Alert:
A nationwide postal strike or lockout may occur as early as May 22, 2025. Dealer Members must take steps to ensure that document delivery requirements prescribed under CIRO Rules continue to be met.
The purpose of this Notice is to clarify requirements under MFDA Rules 1.1.3 (Service Arrangements), and 1.1.6 (Introducing and Carrying Arrangement). This Notice sets out general principles to be taken into account by Members prior to entering into such arrangements, and addresses regulatory concerns, and other related matters.
“Intermediary”, as used throughout this Notice, means: any financial institution (e.g. bank, dealer, or trust company), which has an arrangement with an MFDA Member dealer, for the purpose of facilitating transactions between the MFDA Member and a product issuer. As part of such an arrangement, the intermediary may provide one or a combination of services including, trade execution, custody, settlement, and/or record keeping.
Under MFDA Rule 1.1.3(a), a Member or Approved Person may engage the services of any person, including another Member or Approved Person, to provide services to the Member or Approved Person, as the case may be, provided that:
“…the services do not in themselves constitute securities related business or duties or responsibilities that are required to be performed by the Member or Approved Person engaging the services pursuant to the By-laws, Rules or applicable securities legislation.”
Under MFDA Rule 1.1.6, a Member may enter into an arrangement with another Member pursuant to which the accounts of one Member (the "introducing dealer") are carried by the other Member (the "carrying dealer"), provided that such arrangements comply with requirements under the Rule.
As noted above, arrangements under MFDA Rule 1.1.6 may only be entered into by parties who are MFDA Members. Rule 1.1.3 permits a Member or Approved Person to enter into a service arrangement with any party, subject to requirements under the Rule.
During the course of its regulatory activities, the MFDA has observed situations where Members and/or Approved Persons have entered into relationships with intermediaries for the provision of services. In some cases, such services are provided under an Introducing/Carrying arrangement, pursuant to requirements under Rule 1.1.6 (i.e. where the intermediary is or becomes an MFDA Member). In other cases, Members seek to enter into a service arrangement, pursuant to requirements under Rule 1.1.3, for the provision of essentially the same services. In these cases, the intermediary is not an MFDA Member.
MFDA staff engaged in a more detailed review and evaluation of Member and Approved Person practices in this area, additional particulars of which are set out below.
In reviewing the arrangements entered into by Members and Approved Persons, MFDA staff took the following general considerations into account:
Mutual fund dealers who offer their clients self-directed registered plans enter into an arrangement with a trust company to act as the trustee for these plans.
In both types of arrangements noted above, client accounts are limited to holding investments in which the Member is able to trade or advise. The client has an account with a Member and does not have a direct relationship with the intermediary. All activity in client accounts at the Member is considered the business and responsibility of the Member.
Under Rule 1.1.3, Members may enter into service receiver/provider arrangements with other MFDA Members, or with entities that are not registered under securities legislation (i.e. Non-Registered Intermediaries - “NRI”s).
In the case of a service receiver/provider arrangement, the NRI provides trustee/custodian services directly to the clients of the MFDA Member. Approved Persons may recommend that the client open an account with the NRI to allow the client to consolidate mutual fund securities with other investments which are not traded by or considered business of the Member.
The Member may send trade execution orders for clients either directly to the issuer or to the NRI, depending on the type of transaction. The NRI settles the trade and the assets are held in the registered account for the client at the NRI. Both the Member and the NRI prepare their own books and records, as the client is a client of both the Member and the NRI.
Investments other than mutual funds (e.g. publicly traded equities, limited partnerships and other exempt securities, GICs and segregated funds) can be purchased or transferred in and held in client accounts at the NRI. These investments may or may not be included on the Member’s books and records depending on the Member’s categories of registration or their view as to whether the investments were business of the Member. In such circumstances, clients have an account at the NRI which contains investments in respect of which the Member: (i) has provided advice; (ii) has not provided advice, or (iii) is not licensed to provide advice. The foregoing situation, in the view of MFDA staff, creates significant ambiguity, client confusion, and regulatory risk.
Set out below are regulatory concerns identified by MFDA staff in relation to intermediary arrangements noted in section IV.(B), above.
MFDA Members who operate as carrying dealers offer essentially the same services to mutual fund dealers as the NRIs under the service receiver/provider arrangement. Two key differences are that: (i) carrying dealers are limited to holding and trading in securities in which both the introducing dealer and carrying dealer are licensed and able to trade; and (ii) in introducing/carrying arrangements, all activity within client accounts is the responsibility of an MFDA Member. Under service receiver/provider arrangements, the NRI provides an opportunity for clients to hold other investments within their accounts and creates the potential for confusion as to which party is responsible for advising on various investments within the NRI account.
An NRI is not a registrant subject to the jurisdiction of a securities regulator and, as a result, is not subject to the same regulatory requirements as a carrying dealer, including business conduct standards (e.g. supervisory standards, or complaint handling requirements). Further, securities regulators do not have the same ability to address regulatory issues that may arise with NRIs, as they do with MFDA Member carrying dealers.
The mandate of the MFDA Investor Protection Corporation (IPC) requires it to meet specific requirements, including those related to customer protection, funding and maintenance, and risk management. NRI arrangements, as described above, make it more challenging to achieve these objectives. In part, this results from the potentially unlimited risk of loss to the IPC from assets that could be far in excess of the assets reported on MFDA Member books and records (which is the basis of determining adequacy of the IPC’s fund size).
There are also significant differences in the nature and extent of coverage provided by an NRI and the IPC. For example, if the NRI is a federally regulated financial institution, client assets are provided insurance coverage under the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation (“CDIC”). In the event of insolvency of the NRI, deposits in eligible accounts up to $100,000 would be subject to CDIC coverage. IPC coverage is more extensive, as it covers property in the account of a Member, as defined in the IPC Coverage Policy, including securities, cash, and segregated funds up to $1 million.
Clients may not be aware of the fact that when their account is with the NRI, and not a Member, coverage provided on their assets is materially less. Furthermore, clients may believe all assets in their account at the NRI are covered under the MFDA IPC policy when this may not be the case.
NRIs have arrangements with investment dealers that allow their clients (who are also clients of the MFDA Member) to trade in exchange traded securities and hold those securities in the same account as the mutual fund securities recommended by an Approved Person of the Member. The investment dealer does not provide any investment advice as a Delivery Against Payment (“DAP”) account is established for the client for execution services only. Clients typically open accounts at the NRI on the advice of their MFDA Approved Person, who in many cases is the only financial advisor responsible for providing financial advice to the client.
MFDA Approved Persons cannot advise on all securities that may be held in the account at the NRI. Consolidating mutual fund positions with other positions not sold through the MFDA Member results in Members and Approved Persons being unable to comply with their suitability obligations. An appropriate determination as to suitability requires a trade to be assessed by taking into consideration all positions within the account.
Having regard to requirements under Rules 1.1.3 and 1.1.6, the general considerations taken into account by staff during its review, and the regulatory concerns noted above, MFDA staff is of the view that intermediary arrangements discussed under section IV.(B), above (i.e. those administered by NRIs) should be entered into as Introducing/Carrying Dealer arrangements, pursuant to requirements under Rule 1.1.6, as opposed to service arrangements under Rule 1.1.3.
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