LS-387E
BILL C-8: AN ACT TO ESTABLISH
THE FINANCIAL CONSUMER
AGENCY OF CANADA, AND TO AMEND CERTAIN ACTS
IN RELATION TO FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
Prepared by:
Blayne Haggart, Alexandre Laurin, Economics Division
Geoffrey Kieley, Margaret Smith, Law and Government Division
Marion G. Wrobel, Senior Analyst
14 February 2001
LEGISLATIVE HISTORY
OF BILL C-8
HOUSE
OF COMMONS
|
SENATE
|
Bill
Stage |
Date |
Bill
Stage |
Date |
First
Reading: |
7 February 2001
|
First
Reading: |
3 April 2001
|
Second
Reading: |
13 February 2001
|
Second
Reading: |
25 April 2001
|
Committee
Report: |
22 March 2001
|
Committee
Report: |
|
Report
Stage: |
28 March 2001
|
Report
Stage: |
|
Third
Reading: |
2 April 2001
|
Third
Reading: |
|
Royal Assent:
Statutes of Canada
N.B. Any substantive changes in this Legislative
Summary which have been made since the preceding issue are indicated
in bold print.
|
|
|
|
TABLE
OF CONTENTS
OWNERSHIP
STRUCTURE
A. Banks
1. The Current System
2. Policy
Considerations
3. Proposed
Changes
4. Holding
Companies
B. Insurance
Companies
BANK
HOLDING COMPANIES
A. Context
B. Incorporation
and Continuance of a Bank Holding Company
C. Capital
Structure
D. Name
E. Business,
Powers and Investments
F. Ownership
G. Directors
and Officers
H. Supervision
and Capital Adequacy
I. Insurance
Holding Companies
FOREIGN
BANKS
MERGER
REVIEW
A. Banks
B. Insurance
Companies
CO-OPERATIVE
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
A. Overview
B. Task
Force and Parliamentary Reports
C. Analysis
1. Structural
Changes
2. Ownership
Rules
3. Business
and Investment Powers
4. Retail Associations
5. Corporate
Governance
a.
Directors and Officers
b.
Dividend Cap
c.
Disclosure of Information
d.
By-laws
e.
Related-party Transactions
6. Security
Interests
7. Prudential
Agreements
REGULATORY
CHANGES
A. Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation Act
1. Analysis
B. Office
of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions
1. Analysis
a.
Administrative Monetary Penalties
b.
Prudential Agreements
c.
Removal of Directors and Senior Officers
d.
Measures Pertaining to Related-party Transactions
C. Regulatory
Streamlining
1. Analysis
CONSUMER
PROVISIONS
A. Bill
C-8: Financial Consumer Agency
of Canada (FCAC)
1. Objectives
2. FCAC
Staff and Responsibilities
3. Powers,
Duties and Functions
4. Violations
and Penalties
5. FCAC-related
Amendments in Other Acts
B. Other
Consumer-related Amendments
1. Canadian
Financial Services Ombudsman
2. Branch
Closures
3. Public
Accountability Statements
4. Disclosure
Requirements
5. Low-fee
Bank Accounts Made Mandatory
6. Tied
Selling Prohibited
C. Amendments
(Act by Act)
1. Cooperative Credit Associations Act
2. Green Shield Canada Act
3. Insurance Companies Act
4. Trust and Loan Companies Act
CANADIAN
PAYMENTS ASSOCIATION
A. Creation
and Expansion
B. Board
of Directors
C. Ministerial
Powers
D. Stakeholder
Advisory Council
E. Regulatory
Powers
F. Supervisory
Powers Repealed
G. Designated
Payment Systems
APPENDIX
I Demutualization
APPENDIX
II Merger Review Guidelines
APPENDIX
III Low-Cost Accounts Memoranda of Understanding
BILL C-8: AN ACT
TO ESTABLISH THE FINANCIAL CONSUMER
AGENCY OF CANADA, AND TO AMEND CERTAIN ACTS
IN RELATION TO FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
On
1 June 1992, the federal government proclaimed its new legislative framework
for federally regulated financial institutions: banks, trust and loan
companies, insurance companies, and the national organization of the credit
union movement. The new legislation
changed the landscape within which federally regulated financial institutions
operate by introducing new powers, making changes to the ownership regimes,
and instituting new prudential safeguards.
On
18 December 1996, the Minister of Finance announced the mandate and composition
of the Task Force on the Future of the Canadian Financial Services Sector.
The Task Force was asked to advise the government on what needed
to be done to ensure that the Canadian financial system remains strong
and dynamic. It examined
a number of substantial policy issues not dealt with by the 1996 White
Paper on Financial Institutions.
In
September 1998, the Task Force released its final report, which contained
124 recommendations dealing with four major themes: enhancing competition
and competitiveness; improving the regulatory framework; meeting Canadians
expectations; and empowering consumers.
Two
parliamentary committees the House of Commons Standing Committee
on Finance and the Standing Senate Committee on Banking, Trade and Commerce
scrutinized the Task Forces report.
Both committees conducted extensive public hearings and, in December
1998, issued their respective reports.
Following
these reports, in late June 1999, the Minister of Finance released the
federal government White Paper, Reforming
Canadas Financial Services Sector: A Framework for the Future,
outlining the governments vision for the future of the financial
services sector.
Bill
C-8 is the culmination of this lengthy process.(1)
The
predecessor to this Bill, Bill C-38, was given first reading on 13 June
2000. It died on the Order Paper when the November 2000 general
election was called. The Act was reintroduced on 7 February 2001
with some minor, mostly technical changes. This legislative summary updates
the LS for C-38.
Overall,
Bill C-8 proposes significant changes to the structure of the financial
services sector. It expands access to the payments system and significantly
blurs the distinctions between the different kinds of financial institutions.
On
the consumer side, Bill C-8 institutes a variety of consumer-protection
measures, most notably the creation of the Financial Consumer Agency of
Canada.
Bill
C-8 also changes the ownership structure of financial institutions by
allowing the creation of bank holding companies, and by instituting a
new size-based ownership regime for banks and converted life insurance
companies. This Bill is accompanied by policy guidelines that set out
the conditions under which mergers would be allowed as well as the conditions
under which existing Schedule I banks could be recategorized according
to the new size-based ownership rules.
This
legislative summary, which provides an analysis of Bill C-8, is organized
according to the following themes:
OWNERSHIP
STRUCTURE
A. Banks
1. The
Current System
Under
the current rules (Bank Act,
Part VII, s. 372-408), no individual may own more than 10% of any class
of shares in a Schedule I bank, regardless of its size.
Accordingly, Schedule I banks are always widely held.
No such limits apply to Schedule II banks, provided the owner has
the prior approval of the Minister of Finance to acquire shares exceeding
this limit. However, a shareholder
of a domestic bank may have holdings in excess of the 10% limit for the
first ten years of the banks existence; after that time the bank
becomes a Schedule I bank, subject to the widely held regime.
The purpose of this rule is to encourage the formation of new domestic
banks. The rule does not
apply to foreign banks, which may establish Canadian subsidiaries and
hold them indefinitely. Originally,
these Canadian subsidiaries were limited in the amount of Canadian assets
they could hold; however, as a result of Canadas participation in
various international trade agreements, these restrictions have been progressively
eliminated. Despite the elimination of these restrictions, Canadian subsidiaries
of foreign banks continue to account for only a small portion of all Canadian
bank assets.
Mutual
insurance companies also have been allowed to wholly own Canadian banks,
on the grounds that these insurance companies are themselves widely held
because of their mutual status.
2. Policy
Considerations
There
are two main policy reasons for the widely held requirement.
First, the absence of a controlling shareholder facilitates the
continued Canadian control of banks, regardless of ownership.
Previously, foreigners could hold no more than 25% of the share
issue of federally regulated financial institutions; however, successive
international trade agreements have led to the elimination of this restriction.
Canadian control of strong domestic financial institutions is considered
important because it:
-
provides
benefits to communities through philanthropic contributions and community
leadership;
-
establishes
the foundation for domestic financial centres, which provide high-skilled
employment opportunities to Canadians, and are an important source
of taxation revenue for Canadian governments; and
-
is
considered to be more sensitive than foreign-controlled institutions
might be to domestic market situations particularly in an economic
downturn.
Second,
the widely held requirement is believed to facilitate the separation of
financial and commercial activity; without this separation, dominant shareholders
with commercial interests could influence a bank to make lending decisions
that were not in the best interests of depositors or other shareholders.
Of particular concern in a system of deposit insurance, this view
was given some credence by the failure of many trust and loan companies
owned by dominant shareholders in the 1980s and early 1990s.
This concern led to the introduction of much more restrictive related-party
transaction rules in the 1992 legislation; it was also a factor in the
35% public float requirement for larger trust and loan companies and shareholder-owned
insurance companies, introduced at that time.
The
changes proposed by the new ownership rules aim to balance the desire
for increased competition in the banking and insurance sector and the
promotion of international competitiveness, while at the same time maintaining
the financial systems safety and soundness.
The current 10% restriction may preclude the use of stock as acquisition
currency for potential transactions requiring the granting of a position
in excess of 10% to a major shareholder in the target company.
In an industry increasingly dominated by consolidated institutions,
and in which many transactions are made through share exchanges, this
inflexibility is thought to seriously constrain the range of potential
strategies available to domestic banks.
3. Proposed
Changes
Under
the proposed changes, most of Part VII of the Bank
Act would be replaced. The current Schedule I and Schedule
II classifications would be eliminated.
The new ownership regime for banks would be based on equity:
-
small banks less than $1 billion
equity;
-
medium banks $1 billion to $5 billion;
and
-
large banks greater than $5 billion.
Large
banks would still be required to be widely held (s. 374).
However, to provide additional flexibility for large banks to enter
into alliances or joint ventures, the definition of widely held
would be expanded: a widely held bank would be one in which no person
owns more than 20% of any class of voting shares or 30% of any class of
non-voting shares(2)
(clause 36, s. 2.2 and 2.3). Medium-sized
banks would be allowed to be closely held, although a public float(3)
of 35% of voting shares would be required (s. 385).
Small banks would not be subject to any ownership restrictions
other than the fit and proper(4)
test.
Commercial
entities would be permitted to own banks with less than $5 billion of
equity. Subject to the fit
and proper test, large banks would be permitted to have strategic investors
owning up to 20% of voting shares or 30% of non-voting shares.
Ownership would be permitted based primarily on the size of a particular
bank: banks with equity of $5 billion or more would be required to be
widely held,(5)
banks with less than $5 billion of equity could be closely held.(6)
A widely held bank that controls a bank which passes the $5 billion
threshold only after the new law comes into force would be allowed to
retain its shares in the bank (s. 374; see below for similar exemptions
applying to widely held insurance holding companies governed by the Insurance
Companies Act). This
would permit a large bank or other eligible institution that establishes
a bank subsidiary to retain its interest in the bank despite the fact
that the bank has grown through the $5 billion threshold.
The
new law would permit banks to own other banks.
This is designed to introduce greater organizational flexibility;
for example, a bank could be restructured into a number of smaller banks,
each held by a widely held bank, with some or all of the subsidiary banks
having outside strategic investors.
Banks
with equity of $5 billion or more would not be permitted to have any major
shareholder (s. 374).(7)
For banks with equity under $5 billion, some restrictions would
continue to exist (s. 382); however, a single shareholder could entirely
own such a bank with the prior approval of the Minister (s. 377.1).
Although
the National Bank of Canada, Laurentian Bank of Canada and Canadian Western
Bank all have equity of less than $5 billion, the new legislation would
treat these banks as entities with equity of more than $5 billion
(s. 378(1)). Under the new
Act, as long as these banks
equity remains below $5 billion, the Minister could revoke this treatment,
in which case the bank could be closely held (s. 378(2)).
The Governments current policy is that the widely held requirement
would not be revoked unless the Minister received an application from
a bank in question along with indications that the interests of the particular
region served by the bank would be enhanced by changing the banks
status.
The
current rule requiring certain Schedule II banks to publicly trade a portion
of their shares would continue to apply.
Under the proposed system, once a bank exceeded $1 billion
in equity, at least 35% of the banks shares would have to be listed
on a stock exchange in Canada and held by persons who are not major shareholders
of the bank. The Minister
could make exceptions to this public float requirement.
This requirement would not apply to large banks because, being
widely held, they would not be permitted to have major shareholders.
This
proposed more liberal ownership regime gives rise to new supervisory issues,
such as what to do if a bank is owned by a conglomerate.
The Minister would continue to have broad discretion in deciding
who would be a suitable owner for a bank, and the new law would set out
a number of factors that the Minister could consider when making a decision. This list (s. 396) of factors is substantially the same as
that set out in the current Act;
however, two new elements would be added to the Ministers authority.
First, the Minister would be authorized to consider the Superintendent
of Financial Institutions opinion as to whether the corporate structure
of a particular applicant would impede the proper supervision and regulation
of the bank. Second, the
Minister would be authorized to order the assets of any closely held bank
to be frozen should the Superintendent voice concerns about the institution.
The order could be lifted upon the conglomerate organizing its
affairs to comply with the holding requirements of the law.
This provisions apparent objective is to warn potential applicants
that, in the case of a conglomerate, an applicant might not be permitted
to acquire an interest in a bank unless it was prepared to bring its financial
services into line with the requirements of the Act,
i.e, under a regulated holding company.
The Minister also would be entitled to consider the impact of any
proposed integration of the operations and businesses of the applicant
with those of the bank.
For
large banks, the new Act would
instruct the Minister to consider the character and integrity of an applicant
wishing to acquire an interest at the 20% or 30% limit, although the
Minister would not be precluded from considering control issues.
In addition to prohibitions against holding in excess of 20% of
voting shares or 30% of non-voting shares, the new Act
would specifically prohibit anyone from having a controlling interest
in a large bank.
The
new law proposes two new anti-avoidance rules aimed at ensuring that no
one shareholder is able to exert influence over a large bank.
The tainting rule would prohibit anyone from being
a major shareholder of any bank in Canada that is a subsidiary of a large
bank. If a shareholder insists
on remaining the major shareholding in the subsidiary bank, then the large
bank would be required to divest itself of the subsidiary. To provide large banks with some flexibility to establish joint
ventures, this rule would not apply to bank subsidiaries with equity of
less than $250 million.
The
second rule, known as the cumulative voting rule, would provide
that a person could only have a significant interest (ownership of more
than 10% of a class of shares) at one level in any group of banks related
to a large bank. If a person received approval to exceed the 10% limit with
respect to the parent large bank, the person could not exceed that level
in any subsidiary bank of the large bank.
Similarly, if a person exceeded the 10% limit with respect to any
subsidiary bank, the person could not apply for approval to acquire more
than 10% interest in the large bank.
Under
the current law, the Superintendent of Financial Institutions can exempt
a class of non-voting shares of a Schedule II bank from the ownership
regime if the class amounts to not more than 10% of the banks equity.
As such, a person can acquire more than 10% of the shares of that
class without first obtaining the Ministers approval. Further, the holder is deemed not to be a related party of
the bank for the purposes of the self-dealing rules(8) in the Act,
despite the fact that the shareholder would hold more than 10% of a class
of shares of the bank. Under
the new law, the Superintendent would be able to exempt a class of shares
in a bank with equity of less than $5 billion provided that the class
accounted for not more than 30% of the aggregate book value of all the
outstanding shares of the bank.
Under
the current law, banks face restrictions in terms of what they may invest
in or hold as a subsidiary. For
example, certain financial services such as credit card issuing
and consumer lending must take place within the bank itself.
