Canadian Securities Regulators Announce New Measures to Promote Competitiveness of Canada’s Capital Markets
In response to ongoing uncertainty in global capital markets, the Canadian Securities Administrators (CSA) recently published three coordinated blanket orders (the “Blanket Orders”) intended to reduce the regulatory burden and provide increased flexibility for publicly-listed issuers in Canada. The Blanket Orders represent the first in a series of steps the CSA plan to implement to support the competitiveness of Canada’s capital markets by making it easier and more cost-effective to raise capital in Canada without sacrificing investor protection.
The Blanket Orders, being, collectively, Coordinated Blanket Order 41-930 Exemptions from Certain Prospectus and Disclosure Requirements, Coordinated Blanket Order 45-930 Prospectus Exemption for New Reporting Issuers, and Coordinated Blanket Order 45-933 Exemption from the Investment Limit under the Offering Memorandum Prospectus Exemption to Exclude Reinvestment Amounts, came into force on April 17, 2025 and are subject to term limits in each jurisdiction, which may be extended by the CSA. In Ontario, the initial term for the Blanket Orders expires on October 16, 2026.
Key Regulatory Changes
The Blanket Orders include the following key regulatory changes:
1. Reduced Historical Financial Statement Disclosure for IPOs
Under existing Canadian securities laws, issuers must include three years of audited financial statements and related management’s discussion and analysis in their IPO prospectus, subject to limited exceptions. The Blanket Orders reduce this requirement to two years for all issuers conducting an IPO. The new two-year requirement also applies to financial statements required for an acquiror in a management information circular or take-over bid circular for a transaction involving the issuance of securities of the acquiror to target securityholders.
2. New Prospectus Exemption for IPO Issuers
Under the Blanket Orders, during the 12 months following an underwritten IPO, issuers that meet certain conditions will be permitted to raise up to the lesser of $100,000,000 or 20% of the aggregate market value of the issuer’s listed equity securities without filing a prospectus, provided the follow-on offering involves the same class of securities issued on the IPO and the offering price is not less than the IPO price. To rely on the exemption, the issuer must, among other conditions, be listed on a Canadian stock exchange and file a news release and offering document before soliciting offers to purchase. The offering document must include, among other information:
- details of the offering;
- disclosure of any material fact relating to the offering;
- description of the issuer’s objectives, recent developments and use of proceeds;
- disclosure of the involvement of underwriters or dealers in connection with the offering, including details regarding compensation, fees, commissions and conflicts;
- if proceeds of the offering are to be allocated to a “significant acquisition”, the disclosure that would be required in a prospectus; and
- if comparable rights are not otherwise available under applicable securities laws in the jurisdiction, contractual rights to cancel the agreement within two days of purchase and to rescind or sue for damages if there is a misrepresentation in the offering document or certain other documents.
It will be interesting to see how this new prospectus exemption is used by market participants in practice, and whether it will significantly modify the customary “bought deal” and other well-established processes.
3. Other Changes
The Blanket Orders also implement changes to: (i) reduce the circumstances under which a promoter certificate is required in a prospectus; (ii) permit marketing materials utilized during the waiting period to include certain specified pricing information that is not disclosed in the preliminary prospectus (which gives issuers and dealers flexibility to change the size and pricing of an offering without filing an amendment to the preliminary prospectus); and (iii) in Alberta, Ontario, Québec, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Saskatchewan, increase the investment limit in the offering memorandum exemption for certain eligible investors to allow for reinvestment of proceeds within a 12-month period (there is no such limit in the other CSA jurisdictions).
Future Relief for Canadian Markets
The CSA’s new measures, implemented against the backdrop of a general decline in activity across Canada’s capital markets and protectionist trade measures by the U.S., are one step towards revitalizing Canada’s capital markets. We are pleased the CSA are seeking to reduce the regulatory burden on Canadian public issuers and believe these changes are generally a positive development. However, more concrete steps are needed to encourage businesses to list and stay listed on Canadian stock exchanges. For additional insights into the problem and potential solutions, please see here.
For further information regarding these developments and how they impact your company, please contact any member of our Capital Markets Group.
