Securities regulators from Ontario, Quebec and the United States have signed a memorandum of understanding designed to bolster cross-border supervision.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Autorité des marchés financiers, and the Ontario Securities Commission, announced the signing on Monday.
The agreement facilitates supervision of regulated firms that operate across the U.S.-Canadian border. The regulators say that the new agreement extends their historical co-operation beyond enforcement to the day-to-day supervision and oversight of regulated firms.
The agreement provides a mechanism for consultation, cooperation, and exchange of information among the SEC, AMF and OSC, and it sets forth the terms and conditions for the sharing of information about firms, such as broker-dealers and investment advisers, which operate in the U.S., Quebec and Ontario.
The MOU, which was signed in Montreal on June 10 after the close of the annual conference of the International Organization of Securities Commissions, is the first comprehensive supervisory agreement to be signed by the SEC since the start of the financial crisis. It already has comprehensive supervisory MOUs with the securities regulators in the UK, Germany and Australia.
“Our organizations share a strong commitment to overseeing the markets and protecting investors. This agreement will help us to fulfill our roles by giving us access to needed information,” said SEC chairman, Mary Schapiro.
AMF president and CEO, Jean St-Gelais said, “Since our markets have become so interrelated and given the impact of the recent financial crisis, this MOU is an important step in ensuring that our markets are safe and that our investors are protected by optimum cooperation between the SEC and the AMF and OSC. It is essential that entities operating across borders be effectively regulated, and this cannot be achieved without the co-operation envisioned by this MOU.”
OSC Chairman David Wilson said the agreement, “will further enhance the effectiveness of our co-operative activities which are essential for regulators to prevent financial harm and protect investors.”
IE
Latest news In From the Regulators
Europe pushes single financial market reforms
Policymakers propose measures to integrate, harmonize markets
- By: James Langton
- December 4, 2025 December 4, 2025
- 14:33
U.K. to explore growing private market risks
Bank of England to stress test private markets
- By: James Langton
- December 4, 2025 December 4, 2025
- 14:20
Virtu sanctioned by SEC
Regulator alleged firm failed to protect clients' trading data
- By: James Langton
- December 4, 2025 December 4, 2025
- 14:14
CIRO to issue final dealer rules in February
Final consultation on merged dealer rules will get 120-day comment period
- By: James Langton
- December 3, 2025 December 3, 2025
- 17:32
Today's top stories
CIRO’s proficiency portals on track for Jan. 2
CSI brand will continue, Fitch Learning says
- By: Michelle Schriver
- December 5, 2025 December 5, 2025
- 16:51
Ben Felix is on Canadian Advisor.cast
A look back at 2025 — Canadian stocks, AI and not-so-great expectations
- By: Kevin Press
- December 5, 2025 December 5, 2025
- 16:38
S&P/TSX composite closes the week lower, while U.S. stock markets rise
Both the Bank of Canada and the Fed will make rate decisions next week
- By: Lauren Krugel, The Canadian Press
- December 5, 2025 December 5, 2025
- 18:00
Product roundup: Global X unveils copper ETF with covered call strategy
Plus, a new ETF provider enters the scene, other products announced, firms make fund changes
- By: Noushin Ziafati
- December 5, 2025 December 5, 2025
- 16:25