Prepare for CSI Canadian Securities Course (CSC) Exam 1 with free sample questions, a 100-question full-length mock exam, topic drills, timed practice, marketplace, fixed-income, equity, and derivatives scenarios, and detailed explanations in Securities Prep.
CSC Exam 1 rewards candidates who can recognize Canadian market structure, read a quote or bond fact pattern quickly, and connect security features to the dominant risk without slowing down. If you are searching for CSC Exam 1 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 Securities Prep account. This page includes 24 sample questions with detailed explanations so you can try the exam style before opening the full practice route.
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If several unseen mixed attempts are above roughly 75% and you can explain the instrument, risk, calculation, or market-function rule behind each answer, you are likely ready. More practice should improve securities reasoning, not repeated-definition memory.
Because CSC Exam 1 has 100 questions, each percentage point maps closely to a target question count.
| Topic | Weight | Target questions | CSI chapters |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Canadian Investment Marketplace | 15% | 15 | 1-3 |
| The Economy | 13% | 13 | 4-5 |
| Features and Types of Fixed-Income Securities | 12% | 12 | 6 |
| Pricing and Trading of Fixed-Income Securities | 11% | 11 | 7 |
| Common and Preferred Share | 13% | 13 | 8 |
| Equity Transactions | 10% | 10 | 9 |
| Derivatives | 10% | 10 | 10 |
| Corporations and their Financial Statements | 8% | 8 | 11 |
| Financing and Listing Securities | 8% | 8 | 12 |
CSC Exam 1 is primarily a recognition-and-reasoning exam:
| If you are choosing between… | Main distinction |
|---|---|
| CSC Exam 1 vs CSC Exam 2 | CSC Exam 1 is the product, market, economy, and securities foundation; CSC Exam 2 moves into portfolio analysis, managed products, taxation, and client-fit decisions. |
| CSC Exam 1 vs CIRE | CSC Exam 1 is a broad CSI course foundation; CIRE is the current CIRO registration route built around onboarding, suitability, complaints, and dealer workflow. |
| CSC Exam 1 vs IFC | CSC Exam 1 covers the wider securities market across bonds, equities, derivatives, and issuer financing; IFC narrows into mutual funds and fund-suitability workflow. |
| CSC Exam 1 vs IMT Exam 1 | CSC Exam 1 builds the securities vocabulary and instrument logic; IMT Exam 1 expects deeper portfolio-policy, asset-allocation, and monitoring judgment. |
Use these child pages when you want focused Securities Prep practice before returning to mixed sets and timed mocks.
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These are original Securities Prep practice questions aligned to CSC Exam 1 capital markets, economics, financial statements, fixed income, equities, derivatives basics, investment products, regulation, and conduct decisions. They are not CSI exam questions and are not copied from any exam sponsor. Use them to check readiness here, then continue in Securities Prep with mixed sets, topic drills, and timed mocks.
Topic: Features and Types of Fixed-Income Securities
A client wants to sell today a \$250,000 (par) corporate debenture with 8 years remaining to maturity. The bond trades infrequently in the over-the-counter market, and your dealer indicates it has little appetite to add the bond to its inventory; current indications are 92 bid and 95 ask (prices per \$100 par). Which conclusion is the BEST choice to communicate to the client about liquidity and expected execution?
Best answer: B
Explanation: Most corporate bonds trade over the counter, where liquidity depends heavily on dealer willingness to commit balance sheet and on the depth of the market for that specific issue. An infrequently traded bond with a wide bid-ask spread signals that immediate execution will likely occur at the bid, and the seller may need to accept a lower price to complete the trade promptly.
Fixed-income liquidity is largely an OTC phenomenon: dealers intermediate trades and quote prices based on their ability and willingness to take the bond into inventory or quickly offset the position. When a bond trades infrequently, fewer natural buyers and limited dealer interest typically lead to a wider bid-ask spread.
In this scenario, the 92/95 market and the dealer’s low appetite to hold the bond imply:
Interest rates affect bond values, but the immediate execution level and speed here are driven by liquidity, dealer inventory, and the bid-ask spread.
Topic: Derivatives
In the context of derivatives, what is the primary role of using a derivative for hedging?
Best answer: B
Explanation: Hedging with derivatives is about risk reduction, not return maximization. By adding an offsetting derivative position, a hedger aims to limit the impact of adverse price movements in an existing asset, liability, or forecast transaction. This contrasts with taking derivatives primarily to seek profit from market views or pricing discrepancies.
