Vol. 151, No. 21 — October 18, 2017
Registration
SOR/2017-215 September 29, 2017
CANADA DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION ACT
By-law Amending the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation Deposit Insurance Information By-law
The Board of Directors of the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation, pursuant to paragraph 11(2)(f) (see footnote a) of the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation Act (see footnote b), makes the annexed By-law Amending the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation Deposit Insurance Information By-law.
Ottawa, September 27, 2017
By-law Amending the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation Deposit Insurance Information By-law
Amendments
1 (1) The definition point of service in section 1 of the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation Deposit Insurance Information By-law (see footnote 1) is repealed.
(2) The definition place of business in section 1 of the By-law is replaced by the following:
place of business means a physical location in Canada where a member institution carries on business and where a person may make a deposit or commence a transaction to open a deposit account with the assistance of a representative of the member institution, but does not include an automated teller machine. (lieu d’affaires)
(3) Section 1 of the By-law is amended by adding the following in alphabetical order:
electronic business site means a website or other electronic site that is used by a member institution to carry on business and at which a person may make a deposit or commence a transaction to open a deposit account with or without the assistance of a representative of the member institution, and, for greater certainty, includes an automated teller machine. (site d’affaires électronique)
2 Subsection 3(1) of the By-law is replaced by the following:
3 (1) When a member institution makes representations with respect to any of the matters referred to in paragraphs 2(a) to (c), the representations shall be made in accordance with sections 3.1 to 9.1.
3 Sections 3 to 5 of the By-law are replaced by the following:
3 (1) When a member institution makes representations with respect to any of the matters referred to in paragraphs 2(a) to (c), the representations shall be made in accordance with sections 4 to 11.
(2) A member institution whose policy of deposit insurance is terminated or cancelled shall immediately remove from each of its places of business and each of its electronic business sites all references to its status as a member institution and to the deposit insurance provided by the Corporation, including displays of the membership sign, brochure and badge.
(3) When a member institution ceases to use a location as a place of business, it shall remove from the location all references to its status as a member institution and to the deposit insurance provided by the Corporation, including displays of the membership sign, brochure and badge.
(4) When a member institution is required to display or elects to display a membership sign or badge in digital form, changes may be made to its overall size, but only if the proportions of the sign or badge, as supplied by the Corporation, are maintained and the content is clearly visible and legible.
Representations About Membership
Representations in Advertisements
4 (1) If a member institution makes a representation about its status as a member institution in its advertising, other than by displaying the membership sign or badge, it shall use one of the following representations, or a representation in substantially the same words as any of the following representations:
- (a) “Member of the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation” (or “A Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation member”);
- (b) “Member of the CDIC” (or “A CDIC member”);
- (c) “(name of the member institution) is a member of the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation”; or
- (d) “(name of the member institution) is a member of the CDIC”.
(2) Subject to subsection (3), the representations may appear anywhere in the advertising of a member institution, if the location at which and the manner in which they are displayed do not give the impression that
- (a) a person is a member institution when they are not a member institution; or
- (b) a deposit is insured by the Corporation when it is not eligible to be insured by the Corporation.
(3) If the advertising does not deal exclusively with deposits that are eligible to be insured by the Corporation, the member institution shall not make any of the representations referred to in subsection (1) unless the statement set out in paragraph 9(2)(a) appears in close proximity to the representations respecting the deposits that are not eligible to be insured by the Corporation.
Display of Membership Sign
5 (1) A member institution shall prominently display a membership sign supplied by the Corporation
- (a) in physical form, at each entrance to each of its places of business so that the membership sign is clearly visible during business hours; and
- (b) in physical or digital form, within each of its places of business so that the membership sign is clearly visible during business hours from the main areas of each of those places of business.
(2) A member institution shall display the membership sign in digital form on the home page of its website, either directly or by way of a single hyperlink that links to a page where information about its status as a member institution is available.
(3) A member institution shall ensure that the location at which and the manner in which the membership sign is displayed does not give the impression that
- (a) a person is a member institution when they are not a member institution; or
- (b) a deposit is insured by the Corporation when it is not eligible to be insured by the Corporation.
