Dear Friends,
Tangents: Happy Monday.
Seattle Seahawks fans are happy folks today after the terrific win at yesterday’s Super Bowl. I thought the half-time extravaganza was amazing.
“On Sunday he [Bad Bunny] put on what might have been the best halftime performance in Super Bowl history: a riot of machine-tooled beats and swaying melodies, accompanied by so much dancing and so many different scenes—from a sugarcane plantation to a miniature nail salon to a handful of malfunctioning electric poles, to evoke and protest the island’s rolling blackouts—that when it was over, scarcely thirteen minutes after it began, viewers might almost have forgotten the appearances by Lady Gaga and Ricky Martin.” Kelefa Sanneh writes, in a review of the performance and its cultural resonance
Loren Elliott writes in the NY Times today that “The large number of A.I. ads featured during the Super Bowl LX broadcast may go down as more memorable than the game itself.” 15 of the 66 spots, which sold for an average of $8 million for 30-second slots – featured A.I., according to iSpot, a TV advertising analytics company. The Super bowl audience was around 130 million, some of whom may have tuned in to catch Puerto Rican star, Bad Bunny.
Fun factoid: Super Bowl Monday is typically the day of the year with the highest volume of workers calling in sick. Next year, the Super Bowl takes place over Presidents’ Day weekend, so the Monday after will be a holiday.
February 9, 1969: The Boeing 747 flies for the first time, debuting the “Jumbo Jet” as the world’s largest passenger aircraft at the time, and it still serves in passenger and cargo fleets today.
February 9,1971: Apollo 14 returned to Earth after man’s third landing on the moon.
Carole King, songwriter, b. 1942.
Alice Walker, writer, b. 1944.
The ancient Roman city 10 times the size of Disneyland
Each year, millions visit the remarkably preserved ancient city of Ephesus, stepping back in time to explore Roman baths and admire its landmarks.
Chasing the perfect shot
South African wildlife photographer Wim van den Heever was crowned Wildlife Photographer of the Year. His winning shot of this brown hyena was a decade in the making.
How to pick out a good Valentine’s Day gift for your partner
Before you wave the white flag and grab a last-minute gift card, consider this expert advice on picking out thoughtful presents.
Watch standout Super Bowl LX ads
This year’s Super Bowl commercials featured a star-studded lineup of celebrities and battles between AI companies. Here are a few standout commercials worth revisiting.
| Paleo-Inuit people braved icy seas to reach remote Greenland islands 4,500 years ago, archaeologists discover |
Archaeological remains on the Kitsissut Islands off the coast of Greenland reveal that whole communities regularly journeyed across the dangerous Arctic waters. Read More.
| ‘Maybe they’re waiting for something that only happens thousands of years later’: The hidden life ‘sleeping’ deep beneath Earth for millions of years |
Deep inside Earth lies a hidden world of “intraterrestrials” that have been dormant for hundreds of thousands of years — what are they waiting to “wake up” for? Read More.
| Scientist accidentally stumbles across bizarre ancient ‘wrinkle structures’ in Morocco that shouldn’t be there |
Ancient fossil structures imprinted on rocks that were once deep beneath the ocean suggest the search for the first life on Earth needs to be broadened. Read More.
| ‘Invisible scaffolding of the universe’ revealed in ambitious new James Webb telescope images |
A team of researchers using the James Webb Space Telescope has produced the most detailed map of dark matter to date. Read More.
| Extraordinary photo captures first appearance of Siberian peregrine falcon in Australia’s arid center |
An ecologist has captured a photo of a peregrine falcon subspecies in an unprecedented location. Read More.
| Physicists push quantum boundaries by turning a superfluid into a super solid — and back — for the first time |
Physicists saw excitons, a type of quasiparticle, undergo a reversible phase transition from superfluid to super solid for the first time, opening new doors for studying extreme states of matter. Read More.
