Prepare for CSI Canadian Securities Course (CSC) Exam 2 with free sample questions, a 100-question full-length mock exam, topic drills, timed practice, portfolio, fund, taxation, and client-workflow scenarios, and detailed explanations in Securities Prep.
CSC Exam 2 rewards candidates who can move from product knowledge into portfolio analysis, client-fit judgment, and applied securities decisions across retail and institutional contexts. If you are searching for CSC Exam 2 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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CSC Exam 2 is primarily an application-and-judgment exam:
| If you are choosing between… | Main distinction |
|---|---|
| CSC Exam 2 vs CSC Exam 1 | CSC Exam 2 is the later portfolio-analysis and client-application stage; CSC Exam 1 is the earlier markets, products, and instrument foundation. |
| CSC Exam 2 vs WME Exam 1 | CSC Exam 2 stays inside the broader securities-course lane; WME Exam 1 leans more directly into wealth-management, planning, and advisory workflow. |
| CSC Exam 2 vs IMT Exam 1 | CSC Exam 2 is broad securities and portfolio application; IMT Exam 1 goes deeper into IPS logic, asset allocation, and monitoring from an investment-management perspective. |
| CSC Exam 2 vs CPH | CSC Exam 2 is about investment analysis, product fit, and portfolio judgment; CPH is about conduct, disclosure, suitability, and complaint-handling discipline. |
If several unseen mixed attempts are above roughly 75% and you can explain the client constraint, product structure, tax/cost effect, or portfolio mandate behind each answer, you are likely ready. More practice should improve recommendation judgment, not repeated-product recognition.
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These are original Securities Prep practice questions aligned to CSC Exam 2 investment analysis, portfolio judgment, managed products, structured products, taxation, fee-based accounts, retail clients, and institutional context. 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: Fee-Based Accounts and Working with the Retail Client
A retail client has a non-registered fee-based account invested in a 60/40 ETF portfolio that is rebalanced quarterly. The advisor charges an all-in 1.25% annual fee based on assets under administration.
After 12 months, the client sees a 6% account return and asks, “Why am I paying this fee?” If the advisor discusses results using only the portfolio’s absolute return (with no agreed benchmark and no net-of-fee performance reporting), what is the primary risk/limitation of that approach?
Best answer: A
Explanation: In a fee-based relationship, the ongoing fee creates a need for clear, comparable evidence of results and progress toward the client’s plan. An agreed benchmark aligned to the 60/40 mandate, combined with net-of-fee performance reporting, lets the client evaluate whether outcomes are consistent with expectations and whether the advisor is adding value beyond market returns.
Benchmarking and performance reporting are especially important in fee-based accounts because the client pays an ongoing fee regardless of trading activity. If the advisor reports only an absolute return, the client can’t tell whether the result mainly came from broad market movement, the agreed asset mix, or the advisor’s decisions-and can’t evaluate outcomes net of the fee.
Good practice is to:
The key takeaway is that benchmarking and net performance reporting support transparency, expectation-setting, and ongoing value and suitability conversations in a fee-based relationship.
Topic: Portfolio Analysis
A client (age 58) plans to retire in 7 years and wants to grow a non-registered portfolio for retirement income. The advisor proposes allocating 35% to an illiquid private real estate limited partnership with a 7-year lockup (redemptions not permitted). The draft IPS includes a return objective, a “moderate” risk tolerance, and a 7-year time horizon, but it does not mention the client’s planned $80,000 home down payment needed in 18 months.
Which IPS element is missing or unclear?
Best answer: C
Explanation: The proposed allocation creates a major liquidity tradeoff because the investment cannot be redeemed for 7 years, yet the client needs $80,000 in 18 months. An IPS must clearly document liquidity needs (expected withdrawals, timing, and minimum liquid reserves) so the portfolio strategy can be designed to meet known cash-flow requirements.
A key purpose of an IPS is to translate the client’s objectives into workable constraints. Here, the dominant practical risk in the proposed strategy is liquidity: committing 35% to a product with a 7-year lockup can prevent funding a known 18-month cash requirement. Even if the overall time horizon is 7 years, the IPS still must specify interim cash-flow needs (amount and timing) and any minimum liquidity level, so the asset mix and product selection don’t create a mismatch between required cash and available liquid assets. The issue is not primarily return, taxes, or the stated long-term horizon; it’s the missing liquidity constraint that drives suitability of the lockup allocation.
