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CIRO CCO Practice Test

Practice CIRO CCO with free sample questions, timed mock exams, topic drills, and detailed answer explanations in Securities Prep.

The CIRO Chief Compliance Officer Exam rewards candidates who can connect complaints, KYC and KYP duties, AML, governance, supervision, and reporting into one defensible compliance workflow. If you are searching for CIRO Chief Compliance Officer Exam sample questions, a practice test, mock exam, or simulator, this is the main Securities Prep page to start on web and continue on iOS or Android with the same account. This page includes 24 sample questions with detailed explanations so you can try the exam style before opening the full app question bank.

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What this CIRO Chief Compliance Officer practice page gives you

  • a direct route into the Securities Prep simulator for the CIRO CCO exam
  • targeted practice around governance, compliance-program design, escalation, reporting, and control remediation
  • detailed explanations that show why the strongest answer is the most defensible compliance response
  • a clear free-preview path before you subscribe
  • the same subscription across web and mobile

CIRO Chief Compliance Officer exam snapshot

  • Regulator: CIRO
  • Exam: Chief Compliance Officer Exam
  • Format: 90 multiple-choice questions in 180 minutes
  • Pacing target: about 120 seconds per question
  • Readiness benchmark: aim to pass several timed mixed sets or mock exams at 75%+ before booking

Topic coverage for CIRO Chief Compliance Officer practice

  • Compliance framework and business model: general regulatory framework, dealer business model, and offering and distribution controls
  • Governance and controls: corporate governance, ethics, duties, liabilities, risk management, and internal controls
  • Risk, reporting, and investigations: significant risk areas, regulatory reporting, examinations, investigations, and enforcement consequences
  • Senior-officer accountability: compliance responsibilities, CCO responsibilities, and UDP oversight obligations

How CIRO CCO differs from similar routes

If you are choosing between…Main distinction
CIRO CCO vs CIRO CFOCIRO CCO is compliance-program ownership, reporting, and escalation; CIRO CFO is capital, custody, and prudential-finance ownership.
CIRO CCO vs CIRO DirectorCIRO CCO is enterprise compliance leadership; CIRO Director is board, governance, and UDP-level oversight.
CIRO CCO vs CIRO SupervisorCIRO CCO is enterprise control design and reporting; CIRO Supervisor is branch, account, and Approved Person oversight.
CIRO CCO vs CIRECIRO CCO is senior compliance-accountability coverage; CIRE is the broader current dealer baseline.

How to use the CIRO Chief Compliance Officer simulator efficiently

  1. Start with governance, reporting, and escalation drills so the compliance workflow becomes easy to recognize.
  2. Review every miss until you can explain whether the right answer is to investigate, remediate, escalate, report, or redesign a control.
  3. Move into mixed sets once you can switch between complaints, AML, governance, and supervision scenarios without hesitation.
  4. Finish with timed runs so long-form scenario pacing feels steady.

Free preview vs premium

  • Free preview: 24 public sample questions on this page plus the web app entry so you can validate the question style and explanation depth.
  • Premium: the full CIRO CCO practice bank, focused drills, mixed sets, timed mock exams, detailed explanations, and progress tracking across web and mobile.

Focused sample questions

Use these child pages when you want focused Securities Prep practice before returning to mixed sets and timed mocks.

Free review resources

Use these free SecuritiesMastery.com resources for concept review, then return to this page when you are ready to practice in Securities Prep.

Current sample-question status

  • Live now: this exact practice route is available in Securities Prep on web, iOS, and Android.

  • On-page sample set: this page includes 24 public sample questions from the current practice coverage.

  • Full app: open the Securities Prep web app or mobile app for broader timed coverage.

  • Live now: this exact practice route is available in Securities Prep on web, iOS, and Android.

  • On-page sample set: this page includes 24 public sample questions from the current practice coverage.

  • Full app: open the Securities Prep web app or mobile app for broader timed coverage.

Good next pages after CIRO CCO

  • CIRO CFO if you want the prudential-finance leadership page beside the compliance route
  • CIRO Director if the role shifts from enterprise compliance into board or UDP oversight
  • CIRO Supervisor if you want the day-to-day supervisory-control page beside enterprise compliance leadership
  • CIRO if you want the broader Canada dealer-route map first

24 CIRO CCO sample questions with detailed explanations

These sample questions cover multiple blueprint areas for CIRO CCO. Use them to check your readiness here, then move into the full Securities Prep question bank for broader timed coverage.

Question 1

Topic: Element 1 — General regulatory framework

An investment dealer plans to launch direct electronic access for institutional clients through an order-routing platform built by a foreign affiliate. The launch memo says:

  • trading supervision will stay with the affiliate for the first six months;
  • operations will update any CIRO forms and supporting schedules after go-live if requested; and
  • the sponsor assumes no formal review of IDPC Rules, UMIR, or CIRO guidance is needed before launch.

As CCO, which compliance risk matters most?

  • A. No board profitability forecast for the service before launch
  • B. No updated AML risk score for the service before launch
  • C. No pre-use review framework for future marketing before launch
  • D. No documented CIRO applicability, supervision, and filing assessment before launch

Best answer: D

Explanation: The key red flag is the firm’s failure to determine the governing CIRO framework before launching a service that creates trading-conduct exposure. A new business line should not go live on the assumption that supervision, forms, and supporting schedules can be sorted out later.