PHOTOS OF THE DAY
Adelaide, Australia
Marilyn Monroe lookalikes take part in a swim to raise money for a cancer charity
Photograph: Amer Ghazzal/Shutterstock

Yabuli, China
A stack composite photo of the starry sky above Yabuli ski resort
Photograph: Xinhua/Shutterstock

The aurora borealis, also known as the northern lights, illuminates the sky over homes in Kapisillit
Photograph: Marko Đurica/Reuters
Market Closes for February 9th , 2026
| Market Index |
Close | Change |
| Dow Jones |
50135.87 | +20.20 |
| +0.04% | ||
| S&P 500 | 6964.82 | +32.52 |
| +0.47% | ||
| NASDAQ | 23238.67 | +207.46 |
| +0.90% | ||
| TSX | 33023.32 | +552.34 |
| +1.70% |
International Markets
| Market Index |
Close | Change |
| NIKKEI | 57294.44 | +930.50 |
| +1.65% | ||
| HANG SENG |
27027.16 | +467.21 |
| +1.76% | ||
| SENSEX | 84065.75 | +485.35 |
| +0.58% | ||
| FTSE 100* | 10386.23 | +16.48 |
| +0.16% |
Bonds
| Bonds | % Yield | Previous % Yield |
| CND. 10 Year Bond |
3.399 | 3.401 |
| CND. 30 Year Bond |
3.854 | 3.852 |
| U.S. 10 Year Bond |
4.1981 | 4.2060 |
| U.S. 30 Year Bond |
4.8531 | 4.8510 |
| BOC Close | Today | Previous |
| Canadian $ | 0.7373 | 0.7312 |
| US $ |
1.3562 | 1.3675 |
| Euro Rate 1 Euro= |
Inverse | |
| Canadian $ | 0.6193 | 1.6146 |
| US $ |
0.8399 | 1.1904 |
Commodities
| Gold | Close | Previous |
| London Gold Fix |
4948.00 | 4847.25 |
| Oil | ||
| WTI Crude Future | 64.36 | 63.55 |
Market Commentary:
On this day in 1966, the Vietnam War-era bull market peaked, buoyed by military spending and rising inflation. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed the day at 995.15.
Canada
By Bloomberg Automation
(Bloomberg) — The S&P/TSX Composite rose for the second day, climbing 1.7%, or 552.34 to 33,023.32 in Toronto.
The move was the biggest since rising 2% on Aug. 5.
Shopify Inc. contributed the most to the index gain, increasing 5.0%.
Iamgold Corp. had the largest increase, rising 10.5%.
Today, 146 of 217 shares rose, while 67 fell; 9 of 11 sectors were higher, led by materials stocks.
Insights
* In the past year, the index had a similar or greater gain three times. The next day, it advanced twice for an average 1.2% and declined 3% once
* The index advanced 30% in the past 52 weeks. The MSCI AC Americas Index gained 16% in the same period
* The S&P/TSX Composite is 1.2% below its 52-week high on Jan. 26, 2026, and 48.6% above its low on April 7, 2025
* The S&P/TSX Composite is up 2.6% in the past 5 days and rose 1.3% in the past 30 days
* S&P/TSX Composite is trading at a price-to-earnings ratio of 21.2 on a trailing basis and 20.3 times estimated earnings of its members for the coming year
* The index’s dividend yield is 2.2% on a trailing 12-month basis
* S&P/TSX Composite’s members have a total market capitalization of C$5.14t
* 30-day price volatility rose to 15.82% compared with 15.10% in the previous session and the average of 10.62% over the past month
Index Points
Materials | 299.9581| 4.7| 53/3
Financials | 111.3854| 1.1| 15/9
Information Technology | 76.6331| 3.3| 6/4
Energy | 40.5204| 0.8| 22/15
Industrials | 19.3479| 0.6| 21/8
Communication Services | 4.8454| 0.8| 3/2
Consumer Staples | 2.3260| 0.2| 7/3
Real Estate | 1.9132| 0.4| 7/10
Health Care | 0.2524| 0.3| 2/2
Consumer Discretionary | -1.8104| -0.2| 5/3
Utilities | -3.0227| -0.3| 5/8
Shopify | 64.8100| 5.0| 16.6| -27.3
Agnico Eagle Mines | Ltd | 54.3900| 5.8| -35.6| 22.2
RBC | 35.0400| 1.5| 14.9| 1.0
CGI Inc. | -4.0910| -2.7| 5.1| -13.3
Manulife Financial | -4.7130| -0.8| 89.4| 3.5
Sun Life Financial | -6.0410| -1.7| 172.4| 2.1
MT Newswires:
The Toronto Stock Exchange closed higher on Monday, taking it close to being even for the last seven volatile sessions, after recovering a total of more than 1,000 points between today and Friday, with the resources-heavy index buoyed by bargain buying after a couple of heavy recent sell offs and also positivity around commodity prices, as the team at Rosenberg Research “remain supporters of gold’s long-term story”.
