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CIRO CFO Practice Test

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

The CIRO Chief Financial Officer Exam rewards candidates who can connect RAC, capital, early warning, reporting, custody, margin, settlement, and books-and-records controls instead of treating them as isolated memorization blocks. If you are searching for CIRO Chief Financial 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 Financial Officer practice page gives you

  • a direct route into the Securities Prep simulator for the CIRO CFO exam
  • targeted practice around capital adequacy, reporting, custody, pricing, inventory, and operations risk
  • detailed explanations that show how prudential consequences change the best answer
  • a clear free-preview path before you subscribe
  • the same subscription across web and mobile

CIRO Chief Financial Officer exam snapshot

  • Regulator: CIRO
  • Exam: Chief Financial 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 Financial Officer practice

  • Capital, reporting, and records: capital adequacy, books and records, financial reporting, and early-warning discipline
  • Products and firm risk: inventory, security pricing, underwriting, credit risk, and client-account consequences
  • Operations and asset protection: settlements, reconciliations, custody, segregation, and protection of dealer and client assets
  • Governance and accountability: corporate governance, internal controls, significant risk areas, and UDP responsibilities

How CIRO CFO differs from similar routes

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

How to use the CIRO Chief Financial Officer simulator efficiently

  1. Start with capital, reporting, and custody drills so the prudential control framework becomes easier to apply.
  2. Review every miss until you can explain how the balance-sheet, reporting, or safeguarding consequence changes the right response.
  3. Move into mixed sets once you can switch between pricing, margin, settlement, and governance scenarios without slowing down.
  4. Finish with timed runs so long-form prudential scenarios feel manageable under exam pressure.

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 CFO 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 CFO

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

24 CIRO CFO sample questions with detailed explanations

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

Question 1

Topic: Element 8 — Risk management and internal controls

Which statement best describes an adequately governed credit-risk-management policy for a CIRO investment dealer?

  • A. A post-loss collections process monitored mainly by finance
  • B. Desk-level procedures with informal approval and exception-only board reporting
  • C. General operating guidance without documented limits or escalation
  • D. Written, formally approved, regularly reviewed, controlled, and reported to the board of directors

Best answer: D

Explanation: An adequate credit-risk-management policy is a governance framework, not just a desk practice. It should be documented, formally approved, reviewed regularly, supported by internal controls, and reported to the board of directors.

The core concept is governance over credit risk, not merely handling problem accounts after the fact. For a CIRO investment dealer, an adequate credit-risk-management policy should be written so limits, responsibilities, exceptions, and escalation paths are clear; formally approved so accountability is established; reviewed periodically so it remains current; and supported by internal controls that monitor compliance. Regular reporting to the board of directors provides oversight of exposures, breaches, trends, and remediation. A framework that is informal, undocumented, or only reactive after losses does not show that credit risk is being proactively identified, controlled, and overseen. The closest distractors describe useful activities, but they do not meet the full governance standard.


Question 2

Topic: Element 10 — Credit risk management and client accounts

In CIRO capital and margin treatment for repo or reverse repo transactions with an AI, AC, or RE, what is the main prudential benefit of an enforceable written master agreement?

  • A. It lets the dealer ignore counterparty classification.
  • B. It supports enforceable netting and collateral rights.
  • C. It makes all pledged securities allowable assets.
  • D. It removes the need for daily mark-to-market margining.

Best answer: B

Explanation: A strong master agreement matters because it turns exposure control into legally enforceable rights. In a financing relationship with an AI, AC, or RE, that supports valuation, margining, collateral realization, and close-out netting if the counterparty defaults.

The core concept is agreement quality as a credit-risk control. In repo and reverse repo financing, a dealer does not rely only on the counterparty being an AI, AC, or RE; it also needs robust documentation that gives enforceable rights over collateral and default close-out. That is what supports real exposure reduction.

A sound master agreement should support:

  • daily valuation and margin calls
  • control and liquidation of collateral
  • close-out on default
  • netting of mutual obligations where enforceable

Without those legal rights, the dealer may still face larger gross exposure even if the counterparty is otherwise strong. Counterparty status and agreement quality work together; one does not replace the other.


Question 3

Topic: Element 8 — Risk management and internal controls

During the year-end external audit of a CIRO-regulated Investment Dealer, the auditor compares two findings. Finding 1: one monthly securities reconciliation was prepared three days late once, then independently reviewed and corrected before year-end. Finding 2: for most of the year, the same employee could release client cash wires and perform the bank reconciliation, with no independent review. No material misstatement was found, sufficient audit evidence was obtained, and there is no separate engagement to opine on internal control effectiveness. Which reporting treatment best fits the decisive difference between the two findings?

  • A. Communicate Finding 2 as a significant deficiency while still issuing an unmodified audit opinion.
  • B. Treat Finding 1 as the more serious reportable matter because the books were late once.
  • C. Omit both findings from auditor reporting because year-end balances were not misstated.
  • D. Qualify the audit opinion because any segregation-of-duties weakness requires it.