Topic: Canadian Taxation
All amounts are in CAD. On January 1, 2026, Lina has TFSA contribution room of $18,000. During 2026 she contributes $12,000 and later withdraws $5,000. The TFSA annual dollar limit for 2027 is $7,000.
Assuming she makes no other TFSA transactions, what is the maximum she can contribute on January 1, 2027 without overcontributing?
Best answer: A
Explanation: TFSA investment growth and withdrawals are tax-free, and amounts withdrawn are added back to contribution room in the next calendar year. Lina has $6,000 of unused 2026 room ($18,000 - $12,000). For 2027, she adds the $7,000 new limit and the $5,000 withdrawn in 2026, giving $18,000 total room.
A TFSA provides tax-free growth and tax-free withdrawals, but contributions are not tax-deductible. A key trade-off feature is that withdrawals do not create new room immediately; instead, the amount withdrawn is added back to contribution room on January 1 of the following year.
Compute Lina’s room:
\[ \begin{aligned} \text{Unused 2026 room} &= 18{,}000 - 12{,}000 = 6{,}000\\ \text{2027 room} &= 7{,}000 + 6{,}000 + 5{,}000 = 18{,}000 \end{aligned} \]The $5,000 withdrawal increases her 2027 contribution room, not her remaining 2026 room.
Topic: Mutual Funds
Danielle (age 58) is investing $120,000 in a non-registered account for a planned home purchase in 3 years. She wants some growth but is uncomfortable with large short-term swings in value.
Two Canadian balanced mutual funds report the following (returns are net of MER, before tax):
What is the BEST conclusion based on these measures?
Best answer: C
Explanation: Annualized return summarizes the compound (geometric) average return over the period, while volatility summarizes how widely returns have fluctuated. With the same annualized return for both funds, the lower volatility fund has had a smoother ride historically. Given Danielle’s short horizon and discomfort with swings, the lower-volatility fund is the better fit based on these measures.
Annualized return is a compounded average return over multiple periods; it does not show the path of returns or how bumpy the ride was. Volatility (commonly the standard deviation of periodic returns) measures how dispersed returns have been around their average.
Here, both funds show the same 3-year annualized return (6.0%), so the key differentiator is volatility:
For a 3-year goal with stated concern about short-term drops, the lower-volatility fund is the more appropriate conclusion from the data.
Topic: Canadian Taxation
A client is considering two job offers. Offer 1 includes a defined benefit (DB) pension. Offer 2 includes a defined contribution (DC) pension with the same total annual employer contributions. The client’s goal is predictable retirement income and they have low tolerance for uncertainty.
For the DC pension setup, what is the primary risk/tradeoff the client should focus on?
Best answer: D
Explanation: A DC pension plan defines the contributions, not the benefit. That means the member’s eventual retirement income will vary with investment performance (and how long the money must last), unlike a DB plan where the pension benefit is determined by a formula.
The key difference is who bears the uncertainty. In a DB plan, the retirement benefit is pre-defined (typically by a salary-and-service formula), so the employer/plan sponsor bears the investment and funding risk needed to deliver that promised benefit. In a DC plan, the contribution rate is defined and amounts are invested in the member’s account; the member bears the risk that contributions and investment returns may be insufficient to produce the desired retirement income.
Both DB and DC pensions are registered arrangements, so the main tradeoff in this scenario is not annual taxation of growth, but the variability of the retirement outcome under a DC plan. The closest contrast is that “making up” shortfalls is a sponsor obligation in DB plans, not DC plans.
Topic: Alternative Investments, Other Managed, and Structured Products
When considering an alternative investment (e.g., hedge fund strategy, private equity, real assets) for a retail client, which statement best reflects the key suitability considerations?
Best answer: B
Explanation: Alternative investments commonly introduce non-traditional risks such as leverage, strategy complexity, and limited liquidity (e.g., lock-ups or redemption gates). Suitability therefore hinges on aligning the product with the client’s risk tolerance, time horizon, liquidity needs, and-critically-the client’s ability to understand how the strategy works and how it can lose money.
The core suitability concept for alternatives is “fit” across four dimensions: risk tolerance, time horizon, liquidity, and client understanding. Many alternative strategies can have higher downside risk (including leverage and derivatives), returns that may be uneven over time, and restrictions on access to capital (lock-ups, notice periods, gates, or less frequent pricing). Because structures and payoffs can be complex, the client must also understand what drives returns and the key risks.