The S&P/TSX Composite Index closed up 552.34, points or 1.7%, to 33,023.32, adding to the near 476 points gained last Friday.
On the Friday prior to that the index had crashed near 1,100 points, and even after then recouping more than 600 points over the next three straight sessions, slumped again by 577 points on Thursday.
Most sectors were up Monday, led by the Battery Metals Index up 4% and, in reflecting some of that positivity around commodities, Base Metals up 3.6%.
The Utilities sector was down near 0.3%.
Of commodities, West Texas Intermediate crude oil rose on Monday despite moderating international tensions and abundant supply.
WTI crude oil for March delivery closed up $0.81 to settle at US$64.36 per barrel, while April Brent crude was up $1.07 to US$69.12.
Also, gold pushed back above the US$5,000 mark as the dollar weakened, pushing traders to hard assets.
Gold for March delivery was up $93.40 to US$5,073.20 per ounce.
The price of the metal had stuck below US$5,000 since correcting from the Jan. 29 record high of US$5,354.80.
Still, gold has gained 11% over the past month on strong physical demand from central banks and exchange-traded funds, as well as momentum buying and a move away from risk assets.
In its latest ‘Strategizer’, a monthly guidebook for active investors, Rosenberg Research noted Strategizer’s commodity model crossed above the 70.0 “overweight” threshold two months ago for the first time since September 2024.
It noted the model slipped back into “neutral” last month, but it had since “found its legs” and pushed back up into “overweight” at 72.9 and “remains in favour” relative to other asset classes.
Overall, the research noted, the model is largely unchanged from the last update.
It said fundamentals are below average, but added cheap valuations, depressed sentiment, and undercrowded positioning are driving Strategizer’s positive view.
As for individual commodity rankings, the top four are as follows: aluminum (#1), sugar (#2), crude (tied #3), and wheat (tied #3), it noted.
Rosenberg noted the gold model continues to show soft prints, exhibiting a modest improvement in January to 15.2 from 12.8 last month.
“It comes as no surprise to anyone that the commodity markets, particularly the metals, have drawn widespread attention of late.
Silver and gold have been under the financial market microscope lately, continuing to soar to new record highs, and then came January’s closing day crash.
The thing is, trading like meme stocks left them open to a correction, as Strategizer had correctly flagged last month.
Despite the short-term volatility, the story has not fundamentally shifted over these past weeks; as such, we remain supporters of gold’s long-term story and see no changes to the structurally bullish narrative while acknowledging the risks in the near term.”
On equities, Rosenberg Research said Strategizer’s asset allocation tool points to a significant reduction in equity risk in favour of cash and bond positions.
Equities, it added, are now maximum underweighted; 40%, 20 points below its benchmark weight and 5 points below last month’s position, and fixed-income and cash are both maximum overweighted, at 50% and 10%, respectively.
According to the research, Strategizer’s Canadian equity score “fell notably”, reaching its lowest level since June 2021, sitting deep in ‘underweight’ territory at a “dismal” 7.0, yet still above the near-zero U.S. score.
It noted Canada’s TSX score has been below the 30.0 threshold since June of last year.
The research said fundamentals are improving, however improving sentiment, extreme valuations, relative to its own history, and technical overcrowding (all contrarian negatives) weigh on the overall score.
The commodity-driven rally over the past few months resulted in the model’s contrarian signals getting stronger, the research said, noting TSX’s top sector rankings are as follows: Materials (#1), Real Estate (#2), Financials (tied #3), and Energy (tied #3).
For both the S&P 500 and Canada’s TSX, Materials has taken the top spot; and sector favorites are in the value space, led by Materials, Energy, and Financials, the research said.
“Overall,” it added, “investment opportunities are narrowing, and equity scorecards are deteriorating on a broad basis, pushing the risk-off signal; Japan has emerged as the world leader within equities at this juncture. Basic Resources and Energy exposure lead in sector rankings. This is in line with the value-oriented rotation in the equity markets.”
US
By Rita Nazareth
(Bloomberg) — Another rally in tech companies after an artificial intelligence-driven rout drove stocks higher ahead of economic data that will help shape the Federal Reserve outlook.
Gold topped $5,000.
The dollar fell.