Best answer: A

Explanation: The decisive factor is the auditor’s reporting objective. In a standard external audit, a serious internal control weakness is typically communicated to management and those charged with governance, but the financial statement opinion can still remain unmodified if the auditor obtained sufficient evidence and found no material misstatement.

An external auditor considers internal controls to assess risk and plan audit procedures; the auditor does not automatically give an opinion on control effectiveness in a standard financial statement audit. Here, the ongoing lack of segregation between releasing client cash wires and reconciling the bank account is the more serious design weakness because it increases the risk of undetected error or fraud. That kind of issue would ordinarily be reported as a significant deficiency to management and the board or audit committee.

A modified financial statement opinion is a different question. It is usually driven by material misstatement or a scope limitation that prevents the auditor from obtaining sufficient appropriate evidence. The stem says neither occurred, so the opinion can remain unmodified. The isolated late reconciliation is much less significant because it was corrected and independently reviewed before year-end.


Question 4

Topic: Element 12 — Operations and settlements

An Investment Dealer uses CAD 25 million of client free credits as a regular funding source for firm inventory. The dealer has given clients the required disclosure, but most of the cash has been deployed into less liquid positions and the firm has no committed backup facility. If several large clients request repayment of their free credit balances tomorrow morning, what is the most likely immediate consequence?

  • A. An automatic RAC deduction equal to the withdrawal amount
  • B. No prudential stress because disclosure makes the balances stable funding
  • C. An immediate liquidity squeeze requiring emergency funding or asset sales
  • D. Routine CIPF funding of the withdrawal requests

Best answer: C

Explanation: The key issue is liquidity, not automatic capital relief or automatic capital loss. Client free credits may be used, but they remain payable on demand, so financing less liquid assets with them creates a funding mismatch if clients ask for their cash back quickly.

Client free credits can be a source of dealer funding, but they are not committed term financing. Even where disclosure has been provided, the dealer must still manage the liquidity risk created by using on-demand client balances to fund less liquid inventory or other less liquid assets. If clients request repayment on short notice and the firm lacks readily available cash or backup borrowing capacity, the most likely immediate outcome is a liquidity squeeze. The dealer may need to borrow urgently, unwind financing, or sell assets quickly, potentially at unfavorable prices. Any resulting losses or prolonged strain could later affect capital measures or trigger regulatory attention, but the first consequence is the cash funding pressure.


Question 5

Topic: Element 9 — Inventory, pricing of securities and underwriting

The CFO of a CIRO investment dealer allows the trading desk’s marks for a thinly traded corporate bond inventory to be used in month-end Form 1 reporting without independent price verification, even though the firm’s pricing policy requires challenge and escalation of stale or unsupported quotes. A later control review shows the inventory was overvalued by $1.8 million, which increased reported risk adjusted capital (RAC). What is the most likely immediate consequence?

  • A. CIRO would most likely immediately suspend the firm’s bond desk.
  • B. No action is needed until an external trade confirms the price.
  • C. Only annual IFRS statements are affected; Form 1 remains valid.
  • D. Reported RAC is overstated; the filing must be corrected and capital status reassessed.

Best answer: D

Explanation: Weak pricing controls on illiquid inventory can overstate asset values and therefore overstate RAC. The immediate consequence is inaccurate prudential reporting that must be corrected, with the firm’s capital position reassessed using properly verified prices.

Pricing controls for financial instruments are a prudential control, not just an accounting process. When unsupported desk marks are used for illiquid inventory, the dealer may overstate the value of its positions and, as a result, overstate net allowable assets and RAC in Form 1. In this scenario, the firm already knows the reported price was too high, so the first consequence is not to wait for year-end audit work or for a later market trade.

The CFO should ensure the position is revalued using the firm’s approved pricing process, the affected regulatory filing is corrected, and the lower capital result is assessed for any escalation or reporting consequences. Later outcomes such as examination findings, sanctions, or reputational damage are possible, but they are downstream effects. The immediate issue is the prudential misstatement caused by weak pricing oversight.


Question 6

Topic: Element 9 — Inventory, pricing of securities and underwriting

At a CIRO investment dealer, the CFO reviews the monthly results of a thinly traded corporate bond inventory. Position size, issuer exposure, and financing levels were largely unchanged, but desk P&L moved from a CAD 1.6 million gain in April to a CAD 1.4 million loss in May. Operations also recorded repeated repricing corrections and reversed several margin calls. The desk alternated among evaluated prices, trader quotes, and stale dealer runs, with no documented valuation hierarchy or independent review. What is the primary prudential red flag?

  • A. Higher settlement risk from back-office corrections
  • B. No consistent valuation method or independent price verification
  • C. Short-term liquidity strain from revised collateral demands
  • D. Excess concentration in a single illiquid issuer

Best answer: B

Explanation: The most important red flag is the absence of a consistent, documented valuation approach backed by independent review. When stable positions produce sharp P&L reversals and the firm also has frequent repricing and margin-call corrections, the root weakness is inventory pricing control.

