The Ontario Government and OSC give serious consideration to implementing the recommendations of the Expert Panel Report with respect to complaint handling and redress by:
· granting the OSC the power to order compensation in the case of a violation of securities law so that the investor would not be required to resort to the courts;
· establishing of an investor compensation fund funded by industry to allow the securities regulator to directly compensate investors for a violation of securities law;
· mandatory participation of registrants in the dispute resolution process of a legislatively designated dispute resolution body.
Pending implementation of legislative changes which often takes many years, the Committee should ask the OSC to follow up on the recommendation that IIROC review its arbitration procedure with a view to making it more helpful and less costly to investors and more transparent. The maximum claim should be raised to $350,000 or higher.
SHAREHOLDER RIGHTS AND THE TSX
The OSC should be asked to review the regulatory role of the TSX in light of the conflict of interest between its regulatory function and the profit mandate of the TSX and international best practice for exchanges that have demutualized and became "for profit" public companies. The OSC should be asked to report back to the Legislative Committee.
The OSC should be asked to direct the TSX to bring its rules up to international best practice particularly as it relates to shareholder approval for major transactions.
FINANCIAL LITERACY
The Ontario government should take leadership in financial literacy and develop and implement a provincial financial literacy strategy. It should work with other Canadian governments to develop a national financial literacy strategy.
Ontario should make financial literacy mandatory in all Canadian high schools so that the next generation enters the work force and financial system with a basic level of financial literacy.
Government (including the OSC and educators) should test the effectiveness of existing adult financial literary initiatives and not simply assume their effectiveness.
The OSC should be asked to revisit the "accredited" or "sophisticated" investor exemption and require objective evidence of financial literacy. The OSC needs to shift responsibility back to financially sophisticated market participants who manufacture and sell financial products. Market participants should be required to establish that the consumer truly understands the products before buying them.
A copy of our full submission is available on our website.
David Wilson (Chair), Peggy Dowdall-Logie (Executive Director) and Lawrence Ritchie (Vice Chair) and a number of OSC staff were present. Other stakeholders presenting were Pamela Reeve, Stephen Griggs (Canadian Coalition for Good Governance), Kristan Birchard, Greg Pollack, Peter Tzanetakis (Advocis), Dr. Anita Anand and Michael Code (Professors at UofT) and Diane Urquhart.
A transcript will be available on the Ontario Legislative Assembly website shortly.