In this scenario, the primary issue is not missing ancillary documentation; it is the absence of a front-end regulatory analysis. For a new market-access service, the CCO should confirm which CIRO sources apply, including dealer-rule obligations, UMIR trading-conduct supervision, and any relevant guidance, delegated authority implications, recognition-order context, and required forms or supporting schedules. The memo instead treats Canadian supervision as deferrable and filings as optional until someone asks. That is a core control weakness because the dealer could launch with the wrong supervisory structure, incomplete regulatory reporting, or both.

AML assessment, board forecasting, and marketing review may still be necessary, but they are secondary to establishing whether the activity is permitted, properly supervised, and correctly filed under CIRO’s framework.


Question 2

Topic: Element 10 — Regulatory reporting, examinations, investigations and actions

A CCO is reviewing a post-settlement remediation plan after CIRO enforcement action against an Investment Dealer and one Approved Person who served as a branch manager. The settlement states that the Approved Person may remain registered as a dealing representative, but is barred from any supervisory role for 6 months and must complete specified education before resuming supervision. The dealer must move the affected accounts to alternate supervision immediately and certify completion of remedial steps to CIRO within 90 days.

The plan includes revised branch-review procedures, firm-wide conduct training, a media-response protocol, and monthly progress updates to the board. Which missing control is the most significant deficiency?

  • A. Independent validation of the revised branch-review checklist before quarter-end
  • B. A peer review of similar recent settlements to refine future training themes
  • C. A more detailed media Q&A for relationship managers and complaint staff
  • D. A sanctions-implementation register covering role changes, alternate supervision, system access, and evidence for CIRO certification

Best answer: D

Explanation: The decisive gap is the absence of a control that translates the enforcement terms into actual role, supervision, access, and evidence changes. Enforcement action can directly affect an Approved Person’s permitted activities and the dealer’s operations, so implementation tracking is more critical than broader program enhancements.

The core issue is sanctions implementation. An enforcement settlement is not just a reputational event or a training trigger; it can immediately change an Approved Person’s permitted functions and require the dealer to alter supervision and operating controls. Here, the Approved Person can stay registered in one capacity but cannot supervise for 6 months, and the dealer must reassign affected accounts right away and later certify completion to CIRO.

A sound remediation plan therefore needs a control that:

  • maps each settlement term to an owner and deadline
  • removes or changes supervisory authority and system entitlements
  • documents alternate supervision for affected accounts
  • retains evidence to support board oversight and CIRO certification

Testing, benchmarking, and communications can improve the broader program, but they do not ensure the firm is actually complying with the settlement’s immediate restrictions. The key distinction is between improving the control environment and implementing the sanction itself.


Question 3

Topic: Element 5 — Corporate governance and ethics

The CCO receives this outside-activity disclosure from the firm’s CFO:

  • Proposed role: paid director of Arctic Copper Ltd., a reporting issuer
  • Estimated time: six board meetings a year
  • Compensation: annual cash retainer
  • Conflicts section: none identified
  • Relationship to the dealer: blank

Before deciding whether the role can be approved, what should the CCO verify first?

  • A. Whether six board meetings a year is a realistic time commitment
  • B. Whether Arctic Copper has any current, recent, or prospective material relationship with the dealer
  • C. Whether the compensation is only cash or also includes equity awards
  • D. Whether Arctic Copper provides directors’ insurance and indemnification

Best answer: B

Explanation: For directors and executives, the first outside-activity question is whether the role creates a material conflict with the dealer or its clients. Because the form leaves the issuer’s relationship to the firm blank, the CCO must first determine whether the issuer is connected to the dealer through banking, research, financing, or another material business relationship.

In a CIRO compliance context, outside activities for directors and executives are assessed first through a conflict lens, not a convenience lens. A board role at an outside issuer can create divided loyalties, access to material non-public information, and pressure on firm decisions if the issuer is a client, prospect, research-covered name, financing candidate, or other material counterparty. Because the disclosure form omits the issuer’s relationship to the dealer, the CCO does not yet know whether the activity is low-risk, approvable with conditions, or unacceptable.

Useful first checks include:

  • current or recent mandates
  • pending pitches or financing work
  • research coverage or corporate access activity
  • the executive’s ability to influence related firm decisions

Compensation structure, time burden, and indemnification may still matter, but only after the core conflict question is answered.


Question 4

Topic: Element 4 — Offering and distribution of securities

The CCO reviews a bought-deal underwriting file for a prospectus offering. The dealer will underwrite $30 million on a firm-commitment basis.

File summary

  • Treasury approved the dealer’s ability to carry the full unsold position.
  • A signed syndicate agreement and fee split are on file.
  • Diligence call notes and counsel’s verification comments are complete.
  • An affiliate of the dealer is the issuer’s secured lender, and about 60% of the proceeds will repay that loan.
  • The draft prospectus says only “repayment of indebtedness and working capital.”

Which item is the most important deficiency?

  • A. Specific prospectus conflict disclosure that about 60% of proceeds will repay the dealer’s affiliate lender.
  • B. A written backup syndicate allocation plan if a co-manager withdraws before closing.
  • C. A formal diligence matrix cross-referencing verification comments to prospectus sections.
  • D. A post-closing memo comparing actual selling concessions with the original budget.

Best answer: A

Explanation: The file already shows underwriting capacity, syndicate documentation, and substantive diligence. The decisive gap is conflict disclosure: if offering proceeds will materially repay a dealer affiliate’s loan, the prospectus should clearly disclose that benefit instead of using generic debt-repayment language.

In an issuer distribution, the underwriting file should show that the dealer addressed the main deal risks before securities are sold: diligence, syndicate structure, capital commitment, and conflicts. Here, the file already covers the firm-commitment capacity, includes the syndicate agreement, and contains diligence and verification materials. The unresolved issue is that a dealer affiliate will directly benefit because roughly 60% of the offering proceeds will repay its loan. That creates a material underwriting conflict requiring clear, specific disclosure to investors, not vague wording such as “repayment of indebtedness.”