A suitable recommendation typically requires that the client:
Expected outperformance alone is not enough; constraints and comprehension drive suitability.
Topic: Canadian Taxation
In 2026 (all amounts in CAD), Leah sold two non-registered investments: she realized a $18,000 capital loss on an ETF and a $6,000 capital gain on a stock, with no other capital transactions. In 2024, she reported $9,000 of taxable capital gains and paid tax on them. She does not expect to realize capital gains in the next few years and wants to reduce her overall tax as soon as possible.
What is the single best action regarding her 2026 net capital loss?
Best answer: A
Explanation: Leah’s $12,000 net capital loss ($18,000 loss minus $6,000 gain) can only be used to offset taxable capital gains, not other types of income. Because she has taxable capital gains in 2024 and wants tax relief now, carrying the loss back to that year is the best choice. Any unused net capital loss can be carried forward to future years.
A capital gain or loss arises when you dispose of a capital property, and it is generally the difference between the proceeds of disposition (net of selling costs) and the adjusted cost base (ACB). When a client’s capital losses exceed capital gains for the year, the result is a net capital loss.
Net capital losses are restricted in use:
Given Leah has prior-year taxable capital gains and wants the earliest tax benefit, a carryback is the best fit versus waiting to use a carryforward.
Topic: Canadian Taxation
A Canadian resident client holds dividend-paying U.S. and international equities and is deciding whether to hold them in a non-registered account, a TFSA, or an RRSP. Which statement about foreign withholding tax and account type is INCORRECT?
Best answer: C
Explanation: Foreign withholding tax is deducted at source and the ability to recover it depends on the account. In a non-registered account, withheld foreign tax is often eligible for a foreign tax credit, while registered accounts generally cannot claim the credit. An RRSP may reduce U.S. withholding on certain U.S.-source dividends under treaty, but it does not eliminate withholding from all countries.
Foreign withholding tax is usually taken off dividends (and sometimes other income) before the cash reaches the investor. The investor’s after-tax return depends on whether Canada allows relief for that tax and whether the account can use that relief.
In a non-registered (taxable) account, foreign income is generally taxable in Canada, and the foreign tax withheld may be eligible for a foreign tax credit to reduce double taxation (subject to CRA limits). In registered plans (such as TFSAs and RRSPs), the plan itself generally cannot use the foreign tax credit, so withholding is often an unrecoverable drag on return. A common exception discussed at a high level is that U.S.-source dividends paid into an RRSP-type plan are generally exempt from U.S. withholding under the tax treaty, but this does not extend to all countries or all foreign income.
Topic: Investment Analysis
When assessing the investment quality of a common share in company analysis, which set of factors is most directly evaluated?
Best answer: B
Explanation: Common share investment quality focuses on whether the business can grow, produce stable results, defend its position in the marketplace, and follow a sustainable dividend approach. These factors speak to the durability and reliability of shareholder returns over time, not short-term price action or macro forecasts.
In CSC company analysis, “investment quality” of a common share is primarily judged by four business-focused factors: growth, stability, competitive position, and dividend policy. Growth looks at the firm’s ability to expand earnings and cash flow. Stability considers how consistent earnings and cash flow are across business cycles. Competitive position evaluates how well the company can defend profitability against rivals (e.g., industry structure, barriers to entry, product differentiation). Dividend policy assesses whether dividends are appropriate and sustainable relative to earnings/cash flow and reinvestment needs. Valuation measures, technical indicators, and broad macro forecasts may inform an investment decision, but they are not the core definition of investment quality in this context.
Topic: Canadian Taxation
A client in a high marginal tax bracket wants to invest $120,000 (CAD) for long-term growth while keeping taxes low. The client expects to hold about $40,000 in cash-like, interest-bearing investments and $80,000 in equities, and has available contribution room in both an RRSP and a TFSA, plus a non-registered account.
Which recommendation is NOT more tax-efficient for this objective?
Best answer: D
Explanation: Asset location improves after-tax results by putting highly taxed income (like interest) in tax-sheltered accounts and using non-registered accounts for more tax-advantaged income types. For a high-tax-bracket client, holding interest-bearing investments in a non-registered account typically creates the highest annual tax drag. Using an RRSP/TFSA for sheltering and using non-registered for Canadian dividend/capital-gain exposure is generally more efficient.