Following a surge that added $1 trillion to the S&P 500’s value at the end of last week, the index kept rising to approach its all-time highs.
A gauge of chipmakers climbed 1.4% while an ETF focused on software names extended a back-to-back advance to almost 7%.
Oracle Corp. jumped 9.6%.
Alphabet Inc. embarked on a global bond spree to fund its AI ambitions.
“When markets sell off like certain areas in tech have, there’s often knee-jerk rallies,” said Sameer Samana at Wells Fargo Investment Institute.
“Time will tell if we need a retest or if enough value was created.”
Traders are also gearing up for a busy week of economic data that include the two most-consequential snapshots — employment and inflation.
The jobs report – due Wednesday – is expected to show payrolls rose 69,000 in January.
The unemployment rate is seen steady at 4.4%.
The data will also include historical revisions that are anticipated to show a sizable downward adjustment to payrolls in the year through March 2025.
“So-so jobs report probably won’t have much of an impact, but traders expecting stocks to bounce on weak numbers have to consider the possibility that a choppy stock market may simply treat good news as good and bad news as bad,” said Chris Larkin at E*TRADE from Morgan Stanley.
In Friday’s consumer price index, economists will look for more evidence that inflation is on a downward trend.
Before that, figures on Tuesday are projected to show solid retail sales.
Action in the Treasury market was fairly muted following an earlier slide driven by news that Chinese regulators were said to be urging banks to curb US government bond exposure amid market risks.
The S&P 500 added 0.5%.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average held above 50,000.
The Russell 2000 climbed 0.7%.
The yield on 10-year Treasuries was little changed at 4.20%.
The dollar fell 0.6%.
Bitcoin wavered near $70,000.
Oil rose as the US advised ships to steer clear of Iranian waters when navigating the Strait of Hormuz.
UK assets bounced from session lows, with Keir Starmer’s cabinet members voicing support for the prime minister.
Japanese equities jumped to a record as Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi secured a historic election triumph.
For months, investors have been growing increasingly anxious about how AI will potentially transform the economy.
Last week, those concerned suddenly spilled over into the stock market.
The culprit was AI startup Anthropic, which released new tools designed to automate work tasks in various industries, sparking fears that the innovations would doom countless businesses.
The tumult left investors questioning some underlying assumptions.
Is the economy really strong enough to support another year of double-digit gains? Will AI’s promise of productivity gains instead wreak havoc on entire industries?
Are retail traders distorting markets, turning havens into hazards? The flip side is that there’s little fundamental evidence of deterioration.
US technology stocks have the scope to rally further as the buzz around AI underpins a robust sales outlook, according to Morgan Stanley strategists.
The team led by Michael Wilson said revenue growth expectations for the biggest tech stocks have reached “multi- decade highs,” while valuations have declined after recent market volatility.
At the same time, the rout in software stocks has opened up “attractive entry points” in some names.
The technology sector reset was a necessary digestion of prior gains, with the industry projected to record earnings-per- share growth of 32% in 2026, followed by an additional 20% in 2027, according to Sam Stovall at CFRA.
That compares with the S&P 500’s projected gains of 13% and 16%, respectively.
“Should these EPS growth estimates continue to hold up, investors will be pleased they stayed the course,” he said.
There seems to be faith that mega-tech companies know what they are doing in pouring so much money into building out the massive data centers, according to veteran Wall Street strategist Louis Navellier.
“There remain doubts as to the timing of the return on the huge investment, as well as the apparent restraint on coming up with the needed power supplies, but we’re already seeing significant job reductions due to the efficiencies of early implementation of AI solutions,” he said.
Markets are in a period of healthy rotation, and near-term skepticism about AI isn’t necessarily causing broader market disruptions at the moment, according to Anthony Saglimbene at Ameriprise.
“At present, big tech fundamentals appear sound,” he said.
“As long as fundamental conditions hold and tech surprises are kept to a minimum, current market conditions continue to favor a balanced asset allocation approach.”
The S&P 500 is poised for more gains this year as last week’s volatility is likely to remain brief, according to strategists at RBC Capital Markets.
The team led by Lori Calvasina says the five models they track still argue for “solid gains” in stocks, while noting that historical data on recent drawdowns suggest “it’s possible that this latest bout of weakness has played out for now.”
The strategists maintain their 12-month price target of 7,750 points for the S&P 500.
