OSC analysis highlights increasing mentions and diverging sentiment in AI disclosures
TORONTO, May 6, 2025 /CNW/ - The Ontario Securities Commission (OSC) has released staff research that analyses the frequency and sentiment of Canadian listed issuers' references to Artificial Intelligence (AI) in their financial disclosures.
OSC staff analyzed the Management Discussion and Analysis (MD&A) filings from S&P/TSX Composite Index issuers over a 10-year period. The exploratory study also provided OSC staff with an opportunity to test new large language models (LLMs) for sentiment analysis.
The exploratory research revealed three key findings:
Increased AI Mentions: The OSC observed a substantial rise in the number of issuers mentioning AI in their MD&As, reflecting the growing importance and integration of AI technologies across various sectors.
Shift in Tone: The 2024 filing year marks a turning point in the overall tone used by issuers to discuss AI. Previously most issuers that discussed AI had an overall positive sentiment, however along with more issuers mentioning AI, there has been a substantial increase in negative sentiment, indicating a more balanced view of AI's risks and opportunities.
Diverging Sentiments: Issuers in the Finance and Information sectors exhibit a distinct divergence in sentiment compared to those in other industries. While Finance and Information sectors maintain a more positive outlook on AI, other industries are increasingly cautious.
"This research underscores the evolving landscape of AI in corporate disclosures. As issuers become more attuned to the potential benefits and risks of AI, we see a more nuanced discussion emerging," said Leslie Byberg, Executive Vice President, Strategic Regulation at the OSC.
This exploratory analysis was conducted by staff in the Thought Leadership division of the OSC.
The mandate of the OSC is to provide protection to investors from unfair, improper or fraudulent practices, to foster fair, efficient and competitive capital markets and confidence in the capital markets, to foster capital formation, and to contribute to the stability of the financial system and the reduction of systemic risk. Investors are urged to check the registration of any persons or company offering an investment opportunity and to review the OSC investor materials available at http://www.osc.ca.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Globe and Mail
an hour ago
- Globe and Mail
Apple's AI Stumble: Why AAPL Stock Is the Weakest Link in Tech's 2025 Rebound
The S&P 500 (SPY) has shaken off its early-year jitters. After falling nearly 19% between April and May, the index has now clawed its way back to even. The charge higher has been led, once again, by the tech elite: Microsoft (MSFT), Nvidia (NVDA), Meta (META), Alphabet (GOOG) (GOOGL), Amazon (AMZN), and Tesla (TSLA). Dubbed the 'Magnificent Seven' alongside Apple (AAPL), these mega-cap names are driving the Nasdaq and cap-weighted S&P 500 higher, leaving smaller stocks in the dust. Confident Investing Starts Here: But there's one glaring exception: Apple. While the other six have rebounded sharply thanks to strong Q1 earnings and bullish AI investment plans, Apple's stock is still down nearly 19% year-to-date. It now ranks as the third-largest company by market capitalization, behind Microsoft and Nvidia. And its troubles go deeper than just price performance. AI Ambitions, Delayed Apple's long-hyped AI upgrade to Siri, once a potential crown jewel, has become a symbol of its struggles. Internally dubbed a 'reset,' the new AI-powered version of Siri promised to integrate across your calendar, mail, and messages. But repeated delays, software bugs, and underwhelming internal demos forced Apple to postpone the rollout, first from March to May quietly, and then indefinitely. According to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, hundreds of bugs still plague the software. Engineers say features that were advertised just last year still don't work. Ads were pulled. Morale dipped. And Apple, once a leader in personal tech, now risks being seen as an AI laggard. Lawsuits, Tariffs, and a Frustrated White House In early 2025, Apple paid out $95 million to settle two privacy lawsuits related to Siri's unintended recordings. Then came new tariffs. With Donald Trump back in the White House, the administration has imposed sweeping import taxes on China-made electronics, putting direct pressure on Apple's supply chain. Apple has responded by shifting some iPhone production to India, aiming to produce all U.S.-bound phones there by 2026. But Trump isn't pleased. 'I've told Tim Cook, the iPhones sold in the U.S. should be made here,' he said in May, threatening a 25% tariff on devices not assembled in America. To offset the pressure, Apple has pledged $500 billion in U.S. investment, including a server plant in Houston and a supplier training center in Michigan. But iPhones—its most critical product—remain mostly made overseas. The Bigger Picture for Investors Despite its current headwinds, Apple's long-term fundamentals remain solid. It boasts over 2 billion active devices, strong free cash flow, and a growing services business. But in the eyes of many investors, it missed the starting gun in the AI race. While rivals pour billions into GPUs and large language models, Apple is playing catch-up—now reportedly partnering with OpenAI to fill the gaps. TipRanks data indicates a waning of analyst enthusiasm, characterized by fewer 'Strong Buy' ratings, a decline in price target revisions, and cautious sentiment from both insiders and hedge funds. The Magnificent Seven may be back in form, but Apple, for now, looks like the weakest link. Is Apple Stock a Buy, Sell, or Hold? Turning to Wall Street, Apple is considered a Moderate Buy, based on 29 analysts' ratings. The average price target for AAPL stock is $228.22, suggesting a 12.27% upside. See more AAPL analyst ratings Disclaimer & Disclosure Report an Issue


Globe and Mail
2 hours ago
- Globe and Mail
Nvidia Stock: Forget AI Data Centers, Is This Market Nvidia's Next Big Growth Driver?