The key idea is matching the type of return to the account. Interest is generally the least tax-efficient return in a non-registered account because it is taxed as ordinary income each year at the investor’s marginal rate. In contrast, registered accounts (RRSP and TFSA) shelter ongoing investment income from annual taxation while it remains in the plan.
For many clients, a practical high-level approach is:
The main takeaway is that placing interest-bearing investments in a non-registered account is usually the least tax-efficient choice.
Topic: Working with the Institutional Client
A Canadian pension plan wants to sell 2,000,000 shares of a TSXV-listed issuer. The stock trades about 50,000 shares per day on average. The plan contacts an investment dealer’s institutional salesperson, who coordinates with the dealer’s trading desk to “work the order” and look for block liquidity.
What is the primary risk/limitation of this sell-side trading solution for the pension plan?
Best answer: B
Explanation: This scenario is mainly about the sell-side trading function supporting an institutional client with execution and liquidity. When the trade size is extremely large relative to average daily volume, the dominant tradeoff is liquidity: the desk may need to stage the sale, accept price concessions, or risk moving the market. Those are market-impact and execution risks tied directly to how trading supports institutions.
On the sell side, the trading desk’s core role for institutional clients is to provide execution expertise, source liquidity (including blocks), and manage the order’s interaction with the market. Here, selling 2,000,000 shares in a stock averaging 50,000 shares/day creates a large imbalance between desired trade size and available natural liquidity.
Practical implications of that liquidity constraint include:
The key takeaway is that the main limitation is not “product risk,” but the liquidity/market-impact tradeoff inherent in executing a very large position in a thinly traded security.
Topic: Investment Analysis
A client with a moderate risk tolerance wants dependable income and is considering investing $40,000 in common shares of a Canadian pipeline company that currently yields 7.5%. She notices the company’s dividend has grown faster than earnings and that total debt increased materially over the past year. She asks you to determine whether the dividend is sustainable over her 5-year horizon.
Which analysis lens is MOST appropriate to answer her question?
Best answer: D
Explanation: Dividend sustainability is primarily an issuer-specific question. The most direct way to answer it is to analyze the company’s fundamentals-especially cash flow generation, dividend payout relative to earnings/cash flow, and leverage and refinancing capacity-over the client’s time horizon.
Choosing the right lens depends on what drives the answer. Here, the client’s question is whether one specific company can keep paying (and potentially growing) its dividend over 5 years, given signs of weaker coverage and higher debt.
That calls for company (fundamental) analysis using issuer-level information such as:
Industry and macro factors can influence results, but they are secondary to whether this issuer’s financial capacity supports the dividend. Technical analysis addresses entry/exit timing, not payout sustainability.
Topic: Alternative Investments, Other Managed, and Structured Products
A client is reviewing the offering memorandum for a hedge fund that charges both a management fee and a performance fee.
Which statement about these fee structures is NOT typical?
Best answer: C
Explanation: Alternative investments often use a two-part fee model: an asset-based management fee plus a results-based performance fee. The management fee is typically charged as a percentage of assets under management, even in periods of poor returns. Performance fees, by contrast, are tied to profits and may be subject to features like a hurdle rate or high-water mark.
Typical alternative investment fees combine (1) a management fee and (2) a performance (incentive) fee. The management fee is usually expressed as an annual percentage of assets under management (e.g., based on NAV) and is intended to cover operating and portfolio management costs; it is generally charged regardless of whether the fund makes or loses money. The performance fee is usually expressed as a percentage of investment profits and is designed to align the manager’s compensation with results. To reduce the chance of paying incentive fees after losses, performance fees often include mechanisms such as a high-water mark (no incentive fee until prior losses are recovered) and/or a hurdle rate (incentive fee only on returns above a threshold).
Key takeaway: asset-based fees are not normally contingent on positive performance, while incentive fees are.
Topic: Mutual Funds
All amounts are in CAD. A fund has a net asset value (NAV) per share of $10.00 and an exchange-traded market price of $9.50.
Using \(\text{Discount/Premium \%} = \frac{\text{Market price} - \text{NAV}}{\text{NAV}}\), what best describes this fund and its pricing relative to NAV? (Round to one decimal place.)
Best answer: B
Explanation: The discount/premium is \((9.50-10.00)/10.00=-5.0\%\), so the fund is trading at a 5.0% discount to NAV. Trading at a discount or premium to NAV is characteristic of a closed-end fund because its shares trade in the secondary market. Open-end mutual fund units are issued and redeemed by the fund at NAV (subject to sales charges), so they do not normally trade away from NAV.
