CVs for operating revenue

CVs for operating revenue
Table summary
This table displays the results of CVs for operating revenue. The information is grouped by Geography (appearing as row headers), CVs for operating revenue, Automotive repair and maintenance and Electronic, commercial and industrial machinery and equipment repair and maintenance, calculated using percent units of measure (appearing as column headers).
Geography CVs for operating revenue
Automotive repair and maintenance Electronic, commercial and industrial machinery and equipment repair and maintenance
percent
Canada 2.00 3.50
Newfoundland and Labrador 3.43 1.50
Prince Edward Island 3.78 6.20
Nova Scotia 3.83 3.41
New Brunswick 4.91 5.66
Quebec 4.88 10.81
Ontario 3.58 7.44
Manitoba 4.75 8.15
Saskatchewan 7.15 6.80
Alberta 5.47 6.04
British Columbia 4.65 7.52
Yukon 4.08 6.80
Northwest Territories 0.00 0.00
Nunavut 0.00 0.00

CVs for Total Sales

CVs for Total Sales
Table summary
This table displays the results of CVs for Total Sales. The information is grouped by NAPCS-CANADA (appearing as row headers), Quarter and 2016Q3, calculated using percent units of measure (appearing as column headers).
NAPCS-CANADA Quarter
2016Q3
percent
Total commodities, retail trade commissions and miscellaneous services 1.19
Retail Services (except commissions) [561] 1.21
Food at retail [56111] 2.45
Soft drinks and alcoholic beverages, at retail [56112] 1.26
Clothing at retail [56121] 2.14
Footwear at retail [56122] 2.04
Jewellery and watches, luggage and briefcases, at retail [56123] 2.19
Home furniture, furnishings, housewares, appliances and electronics, at retail [56131] 2.65
Sporting and leisure products, at retail [56141] 3.40
Motor vehicles at retail [56151] 1.57
Recreational vehicles at retail [56152] 3.86
Motor vehicle parts, accessories and supplies, at retail [56153] 1.99
Automotive and household fuels, at retail [56161] 3.10
Home health products at retail [56171] 2.01
Infant care, personal and beauty products, at retail [56172] 2.75
Hardware, tools, renovation and lawn and garden products, at retail [56181] 3.27
Miscellaneous products at retail [56191] 1.85
Total retail trade commissions and miscellaneous services CVs for Note 1 1.26

CVs for operating revenue- Engineering services

CVs for operating revenue- Engineering services
Table summary
This table displays the results of CVs for operating revenue- Engineering services. The information is grouped by Geography (appearing as row headers), CVs for operating revenue, calculated using percent units of measure (appearing as column headers).
Geography CVs for operating revenue
percent
Canada 1.30
Newfoundland and Labrador 1.74
Prince Edward Island 3.47
Nova Scotia 2.46
New Brunswick 2.12
Quebec 4.75
Ontario 2.31
Manitoba 1.80
Saskatchewan 3.91
Alberta 2.00
British Columbia 3.20
Yukon 2.18
Northwest Territories 0.43
Nunavut 0.00

CVs for operating revenue

CVs for operating revenue
Table summary
This table displays the results of CVs for operating revenue. The information is grouped by Geography (appearing as row headers), CVs for operating revenue and percent, calculated using Spectator sports , Promoters (presenters) of performing arts, sports and similar events , Agents and managers for artists, athletes, entertainers and other public figures and Independent artists, writers and performers units of measure (appearing as column headers).
Geography CVs for operating revenue
percent
Spectator sports Promoters (presenters) of performing arts, sports and similar events Agents and managers for artists, athletes, entertainers and other public figures Independent artists, writers and performers
Canada 0.01 0.02 0.00 0.03