Compliance should ensure the conflict is identified, documented, and reflected plainly in the prospectus and related selling materials. Better file organization or extra syndicate process notes would not cure an inadequate live disclosure on who benefits from the financing.


Question 5

Topic: Element 12 — Chief Compliance Officer (CCO) responsibilities

An Investment Dealer’s policy for identifying non-compliance says testing must look for control circumvention, contradictions across records, client harm, and recurring patterns.

Exhibit: Same quarter, same advisor

  • 4 complaints logged as “service issues”
  • 3 goodwill credits tied to unsuitable leveraged trades
  • 2 trade reversals approved by the branch manager
  • 0 entries in the firm’s non-compliance escalation log

The CCO’s test only confirms that branch complaint logs exist and are signed monthly. What is the most likely consequence for the firm?

  • A. Automatic suspension of the advisor after multiple trade reversals.
  • B. Under-identification of non-compliance and likely CIRO criticism of weak controls.
  • C. Automatic OBSI compensation before the firm’s internal review is complete.
  • D. No escalation duty once goodwill credits resolved the client complaints.

Best answer: B

Explanation: The testing design is ineffective because it checks only for the existence of logs, not whether other records contradict them or reveal harm and repeat problems. The likely result is that significant non-compliance is missed or escalated too late, exposing the firm to CIRO criticism of its compliance controls.

A non-compliance-identification policy only works if the related control tests can actually surface attempts to bypass controls, inconsistent records, evidence of client harm, and recurring patterns. Here, the exhibit shows several red flags pointing to possible suitability misconduct: complaints coded as service issues, goodwill credits tied to unsuitable leveraged trades, repeated trade reversals, and no entry in the escalation log. A test that merely confirms complaint logs exist and are signed will not detect those contradictions or the pattern across sources.

The most likely consequence is that the firm under-identifies significant non-compliance, which can lead to delayed escalation to the CCO, UDP, and board and prompt CIRO findings that the firm’s identification and remediation controls are ineffective. Branch sign-offs and goodwill payments do not fix the underlying detection failure.


Question 6

Topic: Element 13 — Ultimate Designated Person (UDP) responsibility

The UDP of a CIRO investment dealer receives a monthly risk report showing that suitability exceptions in one high-volume branch rose from 3% to 9% over two months. During the same period, two branch supervisors left, and the CCO documented that the branch manager missed two deadlines to implement promised corrective actions. Which action by the UDP best aligns with the UDP’s monitoring and supervision responsibilities?

  • A. Request an internal audit review before directing management to act.
  • B. Ask the CCO to expand testing and revisit the issue at year-end.
  • C. Require executive management to deliver documented remediation, interim controls, and progress reporting.
  • D. Leave the matter with the branch manager as a local supervisory problem.

Best answer: C

Explanation: The UDP must oversee whether executive management is effectively managing significant compliance risk. Rising suitability exceptions, reduced supervisory capacity, and missed corrective-action deadlines show a control breakdown that calls for prompt, documented remediation and follow-up.

The core concept is UDP oversight of significant regulatory and business risks. The UDP is not expected to perform day-to-day branch supervision, but is expected to monitor whether executives respond appropriately when risks become significant. Here, the trend is worsening, supervision has weakened, and prior corrective commitments were missed. That combination means the issue has moved beyond a routine branch matter.

A sound UDP response is to ensure:

  • a documented remediation plan with clear owners and deadlines,
  • interim supervisory controls while the weakness persists, and
  • regular reporting so progress can be challenged and escalated if it stalls.

Simply gathering more information or waiting for a later review cycle is not enough once the control problem is already evident.


Question 7

Topic: Element 13 — Ultimate Designated Person (UDP) responsibility

CIRO delivers an examination report to North Harbour Securities identifying weak evidence of branch supervision, outdated written policies, and inconsistent escalation of high-risk complaints. The CCO prepares a remediation plan with proposed corrective actions. As UDP, which response is NOT appropriate?

  • A. Assign the file to the CCO and await the next CIRO exam.
  • B. Set owners, deadlines, and status reporting for each finding.
  • C. Ensure remediation has enough staffing and authority.
  • D. Review completion evidence and escalate slippage promptly.

Best answer: A

Explanation: The UDP cannot be passive after a CIRO examination report. Even if the CCO coordinates the work, the UDP must ensure management responds, remediation is tracked, and deficiencies are actually fixed.

Under CIRO expectations, the UDP is accountable for ensuring that issues raised in examination reports are responded to and addressed. That means more than acknowledging the report or assigning it to compliance. The UDP should ensure clear ownership, realistic deadlines, adequate resources, follow-up reporting, and escalation where delays or unresolved deficiencies create ongoing risk. The CCO and business leaders may carry out the work day to day, but delegation does not transfer the UDP’s accountability. Waiting passively for the next examination cycle is inconsistent with the UDP’s oversight role because it does not ensure timely remediation or evidence that corrective actions were implemented.


Question 8

Topic: Element 13 — Ultimate Designated Person (UDP) responsibility

CIRO completes an examination of an Investment Dealer and identifies repeated failures to escalate large margin-call exceptions and a backlog of unresolved supervisory alerts. The CCO has already concluded that the issue is a significant risk and reported it to the UDP. Which action best fits the UDP’s specific responsibility?

  • A. Require accountable executives to implement a documented remediation plan and report progress to the UDP and board of directors.
  • B. Revise the compliance manual and personally retest alerts before any further escalation.
  • C. Wait for a CIRO disciplinary notice before requiring management action.
  • D. Defer the matter to internal audit’s annual review cycle.