Open-end mutual funds continuously issue and redeem units directly with investors, so transactions occur at NAV (with any front-end or back-end sales charges applied separately). Because the fund stands ready to redeem units, an investor does not typically observe a separate “market price” that drifts to a premium or discount.
Closed-end funds issue a fixed number of shares that trade on an exchange. Since buyers and sellers set the price, the market price can differ from NAV, creating a premium (price above NAV) or discount (price below NAV).
Here:
\[ \begin{aligned} \text{Discount/Premium \%} &= \frac{9.50-10.00}{10.00}\\ &= -0.05 = -5.0\% \end{aligned} \]A negative result indicates a discount to NAV, consistent with exchange-traded closed-end fund pricing.
Topic: Portfolio Analysis
A client (age 54) has a written IPS for a balanced ETF portfolio (60% equity/40% fixed income) with a 10-year retirement goal and moderate risk tolerance. The IPS was reviewed four months ago. The client has now separated from their spouse and expects to need $80,000 from the account within six months for a settlement, and says they are “no longer comfortable” with market fluctuations.
What is the portfolio manager’s best next step?
Best answer: D
Explanation: A separation with a near-term settlement creates a material change in both liquidity constraints and the client’s willingness to take risk. Those changes trigger an immediate review and update of KYC information and the IPS. Only after that review should the portfolio be rebalanced or repositioned to align with the revised constraints.
In the portfolio management process, objectives and constraints should be reviewed whenever there is a material change that could affect suitability. Common triggers include major life events (e.g., marriage/separation, illness, retirement), liquidity changes (a new cash need or a large inflow), and risk changes (ability or willingness to accept volatility).
Here, the client’s separation creates a specific near-term cash requirement and the client has indicated a lower tolerance for fluctuations. The best action is to promptly revisit KYC, update the IPS (especially liquidity and risk tolerance), and then implement portfolio changes consistent with the updated constraints. The key takeaway is that portfolio changes should flow from an updated IPS when a material trigger occurs, not from a “default” schedule or a product-first response.
Topic: Portfolio Analysis
A retail client with a 60/40 balanced portfolio says, “My account was down 2% this quarter-was my portfolio manager successful or not?” The client’s IPS states performance will be reviewed versus an appropriate balanced benchmark.
Which statement by the advisor best aligns with fair dealing and proper performance evaluation?
Best answer: B
Explanation: Fair performance reporting distinguishes between absolute performance (the portfolio’s return) and relative performance (return versus an appropriate benchmark). Using the IPS-appropriate balanced benchmark and communicating both results gives the client a complete, not misleading, assessment of outcomes.
Performance evaluation is typically communicated in two complementary ways. Absolute performance is the portfolio’s standalone return over the stated period (e.g., down 2% for the quarter). Relative performance compares that return to a relevant benchmark that matches the portfolio’s asset mix and risk profile (e.g., a blended balanced index), as set out in the client’s IPS.
Fair dealing requires clear, balanced communication that avoids cherry-picking comparisons or implying that “beating the benchmark” automatically means the client met their objectives. A complete discussion should:
The key takeaway is that both absolute and benchmark-relative results are needed for a fair assessment.
Topic: Investment Analysis
Which statement best describes a rate-reset preferred share?
Best answer: C
Explanation: A rate-reset preferred share pays a fixed dividend for an initial period and then resets the dividend at predetermined dates using a reference government yield plus a stated spread. This dividend feature is a key characteristic used to assess preferred share income stability and interest-rate sensitivity.
Rate-reset preferred shares are designed to reduce (but not eliminate) interest-rate risk compared with straight perpetual preferred shares. The key defining feature is that the dividend is set for a fixed term (often 5 years) and then recalculated at each reset date using a reference Government of Canada yield (for a matching term) plus a contractually stated spread that reflects issuer credit quality at issuance. Depending on the issue terms, the issuer may also have the right to redeem the shares at reset dates, which can cap upside if market yields fall. The core idea is “scheduled dividend resets to a government yield plus a spread,” not conversion or investor-controlled redemption.
Topic: Mutual Funds
You have completed a KYC update for a client who is saving $45,000 for a home down payment needed in about 18 months. The client’s primary objective is capital preservation, they have low risk tolerance, and they want the money readily accessible.
