Sunday, April 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

HSBC Bank Canada Drops Prime Lending Rate To 2.95 Per Cent, Matching Others

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Mar, 2020 07:06 PM

    VANCOUVER - HSBC Bank Canada says it will lower its prime lending rate by 50 basis points effective today.

     

    The bank says in a statement the rate will be 2.95 per cent — down from 3.45 per cent.

     

    The move matches actions by several Canadian banks and financial institutions Monday.

     

    The Royal Bank, Toronto-Dominion Bank, Scotiabank, Bank of Montreal, CIBC and the Desjardins Group slashed their prime lending rates by 50 basis points to 2.95 per cent effective Tuesday.

     

    National Bank, meanwhile, made the same cut effective Wednesday.

     

    The drop matches the Bank of Canada's decision last Friday to drop its key lending rate by the same amount to 0.75 per cent in an unscheduled rate decision amid the novel coronavirus outbreak.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Commons Likely To Sit Again To Pass Economic Response To Covid-19, Trudeau Says

    OTTAWA - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says Parliament will likely sit again to pass emergency measures for the economy during the COVID-19 pandemic.    

    Commons Likely To Sit Again To Pass Economic Response To Covid-19, Trudeau Says

    Quebec Warns No Emergency Shelters For Spring Flooding Amid Covid-19 Outbreak

    MONTREAL - Quebec's public security minister is warning that due to the novel coronavirus outbreak, the province will not be able to open emergency shelters in the event of spring flooding.    

    Quebec Warns No Emergency Shelters For Spring Flooding Amid Covid-19 Outbreak

    COVID-19 Pandemic Brings Out The Best In Many Canadian Communities

    On a weekend when many Canadians were getting themselves ready to weather the COVID-19 pandemic, Jennifer Teufel-Shatilla was figuring out how to help others do so.    

    COVID-19 Pandemic Brings Out The Best In Many Canadian Communities

    Military Looking To Boost Ability To Respond To More Natural Disasters: Vance

    Military Looking To Boost Ability To Respond To More Natural Disasters: Vance
    OTTAWA - Gen. Jonathan Vance says the Canadian military will take a hard look at how to respond to the skyrocketing number of requests for assistance with climate-related emergencies.    

    Military Looking To Boost Ability To Respond To More Natural Disasters: Vance

    First Person: Getting Home From Poland, In Covid-19 Lockdown

    First Person: Getting Home From Poland, In Covid-19 Lockdown
    POZNAN, Poland - When my wife and I left Canada on March 3 destined for her ailing mother's hospital bedside, we never imagined that we would face the prospect of being in Europe and watching country after country go into various forms of lockdown — or that we would be directly affected by it.    

    First Person: Getting Home From Poland, In Covid-19 Lockdown

    Alan Kurdi's Aunt Has Mixed Feelings After Sentencing In His Case

    Alan Kurdi's Aunt Has Mixed Feelings After Sentencing In His Case
    VANCOUVER - The aunt of three-year-old Alan Kurdi says she has mixed feelings after three people were sentenced in the human smuggling case that resulted in the deaths of her nephew, his brother and mother as they fled Syria in 2015.    

    Alan Kurdi's Aunt Has Mixed Feelings After Sentencing In His Case