Best answer: A

Explanation: The UDP’s key differentiator is executive accountability for significant risks. Once the CCO has identified and escalated the issue, the UDP should ensure senior management owns a timely, resourced remediation plan and that progress is monitored through governance channels.

The core concept is that the UDP is the senior executive responsible for ensuring the dealer manages significant regulatory and business risks through accountable executives and appropriate governance. When the CCO identifies a material issue, the UDP should not become the primary tester or simply wait for another function to act. Instead, the UDP should require management ownership, adequate resources, clear deadlines, and progress reporting, and should keep the board of directors appropriately informed where the matter is significant. That is especially important after a CIRO examination finding, because the UDP must ensure deficiencies are actually addressed rather than merely documented. The closest distractor is additional compliance testing, which may support remediation, but it does not satisfy the UDP’s primary oversight duty.


Question 9

Topic: Element 2 — Compliance function and operation

An Investment Dealer uses a specialized CCO model: separate compliance heads oversee retail advice, institutional trading, and AML, and each reports day-to-day to a different business executive. CIRO testing found repeat suitability exceptions in retail accounts referred by the firm’s new structured-product desk, but remediation has stalled because each compliance head says part of the issue sits outside their mandate. The UDP wants to keep specialist expertise and can add only one net new compliance role. What is the best compliance decision?

  • A. Require monthly joint reports to the UDP without changing mandates.
  • B. Shift structured-product remediation ownership to internal audit temporarily.
  • C. Keep separate CCOs and let business executives resolve overlaps.
  • D. Appoint an enterprise CCO with authority over specialists and direct access to the UDP and board.

Best answer: D

Explanation: The main risk in this specialized model is fragmented accountability. Because the issue crosses business lines and remediation has already stalled, the best response is to preserve specialist expertise but place it under one enterprise CCO with clear authority and direct escalation access.

A specialized or multiple-CCO structure can work, but its main governance risk is that cross-business issues can fall between mandates. In this scenario, the suitability problem links referrals, product oversight, and different compliance teams reporting through separate executives. That creates both silo risk and an independence concern.

The strongest intervention is to add one enterprise CCO who:

  • has clear authority over specialist compliance functions,
  • uses documented delegation to retain subject-matter expertise, and
  • reports directly to the UDP and board of directors on firm-wide issues.

This restores a single accountable owner for escalation and remediation without abandoning the specialized model. Better communication alone is not enough when authority is unclear and remediation has already stalled.


Question 10

Topic: Element 10 — Regulatory reporting, examinations, investigations and actions

Exhibit: CIRO notice (excerpt)

  • Matter: possible complaint-handling and branch supervision failures
  • Records due: 10 business days
  • Next stage: staff interviews may be requested

After receiving this notice, the CCO finds several incomplete complaint files. The branch manager says the firm should wait to see whether CIRO actually alleges a rule breach. What is the best next step?

  • A. Discipline the branch manager immediately and notify clients before confirming the facts.
  • B. Send only the requested files now and wait for CIRO to specify the exact breach.
  • C. Preserve relevant records, open a documented internal review, brief the UDP, and make a complete on-time response to CIRO.
  • D. Delay the response until the board approves a remediation plan.

Best answer: C

Explanation: Once CIRO opens an investigation, the CCO should stabilize the situation by preserving evidence, determining the facts, escalating internally, and coordinating a timely response. Discipline, client remediation, and broader governance actions should follow a supported review, not come first or delay the response.

The core process in a regulatory investigation is to control the file before conclusions are drawn. When CIRO issues a notice, the CCO should immediately preserve relevant records, stop any routine destruction, define the scope of the internal review, and gather facts from the affected complaint and supervision files. The CCO should also brief the UDP and coordinate an accurate, complete response within the stated deadline.

  • Preserve evidence and records.
  • Conduct documented internal fact-finding.
  • Escalate internally to the UDP and appropriate management.
  • Respond to CIRO on time, then assess discipline and remediation.

The key point is that the firm must investigate and respond promptly; it should neither wait for formal allegations nor impose sanctions before the facts are established.


Question 11

Topic: Element 2 — Compliance function and operation

A CIRO investment dealer is formalizing a new CCO model. Which proposed feature is INCORRECT for the firm’s arrangement?

  • A. Board escalation only after Chief Revenue Officer approval
  • B. Remote CCO with regular access to staff and regulators
  • C. Direct board and UDP access for material compliance issues
  • D. Qualified acting CCO with interim authority during planned leave

Best answer: A

Explanation: A compliant CCO arrangement must preserve the CCO’s independence, authority, and ability to escalate material issues directly. Remote accessibility and a qualified acting CCO can be acceptable, but business-line approval cannot be a condition to board or regulatory escalation.

The key concept is that the CCO must have sufficient authority, independence, and access to carry out the compliance mandate effectively. A firm can use a remote-work model if the CCO remains readily accessible to regulators, management, and relevant staff. It can also plan for an acting CCO during a leave, provided the interim individual is suitably qualified and given the authority needed to perform the role. What the firm cannot do is subordinate the CCO’s escalation function to a revenue-generating executive. If the Chief Revenue Officer must approve whether material compliance concerns go to the board, the UDP, or CIRO, the CCO’s independence is compromised and escalation may be delayed or suppressed. Flexible structure is permitted; impaired compliance authority is not.