As the next step in making a mutual fund recommendation, which mutual fund type is most suitable?
Best answer: D
Explanation: A money market mutual fund is designed for short time horizons where capital preservation and liquidity are the priority. It typically invests in short-term, high-quality money market instruments with low price volatility. That aligns with an 18-month goal and a low risk tolerance.
The core suitability concept is matching fund type to the client’s objective, risk tolerance, and time horizon. With an 18-month horizon and a stated priority of capital preservation and ready access, the recommendation should focus on minimizing volatility and interest-rate sensitivity.
Money market mutual funds generally invest in short-term, high-quality instruments (e.g., T-bills and other short-term paper), so they tend to have low volatility and provide day-to-day liquidity, making them appropriate for near-term goals. Equity-heavy, balanced, or sector funds introduce materially higher market risk over a short horizon, which can jeopardize the down payment amount when it is needed.
Topic: Mutual Funds
A client invests $50,000 in a Canadian open-end mutual fund in a non-registered account because they want professional management and the ability to redeem on any business day at the fund’s next calculated NAV per unit. The client asks who makes the day-to-day investment decisions and who actually holds the fund’s securities for safekeeping. Which response is the BEST description of the fund’s structure and key parties?
Best answer: A
Explanation: An open-end mutual fund is structured so investors (unitholders) own a proportional interest in the fund, can buy or redeem units with the fund at NAV, and rely on distinct parties for different functions. The portfolio manager makes day-to-day investment decisions, the custodian safeguards the fund’s assets, and the fund manager handles administration and oversight.
In an open-end mutual fund, the fund continuously issues new units to investors and redeems units from investors at the fund’s NAV per unit (typically calculated daily). Unitholders are the investors who have a proportional (beneficial) interest in the fund’s assets and returns.
Key parties:
This separation helps address the client’s concern about who controls decisions versus who safeguards assets.
Topic: Fee-Based Accounts and Working with the Retail Client
A 52-year-old client in a fee-based account is divorced. His will (signed last year) leaves his estate to his two adult children. He notices his $300,000 RRSP still names his former spouse as beneficiary, and he wants the RRSP proceeds to go to his children on death and bypass probate. What is the BEST action to recommend?
Best answer: C
Explanation: The will governs assets that flow through the estate, but registered plan proceeds usually flow by beneficiary designation. If the RRSP still names the former spouse, that designation generally controls and can send the RRSP to the wrong person. Updating the RRSP beneficiary designation aligns the death benefit with the client’s intention and helps bypass probate.
A key estate-planning concept is that different documents control different outcomes. A will generally governs assets that become part of the estate and are distributed through the estate process (often including probate). By contrast, many registered plans (such as an RRSP) allow the account owner to name a beneficiary with the plan issuer; on death, the plan proceeds are typically paid directly to that beneficiary and do not rely on the will.
In this scenario, the client’s will already leaves the estate to the children, but the RRSP beneficiary designation still names the former spouse, which can result in the RRSP being paid to the former spouse despite the will. The most direct way to achieve the client’s stated goal is to update the RRSP beneficiary designation with the issuer.
A power of attorney addresses incapacity during life, not who receives assets on death.
Topic: Investment Analysis
A client with a 6 month horizon and moderate risk tolerance wants to use basic technical levels to time a purchase and set an exit point. A TSX-listed stock has been making higher highs and higher lows for three months. It has turned back near $52 twice (resistance) and bounced near $48 three times (support). Today it closes at $52.30 on above-average volume.
What is the BEST technical conclusion/action?
Best answer: D
Explanation: The pattern of higher highs and higher lows indicates an uptrend. A close above a well-tested resistance level, especially on above-average volume, is commonly interpreted as a breakout that supports the existing uptrend. After a breakout, the old resistance level is often watched as a new support level for managing risk.
In technical analysis, an uptrend is identified by a sequence of higher highs and higher lows. Support is a price area where buying has repeatedly appeared, while resistance is an area where selling has repeatedly appeared.
Here, $52 has acted as resistance (price failed there twice), and $48 has acted as support (bounced three times). A close at $52.30 on above-average volume is consistent with a breakout above resistance, which technicians often read as a continuation signal for the uptrend. After a breakout, the former resistance level (around $52) is commonly monitored as potential new support to help define an exit point if the move fails.
A drop below support would be a different (bearish) signal.