4 Subsection 5(2) of the By-law is repealed.
5 Sections 6 and 7 of the By-law are replaced by the following:
Display and Provision of Brochure
6 (1) A member institution shall prominently display a brochure in physical form, supplied by the Corporation for that purpose, at each of its places of business and shall also make copies of the brochure available there to depositors and all other persons.
(2) A member institution shall, as part of the account opening process for a deposit that is eligible to be insured by the Corporation, provide a depositor
- (a) if all account opening documents are provided only in digital form, with the digital form of a brochure supplied by the Corporation;
- (b) if all account opening documents are provided only in physical form, with a printed version of the digital form of the brochure; or
- (c) in any other case, with either the digital form of the brochure or a printed version of that digital form.
(3) The physical and digital form of the brochures shall contain the following:
- (a) general information about the Corporation;
- (b) contact information for the Corporation;
- (c) the Corporation’s logo or other identifiers;
- (d) information as to what constitutes a deposit that is eligible to be insured by the Corporation;
- (e) the maximum amount of deposit insurance coverage provided by the Corporation; and
- (f) information as to what a depositor needs to know when the Corporation is obliged to make an insurance payment.
(4) For greater certainty, a member institution, or any other person, may make representations about the subject matter of the brochure if the representation is not false, misleading or deceptive.
(5) A member institution shall ensure that the location at which and the way in which the brochure is displayed does not give the impression that
- (a) a person is a member institution when they are not a member institution; or
- (b) a deposit is insured by the Corporation when it is not eligible to be insured by the Corporation.
Display of Badge
7 (1) Subject to subsections (2), (3) and (5), a member institution shall prominently display the digital form of a badge supplied by the Corporation at each of the following locations on its electronic business sites, other than automated teller machines:
- (a) the home page;
- (b) the landing page for each deposit product eligible to be insured by the Corporation;
- (c) the page where a depositor makes transactions after logging on; and
- (d) each page where the membership sign is displayed.
(2) A member institution shall prominently display the badge supplied by the Corporation in either physical or digital form at each of its automated teller machines at which a person may make deposits.
(3) A member institution that shares the home page for an electronic business site with a person other than a member institution shall not display the badge on the home page.
(4) The badge, whether in physical or digital form, shall contain, at a minimum, the Corporation’s logo or other identifiers. The badge in digital form shall also contain a hyperlink to the contents of the brochure referred to in subsection 6(3), unless the badge is being displayed on an automated teller machine.
(5) A member institution shall ensure that the location at which and the way in which the badge is displayed does not give the impression that
- (a) a person is a member institution when they are not a member institution; or
- (b) a deposit is insured by the Corporation when it is not eligible to be insured by the Corporation.
6 (1) The portion of subsection 7.1(1) of the By-law before paragraph (a) is replaced by the following:
7.1 (1) Subject to subsection (3), a member institution that has its own website or shares a website with another member institution shall display deposit insurance information, consisting of at least the membership sign referred to in section 5 and the brochure referred to in section 6, provided by the Corporation in electronic form in both instances, on that website, in at least one location
(2) The portion of subsection 7.1(2) of the By-law before paragraph (a) is replaced by the following:
(2) Subject to subsection (3), a member institution that shares a website with a person other than a member institution shall display deposit insurance information, consisting of at least the membership sign referred to in section 5 and the brochure referred to in section 6, provided by the Corporation in electronic form in both instances, on that website, in at least one location
(3) Section 7.1 of the By-law is repealed.
7 Section 7.2 of the By-law is repealed.
8 (1) Paragraph 8(1)(a) of the By-law is replaced by the following:
- (a) that constitutes a deposit that is eligible to be insured by the Corporation;
(2) Section 8 of the By-law is renumbered as section 11 and that section is repositioned accordingly.
9 Sections 9 to 9.1 of the By-law are replaced by the following:
Federal Credit Unions: Statement of Transitional Coverage
8 (1) A federal credit union shall prepare a statement of transitional coverage that contains the following information which has been verified by the Corporation:
- (a) the purpose of the statement;
- (b) a description of the deposit insurance coverage provided by the Corporation that applies to the pre-existing deposits of the federal credit union during the transition period;
- (c) the day on which the deposit insurance coverage referred to in paragraph (b) expires; and
- (d) a description of the deposit insurance coverage provided by the Corporation that will apply to the deposits of the federal credit union after the transition period expires.
