Definition
Canadian securities regulators have articulated a gatekeeper obligation that applies to all registrants: a registered dealer or adviser is not merely an order-taker but a participant in the integrity of the capital markets. This means registrants must not execute transactions that are clearly illegal, manipulative, or designed to facilitate fraud, even if a client instructs them to do so. The obligation is grounded in PCMLTFA STR requirements, UMIR prohibitions on manipulative trading, CIRO IDPC conduct rules, and provincial Securities Acts. Specific applications include: refusing to execute trades when there are reasonable grounds to believe the proceeds are from crime (STR obligation under PCMLTFA); refusing to participate in market manipulation schemes under UMIR 2.2; and reporting concerns about financial elder abuse through the Trusted Contact Person mechanism. The gatekeeper obligation does not require certainty before acting - reasonable grounds to suspect are enough to trigger reporting duties.
Source
PCMLTFA s.7 (STR obligation); UMIR 2.2; CIRO IDPC conduct rules; CSA Staff Notice 33-315
Where this shows up on the CIRE
- Outcome 6.1
- Outcome 6.5