The core issue is deficient inventory valuation control. For thinly traded securities, the dealer should use a documented valuation hierarchy consistently and subject prices to independent verification, not switch ad hoc among trader quotes, evaluated prices, and stale dealer runs. In the scenario, position size, concentration, and financing were largely unchanged, so the large P&L reversal is not best explained by a new market exposure. The repeated repricing corrections and reversed margin calls reinforce that unreliable prices are feeding other prudential processes.

  • Unexplained P&L swings in otherwise stable inventory are a classic valuation red flag.
  • Error-heavy repricing and collateral adjustments show the pricing weakness is affecting control outputs.
  • The CFO should focus first on the valuation framework, documentation, and independent review process.

Liquidity or processing issues may result, but they are downstream effects of the pricing-control failure.


Question 7

Topic: Element 10 — Credit risk management and client accounts

An Investment Dealer’s securities-backed lending policy requires annual board approval, pre-set client limits, daily independent pricing of collateral, and monthly exception reporting. For one large client, the policy was last approved 18 months ago, the lending desk raised the limit from $10 million to $16 million without approval, the current loan balance is $14.8 million, and the collateral is a thinly traded equity revalued weekly by the desk using the last sale price. No exception report has gone to the CFO or board risk committee for two months. Which is the primary prudential red flag?

  • A. The collateral shares create routine inventory market risk.
  • B. Missing reports mainly affect Form 1 presentation timing.
  • C. Overnight funding of the loan may become more expensive.
  • D. Inadequate governance and stale collateral pricing may understate credit exposure.

Best answer: D

Explanation: The biggest concern is the failure of the credit-risk control framework itself. Outdated board oversight, an unauthorized limit increase, non-independent weekly pricing of illiquid collateral, and missing exception escalation can all cause the firm to mismeasure and exceed secured credit exposure.

This scenario points to inadequate credit-risk governance, not just a bad market move or a reporting delay. The firm’s own framework requires current board oversight, authorized limits, independent collateral valuation, and regular exception review. Here, each safeguard has weakened: the policy is stale, the limit was increased without approval, the business line is pricing illiquid collateral using stale last-sale data, and exceptions are not reaching the CFO or the board risk committee.

That combination matters most because it can materially overstate the security-loan value and understate the firm’s real exposure to the client. If collateral values fall or are unreliable, the apparent loan coverage may be illusory. Funding cost, market volatility, and reporting consequences are secondary effects; the primary red flag is that the firm is not properly governing, measuring, or escalating credit risk.


Question 8

Topic: Element 15 — Ultimate Designated Person (UDP) responsibilities

An investment dealer’s RAC remains comfortably above its internal warning level, and no early-warning filing is required today. Over the last two quarters, unresolved settlement differences have doubled, 70% of inventory financing now comes from one counterparty, and client free-credit balances have grown faster than committed liquidity lines. The annual risk questionnaire is due next week, and the UDP asks whether these matters can wait until a formal breach occurs. What is the best CFO response?

  • A. Exclude them until a capital breach or early-warning trigger occurs.
  • B. Include the emerging risks in the annual questionnaire, show the worsening trend and mitigation, and escalate through governance.
  • C. Wait for audited year-end results before updating the risk trend report.
  • D. Report only the financing concentration and leave the operational items to audit.

Best answer: B

Explanation: Annual risk questionnaires and risk trend reports are forward-looking tools, not after-the-fact breach reports. Because the firm’s operational, funding, and liquidity indicators are deteriorating, the CFO should document the emerging risks now, describe mitigation, and ensure the UDP receives them through the firm’s escalation process.

The core purpose of the annual risk questionnaire and risk trend report is to help the firm and CIRO understand how the dealer’s risk profile is changing over time. They are designed to capture emerging or increasing risks across operations, funding, liquidity, counterparties, and controls, even when RAC is still adequate and no early-warning filing is yet required. In this scenario, rising settlement differences, concentrated inventory financing, and growing free-credit balances all signal a worsening risk trend. The CFO should therefore report those developments, explain the mitigation plan, and escalate them through normal governance so the UDP can exercise informed oversight. Waiting for a formal breach would defeat the proactive purpose of these tools.


Question 9

Topic: Element 5 — Capital adequacy, books and records, and reporting

A CIRO Investment Dealer is close to an RAC early warning trigger at March 31. The CFO can either keep $600,000 on deposit with an acceptable institution or optionally prepay $600,000 for next year’s software maintenance; if it is not prepaid, no amount is due at March 31. Assuming no other changes, which treatment gives the stronger month-end RAC position under the Capital Formula?

  • A. Prepay the maintenance; vendor prepayments remain allowable current assets.
  • B. Prepay the maintenance; removing a future obligation raises RAC by $600,000.
  • C. Keep the cash on deposit; prepaying would lower RAC by $600,000.
  • D. Either choice; both receive identical treatment in the formula.

Best answer: C

Explanation: The stronger month-end RAC position comes from keeping the cash on deposit. Under the Capital Formula, allowable cash remains available for prudential purposes, while a prepaid maintenance balance is a non-allowable asset that reduces RAC by its full amount.

The Capital Formula distinguishes between assets that are readily available to support the dealer’s obligations and assets that are not. Cash on deposit with an acceptable institution is generally an allowable asset. A prepaid operating expense, such as next year’s software maintenance, is different: it represents future services, not liquid resources, so it is treated as a non-allowable asset and deducted from capital.

