Getting caught up on a week that got away? Here’s your weekly digest of The Globe’s most essential business and investing stories, with insights and analysis on the biggest headlines, stock tips, personal finance strategies and more.
Carney reinstates EV buyer incentives, scraps sales mandate
Automotive Parts Manufacturers' Association president Flavio Volpe shows Prime Minister Mark Carney the Project Arrow 2.0 E.V. during a tour of a Martinrea Industries factory in Woodbridge, Ont., on Thursday.Carlos Osorio/Reuters
Prime Minister Mark Carney unveiled Ottawa’s revamped national automotive strategy this week, announcing incentives to buy electric vehicles and a proposal to use credits to encourage domestic manufacturing. The changes included scrapping a mandate that would have required all new vehicles sold to be electric by 2035, put in place under former prime minister Justin Trudeau.
The plan is meant to bolster the automotive sector and reduce greenhouse gas emissions, Eric Atkins reports. As announced on Thursday, Ottawa will introduce tougher emission standards for new car models, reinstate subsidies for consumers of up to $5,000 on EV purchases and up to $2,500 on purchases of plug-in hybrids under $50,000, and and spend up to $3.1-billion to help the auto industry grow and diversify to new markets, among other changes.
The announcement was welcomed by the auto industry, which had fought the EV mandates as it struggles with the tariff burdens and questions over the future of North American free trade.
Canada sheds 25,000 jobs in January due to losses in manufacturing sector

Construction workers on a new condo site in Saint John, N.B. The Canadian economy shed almost 25,000 jobs in January.Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press
Canada’s economy lost almost 25,000 jobs in January, but the unemployment rate fell to 6.5 per cent in January – the lowest level in 16 months. Statistics Canada said the jobless rate was the result of fewer people actively searching for work. Economists were expecting the jobless rate to hold steady at 6.8 per cent. The first set of job numbers for 2026 are the result of the manufacturing industry shedding 28,000 workers in January and Ontario losing a whopping 67,000 positions.
As Vanmala Subramaniam reports, the job market has been under severe stress over the past year, resulting in layoffs in industries targeted by U.S. tariffs, including steel and autos, and many companies that are hesitant to hire new employees because of economic uncertainty. Despite the hit, full-time positions jumped by 45,000 last month and Alberta posted a jobs increase of 20,000.
Decoder: Snack inflation is biting Canadians harder than Americans

Canadians face steeper price increases on products like potato chips.Mark Lennihan/The Associated Press
Ahead of the Super Bowl this weekend, there is some unfortunate news for north-of-the-border snackers: Canadians face steeper price increases on products like potato chips. Snack prices have increased both in Canada and the United States, but the evidence is clear that Canadians have been hit harder by snack inflation. Compared to December, 2020, snack prices in the U.S. have climbed 20 per cent. In Canada, they’re up 31.2 per cent.
Moreover, the consumer price index category of potato chips and other snacks in Canada climbed nearly 8 per cent in December – roughly 3.5 times faster than the U.S. category of snacks. Jason Kirby takes a look at the reasons why in the latest instalment of the Decoder series.
CEO’s payout, workplace relationship spur upheaval at Ontario pension plan

Board chair Don Smith was recently suspended from his position on the board of trustees at the CAAT Pension Plan by the union that appointed him, sources say.Merle Robillard/The Globe and Mail
A governance crisis has hit Ontario pension plan CAAT after senior executives raised concerns about the approval of an unusually large payout to the plan’s chief executive officer.
Three of the plan’s top executives abruptly left CAAT in January amid concerns over decisions approved by the board. Two of the key flashpoints were a $1.6-million vacation payout to chief executive officer Derek Dobson that board leadership approved last year in lieu of vacation time, and a workplace relationship that Mr. Dobson has been having with a CAAT employee that the board sanctioned.
Meanwhile, board chair Don Smith was recently suspended from his position on the board of trustees, seeing that Mr. Smith oversaw both of those decisions. James Bradshaw reports on the upheaval inside the multiemployer pension plan that serves Ontario’s colleges and more than 800 public- and private-sector employers.
Ontario is proposing a new class of mutual funds. Investor advocates warn the risk may not be worth the reward

Toronto's financial district in August, 2022.Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press
Ontario Premier Doug Ford’s government is pushing for the creation of a new class of mutual funds aimed at giving retail investors access to private assets such as real estate. The initiative is being touted as a way to give ordinary investors access to the burgeoning world of privately owned companies and assets.
But investor advocates say private-asset investing is riskier and typically more expensive than traditional mutual funds – especially for small investors. Advocates warn that the plan could lead to investors’ money being locked up for years in long-term real estate or infrastructure projects that have extremely complex fee structures.
Clare O’Hara and Jameson Berkow spoke to stakeholders, representatives from Ontario Securities Commission and financial advisers about the Ford government’s push for this new class of mutual funds and the challenging track record that has emerged with existing private asset funds for accredited investors.
Take our business quiz for this week
d. Copper. Like many miners around the world, Eldorado is hunting for copper assets because the critical mineral is expected to be in heavy demand for decades as electrification grows.
Get the rest of the questions from the weekly business and investing news quiz here, and prepare for the week ahead with The Globe’s investing calendar.