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IIROC is amending its rules in the core areas of account appropriateness, know-your-client (KYC), suitability, conflicts of interest, and relationship disclosure information (RDI) and introducing new rules in the core areas of product due diligence and know-your-product (KYP) (collectively, the Amendments).1The Amendments are intended to make our requirements uniform in all material respects with the reforms to enhance the client-registrant relationship (Client Focused Reforms or CFRs) made to National Instrument 31-103 Registration Requirements, Exemptions and Ongoing Registrant Obligations (NI 31-103) by the Canadian Securities Administrators (CSA CFRs).2
The objectives of the Amendments are to:
The Amendments include both housekeeping rule changes (the IIROC CFRs Housekeeping Amendments) and public comment rule changes (the IIROC CFRs Public Comment Amendments). We are publishing the IIROC CFRs Housekeeping Amendments and the IIROC CFRs Public Comment Amendments in two separate notices on the same day. The IIROC CFRs Housekeeping Amendments are published in this Notice. The IIROC CFRs Public Comment Amendments are published in Notice 20-0238.
IIROC is permitted2 to make rule changes characterized as housekeeping. These changes are not published for comment, and are in effect immediately upon implementation. Housekeeping rule changes have no material impact on investors, issuers, members, registrants or the capital markets in any province or territory of Canada and, among other things, are necessary to conform IIROC’s rules to applicable securities legislation.
The IIROC CFRs Housekeeping Amendments are necessary to conform our requirements to the corresponding CSA CFRs provisions that our Dealers are subject to under NI 31-103 (i.e. Dealers generally do not have an exemption in NI 31-103 from these provisions). The CSA CFRs provisions are material in nature and will apply to Dealers with or without the existence of equivalent IIROC rule provision. The IIROC CFRs Housekeeping Amendments are duplicative of the equivalent CSA rule provisions; they do not add further material requirements on our Dealers and for this reason have been classified as housekeeping. Dealers will want to evaluate the impact of the IIROC CFRs Housekeeping Amendments on their current practices (e.g., policies and procedures) to determine whether any changes are required to reflect such amendments.
The IIROC CFRs Housekeeping Amendments include two main parts:
As part of this initiative, we are also introducing a few additional housekeeping changes that seek to ensure consistent use of terminology in the IIROC Rules, add clarity to the provisions, improve drafting and are reasonably necessary to conform IIROC’s Rules to applicable securities legislation, statutory or legal requirements (the Other Housekeeping Amendments). We believe that these changes have no material impact on investors, issuers, members, registrants or the capital markets in any province or territory of Canada.
We discuss the IIROC CFRs Housekeeping Amendments and Other Housekeeping Amendments in more detail section 2 and 3 of this Notice.
The IIROC CFRs Public Comment Amendments include four parts:
We discuss the IIROC CFRs Public Comment Amendments in more detail in Notice 20-0238.
In conjunction with the Amendments, we are also publishing for comment a proposed Product Due Diligence and Know-Your-Product guidance, (Proposed Product Due Diligence and KYP Guidance). This guidance is intended to assist our Dealers in understanding and complying with the product due diligence and KYP amendments and will replace Notice 09-0087 Best practices for product due diligence (Notice 09-0087), once implemented.
We discuss the Proposed Guidance further in Notice 20-0238.
We are not publishing revised guidance on conflicts of interest. IIROC Dealers are not exempt from the conflicts of interest requirements in section 13.4 and 13.4.1 of NI 31-103 so we refer Dealers to sections 13.4 and 13.4.1 of Companion Policy 31-103CP – Registration Requirements, Exemptions and Ongoing Registrant Obligations (CP 31‑103) for guidance on conflicts of interest requirements as it applies to them as well.
The Client Focused Reforms reflect the concept that in the client-Dealer relationship, the client’s interest comes first. Under the Amendments and in conjunction with existing IIROC rules, Dealers will be required to:
IIROC participated, along with the Mutual Fund Dealers Association of Canada (MFDA), in the development of the CSA CFRs with the CSA. Details of the consultation and rule development process undertaken by the CSA for the CFRs are set out in the CSA CFRs Notice.
