G20 summit forces Bay Street to move house

Bankers, lawyers and traders will work from home, shift to temporary offices and hotels outside security cordon

Boyd Erman and Jeff Gray

A pedestrian walks in front of The Royal Bank Plaza Tower on Front St., Toronto.

The heart of Canadian finance will shift from the gleaming towers of downtown Toronto to a series of non-descript buildings around the city's fringes to keep markets pumping during the G20 summit.

Banks and law firms that negotiate and broker deals are concerned less with G20 protesters causing violence during the June 26-27 leaders' summit, and more with the troubles that crowds and security would cause for employees getting to work.

The people that can are being told to work from home, or to take time off. But for many traders and other key deal makers enmeshed in non-stop global transactions, it's not that simple.

Law firms headquartered downtown are making plans such as booking hotel rooms for crucial “deal teams” who are working on time-sensitive negotiations that can't stop for protests. Financial behemoths such as Royal Bank of Canada and Bank of Montreal are prepared to move hundreds of their traders to secret backup locations scattered around Toronto, where full trading floors are ready and waiting for just such an evacuation.

Read on...

Come on. This is getting ridiculous. Just move the summit to Camp Borden. Let the leaders rough it. By the way, watch the video at this link. Your billion dollars in action. Tom

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