Definition
A PPD is a deposit instrument issued directly by a CDIC member bank, meaning the principal guarantee is backed by the full-faith creditworthiness of the bank and, up to $100,000 per CDIC insured category, by federal deposit insurance. This distinguishes a PPD from a Principal-Protected Note (PPN), which is often issued by a bank subsidiary and may fall outside direct CDIC coverage. The upside participation is linked to an equity index, a basket of securities, or a commodity index; if the reference performs poorly, the client's total return is zero (they receive back only their original deposit at maturity). Terms typically run 3 to 7 years, during which the deposit is non-redeemable or subject to early-redemption penalties that can eliminate the participation component. For registered accounts, the PPD qualifies as a deposit eligible for CDIC coverage, making it attractive for clients who want some market exposure within an RRSP or TFSA without risking principal.
Source
CDIC Act; CSA Staff Notice 46-308; CIRO IDPC suitability provisions
Where this shows up on the CIRE
- Outcome 5.3