The IIROC CFRs Housekeeping Amendments are summarized below.
In this section, we provide a summary of the IIROC CFRs Housekeeping Amendments. In all instances, we are adopting language in the IIROC Rules (and, in the case of conflicts of interest, in the existing Dealer Member Rules (DMRs)) that is materially uniform to the corresponding CSA CFRs provisions. While some of these changes correspond to CSA CRFs provisions that impose new requirements, others codify best practices set out in our existing guidance. With the description of each change, we identify the corresponding CSA CFRs provisions, and we discuss what we anticipate the impact will be of that change or the corresponding CSA CFRs.
The IIROC CFRs Housekeeping Amendments are classified as housekeeping rule changes because they are duplicative of the equivalent CSA CFRs that our Dealers are subject to under NI 31-103, or have no material impact on investors, issuers, members, registrants or the capital markets in any province or territory of Canada and are reasonably necessary to conform our rules to applicable securities legislation. The CSA CFRs provisions are material in nature and will apply to Dealers with or without the existence of equivalent IIROC rule provision. Generally, Dealers currently do not have an exemption from the corresponding CSA CFRs, which include the requirements for product due diligence and KYP, KYC and conflicts of interest. By making housekeeping rule changes so our rules are uniform in all material respects with the corresponding CSA CFRs provisions, we are generally not adding any net new material requirements on our Dealers. Where the corresponding CSA CFRs codifies existing best practices carried on by many Dealers, we generally expect the impact to be limited.
We added a new section requiring Dealers to provide training to their Approved Persons on compliance with IIROC requirements, securities laws and applicable laws, including the KYC, KYP, account appropriateness, product due diligence, suitability determination and conflicts of interest requirements.
Dealers may have to review their training materials.
As discussed in Notice 20-0079 and section 4 of this Notice, the CSA’s CFR conflict of interest amendments are being implemented prior to the implementation of the IIROC Rules. As such, we are amending our existing DMR 42 for consistency with the CSA’s CFR conflict of interest amendments, to be effective June 30, 2021. Once the IIROC Rules come into force on December 31, 2021, the conflict of interest provisions in the IIROC Rules will replace the corresponding DMR. In this section we reference both the applicable DMR and IIROC Rule provisions (in brackets).;
The housekeeping rule changes to our conflicts of interest rule are to align our existing requirements with the enhanced obligations of the CSA CFRs. They also are to address our concern that Dealers and Approved Persons are increasingly relying solely on disclosure to address conflicts of interest, as discussed in Notice 17-0093 - Managing Conflicts in the Best Interest of the Client – Compensation-related Conflicts Review. Under the CFR amendments Dealers cannot rely solely on disclosure as a means of addressing conflicts of interest.
The CSA CFRs, among other things, introduce a requirement to manage conflicts of interest in the best interest of the client. While our current conflicts of interest rule7 already includes a best interest standard, we made changes to this rule to align with the CSA CFRs. The amendments also introduce enhanced standards for the disclosure of conflicts of interest. The disclosure must include a description of the nature and extent of the conflict of interest, the potential impact on and risk that the conflict of interest could pose to the client, and how the conflict of interest has been, or will be, addressed. Dealers should review their existing conflicts of interest management practices to ensure they reflect the IIROC CFRs Core Housekeeping Amendments.
The IIROC CFRs Core Housekeeping Amendments include sentence structure and terminology changes in DMR sections 42.1 to 42.5 as set out in Appendix 3 [IIROC Rules sections 3110 to 3113 as set out in Appendix 1]. In addition, we made the following changes to make our requirements uniform in all material respects with the corresponding CSA CFRs provisions:
The changes to our KYC rules are required to align more closely, our language with the corresponding provisions in the CSA CFRs. These changes expand the KYC requirements to support the IIROC CFRs Suitability Amendments (discussed in Notice 20-0238) by clarifying the content and scope of the KYC process.