“Fourth quarter earnings season continues to be supportive for US equities,” said David Lefkowitz at UBS Global Wealth Management.
“Solid growth, supportive central banks, and AI should be the key drivers of further upside for US stocks. We maintain our June 2026 and December 2026 S&P 500 price targets of 7,300 and 7,700.”
The gauge closed at 6,964.82 Monday.
Chris Senyek at Wolfe Research expects continued volatility.
He noted that an area like consumer staples that has done so well this year is quite “overbought” while non-software tech stocks remain “very crowded” not only with institutional investors but retail as well.
“Further systematic selling is likely to continue over the near term,” Senyek said.
Hedge funds piled into short positions on US stocks as concerns about disruption to business models from AI reverberated through markets.
Notional short selling across single stocks last week was the biggest on record in Goldman Sachs Group Inc. data going back to 2016, the bank’s prime brokerage team said in a client note.
Short sales outpaced long buys by a magnitude of two-to- one, the team including Vincent Lin said, citing flows from the Jan. 30 to Feb. 5 period.
While software and the broader tech trade have seen selling to start the year, the percentage of stocks in the S&P 500 making new 52-week highs has been expanding, according to Bespoke Investment Group strategists.
“One of the reasons overall market breadths has been so strong is that consumer-staples stocks have caught a huge bid,” they said.
“While the S&P 500’s net-new highs breakout is a bullish sign, you don’t really want to see defensives leading a rally.”
While staples retreated on Monday, it has surged 13% in 2026 – compared with a gain of less than 2% in the US equity benchmark.
Most sectors within the S&P 500 have remained positive for the year, and that appears to align well with the rebalancing theme in which leadership was expected to rotate more widely after a period dominated by a very narrow set of winners, according to Brian Levitt and Benjamin Jones at Invesco.
“Periods of rotation can feel uncomfortable, especially when they affect assets that had been powerful performance drivers only weeks earlier,” they said.
“Yet these phases often help build the foundation for more durable market advances.”
Meantime, this week’s employment data and CPI report may prove pivotal for the Fed as it balances slowing job growth against lingering inflation risks, according to Jason Pride and Michael Reynolds at Glenmede.
“We’re watching whether early-year price pressures will be contained after strong core inflation in January,” said BlackRock Investment Institute strategists.
“The jobs report for January will shed light on whether the ‘no hiring, no firing’ stasis in jobs persists.
If so, and inflation proves little changed, we see the Fed leaving rates unchanged at its next meeting.”
To Dave Sekera at Morningstar, if CPI were to come out a lot hotter than expected, it could drive some concern and volatility.
But as long as it comes in anywhere close to expectations, it should be a “non-event,” he said.
“Economic data has been almost perfectly Goldilocks since the government re-opened in late November and that needs to continue to help stocks weather rising AI skepticism,” according to Tom Essaye at The Sevens Report.
“The stabilizing labor market should help keep the Fed on track to cut rates once or twice this year, assuming price pressures continue to ease,” said Angelo Kourkafas at Edward Jones.
“Lower interest rates should reduce borrowing costs for consumers and businesses, helping support the economy and corporate profits.”
To Torsten Slok at Apollo, the bottom line is that it is very difficult to be bearish on the US economic outlook.
Corporate Highlights:
* Microsoft Corp. shares were downgraded for the second time in less than a week as Wall Street grows increasingly wary about the potential disruption software stocks face from artificial intelligence.
* Meta Platforms Inc. was given a European Union warning over policies that block the use of rival Artificial Intelligence assistants on WhatsApp, raising the possibility of further tensions with the Trump administration over the regulation of US tech companies.
* While most Americans were transfixed by this year’s Super Bowl proceedings on Sunday night, Elon Musk took to X to proclaim that SpaceX would focus on building out a base on the moon before sending humans to Mars.
* Kyndryl Holdings Inc., an International Business Machines Corp. spinoff, plunged after the company announced key leadership exits and a review of its accounting practices.
* Eli Lilly & Co. agreed to buy closely held US biotech Orna Therapeutics Inc. for up $2.4 billion in cash, its second deal in as many days as the company expands its pipeline beyond its well-known blockbuster obesity drug Zepbound.
* Novo Nordisk A/S said it’s suing Hims & Hers Health Inc. for making knockoffs of its obesity medicines, even as Hims scrapped plans to sell a copycat version of the Wegovy pill.