The Monthly Survey of Large Retailers

The Monthly Survey of Large Retailers
Table summary
This table displays the results of The Monthly Survey of Large Retailers. The information is grouped by Legal Name (appearing as row headers), Operating Name (appearing as column headers).
Legal Name Operating Name
The Food Retailers  
Buy-Low Foods Limited Partnership AG Foods, Buy-Low Foods, Buy & Save Foods, Fine Foods, G&H Shop N' Save, Nesters Market
Loblaws Inc. At the Pumps, Atlantic Gas Bars, Dominion, Extra Foods, Joe Fresh, Loblaws, Loblaws à Plein Gaz, Maxi, Maxi & Cie, Provigo, Real Atlantic Superstore, Real Canadian Liquor Store, Real Canadian Superstore, Western Gas Bars, Zehrs, pharmacies in franchised locations (IR, Fortino's, No Frills, Save Easy, Your Independent Grocer, Value-Mart)
Metro Ontario Inc. Drug Basics, Food Basics, Metro, Super C, The Pharmacy
Overwaitea Food Group Limited Parternership Cooper's Foods, Overwaitea Foods, PriceSmart Foods, Save-On-Foods, Urban Fare
Sobeys Capital Incorporated Candico Food Markets, Canada Safeway, Canada Safeway Liquor Store, Fast Fuel, Foodland, Freshco, IGA, IGA Extra, Les Fiduciaries, Needs Convenience Store, Price Chopper, Rachelle-Béry, Sobeys, Sobeys Québec Secteur Pétrole, Thrifty Foods, Tradition, Western Cellars
The Department Stores (including concessions)  
Hudson's Bay Company Home Outfitters/Déco Découverte, The Bay/ La Baie, Zellers
Sears Canada Inc. Sears, Sears Home Stores, Sears Hometown Stores, Sears Outlet
Wal-Mart Canada Corp Walmart
The Other Non-Food Retailers  
American Eagle Outfitters Canada Corporation Aerie, American Eagle Outfitters
Apple Canada Inc. Apple Store
Bed Bath & Beyond Canada L.P. Bed, Bath & Beyond, Buy Buy Baby
Best Buy Canada Ltd. Best Buy
Birks Group Inc. Birks
BoutiqueMarie Claire Inc. Boutique Marie Claire, San Francisco, Terra Nostra
Brewers Retail Inc. The Beer Store
Canadian Tire Corporation Limited Canadian Tire, Canadian Tire Gas Bar, Partsource
Chevron Canada Limited Chevron Canada
Costco Wholesale Canada Ltd. Costco, Costco Liquor Store
CST Canada Co. Cardlock, Ultramar, Ultramar Corner Store
Dollarama S.E.C. Dollarama
Electronics Boutique Canada Inc. EB Games, EBX, Gamestop
FGL Sports Ltd. Atmosphere, National Sports, Sport Chek
Foot Locker Canada Co. Champs Sports, Footlocker
Gap (Canada) Inc. Baby Gap, Banana Republic, Banana Republic Factory Store, Banana Republic Outlet, Gap, Gap Factory Store, Gap Kids, Gap Outlet
Grafton-Fraser Inc. George Richards Big & Tall Menswear, Kingsport Big & Tall Clothiers, Mr. Big & Tall Menswear, Tip Top Tailors
Groupe ATBM Inc. Ameublements Tanguyay, Brault et Martineau, Economax, Super Liquida-meubles, Signature Maurice Tanguay
H&M Hennes & Mauritz Inc. H & M
Harry Rosen Inc. Harry Rosen
Holt, Renfrew & Co., Limited Holt Renfrew
Home Depot Of Canada Inc. The Home Depot
Husky Downstream General Partnership Husky
Ikea Canada Limited Partnership Ikea
Indigo Books & Music Inc. Chapters, Coles, Indigo, Indigo Spirit, Smithbooks
La Senza Corporation La Senza, La Senza Express
Le Château Inc. Le Château
Leon's Furniture Limited Leon's Furniture/ Meubles Léon
Les Placements Arden Inc./Arden Holdings Inc. Ardene
Liquor Control Board Of Ontario LCBO
Liquor Distribution Branch Of BC British Columbia Liquor Distribution Branch
London Drugs Limited London Drugs
Lowe's Companies Canada, ULC Lowe's
Lululemon Athletica Canada Inc. Lululemon Athletica
Luxottica Retail Canada Inc. Lenscrafters/Lunetterie Lenscrafters, Pearle Vision, Sears Optical, Sunglass Hut
Magasin Laura (P. V.) Inc. Laura, Laura Liquidation, Laura Petites, Laura Plus, Laura Triple, Melanie Lyne
Mark's Work Warehouse Ltd. Mark's Work Warehouse/L'équipeur
Moores The Suit People Inc. Moores Clothing For Men
Nygard International Partnership Alia, DFx, Jay Set, Nygard, Nygard Fashion Park, Tan Jay
Old Navy (Canada) Inc. Old Navy
Payless Shoesource Canada L.P. Payless Shoesource
Petm Canada Corporation PetSmart
Pharma Plus Drugmarts Ltd. Pharma Plus Drugmart, Rexall Pharma Plus
Pharmaservice Inc. Pharmaservice
Reitmans (Canada) Limited/Reitmans (Canada) Limitée Addition Elle, HybaPenningtons, Penningtons Warehouse/Penningtons Entrepot, Reitmans, R.W. & Co., Thyme Maternity
Roots Canada Ltd. Roots, Roots 73
Sephora Beauty Canada, Inc. Sephora
Shell Canada Products Beaver, Payless, Shell, Turbo
Sleep Country Canada L.P. Sleep Country/ Dormez-Vous
Société Des Alcools Du Québec S.A.Q.
Suncor Energy Products Partnership Petro Canada, Petro Pass
Suzy's Inc. Suzy Shier
The Brick Warehouse L.P. The Brick/Brick, The Brick Clearance Center, The Brick Mattress Store, United Furniture Warehouse
The Children's Place (Canada) L.P. The Children's Pace
The Source (Bell) Electronics Inc. / La Source (Bell) Electroniq The Source/La Source
Thrifty's Inc. (2005) Bluenotes
Tiffany & Co. Canada Tiffany & Co.
Town Shoes Limited DSW, Freedman Shoes, Sterling Shoes, The Shoe Company, The Shoe Warehouse, Town Shoes
Toys "R" Us (Canada) Ltd. Babies "R" Us, Toys "R" Us
Value Village Stores Value Village/Village Des Valeurs
Victoria's Secret (Canada) Corp. Pink Victoria's Secret, Victoria's Seccret,
Visions Electronics Limited Partnership Visions Electronics
Winners Merchants International L.P. HomeSense, Marshalls, Winners
YM Inc. (Sales) Sirens, Stitches, Stitches Mega Warehouse, Stitches Outlet, Urban Kids, Urban Man, Urban Plant

