OANDA (Canada) Corporation ULC -- s. 74(1)

Order

Headnote

Application by investment dealer (Applicant) for relief from prospectus requirement in connection with distribution of foreign exchange contracts to permit investors resident in Ontario to enter into foreign exchange transactions with Applicant, subject to four-year sunset clause and other terms and conditions -- Applicant acts as both market intermediary and as principal or counterparty to forex transaction with client -- Applicant registered in Ontario as investment dealer and a member of the Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada (IIROC) -- Applicant complies with IIROC Rules and IIROC acceptable practices applicable to offerings of forex contracts -- Applicant seeking relief to permit Applicant to offer forex contracts to investors in Ontario on the basis of clear and plain language risk disclosure document rather than a prospectus -- risk disclosure document contains disclosure substantially similar to risk disclosure document required for recognized options in OSC Rule 91-502 Trades in Recognized Options, the regime for OTC derivatives contemplated by former proposed OSC Rule 91-504 OTC Derivatives (which was not adopted), and the Quebec Derivatives Act -- Relief consistent with relief contemplated by OSC Staff Notice 91-702 Offerings of contracts for difference and foreign exchange contracts to investors in Ontario(OSC SN 91-702) -- Relief granted, subject to terms and conditions as described in OSC SN 91-702 including four-year sunset clause.

Legislation Cited

Securities Act,R.S.O. 1990, c. S.5, as am., ss. 53, 74(1)

NI 45-106 Prospectus and Registration Exemptions, s. 2.3.

OSC Rule 91-502 Trades in Recognized Options.

OSC Rule 91-503 Trades in Commodity Futures Contracts and Commodity Futures Options Entered into on Commodity Futures Exchanges Situate Outside of Ontario.

Proposed OSC Rule 91-504 OTC Derivatives

IN THE MATTER OF

THE SECURITIES ACT,

R.S.O. 1990, CHAPTER S.5, AS AMENDED

(the Act)

AND

IN THE MATTER OF

OANDA (CANADA) CORPORATION ULC

ORDER

(Subsection 74(1) of the Act)

UPON the application (the Application) of OANDA (Canada) Corporation ULC (the Applicant) to the Ontario Securities Commission (the Commission) for an order, pursuant to subsection 74(1) of the Act, that the Applicant and its respective officers, directors and representatives be exempt from the prospectus requirement of section 53 of the Act in respect of the distribution of foreign exchange contracts including spot foreign exchange contracts, FXBoxOptions™ and other similar over-the-counter foreign exchange contracts (referred to herein as Forex Transactions) to investors resident in Ontario (the Requested Relief) subject to the terms and conditions below;

AND UPON considering the Application and the recommendation of staff of the Commission;

AND UPON the Applicant having represented to the Commission that:

OANDA Group of Companies

1. The Applicant and its affiliates (OANDA) have developed one of the world's largest historical, high-frequency, filtered currency databases with tick-by-tick exchange rate information for virtually all currency pairs since 1990. Today, its proprietary OANDA Rates® have been the benchmark for corporations, tax authorities, auditing firms and even central banks.

2. The Applicant is a wholly-owned subsidiary of OANDA Corporation. OANDA Corporation was incorporated in the State of Delaware in 1996 and was co-founded by Dr. Michael Stumm, a professor of Computer Engineering at the University of Toronto, and Dr. Richard Olsen of The Olsen Ltd., a leading econometric research and development firm.

3. OANDA Corporation has been registered as a Futures Commission Merchant in the Forex Dealer Member category with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and a member of the National Futures Association (NFA) since March 2003. As a regulated entity, OANDA Corporation is subject to weekly, monthly and annual reporting to the CFTC and NFA.

4. Possessing one of the world's largest and most accurate databases of currency rates, OANDA was the first in 1995 to offer a broad range of currency exchange-rate information free of charge over the web. Currently, it handles more than a million queries a day. In 1997 OANDA became an internet-based business-to-business application service provider (ASP) and currently services over 75,000 ASP clients around the world.