** The US Food and Drug Administration said a TV advertisement for Novo Nordisk A/S’s new weight-loss pill included “false or misleading” claims about the drug’s ability to help users shed pounds, adding to the drugmakers’ recent woes.
* Kroger Co. plans to name Greg Foran as the supermarket chain’s next chief executive officer, according to a person familiar with the matter, as the nation’s largest grocer looks to carve a new path after a failed megadeal and an unexpected exit of its former boss.
* Converse employees have been instructed to work from home ahead of layoffs and restructuring at the struggling Nike Inc. brand.
* Apollo Global Management Inc. set a record in its business of making loans, a crucial plank in the firm’s ambition to become one of the largest underwriters on Wall Street.
* Chevron Corp. acquired a ranch in West Texas whose owner had been waging a legal battle accusing the US energy giant of negligently spilling toxic water and crude oil on the 22,000- acre property.
* Workday Inc. announced co-founder Aneel Bhusri is returning to head the software company, replacing chief executive officer Carl Eschenbach after the company’s shares have plummeted over the past year.
* Activist investor HoldCo Asset Management called a truce with two US regional banks and said it now supports KeyCorp’s chief executive officer after previously calling for his ouster.
* Cleveland-Cliffs Inc. plunged after the US steelmaker said it needed more time to land a deal with South Korea’s POSCO.
* Deep-water oil rig owner Transocean Ltd. agreed to acquire rival Valaris Ltd. in an all-stock deal valued at $5.8 billion as offshore drilling activity heats up.
* Newmont Corp. wants Barrick Mining Corp. to address what it says is underperformance at their joint venture mining operations in Nevada before its partner proceeds with an initial public offering of its North American assets.
* Expand Energy Corp. said Domenic “Nick” Dell’Osso, Jr. stepped down as chief executive officer as the largest US natural gas producer plans to relocate its headquarters to Houston from Oklahoma City in mid-2026.
* Clothing retailer Eddie Bauer LLC filed for Chapter 11 in what marks the chain’s third trip to bankruptcy court. This time, the plan is to sell as many as possible of its 175 stores — which employ about 2,200 people — and liquidate the rest.
What Bloomberg Strategists say…
“Monday’s equity rally continues to smack of short covering, and that coupled with other risks leaves stocks still on shaky ground near-term. Punters’ animal spirits aren’t quite dead yet, but the absence of long-term buyers in the rally suggests they’re waiting for clarity.”
—Alyce Andres, Macro Strategist, Markets Live.
Some of the main moves in markets:
Stocks
* The S&P 500 rose 0.5% as of 4 p.m. New York time
* The Nasdaq 100 rose 0.8%
* The Dow Jones Industrial Average was little changed
* The MSCI World Index rose 0.9%
* Bloomberg Magnificent 7 Total Return Index rose 1.1%
* Philadelphia Stock Exchange Semiconductor Index rose 1.4%
* iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF rose 3.2%
* The Russell 2000 Index rose 0.7%
* S&P 500 Equal Weighted Index was little changed
* Oracle rose 9.6%
Currencies
* The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index fell 0.6%
* The euro rose 0.8% to $1.1914
* The British pound rose 0.6% to $1.3696
* The Japanese yen rose 0.8% to 155.91 per dollar
Cryptocurrencies
* Bitcoin fell 0.1% to $70,573.51
* Ether rose 1.3% to $2,120
Bonds
* The yield on 10-year Treasuries was little changed at 4.20%
* Germany’s 10-year yield was little changed at 2.84%
* Britain’s 10-year yield advanced one basis point to 4.53%
* The yield on 2-year Treasuries declined one basis point to 3.49%
* The yield on 30-year Treasuries was little changed at 4.85% Commodities
* West Texas Intermediate crude rose 1.3% to $64.36 a barrel
* Spot gold rose 2.3% to $5,076.55 an ounce
Have a lovely evening.
Be magnificent!
As ever,
Carolann
Discontent is the first necessity of progress. –Thomas Edison, 1847-1931.
Carolann Steinhoff, B.Sc., CFP?, CIM, CIWM
Senior Investment Advisor
Queensbury Securities Inc.,
St. Andrew’s Square,
Suite 340A, 730 View St.,
Victoria, B.C. V8W 3Y7
Tel: 778.430.5808
(C): 250.881.0801 (Text Only)
Toll Free: 1.877.430.5895
Fax: 778.430.5828