(2) A federal credit union shall, beginning on the day on which it becomes a member institution and ending on the day on which the transition period expires,
- (a) make the statement of transitional coverage available by way of a hyperlink on every page of its website that refers to deposit products; and
- (b) make a copy of the statement available to depositors at each of its places of business.
(3) A federal credit union shall, for a period of 180 days after the day on which it becomes a member institution, prominently display, at each of its places of business, a sign that refers depositors and all other persons to the statement of transitional coverage and indicates how they can obtain a copy of that statement.
(4) Subject to subsection (5), a federal credit union shall, not earlier than 12 weeks but not later than 4 weeks before the end of the transition period, provide to a depositor in respect of any pre-existing deposit that exceeds $100,000 and is to be repaid on a fixed day, a copy of the statement of transitional coverage or an indication of how they can obtain a copy of that statement.
(5) A federal credit union that has provided to a depositor a copy of the statement of transitional coverage in respect of a pre-existing deposit, or given to a depositor an indication of how that copy can be obtained, is not required to provide to the same depositor in respect of any other pre-existing deposit a copy of the statement or an indication of how the copy can be obtained.
Warning Statements for Ineligible Deposits
9 (1) Subject to subsection (2), if a member institution issues an instrument to a person evidencing that the member institution has received or is holding money that constitutes a deposit that is not eligible to be insured by the Corporation, the member institution shall include on the face of the instrument a warning statement in substantially the same words as one of the following statements:
- (a) “Not insured by the CDIC”;
- (b) “Not insured by the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation”; or
- (c) “The deposit evidenced by this instrument does not constitute a deposit that is insured under the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation Act”.
(2) If a member institution issues an instrument to a person evidencing that the member institution has received or is holding money that constitutes both a deposit that is eligible to be insured by the Corporation and a deposit that is not eligible to be insured by the Corporation, the member institution shall include on the face of the instrument, in the location specified, if any, a warning statement in substantially the same words as one of the following statements:
- (a) “Only deposits held in Canadian currency, having a term of five years or less and payable in Canada are eligible to be insured under the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation Act”;
- (b) “The following deposits evidenced by this instrument do not constitute deposits that are insured under the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation Act:” before the list of deposits that are not eligible to be insured by the Corporation;
- (c) “Not insured by the CDIC” beside the reference to each deposit that is not eligible to be insured by the Corporation;
- (d) “Not insured by the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation” beside the reference to each deposit that is not eligible to be insured by the Corporation; or
- (e) “Not insured by the CDIC” in a footnote the reference mark for which is located beside the reference to each deposit that is not eligible to be insured by the Corporation.
(3) If a member institution enters into a transaction with a person by means of telecommunications, or by electronic or other means, with respect to an instrument, the member institution shall
- (a) in the case of an oral communication,
- (i) make an oral representation that is substantially the same as one of the statements set out in subsection (2), and
- (ii) issue to the person in writing, by telecommunications or by electronic or other means, a notice that includes one of the statements set out in subsection (2); or
- (b) in the case of a communication in writing, issue to the person in writing, by means of telecommunications or by electronic or other means, a notice that includes one of the statements set out in subsection (2).
9.1 (1) If a member institution elects to affix a warning statement to any document relating to a deposit that is not eligible to be insured by the Corporation, the warning shall be in substantially the same words as the following:
“Only deposits held in Canadian currency, having a term of five years or less and payable in Canada are eligible to be insured under the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation Act.”
(2) If a member institution elects to affix a warning statement to any document evidencing that the member institution has received or is holding money that does not constitute a deposit that is eligible to be insured by the Corporation, the statement shall be in substantially the same words as one set out in one of paragraphs 9(1)(a) to (c).