In the scenario, moving $600,000 from allowable cash into a prepaid maintenance balance worsens month-end RAC by $600,000. The key comparison is prudential availability at the statement date, not whether the payment relates to a legitimate business cost or will be expensed over time. Confusing accounting matching with capital treatment is the main trap here.


Question 10

Topic: Element 3 — Investment Dealer business model and related areas

A CIRO Investment Dealer has tight RAC headroom, and month-end Form 1 closes in two business days. The head of sales asks the CFO to approve a Friday launch of a new principal-protected note for advised clients through the firm’s full-service advisers on an agency basis, arguing that the issuer bank has already completed its own diligence and the note will be distributed under a prospectus exemption. Internal audit also reported last quarter that some new products were added to the approved list before formal sign-off. What is the best CFO decision?

  • A. Approve the agency-only launch because avoiding inventory removes the main control concern.
  • B. Permit a limited launch because prospectus-exempt distribution reduces the dealer’s review requirement.
  • C. Delay the launch until the firm’s documented product due diligence and approval are complete.
  • D. Use the issuer bank’s diligence package and complete internal approval after month-end.

Best answer: C

Explanation: The CFO should stop the Friday launch until the firm’s own product due diligence and formal approval are finished. Agency-only handling, issuer diligence, and prospectus-exempt distribution do not by themselves exempt an advised product from the dealer’s approval process.

Product due diligence is the dealer’s own gatekeeping process before a new product is added to the approved list or made available through advisers. The firm may use issuer materials, but it still must assess the product’s structure, risks, costs, intended client use, and operational readiness, and document approval through its internal process. Neither agency-only distribution nor an available prospectus exemption automatically removes that obligation for a product being sold through full-service advisers. The prior audit finding makes a post-launch workaround even less acceptable because it points to a known control weakness that should be remediated, not repeated.

The closest trap is relying on the issuer’s diligence package: it can support the review, but it cannot replace the dealer’s own approval decision.


Question 11

Topic: Element 13 — Protection of dealer and client assets

Near market close, a branch receives from a client a physical bond certificate in good deliverable form and a cheque to fund the account. The branch vault has already been closed, and the salesperson proposes keeping both items in a locked desk drawer until morning. As CFO, which action is correct under internal-control standards?

  • A. Log both items immediately and place them in approved secure custody under controlled access.
  • B. Wait to record both items until the cheque clears and the certificate settles.
  • C. Let the salesperson keep both items overnight in a locked desk drawer.
  • D. Send both items to head office first and enter them there later.

Best answer: A

Explanation: When a firm receives client money or securities, it should create an immediate record and move the items into approved secure custody. End-of-day timing does not justify leaving client property in a salesperson’s personal control or delaying the audit trail.

The core control is immediate accountability plus secure safeguarding. Once client property is received at the branch, the firm should promptly record the receipt and place the items in an approved secure location with restricted access under firm procedures. That control reduces the risk of loss, misuse, and later disputes about what was received and when.

In this scenario, the fact that the vault is already closed does not relax the standard. A locked desk drawer controlled by a salesperson is not appropriate custody for client assets, and delaying entry until head office processing, cheque clearance, or later settlement would leave the firm without a proper overnight record. The key point is that handling and safeguarding controls start when the branch receives the property, not when later processing is completed.


Question 12

Topic: Element 1 — General regulatory framework

Which function most clearly distinguishes a recognized exchange from an alternative trading system in Canada?

  • A. Guaranteeing settlement of trades through novation
  • B. Preparing and filing a dealer’s Form 1
  • C. Holding client securities in custody and segregation
  • D. Setting listing requirements for issuers

Best answer: D

Explanation: A recognized exchange is distinguished by its authority to list securities and set requirements for listed issuers. An alternative trading system is a marketplace for trading, but it does not perform the issuer-listing role of an exchange.

The key distinction is the exchange’s issuer-facing authority. In Canada, a recognized exchange is a marketplace that can list securities and establish listing standards and related requirements for issuers. An alternative trading system can provide order matching and trade execution, but it does not list issuers or set issuer listing requirements.

The other functions belong to different parts of the market structure: settlement guarantee is associated with a clearing agency, custody and segregation relate to safekeeping arrangements, and Form 1 filing is a regulatory reporting duty of an Investment Dealer. The best answer is the one tied to issuer listing authority, not post-trade, custody, or dealer reporting functions.


Question 13

Topic: Element 12 — Operations and settlements

An Investment Dealer’s CFO is reviewing the settlement funding impact of today’s U.S. equity principal trades. All amounts below settle on the same date and are in USD unless noted.

  • Principal buys: 6,000,000
  • Principal sells: 4,500,000
  • Existing USD cash available for settlement: 500,000
  • Spot rate: 1.35 CAD/USD
  • For this question, CIRO applies an 8% capital charge to the CAD equivalent of any unhedged net USD settlement exposure. A same-day full FX hedge eliminates the charge.

