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Commodity Pool

A mutual fund regulated under NI 81-104 that is permitted to invest primarily in derivatives and other non-conventional instruments.

Definition

NI 81-104 (Commodity Pools) permits a mutual fund to hold more than 10% of its NAV in derivatives and to use strategies (e.g., short selling, heavy use of futures, options on commodities) that are prohibited for conventional mutual funds under NI 81-102. The commodity pool designation signals to investors that the fund operates with materially higher risk, complexity, and borrowed-capital exposure than a standard balanced or equity mutual fund. Commodity pools must disclose their strategies, derivative and borrowing usage, and risk factors prominently in the simplified prospectus and Fund Facts. They are subject to enhanced sales practice requirements: dealers must confirm that clients meet defined accredited investor or eligibility criteria in some structures, and suitability analysis must specifically address the fund's use of derivatives. Examples include managed futures funds, currency overlay funds, and alternative strategy funds structured as commodity pools.

Source

National Instrument 81-104 Commodity Pools; Companion Policy 81-104CP

Where this shows up on the CIRE

  • Outcome 5.3

Test yourself

Two real CIRE-bank questions on this exact outcome. Click to reveal the answer and the rule citation.

  1. 1

    Statistics Canada releases a monthly report showing the Consumer Price Index (CPI) increased by 4.1% year-over-year, above the Bank of Canada's 2% target. Which economic indicator has been reported, and what is its primary significance for investment analysis?

    Outcome 5.3 · click for answer

    A.The CPI measures the change in the price of a fixed basket of consumer goods and services over time; a reading above the Bank of Canada's 2% target signals that inflation is running hot, which may lead the Bank to raise its overnight rate to reduce demand and bring inflation back toward target.Correct
    B.The CPI measures the trade balance; a 4.1% reading means Canada is importing more than it exports.
    C.The CPI measures corporate earnings growth; a 4.1% reading signals that corporate profits are rising.
    D.The CPI measures unemployment; a 4.1% reading means unemployment has risen significantly.

    The Consumer Price Index (CPI) published by Statistics Canada measures changes in the price of a fixed basket of goods and services purchased by Canadian households. It is Canada's primary inflation indicator. The Bank of Canada targets inflation of 2% (within a 1% to 3% control range). A CPI reading of 4.1% year-over-year indicates above-target inflation, which historically leads the Bank to raise its policy rate to cool demand. This has direct implications for fixed income prices, equity valuations, and currency movements.

  2. 2

    A registrant is explaining economic indicators to a client. The client asks what the Consumer Price Index measures and why it matters for investment decisions. Which response is most accurate?

    Outcome 5.3 · click for answer

    A.The CPI measures the total market value of all goods and services produced in Canada during a quarter, making it the primary measure of economic output.
    B.The CPI measures changes in the average prices of a fixed basket of goods and services purchased by Canadian households and is the primary indicator used to track inflation, which directly influences interest rate decisions and the real return on fixed income investments.Correct
    C.The CPI measures unemployment rates among manufacturing workers and is used exclusively by labour market economists.
    D.The CPI measures the profitability of the S&P/TSX Composite Index constituent companies and is used to forecast equity market returns.

    The Consumer Price Index tracks changes in the average price of a representative basket of goods and services purchased by Canadian households, serving as the primary measure of inflation in Canada. Inflation directly affects investment decisions: it erodes the real return on fixed income securities, influences the Bank of Canada's policy rate decisions, and affects the purchasing power of savings. GDP measures total economic output, unemployment measures labour market conditions, and corporate profitability is tracked through earnings reports; not the CPI.

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