The new law would expand the permitted types of subsidiaries so
that both a holding company and a parent-subsidiary structure would be
permitted a broader range of investments than is currently available to
banks. The purpose of expanding
permitted investment activities is to give banks greater choice and flexibility
with respect to structuring in order to carry out their activities in-house,
under a holding company, or through a parent-subsidiary structure, without
facing significantly different permitted investment constraints.
Permitted investments for trust and loan companies and insurance
companies would be similarly expanded.
The
ability to have additional subsidiaries would also permit the creation
of new special-purpose entities as well as facilitate alliances and joint
ventures through these entities, thereby enhancing the banks flexibility
to meet the increasing technological and competitive challenges from sources
such as unregulated and monoline firms specializing in a single
line of business. The new
rules would be based on defined categories of eligible investments and
a number of key parameters. Permitted
investments would be composed of five broad categories:
-
regulated financial institutions (e.g., banks, trusts);
-
firms primarily engaged in providing financial services
(e.g., credit cards, small business loans, consumer loans);
-
entities acting in the capacity of a financial agent,
advisor or administrator (e.g., investment counselling, payroll administration);
-
entities undertaking ancillary, complementary or incidental
activities (e.g., Interac service corporation activities, armoured
car transportation); and
-
certain other activities not primarily related to financial
services, but specifically enumerated (e.g., certain information services,
real property brokerage corporations).
Control
requirements, approvals and other rules would be based on the category
of investment.
4. Holding
Companies
The
widely held rule for banks could also be met by having the bank held by
a holding company(9)
(s. 374), providing the holding company was itself widely held.
The same ownership regime that applied to banks would apply to
bank holding companies. Similarly,
permitted investment rules would be similar for both banks and bank holding
companies. Rules relating
to insolvency, related-party transactions, governance, use of name, and
regulatory intervention powers would be different for bank holding companies,
reflecting the fact that the bank holding company would be required to
be non-operating, and that the Office of the Superintendent of Financial
Institutions (OSFI) would not be responsible for its creditors.
Only
the holding company created to hold the shares of the bank would be entitled
to the exception, i.e., another widely held bank holding company would
not qualify to own that bank. The
holding company option is designed to provide financial services providers
with greater choice and flexibility in structuring their operations, and
would allow them to compete more effectively in the global market by giving
them new latitude for raising capital and forming strategic alliances. The holding company regime would enhance domestic competition
by providing a structure for institutions to come together under a common
ownership structure without having to enter into a parent-subsidiary relationship.
This would allow them to maintain their separate identities to
an extent not possible under an acquisition or merger.
For example, a bank, an insurance company and a mutual fund company
might find they could realize economies of scale and scope if they were
to work together within a corporate group.
A
bank holding company structure would be an incorporated entity under the
Bank Act.
Banks would have the choice of moving certain activities that are
currently conducted in-house, or in a subsidiary of the bank, to an affiliate
outside the bank. Depending
on the risk that the affiliate poses for the holding companys bank,
the affiliate could be subject to lighter regulation than that of the
bank. However, the entire
group would be overseen in order to safeguard regulated affiliates.
The supervision of the holding company parent and its downstream
holdings would be risk-based, i.e., supervision would focus
on those group activities that may pose material risks to the bank and
other affiliated federally regulated financial institutions.
The OSFI:
-
would use its supervisory authorities over the holding
company and its subsidiaries on a discretionary basis as events warrant;
-
would have the authority to issue compliance orders,
require special audits, and require the holding company to increase
its capital where circumstances warrant; and
-
could require the holding company to divest a subsidiary
or other investments, if warranted.
As
well, the Bill would permit other corporations to be interposed between
the bank and the holding company, provided that the holding company controlled
all of the corporations above the bank in the chain of ownership.
Accordingly, up to 49% of the voting shares of the bank or of the
intermediate corporation might be held by an entity other than the holding
company.
B. Insurance
Companies
In
contrast to the banks ownership regime, there is currently no widely
held rule for federally regulated trust and loan companies or insurance
companies owned by shareholders. For these companies, as with the Schedule
II banks, the Minister of Finance must approve any shareholding in excess
of 10%; currently, there are no legislative restrictions or directions
on the exercise of this authority.
The one exception to the global 10% restriction relates to the
four former mutual life companies that demutualized(10)
during 1999 and 2000. For these companies (like the current Schedule I banks), the
current Insurance Companies Act
and regulations do not permit anyone to acquire more than 10% of any class
of shares of the company. Under
the new rules, demutualized companies would have a two-year transition
period from the time of demutualization, during which they would be required
to remain widely held; no mergers or acquisitions of demutualized firms
would be permitted. Following
the transition period, the requirement that large demutualized insurers
be widely held would continue. Medium-sized
demutualized companies would automatically be subject to the new size-based
ownership rules after the transition period.
Unlike banks, they would not need to apply to the Minister for
recategorization.
Three
of the demutualized companies established holding companies under the
Act at the time they demutualized;
as such, the ownership restriction applies at the holding company level.
No one other than the holding company is permitted to own any voting
shares of the demutualized company.
The new rules clarify the transitional nature of the widely held
requirements: for companies with equity of less than $5 billion at the
time they demutualized (i.e., Canada Life Assurance Company and Clarica
Life Insurance Company), the widely held requirement would continue to
apply, but only until 31 December 2001, after which time the two companies
could be closely held. The two companies with equity of more than $5 billion at the
time they demutualized (Manufacturers Life Insurance Company and Sun Life
Assurance Company of Canada) would have to remain widely held until the
Minister withdraws the requirement.
The
widely held rule applying during the transition period to the two larger
companies would differ from that applying to the two smaller companies.
The two larger companies would be subject to the same rule as the
large banks (i.e., no major shareholders); moreover, as with the large
banks, holding more than 10% of any class of shares would require the
Ministers prior approval.
For the two smaller companies, during the transition period, no
one could own more than 10% of any class of shares of each company.
For
the three companies that have established holding companies, the widely
held requirement would continue to apply at the level of the holding company.
Again, though, only the holding company that was created for the
purpose of holding the shares of the particular demutualized company would
qualify, i.e., the demutualized company could not be acquired by another
widely held holding company.
The
rules for holding companies would be somewhat relaxed from the current
rule in that the holding company would only need to control the demutualized
company in fact. A person
has control in fact where the person has direct or indirect
influence that, if exercised, would result in the person controlling the
company. The Act
does not draw a direct correlation between control in fact and ownership
of shares.
In
addition, as with banks, it would be possible under the new rules to interpose
other corporations between the ultimate widely held holding company and
the demutualized company, again provided that the holding company controlled
all of the corporations above the demutualized company in the chain of
ownership.
As
is the case under the current Bank
Act, a new insurance holding company regime would be incorporated
into the Insurance Companies Act. Consequently,
exceptions from the widely held requirements would also be made to permit
demutualized insurers to establish insurance holding companies, subject
to the same ownership requirements that would apply to the three existing
holding companies. A provision
has also been included to allow the one company that did not establish
a non-operating life insurance company holding company at the time it
demutualized (Clarica Life Insurance Company) to establish a holding company
as a non-operating life insurance company under the Act after the new ownership regime comes into force.
Under
the new rules, the Minister could decide to suspend the widely held requirement
for the demutualized companies.
In so doing, the Minister would be authorized to consider the opinion
of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions as to whether the corporate
structure of a particular applicant would impede the companys proper
supervision and regulation. Again,
as with banks, the Minister would have the authority to order that the
assets of a demutualized company be frozen if the Superintendent expressed
concern about the conglomerate to which the company would be affiliated.
The order could be lifted if the corporate structure of the conglomerate
were suitably reorganized.
The
Minister would also be permitted to consider, in respect of the acquisition
of any company, the effects of any possible integration of the operations
and businesses of an applicant with those of the company that the applicant
seeks to acquire. This would
permit the Minister to consider the impact of the acquisition on Canadian
jobs.
As
with large banks, if a purchaser were to seek to acquire an interest up
to the 20% or 30% limit for the large demutualized companies, the
new Act would instruct the Minister
to consider only the character and integrity of an applicant wishing to
acquire the interest.
The
new system would also contain two anti-avoidance rules, similar to the
banking rules, aimed at ensuring that no one shareholder could exert influence
over a demutualized company. The
tainting rule as it would apply to the two large demutualized
companies would prohibit anyone from becoming a major shareholder
in a life insurance company that is a subsidiary of the demutualized company. If a shareholder wished to remain the major shareholder in
the subsidiary, the company would be required to divest the subsidiary.
In the case of the two smaller demutualized companies, the rule would
apply to anyone acquiring more than 10% of any class of shares of the
subsidiary. The rule would
not apply to life insurance company subsidiaries having equity of less
than $250 million. As with
the banks, the apparent intent of this provision is to provide the companies
with flexibility to establish strategic investments.
The
cumulative voting rule would allow a person to have a significant
interest only at one level in any group of federal life insurance companies
related to a large demutualized company.
A person receiving approval to exceed the 10% limit in a demutualized
company could not exceed that level in any subsidiary federal life insurance
company. Similarly, if a
person exceeded the 10% limit for any subsidiary, the shareholder could
not acquire an interest in excess of 10% in the demutualized company itself.
Because it would not be permitted to acquire more than 10% of any
class of shares of the two smaller demutualized companies prior to 1 January
2002, applying the cumulative voting rule to these companies or their
subsidiaries would not be necessary.
Apart
from the demutualized companies, the new ownership rules for insurance
companies would not be based on size.
Unlike banks under the Bank
Act, an insurance company with equity above $5 billion (or one that
passed that threshold after the legislation came into force) would not
be required to be widely held.
The
current rule requires that companies with equity of more than $750 million
publicly trade a portion of their shares.
This public float rule would still apply; however,
under the new rules, this requirement would apply only after the companys
equity exceeded $1 billion.
At that point, at least 35% of the companys shares would
have to be listed on a stock exchange in Canada and held by persons who
were not major shareholders of the company. Unlike the Bank
Act (under which the Minister has broad discretion to grant exceptions),
the Minister could only exempt a company from the public float requirement
under the Act if the company
were controlled by one of the listed eligible shareholders.
For the most part, these shareholders are other financial institutions
that have similar public float requirements.
Also, unlike the large banks (to which the rule does not apply),
the four widely held demutualized companies would be subject to the public
float requirements.
Under
the current rules, the Superintendent of Financial Institutions may exempt
a class of non-voting shares from the ownership regime if the class amounts
to not more than 10% of the companys equity.
In the case of a mutual company, both the equity and the surplus
of the company would be taken into account.
Based on this exemption, a person could acquire more than 10% of
the shares of the exempted class without seeking the Ministers approval.
The holder would be deemed not to be a related party of the company
for the purposes of the self-dealing rules of the Act. The new rules would
permit the Superintendent to exempt a class of shares (other than those
of a demutualized company that is required to be widely held or one of
its holding companies), provided that the class accounted for not more
than 30% of the aggregate book value of all the companys outstanding
shares.
Banks
are heavily regulated because of their retail deposit-taking activities,
which are typically subject to deposit insurance.
Regulations are designed to help protect the integrity of that
system of deposit insurance as well as maintain the safety and soundness
of the financial system. Other
financial institutions which do not take deposits are less regulated,
and sometimes not regulated at all.
This has competitive implications when a non-bank subsidiary of
a bank competes in a market segment with unregulated or less regulated
financial services providers. Indeed, the subsidiaries of a bank are affected
by the capital and other requirements of bank regulation, even though
they are not directly involved in deposit-taking activities.
For
example, trust and loan companies, which also take deposits, have the
additional structural flexibility to organize via an unregulated holding
company. These companies
do not face the same structural restrictions as banks, as they are permitted
to disaggregate functions between regulated and unregulated affiliates.
This was considered by the Task Force on the Future of the Canadian
Financial Services Sector:
There
is a growing dichotomy between activities that are not regulated or
less regulated when carried on in some institutions, and more regulated
when carried on in others. As
markets become more competitive, the cost burden of regulation on the
same activities in some institutions and not in competing institutions
can affect competition in the marketplace. (Background paper #2, p.
45)
The
Task Force felt that two institutions performing the same functions should
be regulated in the same way with respect to these functions.
Canada
has a constitutional division of powers between the federal and provincial
governments over financial services.
The federal government has exclusive jurisdiction over banking
and the incorporation of banks.
Provincial governments have exclusive jurisdiction over property
and civil rights in the provinces and the incorporation of companies with
provincial objects. This suggests that the activities of trust and loan companies,
insurance companies, securities dealers, and co-operative financial institutions
that are provincial in scope do not fall within federal banking
jurisdiction. Therefore,
a truly functional approach to regulation is, in practice,
hard to implement.
Although
regulation must continue to be based on institutions, it is possible to
move closer to a functional approach by allowing more flexible
organizational structures for regulated financial institutions.
Allowing for the creation of financial holding companies would
accomplish this by helping banks to better compete with unregulated financial
institutions, form joint ventures, and reorganize their activities to
better tackle and take advantage of innovations in financial markets.
The
Bank Act is being amended to allow for the creation of bank holding
companies. Before issuing
letters patent incorporating a bank holding company, the Minister would
assess the suitability of the business plan and the prospective applicants.
The Minister would consider:
-
the capacity of the applicant to be a source of financial
strength for the bank that is proposed to be its subsidiary;
-
the soundness and feasibility of future operations of
the bank projected to be a subsidiary;
-
the character, integrity, competency and experience of
the applicants;
-
the impact of the integration of the banks activities
with those of other affiliates; and
-
the best interests of the financial system.
However,
if a proposed bank holding company was a subsidiary of a foreign bank,
letters patent could not be issued unless the Minister was satisfied that,
if the application was made by a non-member of the World Trade Organization
(WTO), a domestic bank holding company would obtain an equivalent treatment
in the jurisdiction in which the foreign bank principally carries on business
(s. 673).
Existing
banks could convert to a bank holding company structure.
On the banks request,(11)
subject to the approval of the Minister, shares of the bank holding company
could be issued, on a share-for-share basis, to all shareholders of the
bank in exchange for all the issued and outstanding shares of the bank
(s. 677(1)). The shares exchanged
would be subject to the same designation and restrictions and carry on
the same rights, privileges and liability as the shares of the bank for
which they are exchanged (s. 677(2) and (3)).
The ownership structure of the bank would automatically become
the ownership structure of the bank holding company.
Existing
corporations could also form a bank holding company(12)
(s. 682). Where a corporation
would be continued as a bank holding company, its existing property, obligation,
liability, prosecution, conviction, ruling and by-laws would continue
as the responsibilities and rights of the holding company (s. 687).
Moreover, the holder of a security issued by the corporation would
not be deprived of any right or privilege in respect of the security,
nor be relieved of any liability (s. 687(f) and s. 703(4)).
C. Capital
Structure
Shares
of a bank holding company would be in registered form and would be without
nominal or par value (s. 703(2)).
Moreover, where a corporation (including a bank) was continued
as a bank holding company, shares with nominal or par value issued by
the corporation before it was so continued would be deemed to be shares
without nominal or par value (s. 703(3)).
Where voting rights were attached to any series of a class of shares,
the shares of every other series of that class would have the same voting
rights either one vote per share or no vote per share (s. 706(3)
and s. 707).
Unless
permitted by the regulations, or with the consent of the Superintendent,
a bank holding company would not hold its own shares or the shares of
a controlling body. Moreover, the bank holding company would have to preclude
any of its subsidiaries from holding any of its shares or the shares of
a controlling entity (s. 714).
