CSI DFOL study guide for opening and maintaining institutional options accounts, with learning objectives, options workflow cues, and exam traps.
Opening and Maintaining Institutional Options Accounts belongs to the CSI Derivatives Fundamentals and Options Licensing Course Opening and Maintaining Option Accounts exam topic, weighted at 25%. Study it as an options and derivatives workflow lesson: DFOL questions usually ask whether you can identify the instrument, payoff intent, account permission, margin implication, order workflow, clearing role, tax effect, or contract adjustment before choosing the next step.
| Concept | What to know for DFOL review |
|---|---|
| Derivative structure | Describe how corporate option accounts are opened and documented |
| Payoff or exposure cue | Differentiate acceptable institutions from other institutional account types for options-account purposes |
| Account or permission cue | Explain how the know-your-client rule applies to institutional options accounts |
| Margin or collateral cue | Identify which option transactions are permissible for pension plans, insurance companies, and trust companies in Canada at a high level |
| Market-structure cue | Recognize special considerations when a Canadian mutual fund operates an institutional options account |
| Tax or adjustment cue | Apply institutional account-opening and suitability concepts to a realistic options-account scenario |
| Exam trap | Determine whether an institutional client’s status or mandate affects the documentation, KYC depth, or permissible options activity |
| Risk control | Distinguish opening corporate option accounts from opening acceptable-institution accounts when documentation or authority differs |
DFOL questions often blend product mechanics with account workflow. The stronger answer identifies the derivative structure first, then checks the strategy intent, risk and reward profile, client approval, margin or collateral treatment, order-entry requirement, clearing or exchange role, and any special contract or tax consideration.
Do not treat this as a formula-only paper. Payoff logic matters, but many high-value questions are about whether the account can hold the position, whether the margin or approval is sufficient, who performs the market-structure function, or how an adjustment changes the listed option contract.
| If the stem shows… | Prefer an answer that… |
|---|---|
| a payoff, premium, strike, or expiry fact | identifies call or put, buyer or writer, and strategy purpose before calculating |
| account opening, permissions, or suitability facts | checks approval level, documentation, risk disclosure, margin, and supervision |
| exchange, clearing, market maker, or order language | assigns the right role in listed-options infrastructure |
| split, dividend, right, index, or currency option facts | checks contract terms, settlement features, and special risks before applying a generic equity-option answer |
Start by naming the instrument or workflow issue in plain language. Then decide whether the question is about payoff, pricing input, hedging, speculation, strategy fit, account workflow, tax treatment, clearing, exchange function, market making, or contract adjustment. That classification prevents a common DFOL error: solving a product problem when the stem is really testing account or infrastructure rules.
Keep the Canadian listed-options frame active. Option-account approval, margin, order handling, exchange and clearing roles, tax treatment, institutional accounts, and special non-equity risks can change the best answer even when the payoff looks familiar.
After each practice set, tag misses by first failed step: instrument identification, payoff logic, pricing input, hedge versus speculation, account approval, margin, order handling, tax, clearing, exchange, adjustment, or special contract risk.
For final review, summarize this section in three lines: the instrument or workflow issue, the risk or rule that controls the answer, and the reason the best response is safer than the nearest distractor.
Return to the DFOL guide for the full exam-topic table, or use the DFOL Cheat Sheet for payoffs, strategy tables, margin cues, and final review prompts.