Derivatives are used for three classic purposes: hedging, speculation, and arbitrage. Hedging means using a derivative (such as a forward, future, swap, or option) to reduce an existing financial risk by creating an offsetting exposure.
For a hedge to make sense at a high level:
Speculation instead seeks profit from taking on risk, while arbitrage seeks to capture mispricing with little or no net risk.
Topic: The Economy
A $1,000 par bond pays $40 in annual interest. If weaker investor demand causes the bond’s market price to fall to 80 (i.e., $800 per $1,000 par), what is the bond’s current yield?
Best answer: B
Explanation: Current yield measures the cash interest return an investor earns at the bond’s current market price. When demand falls, the bond’s price tends to fall; with a fixed coupon payment, that lower price increases the yield, improving the incentive for buyers. Using the given coupon and price produces a 5.0% current yield.
Supply and demand help set a bond’s market price: when demand weakens, the price typically falls. The coupon payment is fixed by the bond’s terms, so a lower price increases the cash return an investor earns on the amount paid-an incentive that can attract new buyers and help stabilize prices.
Compute current yield using the market price (not par):
\[ \begin{aligned} \text{Current yield} &= \frac{\text{Annual coupon}}{\text{Market price}} \\ &= \frac{40}{800} \\ &= 0.05 = 5\% \end{aligned} \]Key takeaway: price and yield move inversely for a given coupon.
Topic: Pricing and Trading of Fixed-Income Securities
A retail client wants to buy a specific Canadian corporate bond. There is no centralized exchange order book for the bond, so the investment dealer provides a bid and an ask price and is willing to sell the bond out of its own inventory (or buy it for inventory), earning the bid-ask spread.
Which market feature/role is being described?
Best answer: D
Explanation: The scenario describes the way most fixed-income securities trade in Canada: over-the-counter in a dealer (quote-driven) market. Dealers provide bid and ask quotations and typically trade from (or into) their own inventory as principals, with compensation largely coming from the bid-ask spread.
Canadian corporate and many other bonds generally trade in an over-the-counter, quote-driven dealer market rather than on a centralized exchange order book. A client typically requests a quote, and the dealer provides bid and ask prices based on prevailing market conditions, the bond’s characteristics, and the dealer’s willingness to commit capital. When the dealer sells from inventory or buys into inventory, it is acting as a principal (often described as “making a market”), and the bid-ask spread is a key source of compensation. This differs from an auction market, where multiple buyers and sellers submit orders that are matched transparently in a central order book.
Topic: Corporations and their Financial Statements
A junior analyst is comparing two issuer reports:
Which core financial statement is Report B?
Best answer: D
Explanation: A balance sheet measures an issuer’s financial position at a point in time by showing what it owns (assets) and owes (liabilities), with the residual interest reported as shareholders’ equity. Because Report B is stated “as at” December 31 and lists these items, it corresponds to the balance sheet.
The three core financial statements differ mainly by what they measure and whether they are reported over a period or at a point in time. A balance sheet is a “snapshot” of financial position at a specific date, showing assets, liabilities, and shareholders’ equity. In contrast, an income statement measures financial performance over a period by summarizing revenues and expenses to arrive at net income or loss. A cash flow statement measures cash generated and used over a period by classifying cash flows into operating, investing, and financing activities. The “as at” date language and the assets/liabilities/equity structure are the decisive identifiers here.
Topic: Features and Types of Fixed-Income Securities
A client at a Canadian investment dealer says they want steadier portfolio income and less volatility than equities, but still want some growth exposure. You are considering recommending an investment-grade corporate bond issue from a Canadian issuer that is financing a new manufacturing facility.
Which statement to the client best aligns with fair dealing and suitability expectations?
Best answer: A
Explanation: Fair dealing and suitability require a balanced, client-focused explanation of why the security fits the client’s objectives and what risks remain. A suitable fixed-income recommendation commonly emphasizes predictable income, diversification versus equities, and greater capital stability than stocks. It can also be explained that issuers use bonds to raise capital without diluting ownership and to lock in borrowing costs.
