Credit Suisse Securities (Canada), Inc.

Decision

Headnote

Application for an order, pursuant to pursuant to section 80 of the Commodity Futures Act (CFA) granting relief from sections 42, 43, 44 and 45 of the CFA, which contain the requirement to deliver certain confirmations and statements of trade to customers in respect of trades in commodity futures contracts and commodity futures options as well as equity options in the context of trade "give-ups".

Statutes Cited

Commodity Futures Act, R.S.O. 1990, C.20, ss. 42, 43, 44, 45 and 80.

June 26, 2009

IN THE MATTER OF

THE COMMODITY FUTURES ACT,

R.S.O. 1990, CHAPTER C.20, AS AMENDED

(the CFA)

AND

IN THE MATTER OF

CREDIT SUISSE SECURITIES (CANADA), INC.

(the Applicant)

 

DECISION

UPON the application (the Application) by Credit Suisse Securities (Canada), Inc. (the Applicant) to the Ontario Securities Commission (the Commission) for a decision pursuant to section 80 of the CFA granting relief from sections 42, 43, 44 and 45 of the CFA which contain the requirements to deliver certain confirmations and statements of trade to customers in respect of trades in commodity futures contracts and commodity futures options in the context of trade "give-ups";

AND WHEREAS the Applicant has represented to the Commission that:

1. The Applicant is a corporation formed under the laws of the Province of Ontario.

2. The head office of the Applicant is located in Toronto, Ontario.

3. The Applicant is a dealer member of the Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada (IIROC). The Applicant is registered as an investment dealer in Alberta, Manitoba, Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, Northwest Territories, Nunavut Territory, Ontario, Saskatchewan, an investment dealer and underwriter -- securities in British Columbia, a broker in New Brunswick, a broker dealer in Prince Edward Island, a dealer - unrestricted practice in Quebec and as a broker -- securities in Yukon Territory. The Applicant is a participating organization or member of the Toronto Stock Exchange and Montreal Exchange and other electronic markets. The Applicant is a member of the Canadian Derivatives Clearing Corporation.

4. The Applicant has filed an application with the Commission to register as a futures commission merchant. The Applicant has applied to IIROC to permit it to engage in trading activity related to commodity futures contracts and commodity futures options.

5. The Applicant intends to act as executing broker in give-up transactions involving commodity futures contracts and commodity futures options. The Applicant intends to also act as a clearing broker for customers.

6. The Applicant only provides trading services to "institutional customers" as defined in IIROC Rule 2700.

7. In a typical give-up situation, a customer has an existing relationship with its clearing broker, and has signed account documentation with such clearing broker, but desires to utilize one or several other executing brokers for purposes of executing on one or more markets, whether domestic or global. In such an instance, the executing broker will execute trades as directed by the customer and "give-up" such trades to the clearing broker via various futures exchange mechanisms that allow for and govern this procedure, as more fully explained below. The customer does not sign account documentation with the executing broker, nor does the executing broker receive monies, securities, margin or collateral from the customer. The customer is a customer of the clearing broker and the executing broker is merely providing a limited execution transaction service. The executing broker is responsible for its own record keeping, bookkeeping, custody, and other requirements with respect to its customers, but is not responsible for most of these requirements with respect to an execution only customer, as that customer is on the books of the clearing broker.

8. Each give-up trade executed by the Applicant is captured in the Applicant's books and records and accounting system. A daily control performed by the Applicant's back-office identifies equity options, commodity futures contracts and commodity futures options positions held by the Applicant and not allocated to any of its customers' accounts. Each such position is investigated and is either i) sent to the clearing broker as a trade that was executed under a give-up agreement, or ii) upon receipt of new instructions allocated to a customer's account. For each customer a monthly invoice detailing all give-up trades for a given month is sent to the clearing broker. After reconciliation with the clearing broker's own records, the clearing broker pays the invoice sent by the Applicant. Consequently, upon payment of any invoice sent by Applicant to the clearing broker, the Applicant considers the invoice as evidence of trade reconciliation between its internal accounting and the client.

9. The Applicant is in compliance with IIROC requirements relating to the maintenance of records of executed transactions.

10. Section 42 of the CFA requires that a registered dealer that has acted as an agent in connection with a trade in a commodity futures contract promptly send customers a written confirmation of trade.

11. Section 43 of the CFA requires that a registered dealer that has acted as an agent in connection with a liquidating trade in a commodity futures contract promptly send customers a written statement of purchase and sale.

12. Section 44 of the CFA requires that registered dealers send customers a written monthly statement.

13. Section 45 of the CFA requires that a registered dealer that has acted as an agent in connection with a trade in a commodity futures option send customers a written confirmation of a trade.

14. The Applicant is seeking a decision from the Commission pursuant to section 80 of the CFA that it be exempt from the sections 42, 43, 44 and 45 of the CFA with respect to give-up arrangements because the imposition of those requirements is unnecessary, duplicative and not industry practice globally in the futures market.

AND UPON the Commission being satisfied that to do so would not be prejudicial to the public interest;

THE DECISION of the Commission is that the Applicant is exempt from the requirements of sections 42, 43, 44 and 45 of the CFA for the purposes of the Applicant acting as executing broker for give-up transactions where the clearing broker provides customers a written confirmation of the trades, provided that the Applicant enters into a give-up agreement with the clearing broker and the customer.

"Mary G. Condon"
Commissioner
Ontario Securities Commission
 
"Paulette L. Kennedy"
Commissioner
Ontario Securities Commission