We do not expect Dealers to conduct a complete repapering of all their clients’ KYC information because of these changes prior to their implementation date, December 31, 2021. We would expect registrants to continue to schedule reassessments in accordance with current requirements up until then, and to schedule reassessments in accordance with the triggers in the Amendments after that date.
We are making the following changes to our relationship disclosure requirements in section 3216 to be uniform with the language in the corresponding CSA CFRs provisions. We are also making these changes to implement the principle that a Dealer must deliver to its client all information that a reasonable investor would consider important about the client’s relationship with the Dealer. Dealers will need to update their relationship disclosure document based on these changes.
Changes to our relationship disclosure rule include:
Our pre-trade disclosure requirement is expanded to include investment fund management expense fees or other ongoing fees that the client may incur. Dealers may need to update their pre-trade disclosure based on this change.
We have introduced product due diligence requirements for Dealers, and KYP requirements for Approved Persons in a new Rule 3300. Currently, the IIROC Rules do not include explicit product due diligence and KYP requirements. Instead, we have issued guidance on both these topics.10 Rule 3300, codifies IIROC Staff’s views on product due diligence and KYP set out in our existing guidance. We have published proposed new guidance on this matter in Notice 20-0238.
The new product due diligence and KYP requirements include:
We added a new section 3640, which provides that:
We are making the following changes to our general requirements to maintain records to ensure our language is uniform in all material respects with the corresponding CSA CFRs provisions.
We are implementing Consequential Housekeeping Amendments to harmonize our requirements with the IIROC CFR Core Housekeeping Amendments. These include updating section reference numbers where applicable, and other changes to our language and requirements.
While we do not anticipate that most Consequential Housekeeping Amendments themselves will have a significant impact on Dealer practices, the substantive changes they reflect may impact Dealer practices. For example, we updated the list of KYC factors in a number of sections. While we expect the new list of KYC factors introduced through the IIROC CFR Core Housekeeping Amendments to impact Dealer practices, we do not expect the Consequential Housekeeping Amendments arising out of that change to have a further material impact on Dealers.
We summarize all Consequential Housekeeping Amendments in Appendix 5 but some examples of these are:
In addition to the above changes, we are also introducing a few additional housekeeping changes that seek to ensure consistent use of terminology in the IIROC Rules, add clarity to the provisions, improve drafting and are reasonably necessary to conform IIROC’s Rules to applicable securities legislation, statutory or legal requirements. We believe that these changes have no material impact on investors, issuers, members, registrants or the capital markets in any province or territory of Canada.
The nature of the Other Housekeeping Amendments can be described under the following categories:
On September 23rd, 2020, the Board of Directors approved the IIROC CFR Housekeeping Amendments.
We are providing for a phased implementation period, consistent with that of the corresponding CSA CFRs provisions.
The Amendments relating to conflicts of interest will be introduced via proposed amendments to the current DMRs (see Appendix 3 and 4) and will be effective on June 30, 2021.
All remaining CFR (as set out in the IIROC CFR Housekeeping Amendments and the IIROC CFRs Public Comment Amendments) will be effective on December 31, 2021. Once the IIROC Rules come into effect on December 31, 2021, the conflict of interest amendments in the proposed IIROC Rules (see Appendix 1 and 2) will replace the corresponding DMRs that were implemented on June 30, 2021. Dealers will have to comply with the applicable Amendments after those dates.
The CSA has established an implementation committee to provide guidance, respond to questions and otherwise assist registrants to operationalize the CSA CFRs. We are participating in that implementation committee to ensure consistency in implementing the IIROC CFRs Housekeeping Amendments, which are uniform in all material respects with the corresponding CSA CFRs provisions.
Appendix 1 – Proposed Amendments to IIROC Rules (blacklined)
Appendix 2 – Proposed Amendments to IIROC Rules (clean)
Appendix 3 – Proposed Amendments to DMR (blacklined)
Appendix 4 – Proposed Amendments to DMR (clean)
Appendix 5 – Consequential Housekeeping Amendments Summary Chart
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