If the firm leaves the exposure unhedged, what is the best estimate of the RAC impact?

  • A. RAC decreases by $108,000
  • B. There is no RAC effect until settlement
  • C. RAC decreases by $162,000
  • D. RAC decreases by $648,000

Best answer: A

Explanation: The firm has a net USD payment obligation of USD 1,000,000 after offsetting principal sells and available USD cash against principal buys. Converting that amount to CAD and applying the stated 8% charge gives a $108,000 deduction from RAC.

The core issue is the unhedged net foreign-currency settlement exposure created by principal trading. For this question, the dealer can offset USD sells and available USD cash against USD buys, and only the remaining net payable is exposed. CIRO then applies the stated capital charge to the CAD equivalent of that net amount, which reduces RAC.

  • Net USD exposure = 6,000,000 - 4,500,000 - 500,000 = USD 1,000,000
  • CAD equivalent = 1,000,000 1.35 = CAD 1,350,000
  • Capital charge = 8% 1,350,000 = $108,000

So, leaving the position unhedged lowers RAC by $108,000. The closest traps are ignoring the available USD cash or applying the charge to gross buys instead of the net settlement exposure.


Question 14

Topic: Element 8 — Risk management and internal controls

The board of an Investment Dealer has approved a risk appetite stating that total risk consumption under the firm’s stress-testing model must remain within a firm-wide limit, and any breach must be escalated the same day to the CFO and UDP. Internal audit found that the equity desk, fixed-income desk, and treasury unit each monitor separate desk limits, but no one consolidates the results under the enterprise-wide model. Which control enhancement best fits that gap in the dealer’s risk-management framework?

  • A. Annual desk-head attestation of policy compliance
  • B. Daily enterprise dashboard with firm-wide aggregation and automatic breach escalation
  • C. Monthly desk reports with locally set trigger levels
  • D. Larger committed funding line for unexpected market moves

Best answer: B

Explanation: The decisive factor is enterprise-wide measurement against the board-approved risk appetite, not a local or after-the-fact control. A daily aggregated dashboard with automatic breach escalation aligns risk identification, limit monitoring, and accountability with the roles of the CFO and UDP.

A risk-management framework is effective only if exposures are identified, measured, and escalated at the same level where the firm sets its risk appetite. In this scenario, the board limit applies to total risk consumption under an enterprise-wide stress model, so desk-by-desk monitoring is not enough. The best control is one that aggregates all relevant business-unit results each day, compares the combined amount with the approved firm-wide limit, and automatically routes breaches to the CFO and UDP for action.

  • Match measurement to the appetite: firm-wide, not desk-only.
  • Match monitoring frequency to the escalation rule: same day.
  • Match governance to roles and responsibilities: CFO and UDP must receive breach information promptly.

Funding capacity, local reporting, and annual attestations may support the framework, but they do not close the core gap in enterprise-wide measurement and breach governance.


Question 15

Topic: Element 2 — General financial requirements

A CIRO investment dealer is facing severe liquidity stress, and the CFO is briefing the board of directors on what CIPF does if the firm becomes insolvent. Which statement about CIPF is INCORRECT?

  • A. It sets dealer capital rules and monitors early warning compliance.
  • B. It may facilitate the return or transfer of client accounts in an insolvency.
  • C. It protects eligible client property when a member becomes insolvent.
  • D. It does not cover normal market losses on investments.

Best answer: A

Explanation: CIPF is an investor-protection fund, not the prudential regulator. Its purpose is to protect eligible client property when a member firm becomes insolvent, not to set capital rules or monitor early warning compliance.

The key distinction is between insolvency protection and prudential regulation. CIPF’s purpose is to protect eligible clients of an insolvent member when there is a shortfall in client property, typically by helping facilitate the return or transfer of assets and, where applicable, providing protection within its coverage framework. It is funded by member firms and is focused on customer protection if a member fails.

CIRO, by contrast, is the self-regulatory organization that oversees investment dealers’ prudential compliance, including capital requirements, Form 1 reporting, and early warning supervision. So describing CIPF as the body that sets dealer capital rules or monitors early warning misstates its authority. The closest trap is confusing insolvency protection with investment performance protection; CIPF does not insure against ordinary market losses.


Question 16

Topic: Element 9 — Inventory, pricing of securities and underwriting

All amounts are in CAD. An Investment Dealer’s principal desk still holds 18 million face amount of a thinly traded corporate debenture from a recent bought deal. The desk marked the position at 99 using the trader’s estimate, but finance obtained two executable external dealer bids at 96.00 and 96.25, and no client trades have occurred for three days. Revaluing the position to 96.25 would reduce the firm’s RAC by about 2.7 million, and the monthly Form 1 package is due tomorrow. The desk head asks to keep the 99 mark until a client trade occurs and to continue adding inventory. What is the single best CFO response?

  • A. Require an immediate independent mark using observable bids, record the RAC impact now, and halt further inventory increases pending risk review.
  • B. Use the midpoint of the trader mark and external bids for this Form 1 and review the position after filing.
  • C. Keep the trader mark until an arm’s-length trade occurs, but report the concentration to the UDP today.
  • D. Maintain the current mark if the desk hedges spread risk and remains within normal trading limits.

