CIRO takes over Québec mutual fund rep oversight July 4

CIRO framed the change as a matter of clarity. “We are honoured to expand our involvement in the regulatory oversight of mutual fund representatives in Québec,” said Andrew Kriegler, the organization’s president and CEO. He said the announcement created “greater regulatory clarity and a single point-of-contact for mutual fund dealers and their representatives, which will ultimately serve to protect investors in Québec.” 

The AMF cast the move as part of a broader push to modernize how Québec regulates its financial sector. Recognition of the Chambre, the regulator said, establishes a more agile and resilient oversight framework and strengthens several dimensions of the Chambre, particularly its governance. “The coming into effect of these orders is a decisive step toward further simplifying and harmonizing regulation of the financial sector while maintaining public protection,” said Yves Ouellet, AMF president and CEO. 

The changes trace back to Law 16, the Act to amend various provisions mainly with respect to the financial sector. Chapter I of that law came into force in July 2025. It modernized regulation of Québec’s financial sector and created the Chambre through the merger of the Chambre de la sécurité financière and the Chambre de l’assurance de dommages. The law required the Chambre’s functions and powers over mutual fund dealer representatives and scholarship plan dealer representatives to be transferred elsewhere. 

Chantal Lamoureux, the Chambre’s president and CEO, said the recognition order lets the body work “in a spirit of transparency, agility and collaboration.” 

CIRO is the pan-Canadian self-regulatory organization that oversees all investment dealers, mutual fund dealers and trading on Canada’s debt and equity marketplaces. 

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *