On May 14, 2026, the Canadian Securities Administrators (CSA) issued a Notice and Request for Comment proposing wide-ranging amendments to the issuer bid, take-over bid, and early warning reporting regimes, including the introduction of a new issuer bid exemption for selective repurchases.
The proposed amendments form part of the CSA’s broader efforts to strengthen the competitiveness of Canada’s capital markets and are intended to provide issuers with greater flexibility to repurchase their own securities, enhance transparency regarding ownership of derivative interests in specified circumstances, clarify existing requirements, and reduce regulatory burden. The comment period expires on August 12, 2026.
Under the Canadian issuer bid regime, an issuer seeking to acquire or redeem its own securities from one or more securityholders must comply with the formal issuer bid requirements set out in National Instrument 62-104 –Take-Over Bids and Issuer Bids (NI 62-104), unless an exemption is available. Although NI 62-104 includes a “private agreement” exemption from the take-over bid requirements (i.e., permitting an offeror to purchase securities from a limited number of sellers, subject to certain conditions), there is currently no analogous exemption from the issuer bid requirements. As a result, issuers that wish to undertake privately negotiated, selective repurchases from particular securityholders must generally obtain exemptive relief from securities regulatory authorities.
Stakeholders have previously observed that the Canadian issuer bid framework may be overly restrictive in this area, particularly given that selective repurchases are permitted in the United States. The inability of significant shareholders to have larger blocks of their holdings selectively repurchased by the issuer may lead instead to sales in the public market, resulting in an overhang that artificially depresses the market price of the securities. In addition, significant shareholders resident in Canada can be disadvantaged relative to their peers in other jurisdictions, who may be able to participate in selective repurchases by an issuer—particularly where the issuer is not a reporting issuer in Canada.
To address these concerns, the CSA has proposed a new issuer bid exemption to permit selective repurchases of an issuer’s securities, subject to the following conditions:
The CSA has also proposed new guidance in National Policy 62-203 –Take-Over Bids and Issuer Bids (NP 62-203) regarding selective offshore repurchases, clarifying that while offers made to securityholders who are not in Canada or residents of Canada technically fall beyond the definition of an “issuer bid”, the CSA retains public interest jurisdiction over such transactions. In general, offshore repurchases would not raise public interest concerns if the issuer conducts the repurchase in the circumstances and manner described in the proposed selective repurchase exemption.
The CSA has proposed amendments to NI 62-104, National Instrument 51-102 – Continuous Disclosure Obligations and related forms to introduce new disclosure requirements relating to equity equivalent derivatives and other arrangements that alter economic exposure to an issuer. The proposed requirements would apply in the context of take-over bids and proxy solicitations for which an information circular is required.
For bidders, the amendments would require (i) prescribed disclosure in a take-over bid circular of any interests in equity equivalent derivatives and other similar arrangements held during the six-month period preceding the bid, (ii) news release disclosure of changes in economic exposure during the pendency of a bid, and (iii) disclosure of past or present relationships with counterparties that could be perceived to affect the counterparty’s decisions regarding the issuer’s securities. For soliciting securityholders, the amendments would deem an acquiror who is a counterparty to an equity equivalent derivative to have acquired control or direction over the underlying reference securities during the pendency of a proxy solicitation campaign (thereby requiring early warning-style disclosure of changes in their aggregate economic position), and would require comparable disclosure of derivative interests, economic exposure, and past or present counterparty relationships in dissident proxy circulars.
The CSA has also proposed guidance on when the disclosure or use of equity equivalent derivatives may engage securities regulatory authorities’ public interest jurisdiction.
A new provision in NI 62-104 would deem securities held by a person at the time an issuer becomes a reporting issuer to have been acquired at that time, clarifying that holders of 10% or more of a class of securities must file an early warning report upon the issuer’s transition to reporting issuer status. New provisions would also deem each person acting jointly or in concert with other securityholders to have acquired (or, upon cessation of the joint actor relationship, disposed of) the securities held by the other joint actors. Under the current regime, no early warning report is required upon the formation of a joint actor relationship among securityholders who collectively hold 10% or more of a class of securities, but who individually hold less than 10%, absent the acquisition or disposition of securities.
The proposed amendments would also clarify the trigger for subsequent filings under both the early warning system and the alternative monthly reporting (AMR) system in various contexts, including following an issuer action and during a non-exempt take-over bid or issuer bid.
In addition, the CSA has proposed guidance in NP 62-203 regarding disclosure of plans or future intentions in early warning reports. The guidance would clarify that a significant shareholder subject to the reporting requirements (i) should re-assess the accuracy of its disclosure in respect of plans or future intentions every time the requirement to file an early warning report is triggered, (ii) should update its disclosure as soon as a change in plans or future intentions occurs or if it or any joint actor has taken irrevocable steps to effect a potential transaction, and (iii) that significant steps by a significant shareholder or joint actor may, individually or taken together, constitute a change in the plans or future intentions disclosed in the most recent early warning report.
The proposed amendments include several additional changes to the take-over bid and issuer bid regimes:
The CSA is accepting comments on the proposed amendments until August 12, 2026. The authors are available to discuss any aspect of the proposed amendments or assist readers in preparing comments for submission to the CSA.
To discuss these issues, please contact the author(s).
This publication is a general discussion of certain legal and related developments and should not be relied upon as legal advice. If you require legal advice, we would be pleased to discuss the issues in this publication with you, in the context of your particular circumstances.
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