Question 12

Topic: Element 12 — Chief Compliance Officer (CCO) responsibilities

A dealer’s CCO learns that an Approved Person used pre-signed forms and altered KYC update dates in about 40 client files. The firm has suspended the representative, started a file review, and may compensate affected clients. The firm’s procedures require prompt notification to CIRO of material misconduct, with follow-up updates as findings and remedial actions develop. Which response by the CCO is INCORRECT?

  • A. Delay notification until the investigation and loss review are complete.
  • B. Report the suspension, file review, and any client remediation.
  • C. Provide an initial notice now and supplement it later.
  • D. Document the findings, escalation, and remediation supporting the reports.

Best answer: A

Explanation: The inaccurate response is to wait for a fully completed investigation before notifying regulators. For material misconduct, the CCO should report promptly based on known facts and provide follow-up information as the scope, findings, and remedial measures become clearer.

This item tests prompt regulatory notification of Investment Dealer misconduct. When the firm identifies potentially material misconduct, the CCO should not wait for perfect information or a final client-loss calculation before reporting. An initial notice can describe the known facts, affected area, and immediate containment steps. As the review continues, the firm should update regulators on investigation results, disciplinary action, client impact, restitution or other remediation, and any control or supervisory changes put in place. Keeping a clear record of what was found, escalated, and corrected supports both the firm’s reporting and its compliance oversight. The key takeaway is that notification and remediation reporting are iterative, not something deferred until the matter is fully closed.


Question 13

Topic: Element 4 — Offering and distribution of securities

An Investment Dealer is a syndicate member on a prospectus-qualified common share offering to retail clients. The firm’s procedure requires any solicitation material to be consistent with the prospectus and the client to receive the prospectus-access notice before order entry. During a branch review, the CCO finds that one adviser used an issuer slide deck describing the issue as “low risk” and took 14 orders before the notice was sent; 6 clients are still within the disclosed two-business-day withdrawal period, and 2 clients have already complained the issue was sold as “income-like.” The book closes tomorrow. What is the single best compliance action?

  • A. Close the book as planned and review the matter later through complaints handling.
  • B. Keep the orders if the adviser gives recorded verbal risk explanations today.
  • C. Continue sales only for clients with high risk tolerance after updating KYC notes.
  • D. Suspend solicitation, correct disclosure, notify affected clients of withdrawal rights, and escalate.

Best answer: D

Explanation: The best response is to stop the compromised distribution activity and restore the investor protections tied to the offering documents. Here, misleading sales material and late prospectus delivery affect investors’ ability to make an informed decision and, for some clients, exercise the disclosed withdrawal right.

The core investor-protection issue in a securities issuance is timely, accurate disclosure. When sales material is inconsistent with the prospectus and the required prospectus-access step was skipped, the CCO should first stop further solicitation, correct the disclosure failure, and protect affected clients. That includes telling clients who are still within the stated withdrawal period how to use that right and escalating the matter promptly because the deficiency affects an active distribution.

Suitability, KYC, and verbal explanations do not replace prospectus-based disclosure. Nor is it enough to wait for the normal complaint process after closing, because investors may lose a live protection that was expressly disclosed in the offering process. The key takeaway is that immediate remediation must focus on preserving informed consent and existing investor rights.


Question 14

Topic: Element 11 — Compliance responsibilities

An Investment Dealer uses employees of an affiliated service company to collect KYC updates and upload new-account documents before an Approved Person reviews them. The CCO finds that the firm’s written supervisory procedures assign tasks to the affiliate but contain no testing steps or review cycle for that activity, branch reviews focus only on trading, and three recent complaints allege that risk tolerance fields were pre-filled before clients signed. From a CCO perspective, which control weakness matters most?

  • A. No transfer of branch-review ownership from compliance to internal audit.
  • B. No immediate re-papering of all accounts touched by the affiliate.
  • C. No documented compliance testing of KYC work by the firm and affiliate staff.
  • D. No decision to stop using the affiliate for onboarding.

Best answer: C

Explanation: The main problem is the lack of documented procedures to assess whether the KYC process is compliant when part of it is performed by affiliate staff. The complaint pattern makes that gap more urgent, but the primary CCO concern is the missing assessment framework over the dealer and persons acting on its behalf.

A dealer must do more than assign tasks in a manual. It must establish and maintain policies and procedures for assessing compliance by the firm and by persons acting on its behalf. Here, the affiliate participates in KYC collection, complaints suggest client information may be distorted, and the firm’s monitoring does not test that activity at all. That makes the missing assessment framework the primary red flag.

Useful controls would include:

  • defined oversight ownership for the affiliate process
  • periodic file testing of KYC fields and signatures
  • reviews that cover onboarding, not just trading
  • documented escalation and remediation for repeat exceptions

Re-papering files, changing which control function assists, or ending the affiliate arrangement may be considered later, but none of those addresses the fundamental failure to assess compliance.


Question 15

Topic: Element 10 — Regulatory reporting, examinations, investigations and actions

An Investment Dealer is onboarding a prospective Approved Person who says he was “named” in a provincial securities regulator enforcement case involving his former employer. The hiring manager wants to proceed because the candidate says the matter was against the firm, not him. Before the CCO decides whether the file can be closed or requires escalation, what should be verified first?

  • A. Whether clients from the former employer may seek compensation in the future
  • B. Whether the official enforcement record personally names him and imposes any findings, sanctions, undertakings, or restrictions
  • C. Whether the dealer should prepare a communications plan for possible publicity
  • D. Whether the former employer completed its remediation plan after the case

Best answer: B

Explanation: The first step is to verify the actual enforcement documents and current status of the case. The implications for the dealer and the individual depend on whether he was merely referenced, personally subject to allegations, or bound by a final order, settlement, or restriction.