The key principle is fair dealing through a suitability-focused recommendation: explain how the product can reasonably meet the client’s stated needs and disclose the material risks. For investors, fixed-income is often included for predictable cash flow (coupon income), diversification benefits versus equities, and a greater likelihood of capital preservation than common shares because bondholders rank ahead of shareholders if the issuer runs into trouble. For issuers, issuing bonds is a way to finance projects by raising capital without giving up ownership control (no equity dilution) and by borrowing at a stated interest cost for a defined term.
Even for investment-grade bonds, you must avoid implying guarantees and should acknowledge credit and interest-rate risk. The best statement ties these high-level purposes to the client’s objectives in plain language.
Topic: Derivatives
A client owns 1,000 shares of ABC at $50 and is concerned about a short-term price decline over the next three months but wants to keep the shares. The client buys 10 ABC 3-month $50 put option contracts.
Which option best matches the strategy’s primary purpose and the key risk to disclose?
Best answer: B
Explanation: This is a protective put: the client already owns the shares and buys puts to limit downside risk over a stated period. The most important risk to disclose at a high level is that the hedge is not free-the option premium (and time decay) can be lost if the shares do not fall enough before expiry.
A long put purchased while holding the underlying shares is primarily a hedging strategy (often called a protective put). The put gives the client the right to sell the shares at the strike price, which can help limit losses if the share price declines during the option’s life.
The key disclosure risk at a high level is cost: the option premium is paid up front and may be lost if the option expires out-of-the-money. This also means the client’s net protection is reduced by the premium paid (the hedge does not eliminate loss entirely).
By contrast, “unlimited loss” is not a feature of a long option position, and assignment risk is associated with short (written) options.
Topic: Corporations and their Financial Statements
Prairie Foods is a TSX-listed issuer. A competitor, RiverGro, privately approached Prairie’s board about an acquisition, but the board refused to negotiate. RiverGro then publicly offers to buy Prairie shares directly from shareholders at a premium.
Prairie wants to resist the bid by slowing the process and creating time to consider alternatives, without selling major assets. What is the most appropriate next step?
Best answer: C
Explanation: Because RiverGro bypassed Prairie’s board and went directly to shareholders, this is a hostile takeover attempt. A common first-line defence is a shareholder rights plan, which can slow the bid and give the target time to evaluate alternatives such as seeking a higher offer.
A friendly takeover is negotiated with the target’s board (often leading to a supported transaction such as a merger or plan of arrangement). A hostile takeover is unsolicited and typically proceeds by making a bid directly to the target’s shareholders after the board refuses support.
When a target wants to resist a hostile bid, it often tries to buy time and improve its bargaining position. Conceptually, a shareholder rights plan (often called a poison pill) is designed to make it harder for the bidder to quickly accumulate control, which can slow the process and allow the target to canvass alternatives (for example, a “white knight”). The key takeaway is: direct-to-shareholder bids are hostile, and rights plans are a common timing/negotiation defence.
Topic: Equity Transactions
A dealing representative’s activity in ABC (TSX) is shown below.
Exhibit: Trade and order log (snapshot)
Time Acct Relationship Side Qty Symbol OrderType Limit Result
10:02:10 RR-PERS Rep personal BUY 1,000 ABC LMT 24.20 Filled 24.20
10:04:35 CL-7841 Client BUY 50,000 ABC MKT - Filled avg 24.36
10:06:05 RR-PERS Rep personal SELL 1,000 ABC MKT - Filled 24.37
10:30:00 - - - - ABC - - Public news released
Which regulatory or ethical red flag is most clearly supported by the exhibit?
Best answer: C
Explanation: The exhibit shows a personal purchase shortly before a large client market buy, followed by a quick personal sale after the client order is filled at a higher average price. This sequence is a classic front-running concern because the representative appears to benefit from the expected price impact of the client’s order.
Front-running is a serious ethical and regulatory concern where a registrant uses knowledge of a client’s pending order (often a large order likely to move the market) to trade ahead for a personal or firm-related benefit. Here, the representative bought ABC in a personal account, then a large client market buy was executed at a higher average price, and the representative quickly sold for a small profit. The public news release occurs later, so the most direct, exhibit-supported concern is trading ahead of the client order rather than trading on non-public news. The key takeaway is that the timing and sequencing relative to the client order is what creates the front-running red flag.