10 Section 9.2 of the By-law is repealed.
11 Section 10 of the By-law and the heading before it are replaced by the following:
Lists of Trade Names and Financial Products
10 A member institution shall not, in the course of its deposit-taking activities relating to deposits eligible to be insured by the Corporation, use one of its trade names in its representations about who is a member institution, what constitutes a deposit or what constitutes a deposit that is insured by the Corporation, unless the member institution
- (a) prepares and maintains an up-to-date list of those trade names;
- (b) makes the list available on its website in the same location where the membership sign is displayed;
- (c) provides the Corporation with a copy of the list not later than November 1, 2018 and, after that date, provides the Corporation with a copy of the list with its Return of Insured Deposits;
- (d) provides the Corporation with not less than 15 days’ notice of any new trade name to be used in the course of its deposit-taking activities relating to deposits eligible to be insured by the Corporation and the date of the intended first public use of that trade name by the member institution; and
- (e) permits the Corporation to make the contents of the list, and any updates to the list, available to the public.
12 The By-law is amended by adding the following after section 11:
Statement Regarding Compliance
12 A member institution shall state whether or not it is in compliance with this By-law and shall submit that statement with the Return of Insured Deposits.
Coming into Force
13 (1) Subject to subsection (2), this By-law comes into force one year after the date in which it is registered.
(2) Sections 2 and 4, subsections 6(1) and (2) and section 10 come into force on the day on which this By-law is registered.
REGULATORY IMPACT ANALYSIS STATEMENT
(This statement is not part of the By-law.)
Issues
Substantive amendments to the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation Deposit Insurance Information By-law (the By-law) are necessary to reflect the importance of electronic means of transacting with financial institutions, and the resultant impact on how depositors receive information about deposit insurance protection. In addition, amendments are required to ensure the By-law continues to contribute to consumer awareness about deposit insurance protection. Both substantive and technical amendments are contained in the By-law Amending the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation Deposit Insurance Information By-law (the Amending By-law).
Background
The Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation Deposit Insurance Information By-law governs what member institutions of the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation (CDIC or the Corporation) can say about their membership status and about the federal deposit insurance protection provided by CDIC. The Board of Directors of CDIC made the By-law on December 4, 1996, pursuant to paragraph 11(2)(f) of the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation Act (CDIC Act). Paragraph 11(2)(f) of the CDIC Act authorizes the CDIC Board of Directors to make by-laws respecting representations by member institutions and other persons with respect to (i) what constitutes, or does not constitute, a deposit; (ii) what constitutes, or does not constitute, a deposit that is insured by the Corporation; and (iii) who is a member institution. The CDIC Board of Directors amended the By-law on November 26, 1997, September 29, 1999, December 1, 1999, October 10, 2001, December 6, 2006, and March 3, 2016.
CDIC member institutions should provide clear, simple and not misleading information about deposit protection to their clients to contribute to overall public awareness. Fostering awareness about deposit insurance helps to ensure that depositors have the information they need to make informed financial decisions. Awareness also enhances confidence in the deposit insurance coverage system, thereby contributing to financial stability by mitigating the risk of bank runs.
The By-law prohibits the making of false, misleading or deceptive representations about what is or is not a deposit, what is or is not an insured deposit, or who is a member of CDIC. The By-law prescribes where member institutions must display the CDIC membership sign and the CDIC brochure. The By-law also mandates how and where member institutions can make references to their membership status in advertisements, and must use a warning statement when referring to financial products not eligible for CDIC insurance.
In September 2016, CDIC launched a public consultation on the By-law with the goal of ensuring it continues to contribute to depositors being informed about deposit insurance protection at the appropriate time, in a clear and simple manner, and regardless of the deposit distribution channel.
Environmental considerations
CDIC assessed a number of environmental considerations that may impact how member institutions provide information about membership status, deposits and deposit insurance to their clients. These include the following:
Depositor expectations: Surveys conducted by CDIC confirm that most depositors want to receive information on deposit insurance from their financial institution at the time they undertake a financial transaction, regardless of the distribution channel. The surveys also indicate that it is most effective when information is provided in clear and simple language. Member institutions therefore have an important role to play in providing depositors with information about CDIC protection.