Topic: Portfolio Analysis
A client is choosing between two Canadian equity ETFs. ETF H has a beta of 1.3 versus the S&P/TSX Composite Index, and ETF L has a beta of 0.7 versus the same index. If the market moves by 10% over a short period, which statement best describes their market sensitivity?
Best answer: A
Explanation: Beta measures an investment’s sensitivity to movements in the overall market (systematic risk). A beta greater than 1 implies the investment tends to amplify market moves, while a beta less than 1 implies it tends to dampen them. With a 10% market move, a 1.3 beta implies about a 13% move and a 0.7 beta implies about a 7% move.
Beta is a measure of systematic (market) risk: it describes how sensitive an investment’s return is to the return of a chosen market benchmark. Conceptually, beta is the “market-move multiplier.”
A quick interpretation uses:
0\(\beta < 1\): tends to move less than the market (lower market sensitivity)
So for a 10% market move, ETF H (\(\beta=1.3\)) would be expected to move about 13%, while ETF L (\(\beta=0.7\)) would be expected to move about 7%. The key takeaway is that both are equity ETFs, but their betas imply different exposure to market swings.
Topic: Exchange-Traded Funds
A client with moderate risk tolerance wants to “double the return of the S&P/TSX 60” over the next 12 months and plans to buy and hold with only annual monitoring. The advisor recommends a 2x daily leveraged ETF that seeks to deliver 200% of the index’s daily return (before fees) using derivatives and resets its leverage each day.
What is the single best conclusion about the primary risk or misconception in this recommendation?
Best answer: A
Explanation: A daily leveraged ETF is designed to meet a daily multiple of index performance, not a long-term multiple. When held over many days, the effect of daily compounding-especially in volatile markets-can cause the realized 12-month return to be meaningfully different from “2x the index.” That makes buy-and-hold expectations the key misconception.
The core issue is leverage compounding (path dependency) in daily leveraged ETFs. These ETFs reset exposure each day to target a stated multiple of that day’s index return. Over a longer holding period, the sequence of daily gains and losses matters: volatility can cause “volatility drag,” so the ETF’s cumulative return can fall short of (or differ from) simply multiplying the index’s 12-month return by two. In this scenario, the client’s buy-and-hold intent and expectation of “double the index over a year” conflicts with the product’s daily objective, making it a primary suitability concern versus an unlevered ETF or other strategy aligned to a 12-month horizon.
Key takeaway: the daily target is not a promise of a 12-month 2x result.
Topic: Portfolio Analysis
Which statement best differentiates tactical asset allocation from strategic asset allocation?
Best answer: B
Explanation: Strategic asset allocation is the long-term policy asset mix set from the client’s objectives, constraints, and risk tolerance. Tactical asset allocation involves temporary, shorter-term deviations from those strategic weights to take advantage of perceived market opportunities or risks, while still using the strategic mix as the anchor.
Strategic asset allocation is the portfolio’s long-run “policy” mix (e.g., 60/30/10) designed to meet the client’s objectives and constraints in the IPS, and it is expected to hold through market cycles with periodic rebalancing.
Tactical asset allocation is an active overlay that deliberately tilts the portfolio away from the strategic weights for a time (typically within limits) based on shorter-term valuations, macro views, or risk signals. The key distinction is time horizon and intent: strategic is the enduring anchor; tactical is a temporary deviation intended to add value or manage near-term risk without rewriting the long-term policy.
Use this map after the sample questions to connect individual items to client discovery, recommendations, managed products, portfolio construction, ethics, and account-servicing decisions these Securities Prep samples test.
flowchart LR
S1["Client objective or account event"] --> S2
S2["Gather KYC and constraints"] --> S3
S3["Analyze product portfolio and tax fit"] --> S4
S4["Apply suitability disclosure and conflict controls"] --> S5
S5["Recommend document or escalate"] --> S6
S6["Monitor changes and rebalance"]
| Cue | What to remember |
|---|---|
| Client discovery | Objectives, time horizon, risk, income, liquidity, tax, knowledge, and constraints anchor the recommendation. |
| Portfolio construction | Diversification, correlation, rebalancing, asset allocation, and investment policy guide decisions. |
| Managed products | Understand funds, ETFs, managed accounts, fees, benchmarks, and performance reporting. |
| Ethics | Client-first conduct, confidentiality, conflicts, complaint handling, and documentation are recurring traps. |
| Recommendation process | A suitable recommendation connects facts, product risk, alternatives, costs, and disclosure. |