CVs for Total Sales by Geography

CVs for Total Sales by Geography
Table summary
This table displays the results of CVs for Total Sales by Geography. The information is grouped by Geography (appearing as row headers), Month, 201601, 201602, 201603, 201604, 201605, 201606, 201607, 201608, 201609, 201610, 201611, 201612 and 201701, calculated using percentage units of measure (appearing as column headers).
Geography Month
201601 201602 201603 201604 201605 201606 201607 201608 201609 201610 201611 201612 201701
percentage
Canada 1.0 0.9 0.9 0.9 0.9 0.9 0.9 0.9 0.9 0.9 0.9 0.9 1.0
Newfoundland and Labrador 1.0 1.0 1.2 0.8 0.8 0.9 1.0 1.1 0.9 1.2 0.6 0.9 0.8
Prince Edward Island 0.5 0.2 0.4 0.4 0.8 0.8 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.3 0.4 0.4 0.4
Nova Scotia 2.0 2.2 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.7 1.4 1.6 1.5 2.5 2.4 2.7 2.3
New Brunswick 1.1 1.2 1.2 0.8 1.0 1.1 0.8 1.6 1.4 1.0 3.9 1.3 1.5
Québec 2.4 2.4 2.7 2.6 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.6 2.3 2.6 2.8 2.3 2.5
Ontario 1.6 1.5 1.4 1.3 1.3 1.4 1.4 1.4 1.4 1.3 1.4 1.4 1.7
Manitoba 1.5 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.1 2.5 2.3 2.1 1.9 2.0 1.9 2.0 2.2
Saskatchewan 2.0 2.7 2.4 4.1 3.6 3.2 3.4 4.1 3.3 3.8 2.2 1.2 2.3
Alberta 1.7 1.5 1.6 1.4 1.5 1.5 1.5 1.9 1.9 1.8 1.5 1.8 1.7
British Columbia 1.8 1.7 1.6 1.8 1.7 1.7 1.6 1.6 1.6 1.7 1.4 1.5 1.6
Yukon Territory 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Northwest Territories 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Nunavut 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0

