Investors will benefit from a single regulator: CBA chief

By Art Melo | April 28, 2004 | Last updated on April 28, 2004
3 min read
  • Goodale ready to move on regulatory reform
  • Single securities regulator forecast for 2005
  • National securities regulator would save $40 million a year, study says
  • Regulatory reform goes beyond politics, Phelps says
  • Federal committee calls for single national securities regulator

    Longer term, if Protti’s predictions prove accurate, the single-regulator concept has other applications for simplifying the lives of advisors and their clients in areas such as the property and casualty insurance sector, which is regulated both by provinces for products such as auto insurance and federally by the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions for financial stability.

    Still, while the CBA’s Protti pitches the benefits of the single regulatory regime for governments, investors and businesses looking for capital, it can be argued that individual bank CEOs have said little on this issue, a reserve they did not have with earlier issues such as sale of insurance through bank branches and their perceived need for mergers.

    One answer could be that while staying determinedly neutral on the merger issue, the CBA needs a less controversial, more palatable and broadly agreeable issue on which to hang its proverbial hat, since some senior bankers are now questioning the CBA’s relevancy and what they get for their membership dues. As a result, the CBA needs to demonstrate it still has a role to play in speaking for Canadian banks, according to a source contacted by Advisor.ca.

    Campaigning on the broadly agreed need for regulatory reform, whether resulting in a single regulatory regime or other model, provides the CBA with such a role.

    • • •

    Art Melo is a financial services writer based in Toronto.

    (04/28/04)

    Art Melo

  • Goodale ready to move on regulatory reform
  • Single securities regulator forecast for 2005
  • National securities regulator would save $40 million a year, study says
  • Regulatory reform goes beyond politics, Phelps says
  • Federal committee calls for single national securities regulator

    Longer term, if Protti’s predictions prove accurate, the single-regulator concept has other applications for simplifying the lives of advisors and their clients in areas such as the property and casualty insurance sector, which is regulated both by provinces for products such as auto insurance and federally by the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions for financial stability.

    Still, while the CBA’s Protti pitches the benefits of the single regulatory regime for governments, investors and businesses looking for capital, it can be argued that individual bank CEOs have said little on this issue, a reserve they did not have with earlier issues such as sale of insurance through bank branches and their perceived need for mergers.

    One answer could be that while staying determinedly neutral on the merger issue, the CBA needs a less controversial, more palatable and broadly agreeable issue on which to hang its proverbial hat, since some senior bankers are now questioning the CBA’s relevancy and what they get for their membership dues. As a result, the CBA needs to demonstrate it still has a role to play in speaking for Canadian banks, according to a source contacted by Advisor.ca.

    Campaigning on the broadly agreed need for regulatory reform, whether resulting in a single regulatory regime or other model, provides the CBA with such a role.

    • • •

    Art Melo is a financial services writer based in Toronto.

    (04/28/04)