Best answer: A

Explanation: The CFO should override the unsupported trader mark and require an immediate independent valuation based on observable external bids. Because the position materially affects RAC and Form 1 is due tomorrow, the impact must be recorded now, and further inventory growth should pause until the issue is reviewed.

Principal trading controls require independent price verification and timely recognition of valuation effects in the firm’s books and regulatory capital. Here, the trader’s 99 mark is contradicted by two executable external bids and there have been no recent client trades, so the CFO should require the inventory to be revalued using supportable market evidence for the current reporting cycle. Because the position is large enough to reduce RAC materially and the Form 1 filing is due tomorrow, the impact cannot be deferred to a later month or handled only as disclosure. The request to keep adding inventory should also be stopped until risk management reviews the exposure and the pricing-control issue is addressed. Disclosure, averaging, or hedging do not cure a current valuation-control failure.


Question 17

Topic: Element 6 — Corporate governance and ethics

A CIRO Investment Dealer’s board-approved governance policy requires the CFO to escalate to the board risk committee within 5 business days if any of the following occur:

  • risk-adjusted capital (RAC) falls below 115% of the firm’s internal capital floor
  • one lender provides more than 35% of secured funding
  • a high-risk control deficiency remains open more than 90 days

At month-end, all amounts in CAD:

  • Internal capital floor: $12.0 million
  • RAC: $13.5 million
  • Secured funding: $200 million
  • Largest lender: $78 million
  • Oldest high-risk control deficiency: 104 days

Which response best reflects effective corporate governance?

  • A. Treat the aged control issue as an internal audit matter unless capital turns negative.
  • B. Wait for the next quarterly board package because RAC still exceeds the internal floor.
  • C. Escalate only the funding concentration breach and monitor the other two internally.
  • D. Escalate all three trigger breaches now and present a documented remediation timetable.

Best answer: D

Explanation: Effective corporate governance depends on clear thresholds, timely escalation, and board oversight when those thresholds are breached. Here, RAC is only 112.5% of the internal floor, funding concentration is 39%, and the control deficiency is 104 days old, so all three triggers require prompt escalation and remediation tracking.

The key governance concept is that the board sets risk limits and escalation rules, and management must apply them consistently and promptly. In this scenario, the CFO is not deciding whether the issues are material in a general sense; the board has already defined materiality through numeric triggers.

  • RAC trigger: \(13.5 / 12.0 = 112.5\%\), which is below 115%
  • Funding trigger: \(78 / 200 = 39\%\), which is above 35%
  • Control trigger: 104 days, which is above 90 days

Because all three board-approved triggers are breached, effective governance requires immediate reporting to the board risk committee, clear management accountability, and a documented remediation plan. Waiting, narrowing the report, or keeping matters within management would weaken oversight and undermine the governance framework.


Question 18

Topic: Element 4 — Offering and distribution of securities

An Investment Dealer acts as lead underwriter in a firm-commitment common share offering. Closing has occurred, 80,000 shares from the dealer’s allotment remain unsold, and the agreement gives the dealer no right to return those shares to the issuer. For CIRO books and records and capital purposes, what is the correct treatment of the unsold shares?

  • A. Record them only as an amount receivable from the issuer.
  • B. Treat them as client securities and place them in segregation.
  • C. Classify them as dealer inventory and apply the applicable inventory margin.
  • D. Keep them as an off-balance-sheet underwriting commitment until syndicate settlement.

Best answer: C

Explanation: In a firm-commitment underwriting, the dealer purchases its allotment at closing and assumes the risk of any unsold portion. That means the remaining shares are the dealer’s own inventory for CIRO prudential purposes and must carry the applicable inventory margin.

The core concept is risk transfer in a firm-commitment underwriting. Once closing occurs, the Investment Dealer has taken up its allotment from the issuer, so any unsold shares are no longer just a distribution commitment. They are the dealer’s own securities position. For CIRO prudential purposes, that position must be reflected in the firm’s books and records as dealer inventory and included in capital calculations with the applicable inventory margin.

This differs from a pre-closing underwriting commitment or a best-efforts arrangement, where the dealer may not have taken ownership of unsold securities. It also differs from client asset treatment, because unsold allotment shares are not client securities merely because they were intended for distribution. The key takeaway is that a completed firm-commitment take-down turns unsold shares into dealer inventory, not an issuer or client position.


Question 19

Topic: Element 9 — Inventory, pricing of securities and underwriting

An Investment Dealer is the syndicate manager for a prospectus offering. The syndicate agreement says the management fee is payable only to the managers, while syndicate profit is shared among all underwriting members after allowable syndicate expenses. The finance team mistakenly adds the management fee to the syndicate-profit pool and releases final member payments using that calculation. What is the most likely consequence?

  • A. Only revenue presentation changes; member payments stay correct.
  • B. The issuer must pay an additional amount to the syndicate.
  • C. Managers are underpaid and non-managers are overpaid; settlement must be restated.
  • D. The management fee becomes an allowable syndicate expense.