The
bank holding company would maintain a separate stated capital account
for each class and series of shares it issues (s. 710).
It also would maintain adequate capital and liquidity, subject
to the regulations of the Governor in Council and the Superintendents
guidelines (s. 949).
A
bank holding company would not be permitted to adopt a name that is substantially
similar to that of a bank unless the name contains words that, in the
opinion of the Superintendent, indicate to the public that the bank holding
company is distinct from any bank that is its subsidiary (s. 695).
Moreover, every bank holding company would have as part of its
name the abbreviation bhc or spb(13)
(s. 696(2)).
The
bank holding company would be required to be non-operating.
Its permitted activities would include acquiring, holding and administering
permitted investments as well as providing management, advisory, financing,
accounting and information processing services to entities in which it
has a substantial investment(14)
(s. 922(1)(a) and (b)). The
bank holding company could also conduct any other prescribed business
(s. 922(1)(b) and (c)). It
would not be permitted to undertake any core banking or financial services
functions such as credit assessments.
No
bank holding company would acquire control of, or increase a substantial
investment in, any entity other than a permitted entity (s. 928(1)).
Permitted entities, which would require the Ministers prior
written approval (s. 930(5)), would be defined as:
-
financial services providers formed and regulated under
federal or provincial legislatures which would include a bank,
a bank or insurance holding company, a trust corporation, a loan company,
an insurance company, a co-operative credit society and an investment
dealer; or,
-
a foreign entity primarily engaged outside Canada in
a business that, if carried on in Canada, would be the same business
as the activity of a permitted Canadian entity (s. 930(1)).
The
bank holding company also would be required to own a majority of the shares
of its bank subsidiary (or a bank holding company subsidiary), which would
result in both de jure control and control in fact of the bank subsidiary
(paragraph 930(4)(a)). Other
regulated affiliates would be subject to control in fact,
where a minority of shares could be held, but control could nevertheless
be exercised by direct or indirect influence (paragraph 930(4)(b)).
The same control restrictions would apply to affiliates that engage,
as part of their business, in any financial activity that exposes the
entities to material or credit risk (e.g., credit cards, small business
loans, consumer loans) (paragraph 930(4)(c)).
Furthermore,
a bank holding company could control:
-
any entity whose business is limited to providing financial
services that a bank is permitted to engage in;
-
any entity providing services exclusively to another
financial services entity, as long as the entity is also providing
those services to the bank holding company or any of its members;
-
a mutual fund entity or a real property brokerage entity
(s. 930(2));
unless
the entity was engaged in the business of accepting deposit liabilities,
or any activity that a bank was not permitted to engage in (s. 930(3)).
Finally,
a bank holding company and its subsidiaries could only acquire shares
or ownership interests of an entity, other than permitted investments,
up to a point that the aggregate value of those ownership interests, plus
the value of its interests in or improvement to real property, did not
exceed the prescribed percentage of its regulatory capital (s. 938, 939
and 940).
F. Ownership
Bank
holding companies would be divided into three main classes: ones with
equity of $5 billion or more; ones with equity of between $5 billion and
$1 billion; and ones with equity of less than $1 billion.
A
bank holding company with equity of $5 billion or more would have to be
widely held, i.e., no shareholder could hold more than 20% of any class
of voting shares, and no more than 30% of any class of non-voting
shares (s. 876 and 2.2). Shareholders
wishing to hold more than 10% ownership would have to obtain the approval
of the Minister. In determining
whether to approve a transaction, the Minister would review the applicants
character and integrity as a businessperson (s. 906).
Moreover,
the widely held requirement would apply to the total direct and indirect
ownership of a bank subsidiary that is itself controlled by a widely held
bank holding company with equity of $5 billion or more.
Other than the controlling bank holding company, no other shareholder
could hold more than 20% of any class of voting shares of the bank
subsidiary, and no more than 30% of any class of non-voting shares (s.
879). No shareholder who held more than 10% ownership of the bank
holding company could also hold more than 10% of the bank subsidiary (s.
880). This would mean that
no single investor would be able to use the holding company to exceed
bank ownership restrictions for widely held banks.
A
bank holding company with equity of between $1 billion and $5 billion
could be closely held,(15)
with the approval of the Minister (s. 883).
However, the bank holding company would be required to maintain
a 35% public float of voting shares, i.e., 35% of voting shares traded
on a recognized stock exchange in Canada and not owned by any major shareholder(16)
(s. 893). Finally,
bank holding companies with equity of under $1 billion would have
unrestricted choice in ownership structure, but the Ministers approval
would still be required for control and substantial ownership.
Therefore, bank holding companies with equity under $5 billion
could be owned and controlled by a commercial enterprise.
G. Directors
and Officers
The
minimum number of directors would be seven, and at least half of the directors
of a bank holding company that was a subsidiary of a foreign bank and
at least two-thirds of the directors of any other bank holding company
would have to be resident Canadians (s. 749).
At
least one unaffiliated member would have to be present at all Board meetings.
When
a contract was being considered by a bank holding company, any director
or officer in a conflict-of-interest situation would have to disclose
in writing or, request to have entered in the minutes of the meetings,
the nature and extent of that personal interest (s. 789).
Moreover, the director would have to be absent from any meetings
of directors while the contract was being considered some exceptions
would apply (s. 790). Finally,
the Superintendent of Financial Institutions could, by order, remove from
office a director or senior officer of a bank holding company if the Superintendent
believed that this person was not suitable to hold that office (s. 964).
The
bank holding company would be subject to consolidated supervision.
The Superintendent could request, by order, information and documents
from the bank holding company or any of its affiliates, to review both
financial and non-financial activities conducted under the holding company
(s. 954). From time to time,
the Superintendent could examine and inquire into the business and affairs
of each holding company (s. 957).
If necessary, the Superintendent could order the bank holding company
to take necessary actions to comply with regulations, or to remedy a situation
that was believed to be prejudicial to the interest of depositors, policyholders
or creditors (s. 960).
The
holding company group would be subject to consolidated capital adequacy
requirements (s. 949(1)), and the Superintendent could require the holding
company to increase its capital and liquidity where circumstances warranted.
When warranted, the Superintendent could, also by order, direct
a bank holding company to divest a subsidiary or other investments (s.
942).
I. Insurance
Holding Companies
Demutualized
life insurers could convert into insurance holding companies.
The rules that applied to demutualized insurance holding companies
would be broadly similar to the ones applicable to bank holding companies.
Insurance
holding companies that controlled a converted widely held insurance company
with equity of $5 billion or more at the time of the conversion would
be required to be widely held. However,
they could be allowed, by order of the Minister after the day that is
two years past December 31, 1999, to change their ownership status to
become closely held, with a 35% public float (clause 449, s. 927(4) and
(5)).
Insurance
holding companies with equity of less than $5 billion that controlled
a demutualized insurance company would be allowed to be closely held (with
a 35% public float if equity exceeded $1 billion) after the transition
period, with the approval of the Minister.
They would also be allowed to grow beyond $5 billion in equity
without any ownership restrictions, other than the 35% public float requirement
(s. 927 and 938).
Finally,
insurance holding companies that controlled a stock insurance company
(non-demutualized, e.g., Great West Life), with equity of $1 billion or
more, would have to comply with the 35% public float requirement, with
no other ownership restrictions (s. 938).
FOREIGN
BANKS
The
aim of these amendments is to clarify the rules with respect to the activities
of foreign banks in Canada. To date, the relevant sections of the Bank
Act have been unclear, necessitating clarification through policy
pronouncements and interpretations from the Superintendent and the Department
of Finance. In addition, the proposed changes aim to ensure access for
Canadian firms to international markets on the same terms as their international
counterparts, as well as fostering greater domestic competition by giving
foreign firms fuller access to Canadian markets.
Part
XII contains some recent changes regarding the manner in which foreign
banks may operate in Canada. A
foreign bank may establish either a full-service branch or a lending branch.
Full-service branches are permitted to take deposits greater then
$150,000. A foreign bank
wishing to take retail deposits (i.e., deposits under $150,000) may do
so only through a subsidiary. Lending
branches may not take deposits, they are restricted to borrowing only
from other financial institutions.
Because this puts no individual Canadians funds at risk,
lending branches face fewer regulatory requirements then do full-service
branches.
Part
XII of the Act would be replaced
in its entirety. This Part has undergone substantial re-drafting since
Bill C-38. Most notably, it has been split into eight divisions, each dealing with a different subject matter. Foreign banks
wishing to carry on business in Canada must comply with Part XII.
Although the policy remains unchanged, section numbers have changed,
and a new definition has been added. The part is still complex and substantial,
comprising almost 50 pages in Bill C-8.
In
broad terms, Bill C-8 creates three categories of foreign banks. The first
of these is what is commonly known as a near
bank.(17)
A near bank is an entity that falls within the definition of a foreign
bank for the purposes of the Bank
Act but that would not otherwise be considered a true regulated bank.
The second type is a regulated foreign bank that wishes only to carry
on commercial activities in Canada. The third is a regulated foreign bank
that wishes to offer financial services in Canada. Part XII provides different
rules for each type.
The
definition of foreign bank would remain unchanged, with the
result that the foreign financial institutions to which the Act
would apply would still be quite broad. Section 510 states that a foreign
bank could not (except in certain instances): undertake any business;
maintain a branch in Canada; establish bank machines; or acquire or hold
a substantial investment in a Canadian entity. As well, a foreign bank
could not (again, except in certain prescribed instances): guarantee securities;
or accept bills of exchange or depository bills issued by a person in
Canada for sale or trade in Canada. A foreign bank could apply to the
Minister for an order permitting it to establish a branch in Canada to
carry on business in Canada under Part XII.
A
foreign bank also could apply to the Minister for an authorization order,
the effect of which would be to remove the bank from the application
of Part XII and bring it under Part XII.1. The amendments to Part XII.1
(clauses 133-137) aim to ensure that authorized foreign banks would have
similar business powers to those of Canadian banks. As well, they would
ensure that new consumer provisions and new supervisory measures, including
the authority for the Superintendent to remove the banks principal
officer in Canada, applied to authorized foreign banks.
As
noted, Part XII is now broken into eight divisions,
each of which deals with a distinct subject matter.
Division
1 is the most involved, setting out definitions, including the criteria
that distinguish near banks from true banks.
A true bank (i.e., one that meets the criteria set out in section
508) may be designated by the Minister for the purposes of Part XII. Under
section 509, the Minister may exempt a bank from most of the requirements
of Part XII; however, the Minister may not designate the bank if it has
already been designated under section 508. This means that a bank that
does not meet the designation criteria under section 508 is not a true
bank, and may not be designated; it may, however, be exempted from some
or all of the requirements of Part XII.
A
bank may be designated a true bank if:
-
it
is regulated as a bank outside of Canada; or
-
it
is part of a conglomerate that contains one or more regulated banks,
and a material portion of the assets or revenues(18)
of the conglomerate are derived from the conglomerates
regulated banks.
Foreign
banks that previously received a consent order from the Minister under
what is now section 521 of the Bank
Act (and that have not been designated under subsection 521(1.06))
are deemed automatically to have an exemption order under new section
509. By contrast, foreign banks that are currently designated under subsection
521(1.06) are considered to be designated banks under the new Part XII.
Division
2 begins with a general prohibition on foreign banks carrying on business
or making investments in Canada except as authorized by Part XII. Accordingly,
a true bank seeking to carry on business or make investments in Canada
must have that business or those investments specifically authorized under
Part XII.
Division
3 sets out the rules for banks that do not have financial establishments
in Canada, but which seek to carry on business and make investments in
Canada which will not result in the bank having a financial establishment
in Canada. Essentially, the foreign bank would be permitted to engage
only in commercial activities, including entities listed in section 468(1)(a)
to (i).(19)
Division
4 deals with foreign banks seeking to carry on financial services activities
in Canada. Generally, these banks will be permitted to carry on the same
businesses and undertake the same investments permitted to a Canadian
bank under the Act. As re-drafted, this Division parallels Part IX of
the Bank Act, which establishes
investment rules for Canadian banks. The Part also allows the Minister
to permit a true foreign bank to carry on certain limited commercial business
in Canada; the activities must be the same as, or similar to, related
or incidental to the business outside of Canada of the foreign bank or
an entity associated with it.
Division
5, like Division 3, also deals with foreign banks. It requires that a
foreign bank without a financial institution in Canada must be either
designated or be associated with a designated foreign bank
in order to be permitted to acquire, control or be a major owner of:
-
an
entity referred to in section 468(1)(g) to (i);
-
a
permitted Canadian entity that is a financial services entity; or
-
a
Canadian entity that is a financial services entity, by way of temporary
investment.
The
foreign bank would also have to be designated to engage in securities
dealing or cooperative credit society business. The same conditions would
apply to an entity associated with a foreign bank. Similar conditions
would apply to foreign banks having a financial establishment in Canada
(and entities associated with them). Division 5 would not apply to investments
acquired, or branches or businesses addressed under Division 3.
Section
522.22 would require the Ministers prior approval for certain acquisitions
which would give the foreign bank controlling interest in certain Canadian
entities.
Division
6 is brief and deals with Administrative matters, and includes the authority
to make regulations, as well as other powers of the Minister to orders
divestiture, to include terms and conditions, to revoke or vary decisions,
etc.
Division
7 is also brief, and serves to exempt certain select transactions from
the application of the Investment
Canada Act.
Division
8 contains transitional rules for foreign banks already operating in Canada
with respect to businesses or investments that are no longer authorized
under Part XII. Some activities and investments are grandfathered; in
other cases, however, the rules require that the Minister be notified
with respect to the business activities of the grandfathered business
or investment, and also that the business or investment will not be altered
in the future.
For
foreign bank subsidiaries operating in Canada that have opted out of the
deposit-taking regime, amendments have been proposed that would
prohibit an opting-out bank from operating from premises open to the public
that are shared with or adjacent to those of a
non-opted-out bank affiliate. In
the case of adjacent premises, the prohibition would not apply if the
premises were clearly distinguished to the banks customers. A designated
foreign bank could invest in any entity in which a bank might invest,
including the new categories of permitted investments available to Canadian
banks. Where an investment was such that a Canadian bank making it would
require prior approval from the Minister, the foreign bank would also
be required to obtain in addition to the designation order
the Ministers approval.
Foreign
banks would be permitted to operate in Canada a branch of the bank, an
insurance company, a securities dealer, or a credit union, or to have
an investment in a Canadian entity that carries on the business of one
of these entities. Similarly, a foreign bank would be permitted to acquire
indirect investments as a result of these activities. For example, a foreign
bank could be permitted to make a temporary investment, or acquire and
hold investments, as a result of a loan work-out or realization of security
by its Canadian bank subsidiary.
Merger
activity in the financial services sector accelerated steadily throughout
the 1990s. As well, mergers
are getting larger with values now exceeding U.S.$500 billion. A number of factors are contributing to the trend.
In the United States, the elimination of regulatory restrictions
on interstate branching has resulted in the construction of a national
banking system for the first time in that countrys history.
In Europe, the introduction of the euro marks a new stage in European
integration, leading to increases in consolidation in order to exploit
the capacity to deliver cross-border financial services in a single currency
regime. Moreover, most countries have been experiencing increased consolidation
aimed at reducing costs and increasing efficiency in preparation for what
is seen by all participants as an increasingly competitive global marketplace.
In Canada, 185 mergers and acquisitions occurred in the financial
sector from 1993 to 1996, up from 125 in the previous four years.
Total merger activity in all sectors in Canada in the first half
of 1998 set a record high, without counting the two proposed Schedule
I bank mergers.