5. OANDA introduced the first graphical-based forex trading platform in 2001 known as FXTrade™ (FXTrade) allowing customers to participate directly in the forex markets.

OANDA (Canada) Corporation ULC

6. The Applicant is a corporation incorporated under the laws of Alberta with its principal office in Toronto, Ontario. The Applicant is registered as a dealer in the category of investment dealer in Ontario and British Columbia (application pending in Quebec) and is a member of the Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada (IIROC).

7. The Applicant is required by IIROC to maintain a certain level of capital to address the business risks associated with its activities. The capital reporting required by IIROC (as per the calculation in the Joint Regulatory Financial Questionnaire (the JRFQ) and the Monthly Financial Reports to IIROC) is based predominantly on the generation of financial statements and calculations as to ensure capital adequacy. The Applicant as an IIROC member is required to have a specified minimum capital which includes having any additional capital required with regards to margin requirements and other risks. This risk calculation is summarized as a risk adjusted capital calculation which is submitted in the firm's JRFQ and required to be kept positive at all times.

8. As a member of IIROC, the Applicant is only permitted to enter into Forex Transactions pursuant to IIROC Rules. The Applicant is not, to the best of its knowledge, in default of any IIROC Rules.

9. In addition, IIROC has communicated to its members certain additional expectations as to acceptable business practices (IIROC acceptable practices) as articulated in IIROC's "Regulatory Analysis of Contracts for Differences (CFDs)" published by IIROC on June 6, 2007 (the IIROC CFD Paper), as amended on September 12, 2007, for any IIROC member proposing to offer CFDs or foreign exchange contracts to investors. To the best of its knowledge, the Applicant is in compliance with IIROC acceptable practices in offering the Forex Transactions. The Applicant will continue to offer Forex Transactions in accordance with IIROC acceptable practices as may be established from time to time.

10. In Québec, the Applicant has applied for an order from the Autorité des marchés financiers (the AMF) to offer foreign exchange contracts to both accredited and retail investors pursuant to the provisions of the Derivatives Act (Québec) (the QDA). The final AMF Order will, if granted, exempt the Applicant from the qualifying requirement set forth in section 82 of the QDA relating to the creation or marketing of foreign exchange contracts offered to the public, subject to certain terms and conditions.

11. The Applicant has previously offered Forex Transactions to investors, including retail investors, in Ontario on the basis of a good faith determination that the Forex Transactions did not constitute securities for the purposes of Ontario securities law. Consequently, such offerings were made in compliance with applicable IIROC Rules and other IIROC acceptable practices but were not made under a prospectus or an exemption from the prospectus requirement of Ontario securities law. In October 2009, OSC staff published OSC Staff Notice 91-702 Offerings of Contracts for Difference and Foreign Exchange Contracts to Investors (OSC SN 91-702). The Applicant has considered the guidance in OSC SN 91-702 and wishes to continue to offer Forex Transactions to investors, including retail investors, in Ontario on the basis of the exemptive relief contemplated by OSC SN 91-702.

12. The Applicant wishes to offer the Forex Transactions to investors, including retail investors, in Ontario on a similar basis as in Québec and on substantially the same terms and conditions as articulated in the QDA and in the AMF Order. For the Interim Period (defined below), the Applicant is seeking the Requested Relief in connection with this proposed offering in Ontario.

Forex Transactions and FXTrade

13. OANDA's FXTrade platform is a proprietary and fully automated internet-based trading platform that serves as the basis for OANDA's private and white label forex trading solutions. As of April 13, 2010, more than 609,000,000 transactions have been executed on OANDA's FXTrade platform.

14. The Applicant utilizes the FXTrade trading platform to process Forex Transactions under a software license and services agreement with its parent company, OANDA Corporation.

15. The Applicant is a market maker in OTC forex contracts in Canada. It is also the counterparty to its clients' forex trades -- it does not act as an intermediary, broker or trustee. Clients place trades with the Applicant electronically over the internet. The Applicant does not trade on behalf of clients or manage any discretionary accounts. Nor does it provide any trading advice or recommendations. The FXTrade platform is similar to those developed for on-line brokerages in that the client trades without other communication with, or advice from, the dealer.