It's clear that Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) has been the biggest winner of the artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure boom. Its graphics processing units (GPUs) have become the go-to chips for running AI workloads in data centers, thanks to their parallel processing capabilities. Parallel processing allows chips to perform many calculations all at once, which is essential for both training large language models (LLMs) and running AI inference. Just as important is Nvidia's CUDA software platform, which makes it easy for developers to build and optimize AI models on its hardware. The combination of best-in-class GPU performance along with a sticky software platform has helped cement the company's lead in the data center space. Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now. Continue » At the same time, this has been an explosive market. Over the past two years, its data center revenue has gone from $4.3 billion in the fiscal first quarter of 2024 (ended April 30, 2023) to $39.1 billion in fiscal Q1 of 2026 (ended April 27, 2025). That's a nearly 10 times increase in just two years. Nvidia sees data center capital expenditures (capex) rising to more than $1 trillion by 2028. Not all that spending will go toward GPUs, but with its more than 80% market share in the GPU space, Nvidia is well positioned to capture a sizable chunk of that overall data center spending growth. However, that is not the only potential huge market that Nvidia is eyeing. Nvidia's next big opportunity While AI data center spending is Nvidia's largest market by far, it's certainly not the only end market it participates in. The GPU was originally created to speed up graphics rendering in video games. The company later created CUDA as a way to expand beyond this market, giving developers an easy way to program its GPUs for other tasks. However, the market for GPUs outside of video games was slow to develop. Around the same time CUDA was introduced, Advanced Micro Devices bought rival GPU maker ATI Technologies. With integration a top priority and not a lot of early traction outside of video games for GPUs, AMD was in no rush to create a competing software platform. Despite the slow uptake, Nvidia smartly began pushing CUDA for use in universities and research labs, which helped make it the default software program that developers were taught to program GPUs. Today, that is why Nvidia's GPUs have a dominant place in the data center. At this same time, though, Nvidia was also edging into another market: automobiles. In fact, Audi was one of its first big customers outside of the video game space. The German luxury carmaker began using Nvidia's GPUs in its infotainment and navigation systems, and Nvidia later built a full automotive platform called DRIVE, which is a family of hardware and software tools developers need for advanced driver-assistance and autonomous vehicle development. While long promised, autonomous driving is finally here. Alphabet's Waymo, for example, is now providing more than 250,000 paid robotaxi rides per week in the U.S. It's currently only in a few cities, but it's expanding rapidly. According to reports, Waymo uses Nvidia's GPUs in its vehicles. Waymo is not Nvidia's only automobile customer -- far from it. Mercedes, Volvo, and Hyundai all use Nvidia's DRIVE platform and GPUs to power self-driving technologies, while Toyota announced it would use Nvidia's platform and chips for advanced driver assistance features in its next-generation vehicles. Meanwhile, General Motors and Hyundai will use Nvidia technologies to improve their manufacturing with "smart factory" initiatives. Last quarter, Nvidia saw its automobile revenue surge 72% to $567 million. However, more growth is in store, with the company forecasting its auto revenue to rise to approximately $5 billion this fiscal year. The growth will come as new vehicles using its technology begin to hit the roads. Mercedes' new CLA sedan is the latest vehicle with its technology. It's easy to dismiss a segment that was only a fraction of its data center revenue last quarter, but with the data center, Nvidia showed how quickly end markets can ramp up. The autonomous driving market is still in its infancy, so the opportunity is just massive. With Waymo having just around 1,500 robotaxis now, it's easy to see that this could scale to 100x or more vehicles when it reaches scale. Meanwhile, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has predicted that every car on the road will eventually be robotic. With more than 1 billion cars on the road, that's a huge opportunity. At its investor day in 2022, Nvidia estimated the auto market could be a $300 billion opportunity. With Nvidia's stock trading at a forward price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) of 33 times this year's analyst estimates and a 0.7 price/earnings-to-growth (PEG ) ratio, with numbers below 1 considered undervalued, the stock is currently not pricing in any potential upside from its next big potential market opportunity. Should you invest $1,000 in Nvidia right now? Before you buy stock in Nvidia, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Nvidia wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $669,517!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $868,615!* Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor 's total average return is792% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to171%for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join Stock Advisor. See the 10 stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of June 2, 2025