A. Banks
The
aim of this set of amendments is to allow domestically based financial
institutions to become large enough to compete internationally while maintaining
an acceptable degree of domestic competition.
Both
the Bank Act (in s. 223-231, Part VI) and the Insurance Companies Act (in s. 246-252, Part VI) treat mergers
(amalgamations) as distinct transactions from acquisitions.
The new legislation would expressly permit bank mergers; however, banks
with equity of $5 billion or more would be required to be widely
held. In this context, widely
held means that the bank has no major shareholder, i.e., one who
beneficially owns either directly or through entities controlled
by that shareholder more than 20% of the banks outstanding
voting shares or more than 30% of any class of the banks non-voting
shares.
Currently,
banks are permitted to merge with any other federally incorporated bank
and continue as one bank. Under
the new Act, mergers would also be permitted between a bank and: a) a trust
and loan company; b) a non-regulated lending institution; and c) an insurance
company (except demutualized insurance companies). Some of these mergers particularly that of a bank with
an insurance company raise transitional issues necessitating exemptions
from the Minister. The current
Act contains no provision prescribing
how provincially incorporated foreign financial institutions which are
not Schedule II banks can be amalgamated to form a bank.(20)
The
$5 billion threshold would also apply to mergers: If a bank with equity
of $5 billion merged with another bank or corporation, the merged
bank would be required to be widely held (s. 223(3)).
Some exceptions have been built into the regime applying to large
banks held by a qualifying shareholder (i.e., a widely held bank or bank
holding company):
-
Where two banks merged, the resulting merged bank would
have to be controlled by the holding company that controlled the large
bank prior to the merger.
-
If the parties to the merger were both large banks, each
controlled by a widely held holding company, the resulting merged
bank would have to be controlled by one of the holding companies that
controlled those merger partners.
-
If the merger would result in the creation of a bank
with equity of $5 billion or more, the merged bank would have to be
widely held or owned by a qualifying shareholder (i.e., a widely held
bank holding company or an eligible Canadian or foreign institution).
Section
228 sets out a list of factors the Minister would be required to consider
before issuing letters patent. The
Minister would be authorized to consider the Superintendents opinion
(s. 228(4(g))) as to whether the newly merged bank would present any supervisory
or regulatory concerns based on:
i) the nature and extent of the proposed financial activity;
or ii) the nature and degree of supervision and regulation applying to
the proposed financial activity.
The
integration plan would be a significant part of the new approach to merger
review. As recommended by
the Task Force, the parties would be required to prepare a Public Interest
Impact Assessment (PIIA) of both the micro- and macro-economic impact
of the merger.(21)
The PIIA would be required to indicate the costs and benefits of
the proposed merger. For
example, it would have to include an estimate of the impact of the merger
on sources of financing for individual consumers and small- and medium-sized
enterprises. It would also
be required to address regional impacts including branch closures and
changes to service delivery, as well as the impact on international competitiveness,
employment and technology.
In
addition, the PIIA would be required to set out the impact of the merger
on the structure of the financial sector overall, proposals to address
any negative results such as job losses or branch closures, and any other
matter the Minister of Finance might specify.
The matter would then be referred to the House of Commons Standing
Committee on Finance and the Senate Standing Committee on Banking,
Trade and Commerce for their consideration of the assessment, and
for public hearings. The
PIIA would be made public. More
detailed requirements of the PIIA would be set out in regulation.
Concurrent
with the Committee hearings, the Minister would receive reports from both
the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions (OSFI) as well
as the Commissioner of the Competition Bureau with respect to issues falling
within their respective authority.
The OSFI would report to the Minister on prudential issues. The Competition Bureau would provide the Minister and the parties
with the Bureaus view on the competitive aspects of the proposed
merger. These reports would
be made public, and would be available to the Committee for its scrutiny.
Based
on these reports, the Minister of Finance would decide whether the proposed
merger should proceed in light of the prudential, competition and public-interest
concerns. The three criteria
on which the government based its rejection of the 1998 bank merger proposals
would continue to apply: merger proposals would have to demonstrate that
they would not unduly concentrate economic power, significantly reduce
competition, or restrict flexibility to reduce prudential concerns.
The Minister could allow the proposed merger to proceed subject
to certain conditions. Should
the Minister find the concerns too great to be remedied, the proposal
would be rejected. The Competition
Bureau and OSFI would negotiate competition and prudential remedies with
the parties. These two agencies
would work with the Department of Finance to co-ordinate an overall set
of prudential, competition and other public-interest remedies.
It would then be left to the merging parties to decide whether
they wished to proceed in light of the conditions imposed upon the transaction.
If they decided to proceed, final approval of the merger would
be sought from the Minister. Further legislative changes would be introduced to permit a
breach of a term or condition to be remedied upon application to the court
(s. 229.1). The Governments
Merger Review Guidelines are attached as Appendix II.
B. Insurance
Companies
As
with banks, the Minister could issue letters patent amalgamating and continuing
the applicants as one company. Amended
s. 250(3) sets out a list of criteria the Minister would be required to
consider.
Provisions
of the new Act would restrict
the ability of demutualized(22)
insurance companies to merge. No
mergers would be permitted involving any one of the four recently demutualized
companies until 1 January 2002. After that date, restrictions applying
to the two smaller companies Canada Life Assurance Company and
Clarica Life Insurance Company would be lifted.
Restrictions similar to those applying to the large banks would
continue to apply to the two larger companies, Manufacturers Life Insurance
Company and Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada.
The following rules would apply to mergers involving demutualized
insurance companies:
-
If one of the large demutualized companies merged, the
resulting merged company would have to be widely held.
-
Only the holding company that controlled the large demutualized
company prior to the merger would qualify to control the new company.
-
If the two merger parties were both large demutualized
companies controlled by holding companies, the resulting merged company
would have to be controlled by one of the widely held companies or
insurance holding companies that controlled the merger partners.
No other corporation, regardless of whether it was widely held,
could become the holding company of one of the large demutualized
companies.
The
Minister would be able to order that the widely held requirement did not
apply to a large demutualized company.
In that event, the merger restrictions applying to the large demutualized
companies would also cease to apply.
In
any merger involving demutualized companies, the Minister would be authorized
to consider the Superintendents opinion as to whether the newly
merged company would present supervisory or regulatory concerns based
on the overall corporate structure applying to the company.
The Minister would also be authorized to consider the integration
plans of the merger applicants.
Unlike
banks, mergers involving companies with equity of $5 billion or more would
not be subject to the merger review policy.
CO-OPERATIVE FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
Consisting
of both credit unions and caisses populaires, the credit union movement
is an important component of the Canadian financial services sector.
Although the movement plays a role in most parts of the country,
it is particularly active in British Columbia, Saskatchewan and Quebec.
In the latter two provinces, for example, it comprises approximately
40% of the market share while in British Columbia the market share is
about 20%. More than 10
million Canadians belong to a credit union or caisse populaire, and the
movement manages more than $120 billion in assets.
The
credit union/caisse populaire system is characterized by a three-tiered
structure:
-
first tier individual credit unions and caisses
populaires;
-
second tier provincial centrals or regional federations
in Quebec;
-
third tier the Credit Union Central of Canada
(CUCC) (outside Quebec); inside Quebec, the Confédération des caisses
populaires déconomie Desjardins du Québec (Desjardins).
Credit
unions and caisses populaires are co-operatives owned and controlled by
their members. In Quebec,
each caisse belongs to one of a number of regional federations, which
in turn are members of the provincial federation, the Confédération des
caisses populaires déconomie Desjardins du Québec.(23)
Desjardins provides liquidity support for individual caisses through
the regional federations and provides access to the payments system.
By 1 July 2001, a new structure will be in place.
The caisses will be divided into 16 regional councils and
will elect their own representatives to the board of directors of the
Confederation.
Elsewhere
in Canada, a significant number of credit unions are members of a provincial
central credit union. These
provincial centrals in turn belong to the national central, the Credit
Union Central of Canada. Provincial
centrals provide a number of services in support of local credit unions.
Typically, these services include research, marketing, product
development and public relations, member education and professional development
programs, electronic data processing, government relations, capital for
loans and investment, management services, co-ordination of access to
the payments system, and the management of the liquidity pool for member
credit unions. The CUCC oversees
the national liquidity pool for the Canadian credit union system.
Both
the provincial and federal governments participate in the regulation of
the credit union movement. Individual
caisses and credit unions are incorporated and regulated at the provincial
level. In addition, the provinces provide deposit insurance for members
of credit unions or caisses populaires.
The CUCC is incorporated under federal law and regulated under
federal legislation; a number of provincial centrals (British Columbia,
Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario and Nova Scotia) have chosen
to register under both federal and provincial legislation.
B. Task
Force and Parliamentary Reports
The
Task Force on the Future of the Canadian Financial Services Sector noted
that Canada does not have strong second-tier financial institutions to
compete with the major banks. Pointing
to the success of the Mouvement Desjardins, the Task Force felt that the
co-operative sector had an opportunity to build a system in the rest of
Canada that could achieve the level of success gained by the caisse populaire
system in Quebec.
The
Task Force felt that public policy should not constrain the ability of
credit unions and caisses populaires to compete and become more effective
players in the financial services market.
Concluding that the current policy framework is too rigid, and
that the structural fragmentation of the system outside Quebec is a barrier
to the growth of the credit union sector, it made a number of recommendations
designed to increase the flexibility of credit union centrals to engage
in joint ventures and provide services to assist local credit unions in
offering more financial services products to customers.
These included proposing changes to the Cooperative
Credit Associations Act that would:
allow credit union centrals to provide wholesale services to other
financial entities or retail services directly to members of local credit
unions; and remove the restrictions on the ability of credit union centrals
to enter into financial joint ventures among themselves and with credit
unions. The Task Force further
called for the creation of co-operative banks.
This proposal would allow a credit union or a group of credit unions
to apply to become a federally chartered co-operative bank.
Credit union centrals could also become co-operative banks whose
sole business would be to provide services to local credit unions.
Both
the House of Commons Standing Committee on Finance and the Standing Senate
Committee on Banking, Trade and Commerce supported the Task Force recommendations
concerning the co-operative financial sector.
The
White Paper issued by the Department of Finance in June 1999 proposed
legislative changes that would permit the co-operative financial sector
to restructure its operations into a two-tier system consisting of local
credit unions and the federal credit union central.
The upper tier would be a national service entity.
The government also stated that it would work closely with credit
unions wishing to form a national co-operative bank.
C. Analysis
Bill
C-8 would make several changes to the Cooperative
Credit Associations Act (CCAA)
to provide the credit union system with increased structural flexibility
as well as expanded business
and investment powers. The
credit union movement identified a number of challenges that it hoped
would be addressed by the Bill:
the inability of credit unions to provide services to members who
move to another province; constraints on the ability of credit unions
to pool resources and skills in different parts of the country; duplication
of backroom activities and administrative costs; and lack of co-ordination
of products and services.(24)
1. Structural
Changes
The
Bill contains several proposed amendments that would enable the credit
union system, if it wished to do so, to move from the current three-tier
structure local credit unions, provincial credit union centrals,
and the national credit union central to a two-tier structure consisting
of local credit unions and a national services entity.
The
Bill would ease the constraints on the ability of an association to control
another association. Under
clause 256, an association could be created by another association or
at least two credit union centrals, ten local credit unions, or two or
more leagues. However, not
all of the centrals, credit unions or leagues could come from one province
(s. 24). Before approving
the incorporation of an association, the Minister of Finance would have
to consider a number of factors, including the character and integrity
of the applicants, whether the association would be operated responsibly
by persons with the competence and experience suitable for operating a
financial institution, whether the association is to be operated in
accordance with cooperative principles, and the impact of the integration
of the business and operations of the applicant with those of the association
on the conduct of those businesses and operations (s. 27).
This last factor would allow the Minister to consider the impact
of an associations creation on jobs.
The
Bill provides for a new type of entity a league which clause
248 defines as a provincially incorporated co-operative created by local
credit unions for providing administrative, technical, research and consultative
services and goods related to those services to credit unions. By establishing a framework for leagues from more than one
province to form an association, the Bill would accommodate the creation
of a national services entity.
Clause
258 would allow for the continuance of a corporation incorporated under
provincial or other federal laws as an association under the CCAA.
Continuances could also be granted for the purposes of amalgamating
with another corporation.
Under
clause 259, an association could apply for a continuance as a trust and
loan company, a bank or a bank holding company, or for amalgamating and
continuing the association as any of the foregoing.
With the approval of the Minister, an association could also apply
for a continuance under the Canada
Business Corporations Act or the Canada
Cooperatives Act.
Likewise, under the amendments to the Trust and Loan Companies
Act (clause 487, s. 38), a cooperative-owned trust company would be
allowed to continue as an association under the CCAA.(25)
Clause
285 (s. 226) would provide for the amalgamation of associations under
the CCAA as one association if the proposed capital and corporate structure
of the amalgamated association met the requirements for an association
under the Act.
A horizontal short-form amalgamation regime would be available
under clause 286 where at least one of the applicants was an association
and all the applicants were wholly owned subsidiaries of the same holding
company.
Clause
287 sets out the matters that the Minister would have to take into account
before approving an amalgamation that would create one association.
These include:
-
the source of continuing support for the amalgamated
association;
-
the soundness and feasibility of the plans for the future
conduct and development of the business of the association;
-
the business record and experience of the applicants;
-
the reputation of the applicants for operating in a manner
consistent with the standards of good character and integrity;
-
whether the amalgamated association would be operated
responsibly by persons with the competence and experience suitable
for the operation of a financial institution;
-
the impact of any integration of the operations and businesses
of the applicants on the conduct of these operations and businesses;
-
whether the association is to be operated in accordance
with cooperative principles; and
-
the best interests of the financial system in Canada.
Clause
270 would introduce new provisions to facilitate the transfer of assets
from a member of an association to the association.
With the approval of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions,
an associations by-laws could contain a formula for valuing a member
or its assets or liabilities when the association proposed to acquire
the member or such assets or liabilities in exchange for shares.
In addition, clause 289 would add new provisions to the CCAA
that would allow an association to sell all or substantially all of its
assets to a federally incorporated financial institution, a bank holding
company or an authorized foreign bank.
Such a sale would have to be approved by a special resolution of
the associations members and shareholders and by the Minister of
Finance (s. 233.1- 233.5).
2. Ownership
Rules
Bill
C-8 would expand the association ownership rules.
The CCAA currently provides
that at least two credit union centrals or at least ten local credit unions
can form an association. In
both cases, not all of the centrals or credit unions can be located in
one province. Clause 256 (s. 24) would amend this provision by providing
that an association could be incorporated by an association, or applicants
that include at least two credit union centrals, ten local credit unions,
or two or more leagues. Again,
the centrals, credit unions and leagues would have to come from more than
one province.
Under
clause 263, membership in an association would be limited to associations,
credit union centrals, credit unions, co-operatives, deposit protection
agencies, leagues or unincorporated organizations consisting of any of
the foregoing entities. Clause
265 provides that an associations membership would have to include
at least an association, two credit union centrals, ten local credit unions,
or two or more leagues. The
centrals, local credit unions and leagues could all be from one province.
Clause
266 would amend the CCAA provision
that deals with control of an association.
Section 52 of the Act,
which currently states that no individual can control an association,
would be amended to allow an association to control another association.
The Bill would lower the minimum capital requirement to form an
association from $10 million to $5 million.
Section
354 of the CCAA would prevent
a person from acquiring a significant interest in (defined as more than
10% of shares) or increasing a significant interest in an association
without the approval of the Minister of Finance.
