Understand public-company continuous disclosure requirements, including periodic, event-driven, and other disclosures.
On this page
Continuous disclosure requirements appears in the official CIRO Director and Executive Exam syllabus as part of Offering and distribution of securities. Questions here usually test whether you can identify the controlling rule, control, calculation, workflow, or escalation path in a realistic fact pattern rather than simply restate a definition.
What This Section Is Really Testing
The exam is usually less interested in whether you can repeat the heading than whether you can explain why it matters in the actual dealer, client, governance, capital, operations, market, or supervisory context. Start by identifying the participant, obligation, process, or risk that governs the situation, then ask what action, documentation, or consequence follows.
Learning Objectives
Understand public-company continuous disclosure requirements, including periodic, event-driven, and other disclosures.
Interpret disclosure obligations involving financial statements, MD&A, executive compensation, AIF, forward-looking information, business acquisition reports, restricted security disclosures, proxies, information circulars, and press releases.
Apply continuous-disclosure concepts, including certification and SEDAR+ and SEDI use, to a public-company scenario.
Exam Angle
The stronger answer usually classifies the participant, account, marketplace, report, control failure, or oversight duty first, then applies the rule to the exact context. Watch for fact patterns that blur documentation, supervision, escalation, calculations, and timing because that is where this syllabus language becomes exam-relevant.
Key Takeaways
Start by identifying which participant, account, process, control framework, or rule governs the fact pattern.
Translate the section heading into a practical consequence such as approval, calculation, documentation, reporting, monitoring, or escalation.
Treat this section as scenario logic, not as isolated terminology.