Distribution channels: CDIC has observed a continued migration toward the use of electronic channels by individuals to conduct a wide variety of financial transactions. To continue to be effective, the By-law needs to reflect these trends to ensure information is available to depositors regardless of how and where they conduct their activities.
International financial information disclosure regulations: In response to instability during the recent crisis, steps have been taken by other jurisdictions to increase depositor awareness by improving the clarity and accuracy of deposit insurance information that is provided by financial institutions where depositors conduct transactions. An international principle supports this trend.
Objectives
The Amending By-law addresses the following two issues.
1. Enhanced clear, simple and not misleading information to depositors
The amendments go toward ensuring that depositors receive clear, simple and not misleading information about which financial institutions are members of the CDIC deposit insurance program, and about the deposit insurance protection provided by CDIC. Amendments will require members to provide depositors, when opening an eligible deposit account, with a CDIC brochure containing information about deposit insurance. Amendments will also require increased disclosures by member institutions about trade names used in the course of a member institution’s eligible deposit-taking business. The amendments will remove the requirement for member institutions to negative stamp advertisements for money market mutual funds.
2. Ensuring all depositors receive useful information on deposit insurance at the appropriate time, prominently displayed across all distribution channels
The amendments result in key information about deposit insurance being readily available and visible to depositors on all distribution channels. The primary changes under this theme include updates to the terminology used in the By-law to capture various electronic business channels used for deposit-taking activities (e.g. websites, online banking, mobile applications), expanded and enhanced in-branch display requirements for the CDIC membership sign, and expanded and enhanced electronic display requirements for the CDIC membership sign and the CDIC brochure.
Description
The changes are reflected in the Amending By-law. The following table provides more detail about the substantive amendments.
Amending By-law Section |
Explanation |
---|---|
1 |
The definition of point of service is replaced with a definition of electronic business site to reflect the shift towards electronic business channels. The definition of place of business has been amended to clarify that it includes a physical location where a person may commence a transaction to open a deposit account with the assistance of a representative of the member institution. |
3 |
To provide the members with flexibility with respect to the display of a membership sign or badge in digital form. The amendment clarifies that changes may be made to the overall size of the sign or badge so long as the proportions, as supplied by the Corporation, are maintained and the content is clearly visible and legible. Aimed at ensuring accuracy and standardization of membership disclosures, the amendment clarifies that if a member institution makes a representation about its status as a member institution in its advertising, other than by displaying the membership sign or badge, it shall only use the representations provided. Members are provided a degree of flexibility such that representations may appear anywhere in the advertising of a member institution, if the location at which and the manner in which they are displayed do not give the impression that a person is a member institution when it is not a member institution or that a deposit is insured by the Corporation when it is not eligible to be insured by the Corporation. To require appropriate disclosure of CDIC membership status, members must prominently display the CDIC membership sign within each branch so that it is visible from the main areas of the branch. The requirement can be met through physical displays or electronic displays on screens in the branch. CDIC will supply members with a physical and digital sign for this purpose. A member institution shall also display the membership sign in digital form on the home page of its website, either directly, or by way of a single hyperlink that describes that page as the location links to a page where information about its status as a member institution is available. To require member institutions to ensure that the location at which and the manner in which the membership sign is displayed does not give the impression that a person is a member institution when it is not a member institution or that a deposit is insured by the Corporation when it is not eligible to be insured by the Corporation. The required contents of the membership sign are repealed to provide the Corporation with additional design flexibility. |
5 |