Topic: Derivatives
A Canadian importer must pay USD 2,750,000 to a supplier on a specific date 87 days from today and wants to lock in the CAD cost. The firm prefers a contract customized to that exact amount and date and wants to avoid daily cash margin calls. It is willing to face the bank as the counterparty.
Which choice is the best conclusion about the derivative it should use and how it differs from a futures contract?
Best answer: D
Explanation: A forward contract is a privately negotiated (OTC) agreement between two parties, so it can be tailored to the importer’s exact USD amount and payment date. Unlike futures, it is not standardized or exchange-traded, and it generally does not involve a clearinghouse and daily margining; instead, it leaves the parties exposed to each other’s credit risk.
A forward contract is a bilateral agreement to buy or sell an underlying asset (or currency) at a pre-set price on a specified future date. Because it is typically traded OTC, it can be customized to match an exact amount and a non-standard date, which fits the importer’s specific USD payment.
Futures contracts differ at a high level because they are standardized and traded on an exchange. The exchange’s clearinghouse becomes the counterparty to both sides, which reduces direct counterparty credit exposure, and positions are marked-to-market with margin posted (and adjusted) as prices change. The key trade-off is customization and avoiding daily margining versus the benefits of standardization, clearing, and margining.
Topic: Common and Preferred Share
A client is considering buying common shares of a Canadian issuer. To meet a fair-dealing standard, an investment advisor prepares a short summary of the key rights that come with common shares.
Which statement is the most accurate?
Best answer: C
Explanation: Common shareholders generally have voting rights, but dividends are not guaranteed and are paid only if the board declares them. If the company is liquidated, common shareholders are paid last and receive only what remains after creditors and other senior claims are satisfied. This combination of rights is the key high-level disclosure a client needs.
At a high level, common shares are equity ownership units that usually include the right to vote on major corporate matters (for example, electing directors). Common shareholders may receive dividends, but only if the issuer declares a dividend; there is no obligation to pay common dividends. In a liquidation, common shareholders are residual claimants: they are entitled to whatever assets remain only after all higher-priority claims have been paid (typically creditors first, then preferred shareholders if any).
A fair-dealing client communication should clearly distinguish “dividends if declared” from guaranteed payments and should not overstate common shareholders’ priority in liquidation.
Topic: The Economy
A government reports annual revenues of $310 billion and annual expenditures of $330 billion. Its opening gross debt is $900 billion.
Assuming any budget deficit is financed entirely by new borrowing (and any surplus would be used to repay debt), what is the government’s year-end gross debt level?
Best answer: A
Explanation: A budget deficit occurs when expenditures exceed revenues; here the deficit is $20 billion ($330B - $310B). If that deficit is funded by borrowing, the government adds $20B to its opening debt. The year-end debt therefore rises to $920 billion.
The budget balance is the difference between government revenues and expenditures for a period.
Here, the deficit is $20B ($330B - $310B). When the deficit is financed by borrowing, the government’s debt increases by the same amount, so year-end debt becomes $900B + $20B = $920B. A common mistake is to subtract the deficit from debt (which would only occur with a surplus).
Topic: The Economy
All amounts are in CAD. A bond has a par value of $1,000 and pays a 5% annual coupon (paid once per year). If market interest rates rise and the bond’s price falls to $950, what is the bond’s current yield (round to two decimals)?
Best answer: D
Explanation: Current yield is calculated as annual coupon payment divided by the bond’s current market price. The annual coupon is $50 (5% of $1,000), and dividing by the new lower price of $950 produces a higher yield. This illustrates the inverse relationship: when interest rates rise, bond prices fall and yields rise.
When market interest rates rise, existing bonds with lower coupon rates become less attractive, so their prices fall. Because current yield is based on the coupon dollars relative to the bond’s current price, a lower price increases the yield.
Using current yield:
\[ \begin{aligned} \text{Annual coupon} &= 0.05 \times 1{,}000 = 50 \\ \text{Current yield} &= \frac{50}{950} = 0.0526316 \approx 5.26\% \end{aligned} \]The key takeaway is that interest rates and bond prices move inversely, and yields move inversely to price for a given coupon.
Topic: The Canadian Investment Marketplace
A retail client asks why their equity purchase is not considered “complete” until settlement and why the dealer insists the trade be settled on a delivery-versus-payment (DVP) basis through the clearing system.
Which response best aligns with fair dealing and prudent counterparty risk control?