Toronto Star
2 hours ago
- Toronto Star
Nova Scotia's ambitious ‘Wind West' offshore energy plan wins support with conditions
HALIFAX - Two leading environmental groups are giving a thumbs up to Nova Scotia's ambitious plan to dramatically expand its fledgling offshore wind energy industry. But both groups were quick to add caveats. On Monday, Premier Tim Houston said the province's plan to license enough offshore wind farms to produce five megawatts of electricity would be increased eightfold to 40 megawatts, well beyond the 2.4 megawatts Nova Scotia needs. He called on Ottawa to help cover the costs of his new Wind West project, saying the excess electricity could be used to supply 27 per cent of Canada's total demand. 'Nova Scotia is on the edge of a clean energy breakthrough,' the Progressive Conservative premier said in an online video, adding the province is poised to become an 'energy superpower.' ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Gretchen Fitzgerald, executive director of Sierra Club Canada, said the premier's bold plan, which includes building transmission lines across the country, represents an exciting opportunity for the province. 'It could be a game-changer for the region and for Canada,' she said in an interview from Ottawa. 'But it needs to be done correctly and with consultations.' Fitzgerald said the Nova Scotia and Canadian governments must focus on securing long-term benefits from the nascent offshore wind industry because they did a poor job on that front when dealing with the offshore oil and gas sector. 'We have to make sure that we are not selling out what is a massive resource for less benefit than communities should have,' Fitzgerald said, adding that Nova Scotia continues to suffer from a high rate of energy poverty. In May of this year, utility affordability expert Roger Colton produced a report showing that 43 per cent of Nova Scotians were struggling to pay their energy bills — the highest proportion in Canada. While Fitzgerald applauded Houston's clean energy plan, she criticized what she described as the premier's populist penchant for taking decisive action before consulting with experts and the public. 'Moving from a couple hundred turbines to thousands in the next decade needs to be done in a staged way so we learn how to do this right,' she said, adding Houston appears to have adopted a ''move-fast-and-break-things mentality.' ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW '(That) can lead to unacceptable harm to sensitive ocean life,' she said. 'From a community benefits and acceptance point of view, breaking trust can be the biggest barrier to getting to good climate solutions.' In October 2023, the Public Policy Forum released a study saying Sable Island Bank, an ocean area about 180 kilometres south of Nova Scotia, is among the world's best locations for wind energy generation. 'It and several other similarly endowed areas off the coast of Atlantic Canada hold the potential to place the region among the leading global hubs of offshore wind-powered energy development,' says the report from the independent non-profit think tank. It goes on to say that as the world shifts from a dependence on fossil fuels to forms of energy that do not emit climate-changing greenhouse gases, Atlantic Canada is facing 'a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity ... to recover an economic vitality comparable to the Age of Sail — fittingly built again on the power of wind at sea.' The report says the installation of 15 gigawatts of offshore wind generation would create about 30,000 direct jobs annually. Despite the hype, the industry must also earn acceptance from Nova Scotia's fishing industry, which in 2023 contributed $2.5 billion to the province's economy and employed 19,000 people. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW In Halifax, a spokesman for the Ecology Action Centre called on the provincial government to build public trust, especially with coastal communities. 'There really needs to be a priority on stakeholder engagement for all ocean users,' said senior energy co-ordinator Thomas Arnason McNeil. 'We're going to need to prioritize ecological safeguards and preserve the existing livelihoods that we have. That includes the fishing industry. That's half the economy in Nova Scotia.' Still, he said the province's big push for clean energy is on the right track, especially when it comes to building out its electricity grid to better connect with the rest of the country. If done right, the payoff would be enormous, Arnason McNeil said. 'We're talking serious job creation here and a lot of revenue potentially,' he said. 'The bottom line is that you have to do this right. (But) the prize at the end of the road is monumental in terms of the benefits.' A call for bids to build enough offshore turbines to generate five gigawatts of electricity is expected as early as this year. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 8, 2025.