Study
| EST. READ TIME 1 MIN.Financial Regulatory Disclosure - Embracing New Communications Channels
Canadian financial regulators have introduced a new disclosure document for mutual and segregated funds called ?Fund Facts.? The document is intended to provide investors with information in a simple, accessible, and comparable format.
However, the disclosure regime for Fund Facts is too prescriptive, particularly in its format requirements, as it is designed in a size best suited for a paper document. But people are shifting away from paper documents and now frequently digest information using new communications channels, namely, mobile devices such as smart phones.
Canadian securities regulators have signaled their intent to develop rules requiring the Fund Facts documents to be delivered before or when a transaction takes place between an investor and an advisor, despite the potential for disrupting transactions that may be in the investor?s interest. A better approach would be to create the conditions in which technology and market forces will move the industry standard towards this objective in a competitive environment. This can be done by introducing more flexibility into the formats the industry can use to present the information that must be disclosed. Building more flexibility into this regulation allows for the integration of financial literacy into mandated disclosure.
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Neil Mohindra
Neil Mohindra is the former Director of the Centre for Financial Policy Studies at the Fraser Institute where he authoreda number of papers, articles, and opinion pieces on securities regulation and insurance. Mr. Mohindra previously worked for the Financial Services Commission of Ontario as Policy Manager for the Joint Forum Secretariat, Joint Forum of Financial Market Regulators, in which he managed the cross-sectoral projects of Canadian provincial pension, securities, and insurance regulators. This included strategic planning, developing policy options and recommendations, managing external stakeholder engagement, and developing communications strategies. Mr. Mohindra worked for Insurance Bureau of Canada as a Senior Policy Analyst and led the development of industry positions on a number of issues key to the property and casualty insurance industry such as the 2006 review of federal financial institutions legislation. Prior to Insurance Bureau of Canada, he was a policy analyst on financial sector issues at the Department of Finance Canada where his responsibilities included briefing the departments member on the Financial Stability Forum. Earlier, he was a research associate with the Task Force of the Future of the Canadian Financial Services Sector (the MacKay Taskforce). He holds a BA (Honours) in Social Sciences (Economics) from the University of Ottawa and an MBA in Finance from McGill University.… Read more Read Less…
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