Expertise
Authors
Insights
-
Capital Markets
Proxy Advisors Release Updated Canadian Voting Guidelines for 2026
Ahead of the 2026 proxy season, Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) and Glass Lewis, North America’s two leading proxy advisory firms, have released updates to their Canadian benchmark proxy… -
Capital Markets
SCC Affirms Broad and Contextual Interpretation of “Material Change”
The Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) has provided further guidance on what may constitute a “material change” under Ontario securities law and the leave test for bringing a claim for failure to make… -
Capital Markets
CSA Proposes Amendments to Align Non-GAAP Financial Measures Disclosure Framework with IFRS 18
On November 13, 2025, the Canadian Securities Administrators (CSA) published a notice and request for comment regarding proposed amendments to National Instrument 52-112 – Non-GAAP and Other Financial… -
Capital Markets
Canadian Securities Administrators Propose Semi-Annual Reporting Pilot Project
On October 23, 2025, the Canadian Securities Administrators (CSA) announced a pilot project to allow certain venture issuers to voluntarily adopt semi-annual financial reporting (the “SAR Pilot”). The… -
Capital Markets
Pre-Budget Consultations by The Coalition to Support Investment in Canada
On August 27, 2025, The Coalition to Support Investment in Canada made written submissions in response to the Canadian government’s 2025 pre-budget consultations. The submissions seek to foster… -
Capital Markets
The Going Public Alternative
Since 2023, publicly listed Canadian senior living companies1 have generated strong returns for investors and have been some of the best performing issuers in Canada’s public real estate sector. With…
Featured Work
-
Banking and Financial Services
Doman Building Materials Group completes reopening of C$170 million senior notes
Goodmans LLP advised Doman Building Materials Group Ltd. in connection with the closing of its offering of an additional C$170 million aggregate principal amount of its 7.50% Senior Unsecured Notes… -
Capital Markets
Brookfield Corporation completes C$250 million preferred share offering
Goodmans LLP acted as counsel for the underwriters in connection with the offering by Brookfield Corporation (“Brookfield”) of 10,000,000 Class A Preference Shares, Series 54 (“Preferred Shares… -
Banking and Financial Services
Algoma Steel secures C$500 million in government financing facilities
Goodmans LLP acted for Algoma Steel Group Inc. in connection with its C$500 million financing transaction with the Governments of Canada and Ontario… -
Capital Markets
Brookfield Infrastructure Corporation announces at-the-market equity issuance program
Goodmans LLP acted as Canadian counsel for the agents in connection with the “at-the-market” equity issuance program (the “ATM Program”) of Brookfield Infrastructure Corporation (the “BIPC… -
Capital Markets
Brookfield Asset Management Ltd. completes US$1 billion cross-border senior notes offering
Goodmans LLP acted as Canadian counsel for the underwriters in connection with a public offering by Brookfield Asset Management Ltd. (“BAM”) of (i) US$600 million principal amount of senior notes due… -
Capital Markets
CIBC Capital Markets leads C$700 million Oxford Properties Group Trust debt offering
Goodmans LLP acted for CIBC Capital Markets and the agents in connection with their role as Joint Bookrunner for a C$700 million senior unsecured notes offering for Oxford Properties Group Trust…
News & Events
-
Banking and Financial Services
Goodmans Receives Top-Tier Recognition from The Legal 500 Canada 2026
We are pleased to announce Goodmans has once again received top-tier recognition from The Legal 500 Canada in their 2026 Guide.Recognition from The Legal 500 is based on independent research and… -
Banking and Financial Services
IFLR1000 2025 Recognizes Goodmans Lawyers and Practices
We are proud to announce Goodmans is once again recognized by IFLR1000 in its annual guide.Recognition in IFLR1000 is based on a combination of in-depth qualitative research and direct client… -
Banking and Financial Services
Goodmans Recognized in the Best Law Firms - Canada 2026
Goodmans is pleased to share we are once again featured in the Best Law Firms - Canada 2026, recognizing us as one of Canada’s most exceptional law firms across 42 industries and practices.We are also…