16. The Applicant provides clients with exposure to the exchange rate fluctuation in the selected currency pairing. No physical settlement of the underlying currency is required or expected. There is no fixed duration of a forex contract purchased from the Applicant, and a client may retain an open position in a particular currency pair for as long as they like. The client may liquidate any forex position instantly by initiating a sell order. Settlement is immediate. There is no limit on trade size or trade lot except that no individual order may exceed CAD 10 million.

17. The Applicant manages the risk in its client positions by simultaneously placing the identical Forex Transaction on a back-to-back basis with OANDA Corporation, an "acceptable counterparty" (as that term is defined in IIROC Rules). OANDA Corporation, in turn, automatically offsets each position against other client positions on a second-by-second basis, and either "hedges" its net exposure by trading with liquidity providers (banks) or using its equity capital, or both. By virtue of this risk management functionality inherent in the FXTrade platform, the Applicant minimizes counterparty risk. This also means that the Applicant does not have an inherent conflict of interest with its clients, since it does not profit on a position if the client losses on that position, and vice versa. The Applicants is compensated solely by the "spread" between the bid and ask prices it offers for any currency pair. It does not charge any account opening or maintenance fees, commissions, or other charges of any kind.

18. The Forex Transactions are over-the-counter (OTC) and are not transferable.

19. The ability to lever an investment is one of the principal features of foreign exchange contracts. Leverage allows clients to magnify investment returns (or losses) by reducing the initial capital outlay required to achieve the same market exposure that would be obtained by investing directly in the underlying currency. The risk management functionality of the FXTrade platform ensures that client positions are closed out when the client no longer maintains sufficient margin in their account to support the position, thereby preventing the client from being placed in a margin call situation or losing more than their stated risk capital or cumulative loss limit. This functionality also ensures that the Applicant does not incur any credit risk vis-a-vis its customers.

20. IIROC Rules and IIROC acceptable practices set out detailed requirements and expectations relating to leverage and margin for offerings of foreign exchange contracts. The degree of leverage may be amended in accordance with IIROC Rules and IIROC acceptable practices as may be established from time to time.

21. Pursuant to Section 13.12 Restriction on lending to clients of National Instrument 31-103 Registration Requirements which came into force as of September 28, 2009, only those firms that are registered as investment dealers (a condition of which is to be a member of IIROC) may lend money, extend credit or provide margin to a client.

22. Clients conduct Forex Transactions through the Applicant's on-line trading platform, FXTrade. The Applicant's on-line platform is similar to those developed for on-line brokerages and day-trading in that the client trades without other communication with, or advice from, the dealer. The FXTrade platform is not a "marketplace" as defined in National Instrument 21-101 Marketplace Operation since a marketplace is any facility that brings together multiple buyers and sellers by matching orders in fungible contracts in a nondiscretionary manner. FXTrade does not bring together multiple buyers and sellers; rather it offers clients direct access to interbank prices.

Forex Transactions in Ontario

23. Foreign exchange contracts and similar OTC derivative contracts, including Forex Transactions, when offered to investors in Ontario, may be considered to be "securities" under the Act.

24. Investors wishing to enter into Forex Transactions must open an account with the Applicant

25. Prior to a client's first Forex Transaction and as part of the account opening process, the Applicant will provide the client with a separate risk disclosure document that clearly explains, in plain language, the transaction and the risks associated with the transaction (the risk disclosure document). The risk disclosure document includes the required risk disclosure set forth in Schedule A to the Regulations to the QDA and leverage risk disclosure required under IIROC Rules. The risk disclosure document contains disclosure that is substantially similar to the risk disclosure statement required for recognized options in OSC Rule 91-502 Trades in Recognized Options (which provides both registration and prospectus exemptions) (OSC Rule 91-502) and the regime for OTC derivatives contemplated by OSC SN 91-702 and proposed OSC Rule 91-504 OTC Derivatives (which was not adopted) (Proposed Rule 91-504). The Applicant will ensure that, prior to a client's first trade in a Forex Transaction, a complete copy of the risk disclosure document provided to that client has been delivered, or has previously been delivered, to the Commission.

