Definition
A GIC fixes a rate for a set term (typically 30 days to 5 years) and, in most conventional structures, returns principal only at maturity with no early redemption. A HISA at a deposit-taking institution pays a variable rate that can change at any time, but the depositor can withdraw at any business day. Both are eligible for CDIC coverage (up to $100,000 per insured category per CDIC member) provided the GIC has a term of 5 years or less. Market-linked GICs share the locked-in structure of a conventional GIC but replace the fixed rate with a return tied to an index or basket; they are still insured by CDIC if issued by a member institution. For registered accounts (RRSP, TFSA), both GICs and HISAs are common holdings. The key suitability distinction is liquidity: a client who may need to access principal before maturity should not be placed in a non-redeemable GIC.
Source
CDIC Act; Income Tax Act; NI 31-103 suitability provisions
Where this shows up on the CIRE
- Outcome 5.1