Best answer: C

Explanation: Management fee and syndicate profit are separate components in syndicate accounting. If a manager-only fee is pooled and shared as syndicate profit, the immediate result is incorrect member payments: managers lose part of their entitlement and non-managers receive too much.

The key concept is that syndicate compensation must be allocated by its proper category and by the role entitled to it. A management fee is not the same as syndicate profit, and it is not an allowable expense. In this scenario, the finance team put a manager-only amount into the shared profit pool, so the primary consequence is a payment error in the final syndicate settlement.

  • Management fee belongs only to the managers.
  • Syndicate profit is the amount shared under the syndicate agreement after allowable expenses.
  • Mixing those categories changes each member’s cash entitlement.
  • The settlement therefore has to be corrected, with true-up or recovery as needed.

This is an immediate syndicate-accounting misallocation, not a need for new issuer funding or a mere presentation issue.


Question 20

Topic: Element 12 — Operations and settlements

The CFO of a CIRO investment dealer uses a daily treasury pack to decide whether to fund settlement obligations through repo transactions or bank borrowing. The pack shows opening cash, projected CDS settlements, expected client withdrawals, margin calls, current funding rates, and each lender’s stated facility limit. It does not show current utilization, whether each facility is committed or uncommitted, collateral already pledged to the lender, or the facility’s expiry date. Which missing control or document is the most significant deficiency?

  • A. A daily usable-funding schedule by source, showing commitment status, remaining drawable capacity, pledged collateral, and expiry dates.
  • B. A monthly trend report of average financing rates by counterparty.
  • C. An after-hours escalation list for lenders and custodians.
  • D. A second review of prior-day interest accruals and bank charges.

Best answer: A

Explanation: To manage liquidity, the CFO needs usable funding availability, not just stated line limits and quoted rates. Without commitment status, remaining drawable capacity, collateral constraints, and expiry dates, the dealer cannot reliably determine whether it can fund expected outflows or compare dependable financing choices.

The core issue is whether the firm can convert a funding source into cash when needed. Headline limits are not enough for liquidity management because a facility may be uncommitted, partly drawn, constrained by pledged collateral, or close to expiry. A daily usable-funding schedule lets the CFO match projected outflows from settlements, withdrawals, and margin calls to funding sources that are actually available, then compare the cost of those reliable sources. That is the key control for determining both liquidity needs and financing costs. Rate trend reports, accrual reviews, and contact lists may improve monitoring or administration, but they do not establish real funding capacity for the day’s obligations.


Question 21

Topic: Element 5 — Capital adequacy, books and records, and reporting

A CIRO Investment Dealer’s CFO files the monthly financial report showing RAC of CAD 5.2 million, based on a stale vendor price for a thinly traded inventory position. Two days later, finance confirms that approved independent pricing would reduce inventory by CAD 1.4 million, so corrected RAC is CAD 3.8 million. For this question, assume early warning begins below CAD 4.0 million. If the pricing control weakness was not detected before filing, what is the most likely immediate consequence?

  • A. The discovery would automatically stop all client trading until year-end audit.
  • B. Corrected RAC would require prompt CIRO reporting and early warning management.
  • C. The misstatement would trigger immediate CIPF reimbursement to clients.
  • D. The issue could wait for next month’s filing if cash is unchanged.

Best answer: B

Explanation: A pricing control failure that overstates inventory also overstates RAC. Once corrected RAC falls below the stated early warning threshold, the immediate consequence is a prudential reporting and escalation issue: the firm must correct the filing, notify CIRO as required, and manage the early warning condition.

The key concept is that RAC is only as reliable as the firm’s capital adequacy reporting system and valuation controls. Here, stale pricing inflated inventory and caused RAC to be reported at CAD 5.2 million instead of the corrected CAD 3.8 million. Because the stem states that early warning begins below CAD 4.0 million, the pricing error has an immediate prudential consequence once discovered.

The firm should treat this as a capital reporting problem, not just an accounting clean-up:

  • recalculate RAC using approved prices
  • escalate internally to the CFO, UDP, and appropriate governance
  • notify CIRO as required and correct the filing
  • manage the early warning condition and the underlying control weakness

The closest trap is delaying correction until the next filing, but a known RAC misstatement that changes prudential status requires prompt action.


Question 22

Topic: Element 5 — Capital adequacy, books and records, and reporting

An Investment Dealer began carrying retail listed equity options on April 1. On April 20, the CFO reviews the following internal audit extract. Based on the exhibit, which action is the only one supported?

AreaObservation
Business changeRetail listed equity options started April 1; cleared through CDCC
Written proceduresFinance manual addresses only cash equities
Month-end reportingOption positions added to Form 1 working papers by manual spreadsheet override
Control evidenceNo documented review of option pricing, margin, or segregation impacts
  • A. Defer the procedure update until the next annual review because the change mainly affects the trading desk.
  • B. Retain the current procedures and document the spreadsheet override as the ongoing month-end control.
  • C. Wait for external audit to confirm the proper treatment before revising internal finance procedures.
  • D. Immediately update and approve written finance procedures for option pricing, margin, segregation, Form 1 mapping, and review ownership.

