Eric Reguly
Bio:

Eric Reguly joined The Globe and Mail in November of 1997. He has an Honours Bachelor of Arts in English and French Literature and a Masters in Journalism from the University of Western Ontario. He has worked for a number of publications, including the Times of London, The Financial Post in New York and London, England, the Financial Times of Canada, Alberta Report magazine and the London (Ontario) Free Press.

Until April, 2007, when he became The Globe's European business correspondent, based in Rome, Eric wrote the paper's main business column from Toronto. He also co-hosted a daily business programme on BNN, formerly Report on Business Television, and contributed to several magazines and web sites, including The Globe’s Report on Business Magazine, thefirstpost.co.uk and Time Canada. He is a regular guest on CBC Radio and makes speeches about business issues. Eric has won several awards for his work, including, in 2007, the Hyman Solomon Award for Excellence in Public Policy Journalism.

Eric was born in Vancouver, grew up in Toronto, Washington D.C. and Rome and has Canadian and Italian citizenship. He and Karen have two daughters, Arianna and Emma, who will, their father expects, become dazzling Italian soccer stars.

Latest Columns:

A complacent BHP lets the opportunities slip by

The miner may be eyeing Potash, but history suggests a marriage is not in the cards

Rusal's rising fortune at Mr. Putin's pleasure

Investors think the company deserves a lower-value multiple than its peers, but the potential for recovery exists

E-cars? How about producing streetcars?

Trying to sell the idea of public transportation at an auto show is like trying to sell knickers at a nudist camp

Airbus's white elephant flies company into peril

While no big aircraft project goes according to plan, the Airbus A400M has been a disaster from day one

On climate change, China could show the way

Economic and business forces could come into play to prevent carbon output skyrocketing even if the Copenhagensummit proves a dud

Oil still fuels the green state of Denmark

Something is rotten: Despite wind power, fossil fuels still dominate electricity production

This time, the gold bugs might be right

Soaring levels of U.S. debt, record stimulus, rock-bottom interest rates and tsunami waves of government bond sales will help to push the U.S. dollar ever lower, making gold increasingly attractive

Fiat may get mileage from Chrysler after all

While some analysts think Chrysler is unsalvageable, others are now taking the view that Chrysler is a turnaround story in the making

The timely death of a bad idea

The bancassurance model fails. Good riddance, writes Eric Reguly

Is the world awash in oil?

Not if you ask the folks who pump it