Definition
A PPN is typically structured as a deposit obligation of a bank (or, in some cases, a note issued by a bank subsidiary). The principal guarantee is backed by the creditworthiness of the issuing bank - if the bank fails, the guarantee fails with it, subject to CDIC coverage limits. The return above principal is linked to an underlying reference (an equity index, a basket of commodities, or a fund). Many PPNs are non-redeemable before maturity (commonly 5-8 years), meaning a secondary market may be illiquid or unavailable. Although principal is guaranteed at maturity, the client can lose purchasing power after inflation if the underlying index performs poorly and the return is zero. Under CIRO suitability rules, the long lock-up period and zero-return scenario make PPNs unsuitable for clients who need liquidity within the term. CSA Staff Notice 46-308 provides guidance on the disclosure obligations for structured products including PPNs.
Source
CDIC Act; CSA Staff Notice 46-308; CIRO IDPC Rule 3402
Where this shows up on the CIRE
- Outcome 5.3