The key concept is that compliance decisions about an Approved Person cannot rest on hearsay, a news article, or the individual’s own summary of an enforcement matter. The CCO should first obtain the official enforcement record and confirm the case status to determine whether the person was personally named, whether there were findings of misconduct, and whether any sanctions, undertakings, suspensions, or conditions affect registration or supervision.

That fact drives the next steps for the dealer, including hiring approval, heightened supervision, internal escalation, and any regulatory reporting analysis. If the matter was only against the prior firm, the implications may be limited. If the individual was personally sanctioned or remains subject to conditions, the implications can be significant for both the individual and the dealer. Remediation, client claims, and publicity may matter later, but only after the scope of the enforcement action is confirmed.


Question 16

Topic: Element 13 — Ultimate Designated Person (UDP) responsibility

An Investment Dealer’s CFO tells the UDP that capital headroom has remained just above the firm’s internal early-warning threshold for the past week because of a concentrated inventory position. The same day, the CCO reports repeated delays in reviewing leveraged-account exceptions. Both executives propose monthly updates unless a formal breach occurs. Which UDP response best reflects proper oversight of executives managing significant areas of risk?

  • A. Assume direct control of both workstreams until conditions stabilize.
  • B. Accept monthly updates unless an actual breach or complaint arises.
  • C. Require documented plans, interim controls, weekly monitoring, and board escalation of unresolved material risk.
  • D. Leave follow-up to internal audit’s year-end review.

Best answer: C

Explanation: The UDP should actively oversee executives who own significant risks by requiring evidence, timelines, interim controls, and escalation. The UDP is not expected to run the finance or compliance functions personally, and should not wait for an actual breach before acting.

The UDP’s role is to oversee executives who manage significant risk areas, not to replace them or passively wait for a formal breach. Here, the CFO’s capital headroom concern and the CCO’s supervisory-review delays are both current risk indicators. A proper UDP response is to require each executive to provide a written plan with specific actions, interim controls, deadlines, and reporting metrics, then challenge progress and escalate unresolved material risk to the board. If a regulatory reporting trigger is later met, the UDP must also ensure timely escalation occurs. Monthly verbal updates are too weak, and a year-end review is too late. Personally taking over the functions would blur accountability and weaken the oversight framework. The key takeaway is active, documented challenge with timely escalation.


Question 17

Topic: Element 7 — Risk management and internal controls

The CCO of an Investment Dealer reviews the annual compliance-testing plan. It schedules identical quarterly reviews for retail advice, institutional trading, and self-directed accounts, using the same checklist and staffing for each area. The plan includes due dates, report templates, and sign-offs, but it does not show how complaint trends, new products, outsourcing changes, prior findings, or business-line complexity were assessed when setting scope or review frequency. In a principles-based regulatory environment, which deficiency is most significant?

  • A. A mandatory rotation schedule for compliance reviewers
  • B. A policy cross-reference appendix for each test step
  • C. A colour-coded dashboard of outstanding findings
  • D. A documented risk assessment linking testing scope and frequency to significant risks

Best answer: D

Explanation: In a principles-based environment, the firm must be able to justify why compliance resources are allocated as they are. A testing plan that applies the same approach everywhere without a documented risk assessment misses the core risk-based foundation.

Under a principles-based approach, CIRO expects the dealer to demonstrate that its controls are proportionate to its own business model and risk profile. Here, the plan has administrative features such as timelines, templates, and sign-offs, but it lacks the key evidence showing why different business lines should receive the same or different review intensity. The missing element is a documented risk assessment that considers factors such as complaints, product changes, outsourcing, prior deficiencies, and operational complexity, then uses that analysis to set testing scope and frequency.

Without that linkage, the CCO cannot show that compliance monitoring is aimed at the firm’s significant risks or that resources are being directed where residual risk is highest. Better reporting tools or documentation aids can help, but they do not replace a risk-based methodology.


Question 18

Topic: Element 11 — Compliance responsibilities

Compliance testing at an Investment Dealer found eight new retail accounts where trading started before the electronic file showed a complete account-opening package. The branch manager says the missing documents were obtained later and that the Approved Person was verbally coached. The UDP asks the CCO whether the matter can be closed as a minor administrative issue. What should the CCO verify first?

  • A. The branch’s annual training-completion report for new-account procedures
  • B. The branch exception trend report for the last quarter
  • C. The time-stamped account files showing required KYC, client authorization, approval dates, and any written discipline record
  • D. The clients’ complaint history and current gains or losses

Best answer: C

Explanation: Before closing the issue, the CCO needs the documentary trail for the affected accounts and the firm’s response. Time-stamped account-opening records and written discipline evidence show whether the firm met its record-keeping obligations and whether any breach was properly documented and addressed.

For documentation issues, the CCO should start with contemporaneous records that can reconstruct what actually happened, not with after-the-fact assurances. Here, the key evidence is whether each account file shows the required KYC and client-authorized account-opening documentation, when supervisory approval occurred, when trading began, and whether the firm’s coaching or other internal discipline was recorded. If those records are incomplete or late, the firm should not treat the matter as a minor clerical lapse simply because documents were later uploaded or no client has complained.

  • Confirm when the required documents were obtained.
  • Confirm when the account was approved and when trading began.
  • Confirm that any coaching, warning, or other discipline was documented.

Trend reports, training records, and complaint data may matter later, but they do not answer the first documentation question for the specific files under review.


Question 19

Topic: Element 4 — Offering and distribution of securities

A CIRO Investment Dealer is acting as lead underwriter for a potential IPO. The issuer wants securities regulators to review a draft long form prospectus before any public announcement because the financing may be delayed or cancelled if a pending acquisition does not close. The capital markets desk asks the dealer’s CCO how the filing can rely on selective disclosure without widening access to the information. What is the best next step?