Best answer: B
Explanation: Clearing and settlement exist to confirm, net, and complete trades by exchanging securities for cash in an organized process. DVP is a key safeguard because it links delivery and payment so neither party is exposed to paying without receiving, or delivering without being paid. This supports fair dealing by accurately explaining how client assets are protected in the settlement process.
Clearing and settlement are the post-trade processes that turn a trade execution into a completed exchange of ownership and cash. Clearing supports trade confirmation and often netting of obligations, and settlement is the actual delivery of securities and payment of funds. Because there is time between trade and settlement, there is counterparty (principal) risk that one side could fail.
Delivery-versus-payment (DVP) is a core control: securities are delivered only if payment is made at the same time (and vice versa). Using the clearing system and DVP helps reduce the chance that a client’s cash or securities are exposed to a failed counterparty, which aligns with fair dealing and prudent protection of client assets.
Topic: Corporations and their Financial Statements
A TSX-listed public company becomes aware this morning that a fire has shut down its main facility and management expects a significant negative impact on earnings. The next quarterly financial statements are due in six weeks.
As part of the company’s continuous disclosure obligations, what is the best next step?
Best answer: B
Explanation: Continuous disclosure has two core streams: timely disclosure of material changes and periodic disclosure on a set schedule. A facility shutdown expected to materially affect earnings is the type of event that generally requires prompt public disclosure, followed by the prescribed filing. Waiting for the next quarterly or annual package would not satisfy timely disclosure expectations.
For a public (reporting) company, continuous disclosure is designed to keep the market informed on an ongoing basis. It includes:
In the scenario, the event is a significant operational disruption with an expected earnings impact, which fits the concept of information that should be disclosed promptly to the market rather than deferred to the next periodic reporting date. The key takeaway is that timely disclosure is event-driven; periodic disclosure is calendar-driven.
Topic: Corporations and their Financial Statements
A client wants to buy shares in a company’s first-time public offering (IPO). The company is not yet a reporting issuer in Canada, and the client asks you to “send the regular ongoing disclosure documents” before deciding.
Which action best aligns with fair dealing and proper disclosure practice?
Best answer: A
Explanation: In a primary distribution like an IPO, the core disclosure document is the prospectus, which contains the offering-specific information and required financial disclosure. Continuous (ongoing) disclosure is a separate regime that applies after the issuer becomes a reporting issuer. Fair dealing means directing the client to the appropriate, official disclosure for the transaction they are considering.
Primary-market disclosure is tied to selling new securities to the public. For an IPO, that disclosure is delivered through a prospectus, which is designed to provide offering-specific information (including financial statements and risk factors) so investors can make an informed decision.
Continuous (ongoing) disclosure is what a reporting issuer must provide after it is public, such as annual and interim financial statements, MD&A, and timely disclosure of material changes. Because the company in the scenario is not yet a reporting issuer, the client should not be pointed to “regular ongoing” filings as a substitute for the IPO’s prospectus. The key takeaway is to match the disclosure source to the market event: distribution = prospectus; ongoing trading/public life = continuous disclosure.
Topic: Corporations and their Financial Statements
A TSX-listed company’s CEO (an officer) proposes that the company buy a warehouse from a private company the CEO owns. Which action best aligns with sound corporate governance roles and conflict-of-interest principles?
Best answer: A
Explanation: Officers manage day-to-day business but must disclose conflicts of interest. The board of directors is responsible for oversight and for approving or rejecting significant decisions, especially where conflicts exist. Shareholders typically exercise governance through voting, such as electing directors and approving certain major matters when presented to them.
Corporate governance separates ownership, oversight, and management. Shareholders are the owners; their primary governance powers are to elect directors and vote on fundamental matters that are brought to them. Directors (the board) provide oversight, set broad direction, and protect the corporation’s interests by supervising management and addressing conflicts of interest. Officers (management) run day-to-day operations and implement the board’s decisions.
In a related-party situation like an officer selling an asset to the company, the officer should disclose the conflict and step back from decision-making, while the directors assess the transaction and decide whether it is appropriate; shareholders may be asked to vote when a matter is put to them. The key takeaway is that conflicted transactions require board-level oversight, not unilateral officer action.
Topic: Features and Types of Fixed-Income Securities
A client at a Canadian investment dealer is comparing two 5-year, fixed-rate bonds from the same issuer that both trade at par: a senior unsecured bond yielding 5.0% and a subordinated bond yielding 5.8%. The client says, “I want this to be as safe as possible, but I like the higher coupon.”
