CSC Exam 1 Overview — What’s Tested and How to Prepare

High-level overview of CSC Exam 1 (Canadian Securities Course): what’s tested, common question styles, key pitfalls, and a practical prep strategy.

CSC Exam 1 is the first half of CSI’s Canadian Securities Course (CSC). It rewards fast recognition, clean terminology, and “small math” on bonds, equities, and derivatives—plus core market structure and basic corporate finance.

Official exam snapshot (CSI)

  • Exam format: Proctored (remote or in-person at a test centre)
  • Exam duration: 2 hours
  • Question format: Multiple Choice
  • Questions per exam: 100
  • Passing grade: 60% (Per Exam)
  • Attempts allowed per exam: 3
  • Hours of study (CSC course guidance): 135 – 200 Hours
  • Enrolment period: 1 Year

Source: https://www.csi.ca/en/learning/courses/csc/exam-credits

Official topic weightings (Exam 1)

Weightings are published by CSI. Because Exam 1 has 100 questions, the weighting percentage also maps to a target question count.

TopicWeightTarget questionsCSI chapters (curriculum)
The Canadian Investment Marketplace15%151–3
The Economy13%134–5
Features and Types of Fixed-Income Securities12%126
Pricing and Trading of Fixed-Income Securities11%117
Common and Preferred Share13%138
Equity Transactions10%109
Derivatives10%1010
Corporations and their Financial Statements8%811
Financing and Listing Securities8%812

Curriculum source: https://www.csi.ca/en/learning/courses/csc/curriculum

What CSC Exam 1 is really testing

CSC Exam 1 is primarily a recognition + reasoning exam:

  • Recognize what a security is (structure, cash flows, embedded features).
  • Identify the dominant risk (interest rate risk, credit risk, equity risk, leverage, liquidity).
  • Apply quick calculations (yields, bond price intuition, basic return measures, option payoff/breakeven logic).
  • Interpret market language (quotes, spreads, order types, settlement, issuance vs trading).
  • Read basic financial statements and connect them to financing/valuation language.

What it typically covers (in practical buckets)

  • Canadian investment marketplace: industry participants, how capital markets function, and the regulatory environment.
  • Economics: business cycle, inflation, interest rates, and policy linkages.
  • Fixed income: features, yield measures, pricing intuition, and trading/settlement language.
  • Equities: common vs preferred, corporate actions, and equity transaction mechanics.
  • Derivatives: futures/forwards/options concepts, hedging vs speculation, payoff intuition.
  • Corporate finance & statements: basics of financial statements and how issuers raise/list securities.

Common question styles

  • “Pick the right product”: based on income vs growth, risk tolerance, time horizon, and liquidity needs.
  • “Spot the risk”: especially interest rate risk and embedded option risk (callable bonds, preferred shares).
  • “Interpret the quote”: accrued interest, clean vs dirty price, yield measures.
  • “Do a quick calculation”: current yield, approximate YTM, simple total return, breakeven logic.
  • “Read the statements”: identify what a ratio or line item implies about leverage, profitability, or cash flow (conceptually).
  • “How is this financed/listed?”: public offering vs private placement, underwriting basics, listing language.

High-yield pitfalls (where candidates lose easy points)

  • Mixing up price vs yield directionality (bond prices move opposite yields).
  • Treating preferred shares like bonds (they behave like long-duration cash flows and can be equity‑like in stress).
  • Confusing primary vs secondary market activity (issuing vs trading).
  • Missing what a quote implies (bid/ask, spreads, clean/dirty, accrued interest).
  • Over-thinking derivatives: many questions are direction + payoff logic, not advanced math.

How to prepare (a simple loop)

  1. Use the Syllabus as your checklist.
  2. After each topic, read the matching part of the Cheatsheet and write 5–10 “if you see X, think Y” rules.
  3. Do short, targeted Practice sets (untimed → timed).
  4. Keep a “miss log”: every miss becomes a rule or a flashcard.
  5. Finish each week with a mixed set to force transfer across topics.

✅ Next: follow the Study Plan or jump to the Syllabus.