It would also allow the Superintendent of Financial Institutions
to exempt any class of shares from the ministerial approval requirement
if the class was not more than 10% of the associations equity.
Clause 297 would raise the exemption limit to 30%.
Clause 298 (s. 354.1), however, provides that the Ministers
approval would be required before a person could acquire control as a
result of having a direct or indirect influence on an association that
would amount to control in fact of the association.
Before
approving an application to acquire a significant interest in an association,
the Minister would be required to consider a number of factors, including:
-
the nature and sufficiency of the applicants financial
resources as a source of continuing support for the association;
-
the soundness and feasibility of the plans for the future
conduct and development of the business of the association;
-
the business record and experience of the applicants;
-
the character and integrity of the applicant;
-
whether the association would be operated responsibly
by persons with the competence and experience suitable for the operation
of a financial institution;
-
the impact of any integration of the operations and businesses
of the applicant on the conduct of the operations and businesses of
the association;
-
whether the association is to be operated in accordance
with cooperative principles; and
-
the best interests of the financial system in
particular, the cooperative financial system in Canada
(s. 358.1).
Where
a person had applied to the Minister for approval to acquire control of
an association, the person would have the right to make representations
to the Minister if the Minister were not satisfied that the application
should be approved (s. 361(2)).
3. Business
and Investment Powers
Clause
306 would amend s. 375 of the CCAA
to broaden an associations general business powers.
Under s. 375, associations are currently limited to providing
financial services to:
(a)
a member of the association;
(b)
an entity in which an association has a substantial investment;
(c)
another association;
(d)
a credit union;
(e)
a co-operative corporation; or
(f)
an entity or group of entities controlled by an entity described
above.
Bill
C-8 would expand the general business power by allowing an association
to be engaged in such business as generally appertains to the business
of providing financial services to the entities listed above and
to an entity controlled by an entity or group of entities described above. This would allow an association to engage in activities relating
to or generally supporting the provision of financial services.
Section
376 of the CCAA sets out a number
of additional business powers, such as:
(a) holding
real property;
(b) acting
as a custodian of property on behalf of its members or credit unions;
(c) receiving
money on deposit from the federal, provincial or municipal government
and a deposit protection agency;
(d) making
loans to and investments in entities that are not members of the association;
(e) making
loans to officers and employees of the association;
(f) providing
management, investment, administrative, advisory, educational, promotional,
technical, research and consultative services to members of the credit
union system; and
(g) with
the Ministers approval, providing information services and products
to any of the members.
Clause
307 would expand an associations business powers to include providing
financial services to persons outside the credit union system or providing
clearing, settlement and payment services to members of the Canadian Payments
Association, or ancillary services related to the clearing, settlement
and payment services.
It
would also add to the roster of permissible activities for an association.
For example, s. 376 would provide that, with the Ministers
approval, an association could provide the following services to other
members of the credit union system or, in the case of a retail association,
to any person:
-
collecting, transmitting and manipulating financial or
economic data;
-
providing advisory services related to the design, development
or implementation of information advisory services;
-
designing, developing or marketing computer software;
and
-
designing, developing, manufacturing or selling computer
equipment integral to the provision of information systems.
Furthermore,
an association could offer data transmission services.
This would include developing, designing, holding and managing
data transmission systems, information sites, communication devices, and
information platforms or portals.
However, these services would have to be related to processing
financial or economic information.
Under
the existing Act, an association
cannot acquire more than 10% of the voting shares or more than 25% of
the total equity in another entity (a substantial investment) unless the
investment is permitted by the Act.
The list of allowed substantial investments includes entities such
as financial institutions, factoring corporations, financial leasing corporations
and mutual fund corporations whose activities relate to the services offered
by credit unions.
Under
the Bill (s. 390), an association would be able to acquire control of
or make substantial investments in other financial institutions including
banks, or bank holding companies, insurance holding companies, credit
unions, other associations, securities dealers, and trust and loan companies.
This would allow an association to create separate entities for
different types of services.
In
addition to being able to invest in other financial institutions, an association
could invest in any entity that provided a service that a retail association
would be permitted to provide under certain provisions of the Act
(s. 390(2)(a)) and in holding companies with investments that an
association would otherwise be able to invest in directly (s. 390(2)(b)).
Investments would also be permitted in service corporations.
An association, for example, could invest in an entity that provided
services to financial service providers and their affiliates (s. 390(2)(c)).
Under
s. 390(2)(d), investments would be permitted in entities that engage in
activities related to the promotion, sale, delivery or distribution of
a financial product. As long
as the financial services to which a significant portion of the entitys
business related were those offered by the association or another member
of the associations group, the entity would be able to provide services
to customers outside the associations group.
The
various categories of investments would be subject to limitations.
Under s. 390(3)(a), the entity could not act as a trustee,
deal in securities (subject to some exceptions, such as dealing in
mutual funds), engage in automobile leasing, or make non-guaranteed
high ratio mortgages.
Proposed
paragraph 390(4)(a) provides that an association would not be permitted
to acquire or increase a substantial investment in an entity such as a
bank, trust company, insurance company, credit union or securities dealer
unless:
Control
in fact means that the association would not have to own more than 50%
of the shares if it could establish that it controlled the entity though
other means.
Clause
342 would ensure that the provisions of paragraph 390(4)(a) pertaining
to substantial investments would not apply to the acquisition or increase
of a substantial investment by a provincial credit union central registered
under the CCAA in an association to which the CCAA applies.
Under
s. 390(5), an association would be required to obtain the approval of
the Minister of Finance to acquire control of a securities dealer or a
provincially incorporated financial institution such as a trust, loan
or insurance company, or a credit union.
Ministerial approval would generally not be required, however,
if ownership were being transferred within the same corporate group.
Approval also would be generally required for investments in foreign
financial institutions or in most of the entities that constitute the
new types of investments permitted under the Bill, including investments
in entities engaged in the promotion, sale, delivery or distribution of
financial products, or in data management and transmission.
Under
s. 390(6)(7), the Superintendent of Financial Institutions would be required
to approve investments in a securities dealer or provincial financial
institution, among others, if the investment were not approved by the
Minister because it had been acquired from an entity within the associations
group or from a federally regulated financial institution within the associations
group; or if the association is acquiring control of a factoring or
financial-leasing entity, or a holding company that is not a specialized
financing entity.
The
Bill (s. 393) would make some changes to the existing temporary investment
power that allows an association to make a short-term investment in any
entity. The provision of
the CCAA stipulating that an
associations interest in a temporary investment cannot exceed 50%
of the voting rights in an entity would be eliminated.
However, temporary investments would continue to be subject to
a two-year holding period unless otherwise allowed by the Superintendent.
An association would not be able to use the temporary investment
power to circumvent a requirement to obtain ministerial approval for an
investment.
Bill
C-8 would allow an association to apply to the Minister of Finance for
permission to become a retail association (s. 375.1(1)-(3)).
If approved, a retail association would be permitted to act as
a deposit-taking institution, subject to the same restrictions and safeguards
as other deposit-taking institutions, such as banks and trust and loan
companies. One of the most
important changes would allow a retail association to provide services
and take deposits from non-members.
A retail association would have to be a member of the Canada Deposit
Insurance Corporation (CDIC) before it could accept deposits.
Among
other things, a retail association could act as a financial agent, provide
investment counselling and portfolio management services, issue debit
and credit cards, sell lottery and transit tickets, and act as a receiver
or liquidator (s. 376(1)(i)). It
could also provide specialized business management and advisory services
(s. 376(2)).
Retail
associations would be subject to the same rules as other deposit-taking
institutions with respect to unclaimed account balances, disclosure of
interest rates, disclosure requirements on opening accounts, disclosure
of borrowing costs, and disclosure of credit-card charges.
A
retail association could open deposit accounts for existing account holders
over the telephone by providing oral disclosure of prescribed information
and full written disclosure within a maximum of seven business days after
the account had been opened (s. 385.1(3)-(4)).
A
retail association would be required to establish procedures for dealing
with customer complaints. These
procedures would have to be filed with the Commissioner of the Financial
Consumer Agency of Canada (FCAC).
The association would also be required to be a member of an independent
complaints-handling body either at the provincial level or, if it wished
to do so, at the federal level with the Canadian Financial Services Ombudsman
(s. 385.22 and 385.23).
The
provisions of the Bill pertaining to advance notice of a branch closure
or a branch ceasing to carry on certain activities would also apply to
associations taking retail deposit accounts (s. 385.27).
Clause
313 (s. 385.32) would permit enforcement notices in respect of child
and family support orders to be served at a designated office of an association
rather than at the particular branch where the debtor maintains an account.
Retail
associations would be required to provide the FCAC Commissioner with the
information required for administering the consumer provisions of the
Bill applicable to such associations (s. 452.1).
The Commissioners regulatory powers in relation to a retail
association would be the same as the Commissioners powers with respect
to a bank (s. 452.1-452.5) and would include the power to: conduct examinations or inquiries into whether the consumer
provisions had been complied with; and enter into compliance agreements
with the association.
5. Corporate
Governance
Bill
C-8 would change a number of the corporate governance provisions of the
CCAA.
a. Directors
and Officers
Under
the existing CCAA, three-quarters
of the members of an associations board of directors must be resident
Canadians. Bill C-38 would
reduce this residency requirement from three-quarters resident Canadians
to two-thirds resident Canadians.
The
Bill would give the Superintendent authority to disqualify a person from
being elected or appointed as a director or senior officer of an association
if the Superintendent was of the opinion that the individual was unsuitable
to hold office on the basis of the persons competence, business
record, experience, conduct or character.
In addition to the disqualification power, the Superintendent would
have authority to remove a director or senior officer of an association.
Grounds for removal would include lack of suitability to hold office
on the basis of competence, business record, experience, conduct or character,
or because the person had contravened or contributed to the contravention
of the Act, the regulations,
a direction, an order, a condition or limitation relating to the associations
business, or a prudential agreement (s. 441.2).
The Superintendent would be required to consider whether the interests
of the associations depositors and creditors would likely be prejudiced
if the individual were to hold office.
The individual would have the opportunity to make representations
to the Superintendent about the decision and to appeal a removal order
to the Federal Court.
b. Dividend
Cap
The
Bill would also introduce a cap on the amount of a dividend that could
be paid in any year. Unless
the Superintendent had approved, the dividend payment could not exceed
the aggregate of the associations net income for the year and its
retained net income for the preceding two financial years.
A
retail association would be required to establish procedures to provide
for the disclosure of information to customers and for dealing with complaints,
and designate a committee of the board of directors to monitor the procedures.
d. By-laws
Under
the existing Act, an association
must amend its incorporating documents if it wants to change its name.
This process requires the consent of the Minister of Finance and
can be quite cumbersome. Under the Bill, an association could change its name by amending
its by-laws. This change
would have to be approved by a special resolution and would not take effect
until approved by the Superintendent.
e. Related-party
Transactions
Under
the existing provisions of the CCAA,
related-party transactions must be on terms at least as favourable as
market terms and conditions. Bill
C-8 would provide that where there was no active market, a related-party
transaction must provide the parties with fair value having regard
to all the circumstances of the transaction and that would be consistent
with the parties to the transaction acting prudently, knowledgeably and
willingly (s. 425(2)).
In
addition to other remedies available against directors who approve a transaction
contrary to the related-party rules, the Superintendent could apply to
the court for a compensation order to be made against the directors who
authorized the transaction (s. 430).
The directors would not be liable under this provision, however,
if they relied in good faith on financial statements prepared by management
or the associations auditors or on a statement made by a professional
advisor (s. 215).
6. Security
Interests
The
existing CCAA prohibits associations from creating security interests to secure
their obligations unless the security interest is of a specified type
or is approved by the Superintendent.
Bill C-8 would allow an association to create security interests
without the approval of the Superintendent.
The associations board of directors, however, would be required
to establish a policy in relation to the creation of security interests;
as well, the Superintendent could direct a change to the policy if he
or she were not satisfied with the policy (s. 383).
The Governor in Council would have the authority to make regulations,
and the Superintendent could make guidelines with respect to the creation
of security interests by an association (s. 383.1).
7. Prudential
Agreements
Bill
C-8 would authorize the Superintendent to enter into a prudential agreement
with an association for the purpose of implementing measures designed
to maintain or improve the associations safety and soundness (s. 438.1).
This would allow the Superintendent to agree with the associations
management on measures to deal with weaknesses before they developed into
a serious problem. In addition,
the Bill would give the Superintendent the authority to apply to a court
for an order requiring the association to comply with the terms of a prudential
agreement (s. 441) and to remove an associations directors
or senior officers from office if they contravened or contributed to the
contravention of a prudential agreement (s. 441.2).
REGULATORY CHANGES
The
Task Force spent a considerable amount of time focusing on the regulatory
environment within which financial institutions operate.
Canadas financial system is noted not only for its high degree
of safety and soundness but also for the relative difficulty of entering
the financial services sector.
The
Task Force made a number of recommendations on various aspects of the
financial services sector regulatory environment in order to streamline
the regulation of financial institutions, avoid overlap and duplication
of regulation, and lighten the regulatory compliance burden.
The
Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation (CDIC) operates a government-established
compensation program which applies to regulated deposit-taking institutions.
The CDIC provides deposit insurance and promotes standards of sound
business and financial practice that contribute to the stability of the
Canadian financial system and reduce depositors exposure to loss.
In
its June 1999 White Paper, the Department of Finance announced that it
would put in place a number of changes to streamline the CDICs administrative
processes. Some of these changes would be effected through amendments
to the Canada Deposit Insurance
Corporation Act (CDIC Act),
and others would be implemented through revisions to administrative mechanisms.
1. Analysis
Bill
C-8 would amend the definition of member institution for the purposes
of the CDIC Act. Under the existing
Act, a member institution is
one that holds insurable deposits. This definition presents problems in
applying the Act to newly incorporated
institutions that have not yet taken an insured deposit.
The proposed amendment would define a member institution as a corporation
that has deposit insurance with the CDIC, thereby eliminating the requirement
that a member institution hold insurable deposits.
Proposed
amendments to s. 8 of the CDIC Act
would make the Act applicable
to an association incorporated under the Cooperative
Credit Associations Act, allowing newly formed retail associations
that accept consumer deposits to be CDIC members.
The
Bill would change the composition of the CDIC board of directors by adding
the Commissioner of the Financial Consumer Agency of Canada as a member,
allowing an officer of the Office of the Superintendent of Financial
Institutions to replace a Deputy Superintendent of Financial Institutions,
and allowing another private sector director to be appointed to the
board.
An
amendment to s. 10 of the CDIC Act
would clarify the CDICs power to settle claims by and against it. A related amendment to s. 24.1 would ensure that a CDIC member
could not, without the prior consent of the CDIC, reduce or eliminate
a payment to the CDIC because it had a set-off or claim against the CDIC.
Under
s. 26.03(1)(a) of the CDIC Act,
a bank can be authorized to accept deposits without being a CDIC member
if it is not affiliated with a member institution such as another bank.
Clause 209 would delete the non-affiliation condition found in
s. 26.03. This would accommodate
proposed changes to the Bank Act
that would allow domestic banks to have wholesale and retail operations.
Amendments
to s. 29, 29.1, 29.2 and 45.2 would implement changes in the examination
process for CDIC members agreed to by the OSFI and the CDIC in response
to the White Paper proposals to reduce the reporting burden on financial
institutions.
The
CDIC requires its members to attest that they comply with the Standards
of Sound Business and Financial Practices in the CDICs by-laws.