Which advisor statement best aligns with fair dealing and suitability principles?
Best answer: C
Explanation: Bond seniority affects priority of claims if the issuer becomes insolvent. Senior unsecured debt is paid before subordinated debt, so subordinated bonds typically have higher loss severity and therefore must offer a higher required yield (credit spread). Fair dealing and suitability require explaining this trade-off and confirming it fits the client’s “safety first” objective.
The key concept is priority of claims. If an issuer defaults or is wound up, senior unsecured bondholders generally have a higher priority claim on the issuer’s assets than subordinated bondholders. Because subordinated debt is paid after senior debt, it typically has lower expected recovery and higher credit risk.
In practice, investors demand compensation for that additional credit risk, which shows up as a higher required yield (a wider credit spread) on subordinated issues versus otherwise similar senior issues. An advisor acting fairly must explain that the higher yield is not “free”-it reflects greater loss risk in adverse credit events-and then confirm whether taking that extra credit risk is suitable given the client’s stated preference for maximum safety.
The yield difference is most appropriately linked to credit seniority, not interest-rate risk.
Topic: Pricing and Trading of Fixed-Income Securities
A client bought a 6% Government of Canada bond at 106 (per $100 of par) when it had about 2 years to maturity. Six months later, similar Government of Canada yields are unchanged and the bond is now quoted at 104. The client complains that the bond is “losing value.”
As the advisor, what is the best next step?
Best answer: D
Explanation: This is pull-to-par behavior. With market yields unchanged and a fixed $100 redemption at maturity, a premium bond’s remaining premium is gradually eroded as time passes, so its price tends to drift down toward par as maturity nears (a discount bond tends to rise toward par).
Pull-to-par describes how a bond’s price tends to converge to its par (maturity) value as the maturity date approaches, assuming market yields and credit conditions are unchanged. Because the issuer will repay a fixed amount at maturity (typically $100 par), any premium above par cannot persist all the way to maturity; it is effectively “amortized” over time, so the quoted price tends to fall toward par. Conversely, a bond priced at a discount has “room” to rise toward par as maturity approaches (often described as accretion).
Key takeaway: in a stable-yield environment, a premium bond’s price drift down (and a discount bond’s drift up) is expected time-related pricing, not a surprise loss driven by new information.
Topic: Corporations and their Financial Statements
MapleTech Inc., a Canadian public company reporting under IFRS, prepares its financial statements using accrual accounting.
Which statement about revenue, expenses, net income, and profitability is INCORRECT?
Best answer: C
Explanation: Under accrual accounting, the income statement measures performance by matching revenues earned with expenses incurred for the period. Net income is calculated as revenues minus expenses, regardless of when cash is received or paid. Cash collected and cash paid relate to the cash flow statement, not net income.
Revenue is the value of goods/services earned during the period, while expenses are costs incurred to generate that revenue; both are reported on the income statement under accrual accounting. Net income (profit) is the period’s result after subtracting total expenses from total revenues, even if some sales are on credit or some expenses are unpaid at period-end. Profitability is commonly assessed using ratios that relate profit to sales or to owners’ equity.
A statement that defines net income as “cash collected minus cash paid” is describing cash flow, not accrual-based net income.
Topic: The Economy
Canada has been running a persistent current account deficit. In recent years, it has been financed mainly by foreign purchases of Government of Canada bonds. A sudden global “risk-off” shock causes international investors to sell Canadian bonds and move funds back to their home countries. Assuming no immediate Bank of Canada response, what is the most likely near-term impact on Canadian markets?
Best answer: C
Explanation: A current account deficit must be financed by net capital inflows in the financial account. If a global shock triggers capital outflows (foreigners selling Canadian bonds), the balance of payments pressure is transmitted to Canada through a weaker CAD and tighter financial conditions, including higher yields, until flows rebalance.
Balance of payments links the current account (trade in goods/services and income flows) with the financial account (capital flows). When Canada runs a current account deficit, it needs net financial inflows to fund it.
In the scenario, foreigners reduce holdings of Canadian bonds, turning a prior inflow into an outflow. That “funding shock” typically transmits to domestic markets through:
A weaker CAD can eventually help narrow the current account deficit by making exports more competitive and imports more expensive, but the immediate market impact is usually felt first through FX and interest rates.
