Definition
Market makers (called Registered Traders on the TSX or Designated Market Makers on Cboe Canada/NEO) are required by their marketplace agreement to maintain continuous bid and ask quotes within maximum spread parameters and above minimum size thresholds. This continuous liquidity provision reduces the bid-ask spread and allows investors to trade without waiting for a natural counterparty. In return, market makers receive benefits such as rebates on posted liquidity or preferential access to order flow. Under UMIR rules, dealer market makers are required to comply with marketplace-specific Designated Market Maker agreements and must not use their privileged position to trade ahead of client orders (which would constitute front-running under UMIR 4.1). For ETFs, the market maker's ability to create and redeem units through the authorized participant mechanism is the primary reason ETF market prices stay close to NAVPS.
Source
TSX Rules and Policies; UMIR 4.1; CIRO IDPC conduct requirements
Where this shows up on the CIRE
- Outcome 8.1