The White Paper noted that the CDICs opinion on whether an
institution was following the standards should take into account the significance
of any deficiencies and that non-material deficiencies should not necessarily
be viewed as non-compliance. The
statutory requirement imposed on OSFI examiners to provide the CDIC with
compliance standard reports under s. 29 of the CDIC
Act would be amended to require the examiner to inform the CDIC of
any change in the circumstances of a CDIC member that might materially
affect the CDICs position as an insurer (s. 29(5)).
Amendments
to s. 47 of the CDIC Act would
clarify the penalty provisions of the Act.
B. Office
of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions
The
White Paper acknowledged that greater competition in the financial services
sector increases the potential for risk.
As a result, the government proposed to give the Superintendent
of Financial Institutions additional supervisory powers that would include:
-
the authority for the Superintendent to remove directors
and senior officers from office in certain circumstances, such as
instances of misconduct;
-
a system of administrative money penalties for financial
institutions and individuals that failed to comply with undertakings
and cease and desist orders, or violated financial institution legislation
and regulations; and
-
measures to enhance the Superintendents power to
deal with related-party transactions.(26)
These
proposals have been included in Bill C-8.
1. Analysis
Bill
C-8 would make a number of consequential amendments to the Office
of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions Act (OSFI Act) to
take into account amendments to the Bank
Act that would allow for the creation of bank holding companies as
well as amendments to the Insurance
Companies Act that would allow for insurance holding companies. The OSFI Act would
also apply to associations under the Cooperative
Credit Associations Act.
The
Bill would also make consequential amendments to the OSFI
Act that reflect the introduction of new consumer protection provisions
and the creation of the Financial Consumer Agency of Canada. The Bill would clarify that the Superintendent would be responsible
for all matters connected with administering the provisions of the various
financial institution laws except for the consumer provisions, which would
be the responsibility of the FCAC (s. 6(1)).
a. Administrative
Monetary Penalties
Clause
476 would create an administrative monetary penalty regime that would
give the Superintendent the authority to impose monetary penalties for
violations of various financial institution laws as well as safety and
soundness instruments issued under those laws. This regime would be in
addition to the Superintendents authority to initiate criminal proceedings
for violations of financial institution legislation.
Among
other things, proposed s. 25 of the OSFI
Act would give the Governor in Council the authority to make regulations:
(a)
designating violations of financial institution laws and regulations
that would be subject to the administrative monetary regime including
contraventions of:
-
orders made by the Superintendent under such laws;
-
directions to cease from engaging in unsafe or unsound
practices;
-
terms and conditions imposed by the Superintendent or
an undertaking to the Superintendent; or
-
a prudential agreement entered into by the Superintendent
and a financial institution;
(b)
classifying violations as minor, serious or very serious; and
(c)
fixing a penalty or a range of penalties for violations.
Based
on the seriousness of the violation, penalties would be set at three levels:
-
minor violations by an individual would carry a maximum
penalty of $10,000, and $25,000 if committed by an entity;
-
serious violations would be subject to a maximum penalty
of $50,000 if committed by an individual, and $100,000 if committed
by an entity;
-
very serious violations by an individual would carry
a maximum penalty of $100,000, and $500,000 in the case of an entity.
Under
proposed s. 26, the amount of the penalty would be determined taking into
account:
-
the degree of intention or negligence of the person who
committed the violation;
-
the harm done by the violation;
-
violations or convictions under a financial institution
law in the preceding five years; and
-
other prescribed criteria.
The
Bill would give a person served with a notice of violation the right to
make representations to the Superintendent (s. 28). A person who did not make a representation would be deemed
to have committed the violation.
If a person chose to make a representation, however, the Superintendent
would decide on the balance of probabilities whether a violation had been
committed. Persons found
to have committed a serious or a very serious violation would have a right
to appeal the Superintendents decision to the Federal Court (s. 29
and 30). The Bill also provides
that due diligence as well as common law rules and principles would be
a defence to a violation (s. 34).
The time limit within which the Superintendent could begin a proceeding
for a violation would be six months after the Superintendent knew about
the matter in the case of a minor violation and two years for a serious
or very serious violation (s. 37).
b. Prudential
Agreements
Bill
C-8 would amend:
-
the Bank Act
(s. 614.1; s. 644.1; s. 959);
-
the Cooperative
Credit Associations Act (s. 438.1);
-
the Insurance Companies
Act (s. 675.1; s. 1002); and
-
the Trust and Loan
Companies Act (s. 506.1);
to
give the Superintendent of Financial Institutions the authority to enter
into prudential agreements with a bank, a foreign bank, a bank holding
company, an association, an insurance company, an insurance holding company,
or a trust and loan company.
Under
clause 177, for example, the Superintendent would have the authority to
enter into a prudential agreement with a bank for the purpose of implementing
measures designed to maintain or improve the banks safety and soundness.
This would allow the Superintendent to agree with the banks
management on measures to deal with weaknesses before they developed into
a serious problem. In addition,
the Bill would give the Superintendent the authority to apply to a court
for an order requiring the bank to comply with the terms of a prudential
agreement (s. 646) and to remove a banks directors or senior
officers from office if they contravened or contributed to the contravention
of a prudential agreement
(s. 647.1). The Superintendent would also be given authority to enter into
a prudential agreement with a bank holding company to protect the
interests of depositors, policyholders and creditors of any federal financial
institution affiliated with it.
As
noted above, the Superintendent would be given similar authority to enter
into prudential agreements with an association, an insurance company,
an insurance holding company, and a trust and loan company.
c. Removal
of Directors and Senior Officers
Bill
C-8 would give the Superintendent power to remove a director or senior
officer of a bank (s. 647.1), a bank holding company (s. 964), an
association (s. 441.2), an insurance company (s. 678.2), an insurance
holding company (s. 1007), or a trust and loan company (s. 509.2).
Grounds for removal would include:
lack of suitability to hold office on the basis of competence,
business record, experience, conduct or character; and contravening or
contributing to the contravention of the relevant act or regulations,
a direction, an order, a condition or limitation relating to the entitys
business or a prudential agreement.
In forming his or her opinion, the Superintendent would be required
to consider whether the interests of the depositors, policyholders and
creditors of the entity, as the case might be, would likely be prejudiced
if the individual were to hold office.
The individual would have the opportunity to make representations
to the Superintendent about the decision and to appeal a removal order
to the Federal Court.
d. Measures
Pertaining to Related-party Transactions
Directors
of financial institutions who authorize a transaction contrary to the
related-party rules set out in the relevant laws are personally liable
to compensate the institution for any amounts distributed or losses incurred.
In addition to the remedies currently available against directors,
the Superintendent would be given the authority to apply to the court
for a compensation order to be made against the directors who authorized
the transaction (s. 506 of the Bank
Act; s. 430 of the CCAA;
s. 539 of the Insurance Companies
Act; s. 494 of the Trust and
Loan Companies Act).
C. Regulatory
Streamlining
Currently,
federal financial institutions must obtain the approval of the Minister
of Finance or the Superintendent of Financial Institutions before they
can complete certain transactions and business undertakings.
The
Task Force recommended that the Superintendent be given authority to provide
necessary approvals without the need for referral to the Minister of Finance,
except where policy matters were involved.
It also recommended measures to streamline regulatory approvals
such as a system of notice filings, blanket approvals, fast-track approvals
and advance rulings.
The
Finance Committee and the Senate Banking Committee supported the introduction
of such measures.
The
White Paper endorses a streamlined regulatory process.
A new notice-based approval process would be introduced for many
of the transactions currently requiring the Superintendents approval. Under this process, institutions would file a standard notice
with the OSFI that would be automatically approved within 30 days unless
the OSFI raised concerns or required further information. The White Paper also proposed blanket approvals for certain
types of transactions.
1. Analysis
Bill
C-8 would introduce a number of measures to streamline the regulatory
process. In some situations,
approval by the Minister of Finance would be transferred to the Superintendent.
For example, under proposed amendments to the Bank
Act and the Insurance Companies
Act, the Ministers approval would no longer be required for
certain investments. In many
cases, approval by the Superintendent would be substituted for Ministerial
approval.
For
many of the applications requiring the Superintendents approval,
a new approval process would be instituted.
Under this process, the Superintendent would be deemed to have
approved an application if he or she failed to notify the applicant of
a decision within 30 days after having received the application.
The Superintendent would have the authority to extend the 30-day
period by notifying the applicant of an extension before the expiration
of the initial 30 days.
The
Bill would add a new provision to the Bank
Act, the Cooperative Credit
Associations Act, the Insurance
Companies Act, and the Trust
and Loan Companies Act that sets out the approvals that would be subject
to the streamlined process. In
each case, a significant number of approvals (more than 20 under the CCAA
and the Trust and Loan Companies
Act and more than 30 in the case of the other statutes) would fall
under the new process (s. 976 of the Bank
Act; s. 461.1 of the CCAA;
s. 1019 of the Insurance Companies
Act; s. 529.1 of the Trust and
Loan Companies Act).
Important
approvals, however, would not fall under the streamlined process; as well,
the Minister would continue to exercise a significant degree of authority
in relation to the ownership and structure of financial institutions.
One
of the goals of the Governments financial services sector reform
is to acknowledge the convergence occurring among previously strongly
differentiated institutions. Consequently, many of the consumer-related
amendments to the various Acts relating to financial services would subject
financial institutions to the same (or fundamentally the same) requirements.
This section, therefore, is divided into three parts:
-
an analysis of the proposed Financial Consumer Agency
of Canada;
-
an overview of the main consumer-protection provisions
in the legislation, namely, the Canadian Financial Services Ombudsman
as well as regulations covering branch closures, public accountability
statements, disclosure requirements, low-fee bank accounts, and tied
selling;
-
as the proposed consumer amendments to other initiatives
are reflected in the Bank Act,
the section concludes with tables comparing the Bank Act to proposed amendments to the Insurance Companies Act (ICA), the Cooperative Credit Associations Act (CCAA), and the Trust
and Loan Companies Act (TLCA).
The Green Shield Canada
Act is also mentioned.
Bill
C-8 would create the Financial Consumer Agency of Canada (FCAC), an organization
responsible to the Minister of Finance (clause 3).
This part of Bill C-38 generally follows the proposals set out
by the Government in its 1999 White Paper.
Funding
for the Agency would be set by the Minister and provided out of the Consolidated
Revenue Fund. This, and other
revenues, could be spent in two consecutive fiscal years (clause
13). Each year, the FCAC
would determine its costs and divide this among financial institutions
in a way to be prescribed by the Governor in Council.
This charge would be binding; no appeals would be allowed (clause
18).
The
FCAC and its Commissioner would also take their powers from specific provisions
in the Bank Act, the Cooperative Credit
Associations Act, the Green
Shield Canada Act, the Insurance
Companies Act, and the Trust
and Loan Companies Act (Schedule I).
Under
the amended legislation, the FCAC would take over the consumer-issue-monitoring
responsibilities of the OSFI for all financial institutions (banks, insurance
companies, trust and loan companies, and retail associations).
This
new agencys objectives, as stated in the proposed legislation (clause
3(2)), would be to:
(a)
supervise financial institutions to determine whether they are
in compliance with the consumer provisions applicable to them;
(b)
promote the adoption by financial institutions of policies and procedures
designed to implement consumer provisions applicable to them;
(c)
monitor the implementation of voluntary codes of conduct that are designed
to protect the interests of customers of financial institutions, that
have been adopted by financial institutions and that are publicly available,
and to monitor any public commitments made by financial institutions
that are designed to protect the interests of their consumers;
(d)
promote consumer awareness about the obligations of financial institutions
under consumer provisions applicable to them; and
(e)
foster, in co-operation with any department, agency or agent corporation
of the Government of Canada or of a province, financial institutions
and consumer and other organizations, an understanding of financial
services and issues relating to financial services.
2. FCAC
Staff and Responsibilities
Responsibility
for appointing the Commissioner of the FCAC would belong to the Governor
in Council. The Commissioner
would serve for five years (renewable), but could be removed by the Governor
in Council for cause.
The Commissioner would be entitled to reasonable travel and
living expenses incurred during the course of his or her duties.
The position would be covered by the Public
Service Superannuation Act, the Government
Employees Compensation Act, and any regulations made under s. 9 of
the Aeronautics Act.
The Commissioner would be precluded from holding another job, although
he or she could hold a non-paying governmental position.
The Minister could appoint a Commissioner for 90 days in the case
of absence, incapacity or vacancy.
For a term longer than 90 days, Governor in Council approval would
be needed.
The
Commissioners powers would include reviewing financial institutions
voluntary codes of conduct and institutions commitment to consumer
protection. In collecting information, he/she would have due regard for
any other governmental agent, agency or department working in the same
area. Otherwise, he/she would
be given the latitude to do what he/she deems necessary to promote and
foster consumer awareness. The
Commissioner could appoint one or more deputy commissioners to work under
him/her (clauses 4-6, 8).
FCAC
employees would not be liable for any activities committed in good faith
(clause 33).
Further,
the FCAC would be permitted to enter into an agreement, with the Governor
in Councils approval, to work with any body to meet its objectives
(clause 7).
The
proposed FCAC appears to have two reporting requirements.
First, clause 5 would direct the Commissioner to report on the
implementation of this and the Schedule 1 Acts from time to time.
As well, each fiscal year (by the fifth sitting day following September
30), the Finance Minister would have to submit before the House of Commons
and the Senate an annual report describing in aggregate form its
conclusions on the compliance of financial institutions with the consumer
provisions applicable to them in that year (clause 34).
It would also have to include a report on the procedures
for dealing with complaints established by banks [other amended Acts substitute
the name of the appropriate financial institution], and the number and
nature of complaints that have been brought to the attention of the Agency
(BA, s. 456, 574).
The
amended legislation for banks, insurance companies, co-operative credit
associations, and trust and loan companies sets out the powers of the
FCAC over these financial institutions.
Each financial institution would be required to file a copy of
its complaints procedure with the Commissioner (BA,
s. 455(2), 573(2) foreign banks; CCAA,
s. 385.22(2); Insurance Companies
Act, s. 486(2); Cooperative
Credit Associations Act, s. 385.22(2)).
It would mandate the FCAC Commissioner to examine these institutions
at least once a year, and give him/her access to whatever information
would be needed to administer the FCACs duties, including information
and explanations under oath from financial institutions directors
and officers. This information would be treated confidentially.
The Commissioner would be required to report the findings of these
examinations to the Finance Minister.
Business
information submitted to the FCAC would be treated as confidential, and
would be shared only with other agencies that share this confidentiality,
namely, other supervisory bodies for purposes, related to that regulation
or supervision. These agencies would include the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation,
the Deputy Minister of Finance, and the Governor of the Bank of Canada.
Part
XIV of the Bank Act (BA), which deals with the regulation of the banks by the
Commissioner, would compel foreign and domestic banks to give the Commissioner
information that he/she may require for the purposes of administering
the consumer provisions. Further,
the Commissioner would be allowed access to any records of a bank and
may require the directors or officers of a bank to provide information
and explanations to him or her, and also would be able to obtain evidence
under oath. Further, the
Commissioner could enter into a compliance agreement with a bank to promote
compliance with the consumer provisions (BA, s. 661).
The same power would be granted the Commissioner under Part XIII.1
of the Cooperative Credit Associations
Act, Part XII.1 of the Trust and Loan Companies Act, and Part XVI of the Insurance
Companies Act. The only
difference, in the case of the ICA,
is that, instead of being given the power to turn over information to
the CDIC (in the case of banks), the Commissioner could turn it over to
any compensation association designated by order of the Minister under
s. 449(1) or 591(1), for purposes relating to its operation (s.