Inter-city indexes of price differentials, of consumer goods and services

Methodology

In order to produce optimal Inter-city indexes, product comparisons were initially made by pairing cities that are in close geographic proximity. The resulting price level comparisons were then extended to include comparisons between all of the cities, using a chaining procedure. The following initial pairings were used:

following initial pairings
city col 1 city col 2
St. John’s Halifax
Charlottetown-Summerside Halifax
Saint John Halifax
Halifax Ottawa
Montréal Toronto
Ottawa Toronto
Toronto Winnipeg
Regina Winnipeg
Edmonton Winnipeg
Vancouver Edmonton
 

Reliable Inter-city price comparisons require that the selected products be very similar across cities. This ensures that the variation in index levels between cities is due to pure price differences and not to differences in the attributes of the products, such as size and/or quality.

Within each city pair, product price quotes were matched on the basis of detailed descriptions. Whenever possible, products were matched by brand, quantity and with some regard for the comparability of retail outlets from which they were selected.

Additionally, the target prices for this study are final prices and as such, include all sales taxes and levies applied to consumer products within a city. This can be an important source of variation when explaining differences in inter-city price levels.

It should be noted that price data for the Inter-city indexes is drawn from the sample of monthly price data collected for the Consumer Price Index (CPI). Given that the CPI sample is optimized to produce accurate price comparisons through time, and not across regions, the number of matched price quotes between cities can be small. It should also be noted that, especially in periods when prices are highly volatile, the timing of the product price comparison can significantly affect city-to-city price relationships.

The weights used to aggregate the different product indexes within a city are based on the combined consumption expenditures of households living in the 11 cities tracked. As such, one set of weights is used for all 11 cities. Currently, 2011 expenditures are used to derive the weights. These expenditures are expressed in October 2014 prices.

The Inter-city index for a particular city is compared to the weighted average of all 11 cities, which is equal to 100. For example, an index value of 102 for a particular city means that prices for the measured commodities are 2% higher than the weighted, combined city average.

Additional Information on Shelter

Shelter prices were absent from the Inter-city index program prior to 1999 because of methodological and conceptual issues associated with their measurement. The diverse nature of shelter means that accurate matches between cities are often difficult to make.

To account for some of these difficulties, a rental equivalence approach is used to construct the Inter-city price indexes for owned accommodation. Such an approach uses market rents as an approximation to the cost of the shelter services consumed by homeowners in each city. It is important to note that this approach may not be suitable for the needs of all users. For instance, since the rental equivalence approach does not represent an out-of-pocket expenditure, the indexes should not be used for measuring differences in the purchasing power of homeowners across cities.

Industrial chemicals and synthetic resins

Manufacturing and Energy Division Annual Survey

Collected under the authority of the Statistics Act, Revised Statutes of Canada, 1985, Chapter S19. Completion of this questionnaire is a legal requirement under this Act. Under the provisions of the Statistics Act, Statistics Canada is prohibited by law from publishing or releasing, in any manner, any statistics which would divulge information obtained from this survey relating to any identifiable business without the previous written consent of that business (please see sharing agreement).

