Business
Cost to see your favourite performers has soared thanks to reselling
6 minute read Saturday, Oct. 11, 2025The law of supply and demand is alive and well when it comes to seeing your favourite performer or sports team, live and in person.
Concert tickets, notably to American music superstar Taylor Swift’s recent Eras Tour, can be so in demand, buyers are willing to pay thousands on legal resale sites.
Key players to lay blame upon are undoubtedly resellers — organized crime in faraway jurisdictions or maybe just a tech-savy teenager next door.
Whoever they are, many use bots (software purchased online) allowing them to rapidly and repeatedly purchase tickets on sale from generally the one main ticket source: Ticketmaster.
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Public service could set up young Canadians for success
7 minute read Preview Saturday, Oct. 11, 2025Crop price only 1 piece of farmers’ marketing puzzle
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Oct. 11, 2025Small business usage of Canada Post slumps amid labour woes: CFIB
3 minute read Preview Thursday, Oct. 9, 2025Winnipeg Chamber of Commerce loyalty program honours 7
3 minute read Preview Thursday, Oct. 9, 2025Manitoba to become site of huge carbon-capture facility
5 minute read Preview Thursday, Oct. 9, 2025Maxime’s restaurant, set to close soon, ‘cannot keep up with the demand’
2 minute read Preview Thursday, Oct. 9, 2025- Concerts aim to raise funds for suffering Ukrainians
- A cynical debate over babies’ citizenship
- Just how far will Donald Trump go?
- It’s time to stop people from falling through the gaps
- Today’s horoscope
- Oversharing not the key to losing loneliness
- Northern radio station pleads for more ad dollars from province
- Province blocks release of information on Crown attorneys’ workloads, staff shortages
- Turkey Trot takes off
- ‘Unimaginable what they’ve endured”: Winnipeg Jewish leaders hopeful as surviving Israeli hostages released
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Partnership working on shipping Manitoba-mined potash to global markets through Port of Churchill
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Oct. 1, 2025Manitoba’s hourly minimum wage ticks up 20 cents
3 minute read Wednesday, Oct. 1, 2025Manitoba was among five provinces that increased their minimum wage Wednesday, all tied to Canada’s steadily growing consumer price index.
Manitoba’s minimum wage increased by 20 cents to $16 per hour. It is updated annually Oct. 1 and regulated through the Employment Standards Code. The adjustment reflects Manitoba’s 2024 inflation rate of 1.1 per cent, rounded up to the nearest five cents.
Despite the annual move being tabbed as supporting workers amid affordability issues, the news drew mixed reactions.
“Raising the minimum wage by just 20 cents this year will leave workers falling behind the cost of living,” said Niall Harney with the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (Manitoba).
Organization renamed as Manitoba Queer Chamber of Commerce Inc.
2 minute read Tuesday, Sep. 30, 2025The Manitoba LGBT* Chamber of Commerce has been renamed the Manitoba Queer Chamber of Commerce Inc.
The renaming followed research, consultation and discussion, all of which indicated the LGBTTQ+ business community was ready for a change, per a news release from the chamber.
In the release, executive director Jenny Steinke-Magnus noted that the word “queer” has gained traction in recent years to describe the LGBTTQ+ community as a whole.
“Many members were already starting to call us ‘the queer chamber,’” chamber president Kerry Porter said in the release. “Given this reality, and the fact that we are undertaking a rebrand and website update this year, we felt that this was the right time to explore an update to our name.”
Manitoba GDP forecast to rise by 1% in 2025
3 minute read Tuesday, Sep. 30, 2025Following a tepid 2024, Manitobans can expect more of the same for the provincial economy as 2025 winds down, according to Deloitte.
In its latest forecast, released on Monday, the professional services firm predicted a 1.0 per cent increase in Manitoba’s gross domestic product. Nationally, the firm expects a 1.3 per cent gain in 2025.
Uncertainty continues to hold back economic performance across the country as investors and consumers wait for clarity on trade and the federal government’s fiscal plan.
In an interview with the Free Press, Dawn Desjardins, chief economist at Deloitte Canada, said that Manitoba faces the same economic pressures as other Canadian provinces and territories, including a sharp slowing in immigration that resulted in negligible population growth in the second quarter.
Reducing U.S. market dependence in food, beverage exports daunting challenge
5 minute read Saturday, Sep. 27, 2025Diversifying the Canadian economy has become central to almost any discussion about how to deal with our increasingly volatile next-door neighbour.
There’s growing recognition whatever emerges from the current U.S. administration’s reforms will bear little resemblance to the country and ally Canadians once knew. For the sake of our own survival, it’s time to move on.
Nowhere is that realization more critical than in food and agriculture.
Farm Credit Canada took a swing at quantifying just what it would take to achieve diversification in a newly released report that uses 2023 trade statistics as a starting point.
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