Topic: Pricing and Trading of Fixed-Income Securities
A portfolio holds a 5-year corporate bond. Over the month, its quoted price fell from 100 to 99, and the bond paid 0.25 in coupon interest during the month (ignore reinvestment).
Report A shows -1.0% performance; Report B shows -0.75% performance. Fixed-income benchmarks are usually based on total return.
Which report is using the measure that matches how fixed-income benchmarks are typically constructed?
Best answer: A
Explanation: Total return measures the combined effect of price changes and income (coupon interest) over the period. Because bonds generate a significant portion of their return from coupon payments, fixed-income indices and benchmarks typically use total return so performance comparisons reflect the full economic return, not just price movement.
Price return reflects only the percentage change in the security’s price over the period. Total return adds the income earned during the period (for bonds, primarily coupon interest, and often assuming reinvestment in index methodology) to the price change.
In the scenario, the -1.0% figure matches the bond’s price return
after falling from 100 to 99. The -0.75% figure reflects total return because it offsets the price decline with the 0.25 of coupon income received during the month.
Fixed-income benchmarking usually uses total return so that managers are compared on the same basis as the index: both price movements and cash income drive bond performance.
Topic: Derivatives
A client enters into a bilateral agreement with a bank to buy EUR 1,000,000 for CAD in 90 days at an exchange rate agreed today. The contract is customized, negotiated over-the-counter, and is not cleared through an exchange clearinghouse; typically there is no daily mark-to-market margining.
Which derivative best matches this description?
Best answer: D
Explanation: The description matches a forward contract: a private, customized OTC agreement where two parties commit today to transact at a set price on a future date. In contrast, futures are standardized and exchange-traded with clearinghouse guarantees and daily margining/marking-to-market.
A forward contract is an OTC, bilateral agreement that locks in a price (or rate) today for a transaction that will occur at a specified future date. Because it is privately negotiated, it is typically customized in terms of notional amount, maturity, and settlement terms, and it exposes each party to the other party’s credit risk.
A futures contract differs mainly by market structure:
The stem’s customization, OTC negotiation, and lack of exchange clearing/daily margining point to a forward rather than a futures contract.
Topic: Derivatives
A dealing representative is assessing whether a retail client should use listed equity options for short-term trading. Which of the following is NOT a common derivative-related suitability consideration?
Best answer: A
Explanation: Derivative suitability is primarily about whether the client can withstand the product’s risk characteristics, including leverage and the potential for quick losses. It also depends on whether the client’s time horizon matches the derivative’s expiry and whether the client can access cash and exit positions if needed. Trying to assess a client’s ability to predict markets is not a standard suitability factor.
Common derivative-related suitability considerations are client-focused constraints that interact with how derivatives behave. Because derivatives can be leveraged, losses can occur quickly and may require additional cash (e.g., margin). Many derivatives are also time-limited (options expire), so the client’s time horizon must align with the contract’s life. Liquidity matters both for the ability to enter/exit at reasonable prices and, where applicable, to fund margin calls or assignments.
By contrast, a recommendation should not rely on evaluating whether a client can accurately forecast short-term market moves; suitability is about the client’s objectives, constraints, and capacity for risk given the derivative’s leverage, liquidity, and time features.
Use this map after the sample questions to connect individual items to Canadian markets, products, client accounts, risk, return, taxation, and regulatory decisions these Securities Prep samples test.
flowchart LR
S1["Investor fact pattern or market concept"] --> S2
S2["Identify security account or market function"] --> S3
S3["Assess risk return income and tax effect"] --> S4
S4["Apply regulation disclosure or client-fit cue"] --> S5
S5["Choose compliant interpretation"] --> S6
S6["Connect concept to advice workflow"]
| Cue | What to remember |
|---|---|
| Canadian markets | Separate primary issuance, secondary trading, clearing, settlement, marketplaces, and regulation. |
| Products | Compare equities, fixed income, funds, derivatives, structured products, and managed products by risk and use. |
| Client accounts | Ownership, registered status, margin, authority, and beneficiary details change the answer. |
| Risk and return | Interest-rate, credit, liquidity, inflation, market, currency, and business risk appear often. |
| Tax basics | Interest, dividends, capital gains, registered accounts, and withholding can change after-tax outcomes. |