695(2)(c)). The Minister
already has this power under the current legislation.
Violations
of consumer provisions are not set out in Bill C-38; instead, the proposed
legislation would give the Governor in Council the following powers: to
designate what is a violation and what the attached fines will be; to
regulate the service of documents; and generally to support the legislation
(clauses 19, 32).
A
violation could either be treated as a violation or offence, although
a violation would not be an offence as set out in the Criminal
Code. Due diligence would
be a defence, and there would be a two-year limit to the commencement
of proceedings once the subject matter became known to the Commissioner
(clauses 17, 21, 28, 30, 31). Further,
the Commissioner would be allowed to make public the nature of the violation,
who committed it, and the amount of the fine.
Penalties
would be set at maximums of $50,000 (violation by a natural person) and
$100,000 (financial institution) (clause 20).
Unless fixed by regulation, fees would be determined by the degree
of intention or negligence, the harm done, and a five-year history of
the person fined. The Governor
in Council could also set factors to be considered (clause 25).
Fines would be remitted to the Receiver General.
The
Commissioner would issue a notice of violation, which would set out the
proposed penalty and the right of the person to either pay the penalty
or to make representations (the Commissioner can set a longer period)
in the manner proposed. If
the fined person did not pay or make representations, he/she would be
treated as guilty. If representations
were made, the Commissioner would decide whether a violation had been
committed, and, if so, could maintain, reduce or eliminate the penalty. If nothing was done within the allotted time, the Commissioner
could impose, reduce or eliminate the original penalty.
Notice of decisions and of the right to appeal would be related
to the person fined. The
fined person could appeal to the Federal Court, which could confirm, set
aside or vary the decision (clauses 22-24).
Proposed
amendments to the Bank Act (BA)
and the four Acts relating to financial institutions would also transfer
responsibility for dealing with consumer complaints from the OSFI to the
FCAC. Institutions would
have to provide prospective and actual clients with information on how
to contact the FCAC.
Many
of the proposed changes seem designed to cover as wide a variety of services
as possible. The definition
of cost of borrowing would be expanded.
The audience of financial institutions would no longer
include simply customers, but also persons having requested
or received products or services in Canada from a bank (or appropriate
financial institution, depending on the legislation) (e.g., BA,
s. 455.1).
The
Governments 1999 White Paper states the governments intention
to work with financial institutions to create an independent
Canadian Financial Services Ombudsman (CFSO) that would be modeled
after the existing Canadian Banking Ombudsman.
Its goal would be to ensure fair and impartial complaints
resolution for consumers.
Regarding
independence, the White Paper states that the Ombudsman organizations
board of directors would consist of eight independent directors and four
directors appointed by member financial institutions, each appointed for
three-year terms. It also
states that after the Finance Ministers initial appointment of the
independent directors, a process will be established for the Minister
of Finance and the incumbent independent directors to select new independent
directors. Further, the Paper states that the Minister would play an
ongoing role in insuring the independent operation of the organization,
although not on a day-to-day basis.
In
contrast to the establishment of the FCAC, the CFSO organization is briefly
set up in the proposed amendments to the Bank
Act (s. 455.1). The legislation
does not establish the CFSO. Rather,
it gives the Finance Minister the power to set up such an office and appoint
a majority of its directors. Its
relationship to the FCAC is unclear, as it would be the second stop in
dealing with complaints; banks and other financial services organizations
would have to file a copy of their complaints procedures with the FCAC
Commissioner. As well, the FCAC would have to submit a yearly report detailing
the number and nature of complaints that have been brought to the
attention of the Agency by persons who have requested or received a product
or service from a (financial institution).
How this would fit in with an ombudsman office is unclear.
Regarding
directions, as the legislation would give the Finance Minister the power
to appoint a majority of the organizations directors, it would be
independent of the financial services sector, but not of the Ministry
of Finance.
The
CFSOs stated mandate involves dealing with complaints, made
by persons having requested or received products or services from its
member financial institutions that were not resolved satisfactorily
at the financial-institution level. What exactly would be involved in its mandate to deal
with complaints enforcement, investigative or hearing powers
is unclear. The White
Paper states that the CFSO would have the power to recommend non-binding
awards to aggrieved customers, publicizing non-compliant institutions.
Banks
(foreign and domestic) would have to belong to this organization, were
it to be created. Co-operative credit associations (s. 385.23, CCAA),
trust and loan companies (s. 441.1, TLCA),
and insurance companies (s. 486.1, ICA) must belong to a provincial scheme if the province in
which they operate has legislation that requires participation in such
a scheme. In the absence of a provincial law, these financial institutions
must be a member of an organization that is not controlled by it and that
deals with complaints that have not been resolved at the company level.
This could be either the federal CFSO scheme, or a voluntary scheme in
the province, provided the company does not control it and deals with
unresolved complaints.
2. Branch
Closures
Subject
to any regulations made by the Governor in Council, banks, federal trust
and loan companies, and co-operative credit associations would be required
to give notice of a branch closure.
After notice was given but before the branch closed, the Commissioner
could, in prescribed situations, require a bank to meet with the Commissioner
and interested parties in order to exchange views about the closing
or cessation of activities (BA, s. 459.2, CCAA 385.27, TLCA 444.1).
However, the Commissioners powers in this area would end
here. The Commissioner would
have no power to enforce or prohibit any closures, or change a closure
schedule.
Although
the legislation does not mention a specific timeline, the Governments
White Paper states the governments intention that federal deposit-taking
institutions be required to provide at least four months notice
of a branch closure, except in rural communities with only one branch
in a 10-km radius, where six months notice will be required.
Banks,
trust and loan companies, and domestic insurance companies with $1 billion
or greater in equity would have to publish annual statements describing
the contribution of the (financial institution) and its prescribed affiliates
to the Canadian economy and society.
This statement would have to be filed with the Commissioner; the
financial institution also would have to disclose the statements to their
customers and the public (in the manner and at the time prescribed).
The
Governor in Council would regulate the when and how, to whom, and the
what of the notice, the when of the meeting, and when notice is not necessary
or could be given in a different manner than would be usual.
The
Governor in Council would also give itself the power to regulate the disclosure
of information related to consumer protection.
Banks,
trust and loan companies, and co-operative credit associations would be
required to provide information in writing about the account opened.
Under the current section, information can be provided either in
writing or in such manner as may be prescribed. Currently,
institutions are required to inform individuals that the information can
be made available in writing, and that individuals can request that this
information be provided in written form.
The information that the bank would have to provide to a customer
would not change.
If
a customer opens another account over the telephone, the Bill would allow
for the oral provision of information as long as the information is provided
in writing by a maximum of seven business days after the account has been
opened. However, the Governor
in Council would be able to regulate how and when the information is deemed
to be given to the customer.
The
Bill would also allow an account to be closed within 14 days without incurring
any charges, other than interest charges.
These
changes are mirrored in the amendments covering foreign banks (s. 564).
Section
448.1 of the BA would require banks to allow individuals to open
a retail account without requiring a minimum deposit or the maintenance
of a minimum balance. The
Governor in Council would have the power to define and prescribe points
of service (e.g., branches), and to limit and restrict the conditions
in which this section applies and who qualifies for it. Continuing this,
s. 448.2 would give the Governor in Council the power to require banks
to open a low-fee account, as well as to define again point of service,
and to limit and restrict the conditions in which this section applies
and who qualifies for it. In
addition, it would give the Governor in Council the power to prescribe
the characteristics, including the name, of a low-fee deposit account.
The
governments current approach is to give the banks an opportunity
to take a self-regulatory approach toward low-cost accounts. It has signed
memoranda of understanding with eight banks outlining each banks
conception of a low-cost account to be enacted by the end of March 2001.
Fees range from $2.95 to $4.00 per month for a number of transactions
(approximately 12 for each bank) and other services. The Memorandum of
Understanding is attached as Appendix III.
The FCAC will monitor compliance with these targets, and the government
has committed to making regulations in this area should problems arise.
The
governments 1999 White Paper suggests that regulation in this area would be partly to assure that such an account
is not linked to fraudulent activity.
In addition to the no-balance and no-minimum-deposit rules, the
Paper also states that a person opening such an account would not have
to be employed, although the legislation is silent in this matter.
(Foreign banks would be exempted from this requirement.)
In
addition to not charging for a government cheque (already in the Bank
Act), banks would be required to cash government cheques as long as
the individual cashing the cheque does so in person and meets the prescribed
conditions, and the cheque is not more than the prescribed amount.
As well, the Governor in Council could make regulations detailing
when this does not apply, and when a person otherwise eligible is
considered not to be a customer of the bank.
In
the existing Bank Act, tied selling refers to the practice of linking the purchase
of a product or service to a bank loan. The proposed amendments would expand the definition of tied
selling to include linking any product or service to any other.
Under
the proposed amendment, banks would have to display and make available
a plain-language statement describing the prohibition on coercive tied
selling. This prohibition
would apply only to banks (s. 459.1).
C. Amendments
(Act by Act)
1. Cooperative
Credit Associations Act
These
changes effectively mirror the Bank
Act as well as the proposed amendments, and would bring the CCAA
into line with the Bank Act.
Because of this large overlap, this section merely states the equivalent
section in the Bank Act (BA)
or the proposed amendments to the BA
(ABA). Any differences are
also noted. Throughout, where
the BA refers to bank, these amendments refer to retail
association.
CCAA Amendments
|
Title
|
BA
|
ABA
|
Differences/Notes
|
385.05
|
|
439.1
|
|
No definition of low-fee retail deposit account;
member association, not member bank
|
385.06
|
Account Charges
|
440
|
|
|
385.07 (1,2)
|
Disclosure on opening account
|
441 (1)
|
441 (2)
|
|
385.08
|
Disclosure in advertisements
|
442
|
|
|
385.09 (a,c)
|
Disclosure regulations
|
443 (a, b)
|
|
|
385.09 (b)
|
|
|
|
The Governor in Council can make regulations about
how and when disclosure to customers regarding the keeping of
an account is to be made.
|
385.1
|
Disclosure required on opening a deposit account
|
445 (1) (a-e)
|
445
|
|
385.11
|
Disclosure of charges
|
446
|
|
|
385.12
|
No increase in new charges without disclosure
|
447
|
|
|
385.13
|
Application
|
|
448
|
Applies to s. 385.1-385.12.
|
385.14
|
Definition of cost of borrowing
|
|
449
|
|
385.15
|
Rebate of borrowing costs
|
449.1*
|
|
|
385.16
|
Disclosing borrowing costs
|
450*
|
|
|
385.17
|
Calculating borrowing costs
|
451
|
|
|
385.18
|
Additional disclosure
|
451*
|
|
|
385.19
|
Renewal
statement
|
452.1*
|
|
|
385.2
|
Disclosure
in advertising
|
453*
|
|
|
385.21
|
Regulations
re borrowing costs
|
454*
|
|
Slight
wording difference:
may make regulations (a) respecting
the manner in which
a retail association is to (BA:
shall) disclose to a borrower
|
385.22
|
Procedures for dealing with complaints
|
455 (1), (1)(b), (c)
|
455(1)(a), (2)
|
|
385.23
|
Obligation to be
a member
|
|
455.1
|
A retail association must be a member of a third-party
complaints body similar to that proposed under BA,
s. 455.1(1). The
federal requirement comes into play if there is no provincial
requirement. This section says that a retail association must
belong to an independent complaints organization if, in any
province, there is no law subjecting it to the jurisdiction
of an organization that deals with complaints.
|
385.24
|
Information on contacting Agency
|
|
456
|
|
385.25
|
Prepayment protected, etc.
|
458*
|
|
|
385.26
|
Regulations re customer information
|
459
|
|
|
385.27
|
Notice of branch closure
|
|
459.2
|
|
|
Regulations re disclosure
|
|
459.4
|
|
*
1997 Amendments
Part
XIII.1 Regulation of Retail Associations Commissioner
These
provisions would give the FCAC Commissioner the same powers over retail
associations as over banks (Part XIV, BA
proposed amendments).
Differences
from BA and amendments:
-
No requirement for public accountability statements (as
in BA, s. 459.3)
-
No prohibition of tied selling (as in BA,
s. 459.1)
-
No requirement to provide low-fee retail deposit accounts
(as in BA, s. 448.2)
-
No requirement to cash Government of Canada cheques of
a non-member (as in BA,
s. 458.1)
The Act
would give the FCAC Commissioner the same access to supervisory information
from Green Shield and the same supervisory tools necessary to regulate
Green Shields compliance with the consumer-related provisions as
the Commissioner has in relation to insurance companies under the Insurance
Companies Act.
Changes
to consumer protection regulations are found in proposed s. 479-489.2
(domestic); s. 598-607.1 (foreign); s. 693-698 (Part XVI Regulation of
Companies and Foreign Companies Commissioner).
Many of the suggested amendments mirror those of the Bank
Act. As with the Cooperative Credit Associations Act amendments, this section refers
to the changes in the Bank Act,
noting any differences.
ICA
Amendments
|
ABA
|
Differences/Notes
|
Definition
of cost of borrowing
|
479
|
449
|
As
this is for an insurance company, the definition covers a
loan or an advance on the security or against the cash surrender
value of a policy made by a company.
|
Complaints
|
486
|
455
|
See
notes on BA amendments.
|
486.1
|
455.1
(2)
|
As
with retail associations, an insurance company must be a member
of a third-party complaints body similar to that proposed under
BA, s. 455.1(1). The federal requirement comes into play if there
is no provincial requirement. This section says that an insurance
company must belong to an independent complaints organization if,
in any province, there is no law subjecting it to the jurisdiction
of an organization that deals with complaints.
|
Information on contacting the FCAC
|
487
|
456
|
Similar
to BA, s. 456: the firm
must provide information on how to contact the FCAC to individuals
requesting or receiving a product or service from it.
Again, moves OSFI consumer-protection responsibilities to
the FCAC. As with the
banks, the Commissioners Annual Report must include a report
on the procedures for dealing with complaints established
by companies, and the number and nature of complaints that have
been brought to the attention of the Agency
.
|
Public Accountability Statement
|
489.1
|
459.3
|
As
with banks, insurance companies with equity greater than or equal
to $1 billion must also file public accountability statements.
|
Regulations re disclosure
|
|
459.4
|
Exactly
similar regarding what can be regulated in this area.
|
The
changes to the domestic part of the Insurance
Companies Act are mirrored in the changes to the regulations governing
the activities of foreign insurance companies (s. 598-607.1).
However, unlike domestic insurance companies, foreign companies
with equity greater than or equal to $1 billion would not be required
to file a public accountability statement.
Part
XVI Regulation of Companies and Foreign Companies Commissioner
This
would give the Commissioner of the FCAC the same powers to investigate
domestic and foreign insurance companies as he/she would have to investigate
domestic and foreign banks (Part XIV, BA
proposed amendments). The
only difference is that, instead of being given the power to turn over
information to the CDIC (in the case of banks), the Commissioner could
turn it over to any compensation association designated by order
of the Minister under s. 449(1) or 591(1), for purposes relating to its
operation (s. 695(2)(c)).
The Minister already has this power under the current legislation.
4. Trust
and Loan Companies Act (TLCA)
Changes
to consumer protection regulations are found in proposed s. 301,
385.05-385.28; Part XII.1 Regulation of Companies Commissioner,
s. 520.1-520.5.
These
changes effectively mirror the amendments to the Bank
Act (ABA) discussed above. This
section therefore refers to the relevant changes in the Bank
Act, noting any differences.
