. And that Florida series last year, with all the highs and lows of that series, that was a tough one to get through.' Fletcher jokes that he plans on living long enough to see the Leafs win a Stanley Cup. He says he has no intention of 'leaving this side of the lawn' before that happens. But about this season, who knows? 'In my own mind, I second-guess everything going on around the league like any other fan or media member,' he said. 'It'll be a challenging time for them. Mitch Marner is one of the best players in the NHL. He wasn't coming back and it's up to us now – Brad Treliving and his crew – to find a way to get around it. I have so much respect for the current organization that I'm sure they will recover and go back to being one of the best teams in the league.'

Petrolympic Announces Warrant Extension
Petrolympic Announces Warrant Extension

Globe and Mail

timean hour ago

  • Globe and Mail

Petrolympic Announces Warrant Extension

TORONTO, Aug. 15, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Petrolympic Ltd. (TSX-V: PCQ) (the 'Company'), wishes to announce that the Company has applied to the TSX Venture Exchange (the 'TSXV') to extend the term of 3,100,000 common share purchase warrants originally issued pursuant to a private placement on September 8, 2025. Subject to the approval of the TSXV, the expiry dates of the September 2022 Warrants will be extended as follows: Number of Warrants: 3,100,000 Original Expiry Date of Warrants: September 8, 2025 New Expiry Date of Warrants: September 8, 2027 Exercise Price of Warrants: $0.10 NEITHER THE TSX VENTURE EXCHANGE NOR ITS REGULATIONS SERVICES PROVIDER HAVE REVIEWED OR ACCEPT RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE ADEQUACY OR ACCURACY OF THIS RELEASE. For further information, please contact: Mendel Ekstein, President and CEO Petrolympic Ltd. T: 845 656-0184 E: exis@ CAUTIONARY STATEMENT REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING INFORMATION Certain information contained or incorporated by reference in this press release, including any information regarding the proposed acquisition, constitutes "forward-looking statements." All statements, other than statements of historical fact, are to be considered forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are necessarily based on a number of estimates and assumptions that, while considered reasonable by the Company, are inherently subject to significant business, economic, geological and competitive uncertainties and contingencies. Although the Company believes the expectations expressed in such forward-looking statements are based on reasonable assumptions, such statements are not guarantees of future performance. Known and unknown factors could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements. Such factors include but are not limited to: economic and global market impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, fluctuations in market prices, exploration and exploitation successes, continued availability of capital and financing, changes in national and local government legislation, taxation, controls, regulations, expropriation or nationalization of property and general political, economic, market or business conditions. Many of these uncertainties and contingencies can affect our actual results and could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied in any forward-looking statements made by, or on behalf of, us. Readers are cautioned that forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and, therefore, readers are advised to rely on their own evaluation of such uncertainties. All of the forward-looking statements made in this press release, or incorporated by reference, are qualified by these cautionary statements. We do not assume any obligation to update any forward-looking statements.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store