Important

Please return this questionnaire within 30 days. Please mail the completed questionnaire in the enclosed envelope or fax it to Statistics Canada at 1-204-983-3122.

Survey purpose

The purpose of this survey is to obtain information from Canadian manufactures on quantities of selected industrial chemicals and new virgin resins that is produced by Canadian manufacturers. Data collected by this survey provide an indicator of the economic condition of the producing industry and can serve as input to study market share and industry trends.

Sharing Agreement

To avoid duplication of information collection and to ensure more uniform statistics, Statistics Canada has entered into a data sharing agreement with Environment Canada under section 12 of the Statistics Act for the sharing of information from this survey. The information shared will be used for statistical purposes only. Under Section 12, you may refuse to share your information with Environment Canada by writing to the Chief Statistician and returning your letter of objection along with the completed questionnaire.

Has there been a change in ownership during the reporting period?

  • Yes
  • No

Was this plant operational during the reporting period?

  • Yes
  • No
Industrial chemicals and synthetic resins
This is an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada. This table contains no data.
Industrial Chemicals Commodity code for Statistics Canada use Quantity produced (including intermediate
products made in this establishment and
used in making other products)
Are you reporting in . . . metric tonnes, kilograms, pounds
1. Hydrochloric acid (muriatic), 100% – 2806.10.20  
2. Nitric acid, 100% – 2808.00.10  
3. Phosphoric acid; wet process (as 100% P2 O5 ) – 2809.20  
4. Sulphuric acid, all grades, including oleum (as 100%) – 2807.00  
5. Aluminum sulphate (alum) – 2833.22  
6. Ammonia anhydrous, 100% – 2814.10  
7. Ammonium nitrate, all grades – 3102.30  
8. Ammonium phosphate, all grades – 3105.30  
9. Butadiene – 2901.24.10  
10. Butylene – 2901.23  
11. Carbon black – 2803.00  
12. Chlorine – 2801.10  
13. Ethylene – 2901.21  
14. Formaldehyde 100% solids basis – 2912.11  
15. Hydrogen peroxide – 100% – 2847.00  
16. Methyl alcohol (Methanol) – 2905.11  
17. Propylene (as propylene in all grades) – 2901.22  
18. Sodium chlorate – 2829.11  
Industrial chemicals and synthetic resins
This is an empty data table used by respondents to provide data to Statistics Canada. This table contains no data.
Synthetic Resins Commodity code for Statistics Canada use Quantity produced of New Virgin Resin produced
(excluding compounding or colouring ingredients
Are you reporting in . . . metric tonnes, kilograms, pounds
19. Sodium hydroxide (caustic soda) (as 100% NaOH) – 2815.10  
20. Urea (all grades) – 3102.10  
21. Benzene – 2902.20  
22. Toluene – 2902.30  
23. Xylene – 2902.40  
24. Zinc oxide – 2817.00.10  
25. Polyethylene, low density – 3901.10  
26. Polyethylene, linear low density – 3901.90.10  
27. Polyethylene, high density – 3901.20  
28. Polystyrene – 3903.10  
29. Acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene (abs) – 3903.30  
30. Polyvinyl chloride – 3904.10  
31. Polyesters, unsaturated – 3907.91  
Respondent’s comments section
Statistics Canada commonly compares responses to this questionnaire with those provided by your organization last month. In order to reduce the possibility of further inquiries, would you please provide explanations of any significant changes in the reported data.

For further information please call 1-800-386-1275 or by Fax: 1-204-983-3122.

Statistics Canada advises you that there could be a risk of disclosure during the facsimile or other electronic transmission. However, upon receipt, Statistics Canada will provide the guaranteed level of protection afforded to all information collected under the authority of the Statistics Act.

  • Name of person responsible for this report
  • Telephone (Area code and number)
  • Facsimile
  • Website
  • E-mail address

5-3121-1400: 2009-01-12 STC/IND-310-60014

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