To ensure depositors are informed about CDIC deposit insurance protection at the appropriate time, a member institution shall, as part of the account opening process for a deposit that is eligible to be insured by the Corporation, provide a depositor with a brochure in the same manner as the other account opening documents are provided to the depositor. If members provide account opening documents both physically and digitally, the brochure must be provided to the depositor either in digital or printed format. The Corporation will supply each member with the digital version of the brochure for that purpose. Member institutions are provided with the flexibility to make representations about the subject matter of the brochure, provided such representations are not false, misleading or deceptive. To provide for additional awareness about CDIC deposit insurance protection and CDIC brand recognition, a member institution shall also display the digital form of a badge supplied by the Corporation on specified locations of a member’s electronic banking sites. The digital badge must contain a hyperlink to the contents of the CDIC brochure. The Amending By-law clarifies that, with respect to a member institution’s automated teller machines (ATM) at which a person may make deposits, the badge would not contain a hyperlink to the content of the brochure. To provide the member with flexibility to meet the ATM display requirements, the Amending By-law provides that the member may display the badge in physical or digital form. To promote the delivery of accurate information, a member institution shall ensure that the location at which and the manner in which the badge is displayed does not give the impression that a person is a member institution when it is not a member institution or that a deposit is insured by the Corporation when it is not eligible to be insured by the Corporation. The amendments clarify that warning statements on instruments are necessary only in respect of deposits that are not eligible for insurance by the Corporation. To reduce burden, the requirement that certain mutual fund advertisements be accompanied by a warning statement is repealed. |
11 |
In light of the increased use of trade names, and the need to appropriately inform depositors about CDIC deposit insurance coverage when a trade name is used in the course of a member’s eligible deposit-taking activities, each member shall: (a) prepare and maintain an up-to-date list of each trade name that is used in the course of its |
12 |
To hold senior officers of the CDIC member to a high standard of diligence regarding compliance with the requirements, a member institution shall certify whether or not it is in compliance with the By-law and shall submit the certification with the Return of Insured Deposits that it submits under subsection 22(1) of the Act. |
13 |
To provide member institutions with sufficient time to implement the requirements of the By-law, the By-law will come into force 12 months after the By-law is made. The repeal of the requirement that certain statements must accompany mutual fund advertisements comes into force upon approval of the By-law. In addition, the repeal of the requirement that CDIC supply a membership sign containing a member institution’s name comes into force upon the approval of the By-law. |
“One-for-One” Rule
The “One-for-One” Rule does not apply to this By-law.
Small business lens
The small business lens does not apply to this By-law.
Consultation
On September 12, 2016, CDIC published a consultation paper outlining key elements of proposed amendments to the By-law. The consultation with the public closed on October 28, 2016.
CDIC received five responses to the consultation paper from stakeholders. Respondents generally understood CDIC’s objectives for amending the By-law, but indicated a desire for flexibility in meeting the proposed requirements. In January 2017, CDIC met or held calls with eight member institutions and one industry association to clarify the intent of the proposals, and to highlight the flexibility that members have to implement the proposals. Respondents also expressed concerns with the proposed six-month implementation period. To give CDIC member institutions sufficient time to implement the requirements, CDIC has lengthened the transition period to 12 months.
The Amending By-law was prepublished in the Canada Gazette, Part I, on July 15 with a 30-day comment period. CDIC received a response from an industry association. The comments sought clarity with respect to the place of business display requirements where a place of business is temporary. The respondent also sought clarity regarding the purpose of the CDIC badge and membership sign and the manner in which these must be displayed. In addition, the respondent sought flexibility to provide the CDIC brochure in either physical or digital form in a situation where account opening materials are provided both in physical and digital format. The comments resulted in one change to the Amending By-law to enable members to provide a digital or printed version of the brochure where account opening documents are provided both physically and digitally.
Rationale
Research shows that fostering awareness about deposit insurance helps to ensure that depositors have the information they need to make informed financial decisions. It also enhances confidence in the deposit insurance system, thereby mitigating the risk of bank runs and contributing to financial stability. The past decade has seen a migration toward electronic means of transacting with financial institutions. The amendments ensure the By-law reflects the deposit-taking environment and continues to contribute to depositor awareness about the federal deposit insurance protection framework. The Amending By-law would achieve each of the stated objectives.
Implementation, enforcement and service standards
The majority of the amendments will come into force 12 months following the day on which the By-law is registered. There are no additional compliance or enforcement issues.
Contact
Noah Arshinoff
Manager
Insurance
Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation
50 O’Connor Street, 17th Floor
Ottawa, Ontario
K1P 6L2
Telephone: 613-995-6548
Email: narshinoff@cdic.ca
- Footnote a
S.C. 1992, c. 26, s. 4 - Footnote b
R.S., c. C-3 - Footnote 1
SOR/96-542