Canada’s leading business publication.
Runs every day as a stand-alone section in all editions of the paper.
The Report on Business brand also includes a magazine and website.

Canada's Best Business Coverage

The Globe and Mail's Report on Business has been Canada’s leading business publication for more than four decades. During this time, our international network of more than 100 reporters, editors and data specialists has helped readers be better equipped for their roles as economic players, workers, consumers and investors.

Report on Business covers Canadian, U.S. and international publicly traded companies, economic developments and business news, giving readers a global view of business trends and developments. But our editors aren't content with just the "what" of a story--they also provide context by explaining the "why" and the "how" that underlies today's business developments. What's more, Report on Business reporters and columnists possess the deep financial expertise required to drill down behind the scenes and explain what's really behind corporate profits, consumer spending and corporate innovation.

With extensions that include an award-winning magazine and the ReportonBusiness.com website, it is widely acknowledged to be the pre-eminent business brand in Canada. Marketers who want to associate their own brands with the authority and credibility that distinction confers are well-served with a presence in Report on Business.
Led by Globe and Mail business editor John Stackhouse, Report on Business and ReportonBusiness.com is home Canada's most respected team of business journalists.

Unlike many news operations, our web and print properties aren't separate publications; in fact, everything is run out of single newsroom. We see Report on Business and ReportonBusiness.com as complementary parts of an integrated and cohesive whole, one in which print delivers news on a need-to-know-now basis, and the web delivers in-depth data and stats as only it can.

Our daily stock listings--available in great detail via ReportonBusiness.com--have been replaced in the newspaper with new pages of interpretative data: financial charts, rankings, and stock profiles. We've also introduced the new ROB 100, a list of stocks covering 84% of the S&P/TSX composite index.


Regular Report on Business features include:

  • Agenda, a weekly forum for views on the most pressing issues in Canadian business that runs Mondays.
  • The Monday Morning Manager column and our new Strategists panel that appear on our new Management page.
  • The Corner Office page, where Gordon Pitts talks to top executives about their hopes and frustrations.
Report on Business columnists include:
  • Eric Reguly, who now reports from Europe on European business.
  • Derek DeCloet, whose column appears Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.
  • Trained investment analyst Fabrice Taylor, who contributes the Vox column.
  • Marcus Gee, our first-ever Asia-Pacific reporter.
  • Rob Carrick, who writes about personal finance on Tuesdays and Thursdays for MM.
  • Neil Reynolds, who writes a general column on business Wednesdays and Fridays.
  • John Heinzl, who writes the Market Moves column in Money and Markets Tuesday through Friday.
  • Simon Beck, who writes The Week column on Saturdays.
  • Patricia Best, who writes the Nobody's Business column from Tuesday through Thursday.
  • Harry Koza, who writes Fridays for Money and Markets.
  • Avner Mandelman, who writes the Buy Side column every second Saturday.
  • Ira Gluskin, who writes the Buy Side column every second Saturday.
  • Andrew Busch, who writes a markets column on Mondays for MM.
  • Tom Bradley, who writes on alternate Fridays on markets for Money and Markets.




Report on Business on the Weekend
An integral part of our Globe Weekend Edition, the changes made last year in our Report on Business section became the inspiration for our shift towards a more reflective, analytical weekend newspaper.

On Saturdays, our Globe Investor package offers seven full pages of data and charts, as well as commentary by Scott Adams and Rob Carrick and analysis by Heather Scoffield.