26. Prior to the client's first Forex Transaction and as part of the account opening process, the Applicant will obtain a written or electronic acknowledgement from the client confirming that the client has received, read and understood the risk disclosure document. Such acknowledgment will be separate and prominent from other acknowledgements provided by the client as part of the account opening process.

27. As customary in the industry, and due to the fact that this information is subject to factors beyond the control of the Applicant (such as changes in IIROC Rules), information such as the specific margin or leverage rates would not be disclosed in the risk disclosure document but are part of a client's account opening package and are available on both the Applicant's website and the on-line trading platform.

28. The role of the Applicant is limited to acting as an execution-only dealer. In connection with its role as execution-only dealer, the Applicant is, among other things, responsible for marketing, trade execution, administration of account opening and investor approval (including know-your-client diligence and suitability confirmations) for all Canadian clients.

29. IIROC Rules exempt member firms that provide execution-only services such as discount brokerages from the obligation to determine whether each trade is suitable for the client. However, IIROC has exercised its discretion to impose additional requirements on members proposing to trade in foreign exchange contracts and requires that:

(a) Applicable risk disclosure documents and client suitability waivers provided must be in a form acceptable to IIROC.

(b) The firm's policies and procedures, amongst other things, must assess the depth of investment knowledge and trading experience of the client to assess whether the product is appropriate for the client before an account is approved to be opened. IIROC has also imposed its proficiency requirements for futures trading on the Applicant's registered salespeople, who conduct the know your client and initial product suitability analysis, as well as their supervisory trading officer.

(c) Cumulative loss limits for each client's account must be established (this is a measure normally applied by IIROC in connection with futures trading accounts).

30. The Forex Transactions are offered in compliance with applicable IIROC Rules and other IIROC acceptable practices.

Rationale for the Requested Relief

31. The Requested Relief, if granted, would substantially harmonize the Commission's position on the offering of foreign exchange contracts to investors in Ontario with how those products are offered to investors in Quebec under the QDA. The QDA provides a legislative framework to govern derivatives activities within the province. Among other things, the QDA requires such products to be offered to investors through an IIROC member and the distribution of a standardized risk disclosure document rather than a prospectus in order to distribute foreign exchange contracts to investors resident in Quebec.

32. The Requested Relief, if granted, would be consistent with the guidelines articulated by OSC Staff in OSC SN 91-702. OSC SN 91-702 provides guidance with regards to the distributions of contracts for difference (CFDs), foreign exchange contracts (forex or FX contracts) and similar OTC derivative products to investors in Ontario.

33. The Commission has previously recognized that the prospectus requirement may not be well suited for the distribution of certain derivative products to investors in Ontario, and that alternative requirements, including requirements based on clear and plain language risk disclosure, may be better suited for certain derivatives. Both OSC Rule 91-502 and OSC Rule 91-503 Trades in Commodity Futures Contracts and Commodity Futures Options Entered into on Commodity Futures Exchanges Situate Outside of Ontario (OSC Rule 91-503) provide for a prospectus exemption for the trading of derivative products to clients. The Requested Relief is consistent with the principles and requirements of OSC Rule 91-502, OSC Rule 91-503 and Proposed Rule 91-504.

34. The Applicant also submits that the Requested Relief, if granted, would harmonize the Commission's position on the offering of foreign exchange contracts with certain other foreign jurisdictions that have concluded that a clear, plain language risk disclosure document is appropriate for retail clients seeking to trade in foreign exchange contracts.