TLCA
Amendments
|
ABA
|
Differences/Notes
|
Definitions
and Disclosure
|
425.1
|
439.1
|
Defines
member company, personal deposit account,
retail deposit account.
No
definition for low-fee retail deposit account, as
it is not mentioned in this section.
|
427
(2)
|
441
(2)
|
Exception
for telling a customer the rate of interest of an account and
how it is to be paid.
|
|
444
|
Repealed:
definition of personal deposit account.
|
431
|
445
|
Disclosure
required on opening an account: information to be provided in
writing, closure of an account without charge within 14 days.
|
434
|
448
|
Application.
|
435
|
449
|
|
Complaints
|
441
|
455
|
See
notes on BA amendments.
|
441.1
|
455.1
(2)
|
As
with retail associations, a trust and loan company must be a
member of a third-party complaints body similar to that proposed
under BA, s. 455.1(1).
The federal requirement comes into play if there is no
provincial requirement.
This section says that a trust and loan company must
belong to an independent complaints organization if, in any
province, there is no law subjecting it to the jurisdiction
of an organization that deals with complaints.
|
Information on Contacting FCAC
|
442
|
456
|
Similar
to BA, s. 456: the
firm must provide information on how to contact the FCAC to
individuals requesting or receiving a product or service from
it. Again, moves
OSFI consumer-protection responsibilities to the FCAC.
As with the banks, the Commissioners Annual Report
must include a report on the procedures for dealing with
complaints established by companies, and the number and nature
of complaints that have been brought to the attention of the
Agency
.
|
Notice
re Branch Closure
|
444.1
|
459.2
|
The
same.
|
Public
Accountability Statement
|
444.2
|
459.3
|
As
with banks, trust and loan companies with equity greater than
or equal to $1 billion must also file public accountability
statements.
|
Regulations
re Disclosure
|
|
459.4
|
Exactly
similar regarding what can be regulated in this area.
|
Differences
from BA and amendments:
-
No prohibition of tied selling (as in BA,
s. 459.1)
-
No requirement to provide low-fee retail deposit accounts
(as in BA, s. 448.2)
-
No requirement to cash Government of Canada cheques (as
in BA, s. 458.1)
Part
XII.1 Regulation of Companies Commissioner
This
would give the Commissioner of the FCAC the same powers to investigate
domestic foreign trust and loan companies as he/she would have to investigate
domestic and foreign banks (Part XIV, BA
proposed amendments).
The
amendments to this Act (which
include changing its name to the Canadian
Payments Association Act) are designed to expand membership in the
Canadian Payments Association (CPA), making it more open to innovation
and change, while assuring the continued stability of the system.
Thus, it would open the CPA to life insurance companies, money
market mutual funds and securities dealers (s. 4).
Further, the Minister would be given powers to designate new payments
systems (see below).
The
goals of the CPA (s. 5(1)) would be to:
(a)
establish and operate national systems for the clearing and settlement
of payments and other arrangements for the making or exchange of payments;
(b)
facilitate the interaction of its clearing and settlement systems
and related arrangements with other systems or arrangements involved
in the exchange, clearing or settlement of payments; and
(c)
facilitate the development of new payment methods and technologies.
As
s. 5(1) establishes, there would be multiple systems of payments as well
as other arrangements for the making or exchange of payments.
Information
collected by the CPA would be confidential, and would only be disclosed
to relevant government and regulatory agencies, the Bank of Canada, and
the CDIC if the Minister were satisfied that the information would be
treated as confidential (s. 43).
Sections 45-47 would establish penalties for non-compliance
(could go to the court); they also state that the Minister could apply
to a superior court to achieve compliance with directives, provisions
or requests.
B. Board
of Directors
In
support of these changes, the proposed amendments would change the composition
of the CPAs board of directors.
Section 8 would increase the number of directors from 11 to 16.
Previously, the members elected ten directors; the Bank of Canada
appointed a senior officer to chair the board.
Under the proposed amendments, members
would elect 12 directors, the Bank of Canada would elect one director,
and the Finance Minister would appoint three directors.
The Minister would not be permitted to appoint members of the following
groups: public-sector workers (provincial or federal); MPs; Senators;
MLAs; or Association members or affiliates.(28)
In keeping with the increased scope of the CPAs membership,
the number of classes of members would be increased.
Remuneration of directors would be dealt with in the by-laws.
The
board of directors would be given the power to make rules regarding:
remuneration of directors; fees for services performed by or on
behalf of the Association and how they are to be determined; the authenticity
and integrity of payment items and messages; and the identification and
authentication of members (s. 18.1).
Further,
s. 19 and 19.1 more explicitly states that the Board could make such rules
as it deems necessary to meet the goals of the Association.
These would include: payment
items acceptable for exchange, clearing or settlement; standards and procedures
regarding these; settlements and related matters; authenticity and integrity
of payment items and messages; and the identification and authentication
of members and other persons.
Under
changes to s. 19, the Association not the General Manager
would be responsible for making rules available to members. Rules would no longer have to be sent to members (s. 19(4)).
The Minister would receive copies of each rule within ten days
of a rule being set.
Section
19.1 would allow the board to make a statement of principles and standards.
Currently,
s. 21 allows the Executive Committee to undertake any activity not specifically
reserved to the Chairperson or the Board, and the Executive Committee
must report to the Board at each board meeting.
According to s. 18(1)(a), the Board could tell the Committee what
to do. The Executive Committee
(whose terms are set by the Board) would have no other job description. Section 21.1 would allow the Board to delegate to other committees.
Sections
19.2-19.4 would give sweeping new powers to the Finance Minister. Under
s. 19.2, CPA rules would come into force 30 days after a copy is
sent to the Minister, although the Minister could decide to put it into
effect before then, or extend the period by up to 30 days.
Further, the Minister could also disallow the whole or a
part of a rule. The
Minister could also issue directives to the Board to make, amend or repeal
a by-law, rule or standard; these would have to be followed.
The Board would have to be consulted before a directive is given,
and outside parties could be consulted.
D. Stakeholder
Advisory Council
This
new section (21.2) would legislate the Stakeholder Advisory Council (SAC),
formed in 1996, to provide counsel and advice to the board on payment
and clearing and settlement matters, etc.
The SAC would consist of up to 20 people: up to two would be directors
from the Board. The rest
must be broadly representative of users and service providers to
payment systems. The
CPA Board would appoint members in consultation with the Minister for
three-year terms, except that as far as possible, one-third of the
first members would be appointed for three years, one-third for two years,
and one-third for one year.
These would be unpaid positions, except for travel and living expenses
incurred on the job.
E. Regulatory
Powers (s. 35)
Under
the amendments, the Governor in Councils regulation-making power
would be expanded to include: the number of members of committees of
the Board; the eligibility of persons to be elected as directors, including
the number of directors from each class and when two or more classes are
to be collapsed into one; requirements for membership; the conditions
a money market mutual fund must satisfy; and other regulations for carrying
out the purposes and provisions of this Part.
The
elimination of current section 28 and replacement with a note on electronic
meetings would eliminate the role of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions,
leaving the Association with no oversight mechanism outside the Minister.
Currently, the Superintendent is responsible for examining the
workings of the Association and reporting to the Minister (s. 28).
Section 30 of the current Act,
which states that every member must belong to the CDIC, or have some assurance
of financial stability, would be repealed.
Under
the proposed amendments, the Minister would be responsible, subject to
several criteria, for designating payment systems in the public interest.
Payment systems would have to be at least substantially national,
or play a major role in supporting transactions in Canadian financial
markets or the Canadian economy.
In
designating a payment system, the Minister would have to consider:
-
the level of financial safety provided by the payment
system to the participants and users;
-
the efficiency and competitiveness of payment systems
in Canada; and
-
the best interests of the Canadian financial system.
The
Minister would have to consult the manager and participants of
the payment system before it would be designated.
Again,
the Minister would get copies of the rules governing a designated payment
system (s. 38). Again, he
or she would have the discretion to waive or increase the time, disallow
whole or parts of the rules, or exempt a payment system from the 30-day
rule (s. 39).
The
Minister could issue guidelines regarding Part 2 to be available to the
public, with notice given in a way that the Minister considers appropriate.
Through
directives, the Minister could decide (s. 40):
-
the conditions for a participant to become a member of
a designated payment system;
-
how a designated payment system should operate;
-
how payment systems would interact; and
-
their relationship with users.
The
Minister would have to consult with the manager and/or participants
of a designated payment system before a directive is given, and could
consult with any other interested parties.
Directives would be published in the Canada
Gazette.
If
a designated payment system did not have a Canadian manager, its Canadian
participants would have to comply with the obligations imposed on managers
as if they themselves were the manager.
In that case, however, any action which the Minister would take
with respect to a manager of the payment system would apply only to the
Canadian participants. A
manager or participant would be Canadian if the manager or
participant were incorporated or formed under an enactment of Canada or
a province.
Information
collected under the CPA is to be treated as confidential, although
the Minister is allowed to disclose any information to financial-institution
regulatory bodies, and to authorized agents of the Bank of Canada and
the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation (s. 43). There is no liability
for acting in good faith under the Act (s. 44). If a person fails to comply
with a provision or directive issued under this Act, the Minister can
apply to a superior court to enforce compliance (s. 45). A contravention
of the Act carries a maximum penalty of $100,000 and/or 12 months imprisonment
for a natural person; for other entities, a maximum fine of $500,000 applies
(s. 47).
APPENDIX
I
Demutualization
In
1992, the Government introduced a legislative framework to allow mutual
insurance companies to demutualize.
Demutualization is a process that occurs when mutual companies
convert to stock companies. A
mutual company is owned by its participating policyholders; they not only
vote, they also share in the risk of a company and would receive the remaining
assets of the company upon liquidation.
For this reason, they receive most of the demutualization benefits.
Most non-participating policyholders do not have ownership or voting
rights in their companies, and so do not participate in demutualization
benefits. Only those who
are voting policyholders at the time of the companys announcement
of its intention to demutualize are entitled to participate in the demutualization
process.
A
company would choose to demutualize for three main reasons:
-
to give companies the opportunity to restructure, subject
to the approval of their policyholders, in order to improve efficiency
and competitiveness. As
stock companies, they can issue common shares, an important source
of financing for corporations that want to grow and expand.
Increased ability to raise capital enables demutualized insurance
companies to seize growth opportunities both at home and abroad, especially
those outside of traditional insurance products;
-
to allow companies greater opportunities to strengthen
their capacity to invest in new technologies with the aim of providing
a wider range of products and services to their customers; and
-
to give companies incentive to enhance efficiency and
competitiveness.
The
allocation of benefits does not cause a cash drain on the company. The company generally distributes shares in the company to
eligible policyholders. Policyholders
may then either keep the shares or sell them in the market.
For those wanting cash in lieu of shares, the company may sell
shares to investors and use the proceeds to pay cash to policyholders.
Most of the cash distributed by the company directly to policyholders
as part of demutualization will be raised through the stock market.
The
OSFI continues to regulate demutualized companies.
As a result, the full range of prudential rules, including the
requirement of maintaining adequate capital and of conforming to accepted
standards of sound business and financial practices, continue to apply.
The OSFI will continue to monitor companies to ensure standards
are met.
All
mutual companies must remain widely held for at least a two-year period
after a demutualization, preventing the mutual company from being taken
over by another company, including by a Canadian bank.
After that period, a size-based ownership regime is put in place.
Although
the federal government is not promoting demutualization, it has put in
place a set of rules that companies must follow in order to demutualize.
The objective of these rules is to ensure that the allocation of
value is fair, and that eligible policyholders have complete, accurate
and clear information before voting on demutualization.
In the course of any specific demutualization, the OSFI is responsible
for ensuring that the companies comply with the legislation and the regulations.
Every individual demutualization proposal must also receive the
approval of the Minister of Finance after having been approved by eligible
policyholders. The OSFIs
role in a demutualization is to ensure that companies meet all of the
requirements in the proposed demutualization regulatory framework, which
contains key provisions for the fair and equitable treatment of policyholders.
In reviewing the information it receives on company conversion
plans, the OSFI has the authority to engage outside experts and to require
additional information from the companies, if it deems this necessary,
in order to evaluate the demutualization plan.
To
date, four large mutual life insurance companies have demutualized.
In the process of demutualization, eligible policyholders are asked
by their company to vote on a conversion proposal.
If policyholders approve (and if regulatory approval is obtained),
eligible policyholders become shareholders of their life insurance company.
Policyholders rights as customers remain unchanged
insurance coverage, policy values, premiums and policy dividends are not
affected by demutualization. What
changes is the nature of the policyholders ownership rights in the
company. In exchange for their ownership rights and interests, the company
distributes benefits to eligible policyholders, generally in the form
of shares in the company, although policyholders can choose to receive
demutualization benefits as either shares or dividends.
As shareholders in the company, they are entitled to:
-
shareholder dividends, receiving share dividends as declared
by the directors of the company;
-
the right to vote at company meetings shareholders
elect up to two-thirds of the board; and
-
the right to sell shares at any time for cash.
In
a mutual life insurance company, eligible policyholders are the only ones
permitted to vote at company meetings.
After demutualization, stockholders in the company have that right,
although policyholders are still entitled to vote at the meetings.
Canadian law ensures that, even after a mutual life insurance company
converts to a stock company, policyholders still elect at least one-third
of the companys board of directors.
When
a company demutualizes, its total value is allocated to eligible policyholders
in exchange for their ownership rights and interests in the mutual company.
The benefit received by an individual policyholder is based on
a number of factors, such as: the length of the policyholders relationship
with the company; the amount of insurance coverage; the policy cash value;
and the annual premium. The
allocation formula proposed by each company is reviewed by both the companys
actuary and an independent actuary, who must provide an opinion that it
is fair and equitable to policyholders.
Individual allocation information for eligible policyholders is
contained in the package mailed out by each company.
Demutualization
occurs in seven steps:
-
A company develops a detailed demutualization plan identifying
eligible policyholders.
-
The plan is submitted to the companys Board of
Directors for approval.
-
The plan (and supporting material) is forwarded to the
Superintendent of Financial Institutions for review. The plan is also examined by insurance and securities regulators
in any other jurisdiction in which the company operates.
-
If the material submitted to the Superintendent is acceptable
and conforms to the regulations, then a package of the details is
mailed to all eligible policyholders, at least 45 days before a special
meeting called to vote on demutualization.
-
Eligible policyholders will be asked to vote at a special
meeting held for demutualization.
-
If eligible policyholders vote for demutualization, the
Minister of Finance would then be asked to approve the plan.
-
With the Ministers approval, the demutualization
may proceed; the company becomes a stock company, and the company
distributes benefits to policyholders.
Eligible
policyholders are:
-
policyholders that held, on the day that the company
announced its intention to develop a demutualization plan, or at a
later date chosen by the company, policies entitling them to vote
at a meeting of the company;
-
those who applied for a voting policy before the eligibility
day of the company and were subsequently issued such a policy;
-
those whose policy lapsed before the eligibility day
but was reinstated at least 90 days before the special meeting called
to vote on demutualization; and
-
when a companys eligibility day is after the announcement
date, those whose voting policies terminated involuntarily (by maturity,
by death, but not by surrender) during that period.
APPENDIX
II
-
-
APPENDIX III
(8)
The term self-dealing refers to transactions between a financial
institution and persons who are in positions of influence over, or in
control of, the institution. A key part of the 1992 financial sector reform
was the implementation of comprehensive controls on such transactions.
|