Best answer: D

Explanation: The exhibit shows a clear mismatch between the dealer’s new business activity and its written finance procedures. Because listed options affect valuation, margin, segregation, and Form 1 reporting, the CFO should promptly update and approve the procedures rather than rely on a manual workaround.

When an Investment Dealer adds a new business activity that affects books and records, capital treatment, or regulatory reporting, written policies and procedures should be updated promptly so the control framework matches actual operations. Here, the firm started carrying listed options, but the finance manual still covers only cash equities. The month-end process used a spreadsheet override, and there is no documented review of pricing, margin, or segregation impacts.

That combination shows a control gap, not just a documentation issue. The CFO should ensure procedures are revised, approved, and assigned to clear control owners for ongoing use in Form 1 preparation and related prudential processes. A temporary manual adjustment may get one reporting cycle completed, but it is not an adequate substitute for current documented procedures tied to the firm’s changed business activity.


Question 23

Topic: Element 10 — Credit risk management and client accounts

For an Investment Dealer’s regulatory margin calculation, what is the effect of a missing signed written guarantee in a client margin account that had been receiving guarantee-based relief?

  • A. Relief may continue if the guarantor’s financial strength is well documented.
  • B. No guarantee-based margin relief applies until the signed guarantee is obtained.
  • C. Relief may continue if the client has signed the margin agreement.
  • D. Relief may continue temporarily if branch management approves an exception.

Best answer: B

Explanation: A signed written guarantee is the required documentary basis for using guarantee-based margin relief. If that document is missing, the firm has a documentation gap and must margin the account without the guarantee benefit until the deficiency is cured.

The core concept is that margin relief based on a third-party guarantee depends on proper documentation, not just commercial comfort. If the signed written guarantee is missing, the dealer has weak credit control evidence and cannot continue to give regulatory margin benefit for that guarantee.

The practical corrective action is to:

  • remove the guarantee-based relief,
  • re-margin the account on its own status,
  • issue any resulting deficiency call if needed, and
  • restore the relief only after the signed guarantee is obtained and reviewed.

A guarantor’s apparent financial strength, a client margin agreement, or a management exception do not replace the required guarantee document.


Question 24

Topic: Element 8 — Risk management and internal controls

At a CIRO investment dealer, an operations supervisor can add or change client wire instructions, approve outgoing client cash withdrawals, and release the wire through online banking. The same supervisor also prepares the daily bank reconciliation for the client cash account, while the controller reviews only month-end summaries. During vacation coverage, two beneficiary changes were processed without independent callback verification. What is the primary prudential red flag for the CFO?

  • A. Settlement delays from same-day bank cut-off risk
  • B. Privacy risk from storing banking instructions
  • C. Lack of preventive and detective controls over client cash wires
  • D. Short-term liquidity pressure from concentrated withdrawals

Best answer: C

Explanation: The main issue is the breakdown of internal controls over cash disbursements. The same person can initiate, approve, release, and reconcile the transaction, which removes key preventive controls and weakens detective controls over client assets.

Internal controls are meant to safeguard assets, support reliable books and records, and ensure transactions are properly authorized, recorded, and reviewed. Here, the process has a serious control design flaw: one employee can change beneficiary details, approve the withdrawal, release the wire, and then reconcile the account. That eliminates important preventive controls, such as segregation of duties and independent callback verification, and also weakens detective controls because the reconciliation is not independently reviewed on a timely basis. The primary prudential red flag is therefore the risk of unauthorized or fraudulent client cash disbursements. Liquidity, settlement timing, and privacy concerns may still matter, but they are downstream or secondary compared with the control failure over movement of client cash.

CIRO CFO financial operations map

Use this map after the sample questions to connect individual items to capital, books and records, custody, segregation, financial reporting, and operational-risk decisions these Securities Prep samples test.

    flowchart LR
	  S1["Financial event or operational change"] --> S2
	  S2["Classify capital custody or reporting impact"] --> S3
	  S3["Check books records and reconciliations"] --> S4
	  S4["Apply segregation margin and risk controls"] --> S5
	  S5["Escalate deficiency or filing issue"] --> S6
	  S6["Document remediation and ongoing monitoring"]

Quick Cheat Sheet

CueWhat to remember
CapitalRegulatory capital is a control against firm failure, market exposure, and operational losses.
SegregationClient assets and firm assets must be identified, protected, and reconciled.
Books and recordsAccounting records must support regulatory filings, supervision, and audit evidence.
ReconciliationsBreaks are not just clerical issues; unresolved differences can signal custody or reporting risk.
EscalationMaterial financial or operational deficiencies require prompt reporting and documented remediation.

Mini Glossary

  • CFO: Chief Financial Officer responsible for financial reporting and related controls.
  • Capital deficiency: A regulatory capital shortfall or weakness requiring action.
  • Segregation: Keeping client assets protected and separate from improper firm use.
  • Reconciliation: Comparison of internal records to external or custody records.
  • Operational risk: Risk of loss from failed processes, systems, people, or external events.

In this section

Revised on Sunday, May 3, 2026