35. The Applicant is of the view that requiring compliance with the prospectus requirements in order to enter into Forex Transactions with retail clients in Ontario would not be appropriate since the disclosure of a great deal of the information required under the prospectus and under the reporting issuer regime is not material to a client seeking to enter into a Forex Transaction. The information to be given to such a client should principally focus on enhancing the client's appreciation of product risk including counterparty risk. In addition, most Forex Transactions are of short duration (positions are generally opened and closed on the same day and are in any event marked to market and cash settled daily).

36. The Applicant is regulated by IIROC which has a robust compliance regime including specific requirements to address market, capital and operational risks.

37. The Applicant submits that the regulatory regimes developed by the AMF and IIROC for foreign exchange contracts, including Forex Transactions, adequately addresses issues relating to the potential risk to the client of the Applicant acting as counterparty. In view of these regulatory regimes, investors would receive little or no additional benefit from requiring the Applicant to also comply with the prospectus requirement.

38. The Requested Relief is conditional on the Applicant being registered as an investment dealer with the Commission and maintaining its membership with IIROC and that all Forex Transactions be conducted pursuant to IIROC Rules and in accordance with IIROC acceptable practices.

AND UPON the Commission being satisfied that to do so would not be prejudicial to the public interest;

IT IS ORDERED, pursuant to subsection 74(1) of the Act, that for the duration of the Interim Period (as defined below) the Requested Relief is granted, provided that:

(a) all Forex Transactions with residents in Ontario shall be executed through the Applicant;

(b) the Applicant remains registered as a dealer in the category of investment dealer with the Commission and a member of IIROC;

(c) all Forex Transactions with clients resident in Ontario shall be conducted pursuant to IIROC Rules imposed on members seeking to trade in foreign exchange contracts and in accordance with IIROC acceptable practices, as amended from time to time;

(d) all Forex Transactions with clients resident in Ontario be conducted pursuant to the rules and regulations of the QDA and the AMF, as amended from time to time, unless and to the extent there is a conflict between i) the rules and regulations of the QDA and the AMF, and ii) the requirements of Ontario securities law, the IIROC Rules and IIROC acceptable practices, in which case the latter shall prevail;

(e) prior to a client first entering into a Forex Transaction, the Applicant has provided to the client the risk disclosure document described in paragraph 25 and have delivered, or have previously delivered, a copy of the risk disclosure document provided to that client to the Commission;

(f) prior to the client's first Forex Transaction and as part of the account opening process, the Applicant has obtained a written or electronic acknowledgement from the client, as described in paragraph 26, confirming that the client has received, read and understood the risk disclosure document;

(g) the Applicant has furnished to the Commission the name and principal occupation of its officers or directors, together with either the personal information form and authorization of indirect collection, use and disclosure of personal information provided for in National Instrument 41-101 General Prospectus Requirements or the registration information form for an individual provided for in Form 33-109F4 of National Instrument 33-109 Registration Information Requirements completed by any officer or director;

(h) the Applicant shall promptly inform the Commission in writing of any material change affecting the Applicant, being any change in the business, activities, operations or financial results or condition of the Applicant that may reasonably be perceived by a counterparty to a derivative to be material;

(i) the Applicant shall promptly inform the Commission in writing if a self-regulatory organization or any other regulatory authority or organization initiates proceedings or renders a judgment related to disciplinary matters against the Applicant concerning the conduct of activities with respect to Forex;

(j) within 90 days following the end of its financial year, the Applicant shall submit to the Commission the audited annual financial statements of the Applicant and a statement presenting the number of transactions concluded with Ontario residents for any Forex offering to the public during the most recent financial year; and

(k) the Requested Relief shall immediately expire upon the earliest of

(i) four years from the date that this Order is issued;

(ii) the issuance of an order or decision by a court, the AMF or other similar regulatory body that suspends or terminates the ability of the Applicant to offer foreign exchange contracts to clients in Quebec; and

(iii) the coming into force in Ontario of legislation or a rule regarding the distribution of OTC derivatives to investors in Ontario (the Interim Period).

January 14, 2011

"Vern Krishna"
Commissioner
Ontario Securities Commission
 
"James D. Carnwath"
Commissioner
Ontario Securities Commission