  • A. Arrange a confidential pre-filing with the principal regulator and restrict access internally on a need-to-know basis.
  • B. Wait until the issuer finalizes all terms and file only a final prospectus if the deal proceeds.
  • C. Publicly file the preliminary prospectus first and then ask the regulator to keep its review confidential.
  • D. Send the draft prospectus to selected institutional investors under confidentiality agreements before any regulator filing.

Best answer: A

Explanation: The proper use of selective disclosure here is a confidential pre-filing to securities regulators, not early sharing with investors or the market. The CCO should channel the draft prospectus through that confidential review process and keep access tightly limited internally.

The core concept is that selective disclosure in securities issuance is only acceptable in narrow, recognized contexts. When an issuer wants regulatory feedback on a proposed offering before deciding whether to proceed publicly, the appropriate path is a confidential pre-filing of the draft prospectus with the regulator, coupled with internal need-to-know controls.

In this scenario, the issuer wants comments before any public announcement because the transaction may never launch. A confidential pre-filing fits that purpose. Sharing the draft with investors is a different and riskier form of selective disclosure, and public filing first would defeat the confidentiality the issuer is trying to preserve. Waiting to file only a final prospectus would also skip the normal review sequence for an IPO.

The key takeaway is that regulator-only confidential review may be available, but broader selective disclosure is not a substitute for it.


Question 20

Topic: Element 2 — Compliance function and operation

CIRO sends an information request after a routine exam identifies exceptions on a structured-products desk. Over four months, the firm received two similar senior-client complaints, one has gone to OBSI, and compliance testing found missing KYP approval evidence and several stale KYC records. The UDP has asked the CCO to manage the response. The sales head asks the CCO to delay it until retraining is complete and to have the desk manager speak to CIRO first because the findings may affect revenue. The response deadline is in five business days. What is the CCO’s best next step?

  • A. Delay the response until retraining and retesting confirm the final findings.
  • B. Limit the response to the named client files rather than broader control issues.
  • C. Provide CIRO a timely, complete response using verified facts and current remediation status.
  • D. Have the desk manager lead the response because the issues arose on the desk.

Best answer: C

Explanation: The CCO should deal with CIRO directly, objectively, and within the stated deadline. Because the firm already has verified complaints and control deficiencies, it should disclose those facts and explain the remediation underway instead of waiting for a business-line-approved version.

This tests the CCO’s role when interacting with external regulators. Communications with CIRO should be timely, accurate, and independent from the revenue-generating desk. Here, the firm already knows material facts: similar complaints, an OBSI file, missing KYP approval evidence, and stale KYC records. Those facts suggest possible supervisory and client-protection weaknesses, so they should be addressed in the response even if retraining and further review are still in progress. The CCO should answer by the deadline using confirmed information, note what remains under review, and describe the remediation steps already started. Waiting for a final internal package, allowing the desk manager to control the message, or narrowing the response to only a few files would reduce completeness or independence. The key takeaway is that the CCO manages transparent regulator communication while remediation continues.


Question 21

Topic: Element 1 — General regulatory framework

The CCO of an investment dealer learns that marketing wants to send an affiliated insurer a file containing client names, email addresses, ages, and account values so the affiliate can promote annuity products. The dealer originally collected the information for securities account opening and servicing, and the clients did not consent to affiliate marketing. Which action best aligns with the purpose of PIPEDA?

  • A. Allow the transfer if the board approves the campaign and cybersecurity controls are strong.
  • B. Pause the transfer until the new marketing purpose is disclosed, meaningful client consent is obtained, and the disclosure is limited and safeguarded.
  • C. Allow the transfer if the affiliate’s first email includes an unsubscribe mechanism.
  • D. Allow the transfer because affiliated companies may use client data already collected during account opening.

Best answer: B

Explanation: PIPEDA focuses on fair handling of personal information in commercial activities. Because the firm wants to use client data for a new purpose-affiliate marketing-it should not disclose the file until clients are informed, meaningful consent is obtained, and the information is properly limited and protected.

PIPEDA is designed to balance legitimate business use of personal information with individuals’ privacy rights. In practice, that means an organization should identify the purpose for collecting personal information, obtain meaningful consent for its use or disclosure, limit collection and disclosure to what is necessary, and protect the information with appropriate safeguards. Here, the dealer collected the data for account opening and servicing, not for marketing by an affiliated insurer. Sharing the file for that new purpose would therefore require the firm to clearly define the new purpose, obtain appropriate client consent, and disclose no more information than needed under proper controls. Corporate affiliation, board approval, or strong security can support compliance, but none of them replaces purpose limitation and meaningful consent.


Question 22

Topic: Element 12 — Chief Compliance Officer (CCO) responsibilities

At a CIRO investment dealer, legal tracks client claims, HR tracks employee discipline, and the AML officer tracks suspicious-activity cases. Each department emails compliance only if it believes a matter is reportable, and compliance does not reconcile its reportable-matters log to those source records. Internal audit later found two settled client claims and one written discipline matter missing from the compliance log. Which red flag should trigger the CCO’s immediate remediation of the firm’s reporting controls?

  • A. Legal and HR maintain separate logs from compliance
  • B. No firm-wide escalation and reconciliation for potential reportable matters
  • C. Some omitted matters were already resolved internally
  • D. Internal audit found the omissions before compliance did

Best answer: B

Explanation: The key red flag is the missing control, not any single missed file. When departments decide for themselves what is reportable and compliance never reconciles to source records, the firm has an inadequate process for meeting its reporting obligations.

