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Canadian securities regulation is managed through the laws and agencies established by Canada's 10 provincial and 3 territorial governments. Each province and territory has a securities commission or equivalent authority with its own provincial or territorial legislation.
CIRO operates under Recognition Orders from the Canadian Securities Administrators (CSA), which is the umbrella for Canada's provincial and territorial securities regulators. CIRO is subject to CSA oversight and regular operational reviews. [9] It operates according to its By-Law No. 1. [10] [11]
Reference re Pan‑Canadian Securities Regulation, 2018 SCC 48 is a landmark decision of the Supreme Court of Canada, dealing with the Canadian doctrine of cooperative federalism and how it intersects with the power of the Parliament of Canada over trade and commerce, as well as discussing the nature of parliamentary sovereignty in Canada.
System for Electronic Document Analysis and Retrieval (SEDAR) — the system that public companies and investment funds use to file public securities documents and information with the CSA. [12] There is also a XBRL Filing Program within SEDAR. [13] SEDAR is the Canadian equivalent of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's EDGAR. [5]
The Ontario Securities Commission (OSC; French: Commission des valeurs mobilières de l’Ontario) is a regulatory agency which administers and enforces securities legislation in the Canadian province of Ontario. The OSC is an Ontario Crown agency which reports to the Ontario legislature through the Minister of Finance.
The Alberta Securities Commission (ASC) is the securities commission responsible for administering and enforcing securities legislation in the Canadian province of Alberta. [ 1 ] The Alberta Securities Act RSA 2000 , a revision of the original Act that came into effect on January 1, 2002, is the statute that establishes Alberta's securities ...
In the Matter of a Reference by the Governor in Council concerning the proposed Canadian Securities Act, as set out in Order in Council P.C. 2010-667, dated May 26, 2010: Citations: 2011 SCC 66 (LexUM), Docket No. 33718 [1] Holding; Bill as proposed is not restricted to matters of genuine national concern, and is therefore unconstitutional.
The Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada (IIROC; French: Organisme canadien de réglementation du commerce des valeurs mobilières, or OCRCVM) was a non-profit, national self-regulatory organization (SRO).