Reporting obligations require more than asking business units or control functions to notify compliance when they think something is reportable. The CCO should recognize a control failure when legal, HR, and AML each hold source records but there is no mandatory escalation or periodic reconciliation to a central reportable-matters log. That design allows matters to be filtered out before compliance assesses them, which is exactly what happened here.

The CCO should respond by reviewing the omitted matters, assessing whether any late reports are required, documenting the deficiency, and implementing a firm-wide intake and reconciliation process with clear ownership and testing. Separate logs may be operationally fine, but only if they feed a reliable reporting-control framework.


Question 23

Topic: Element 11 — Compliance responsibilities

A branch DCO escalates a complaint from a 74-year-old client in a newly opened advisory account. The file shows the representative copied KYC information from the client’s prior account at another firm, no new risk-tolerance or time-horizon discussion is documented, a leveraged ETF purchase was coded as unsolicited, and an email from the representative says, “I recommend this as a short-term opportunity.” As CCO, what is the best next step?

  • A. Escalate immediately to CIRO, suspend complaint handling, and wait for regulatory direction before reviewing suitability.
  • B. Preserve records, obtain current KYC independently, reassess account appropriateness and trade suitability, then decide remediation and reporting.
  • C. Rely on the unsolicited code, tell the client the trade was self-directed, and treat the loss as market risk.
  • D. Have the representative update KYC now, re-document the rationale, and close the file if the ETF fits.

Best answer: B

Explanation: The unsolicited-trade exemption is not available when the file shows the representative gave advice in an advisory account. The defensible next step is to secure the record, obtain current KYC through an independent review, and reassess both account appropriateness and suitability before deciding remediation and whether reporting is required.

The core issue is that the firm cannot rely on an unsolicited-order label when the file contains evidence of a recommendation. In a newly opened advisory account, the firm should have current KYC and an account-appropriateness determination, and an advised purchase of a leveraged ETF requires a suitability assessment based on the client’s actual circumstances. As CCO, the sound sequence is to preserve the evidence, keep the representative from rebuilding the file, gather current KYC through an independent review, reassess the account and trade, and then decide client remediation, supervisory action, and any CIRO reporting obligation.

  • preserve emails, notes, and order records
  • obtain and verify current KYC independently
  • test account appropriateness and trade suitability
  • decide remediation and reporting from the findings

Simply re-papering the account or accepting the unsolicited code would weaken both client protection and the firm’s position.


Question 24

Topic: Element 12 — Chief Compliance Officer (CCO) responsibilities

At a CIRO investment dealer, monthly surveillance flags that one Approved Person changed risk tolerance and investment objectives in 11 client accounts on the same day speculative stock orders were entered. The branch manager says the clients later confirmed the trades and asks the CCO to treat the matter as a documentation issue. The CCO has not yet reviewed any broader evidence. Before deciding whether the matter can be closed or must be escalated to the UDP, what should the CCO verify first?

  • A. The status of any OBSI complaint by affected clients
  • B. The branch’s quarterly sales target and bonus memo
  • C. The Approved Person’s annual compliance training attestation
  • D. The time-stamped KYC-change and trade exception reports for all affected accounts

Best answer: D

Explanation: The CCO should first obtain objective, time-stamped evidence showing the sequence of trades and KYC changes, the number of affected accounts, and any client impact. That is the key information needed to decide whether the matter may harm clients or reflects a broader pattern requiring escalation to the UDP.

When facts are incomplete, the CCO should start with the evidence that determines significance: scope, timing, impact, and recurrence. In this scenario, the critical question is whether KYC was altered after trades, across how many accounts, and with what client effect. Time-stamped exception reports for all affected accounts provide objective evidence on those points and help the CCO assess whether the conduct may have caused unsuitable trading, may harm clients, may affect market integrity, or forms part of a pattern that must be escalated to the UDP.

  • Verify the sequence of trade entry and KYC changes.
  • Identify all affected accounts, not just one sample file.
  • Check for unsuitable positions, losses, or repeat behaviour.

A branch explanation alone is not enough to close the matter.

CIRO CCO compliance oversight map

Use this map after the sample questions to connect individual items to the governance, supervision, escalation, testing, and regulatory-reporting decisions these Securities Prep samples test.

    flowchart LR
	  S1["Compliance issue or regulatory change"] --> S2
	  S2["Identify rule obligation and business impact"] --> S3
	  S3["Set policies controls and supervision"] --> S4
	  S4["Test evidence exceptions and trends"] --> S5
	  S5["Escalate deficiencies and remediation"] --> S6
	  S6["Report monitor and document governance"]

Quick Cheat Sheet

CueWhat to remember
CCO roleFocus on reasonably designed compliance systems, escalation, reporting, and evidence of follow-up.
SupervisionPolicies alone are not enough; look for monitoring, exception review, approvals, and accountability.
EscalationMaterial issues move beyond informal coaching to documented remediation and senior governance channels.
TestingCompliance testing should sample evidence, identify root causes, and track corrective action.
RecordsStrong answers usually preserve a clear audit trail for decisions, exceptions, and regulatory communications.

Mini Glossary

  • CCO: Chief Compliance Officer responsible for compliance-system oversight.
  • UDP: Ultimate designated person with senior responsibility for firm compliance culture.
  • Exception report: Supervisory report identifying activity outside expected parameters.
  • Remediation: Corrective action taken to address a control gap or rule breach.
  • Governance: Board and senior-management oversight of risk, compliance, and accountability.

In this section

Revised on Sunday, May 3, 2026