Toronto Star

Investors to get $60M refund after securities crash

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Millions of dollars’ worth of cheques will soon be mailed to eligible investors who bought assetbacke­d commercial paper through certain Canadian investment firms shortly before the market for the securities collapsed in 2007.

According to the regulators overseeing the process, cheques worth a total of nearly $60 million plus accrued interest will be sent to eligible investors who bought the investment­s.

Asset-backed commercial paper, or ABCP, was seen as a conservati­ve short-term investment until mid-2007 when about $32 billion of asset-backed commercial paper became frozen. The problems arose amid fears that some of the paper was backed by U.S. sub-prime mortgages, at a time when defaults on that type of debt began to soar.

The cheques are from a settlement process overseen by the Ontario Securities Associatio­n and the Investment Industry Regulatory Organizati­on of Canada. They announced Thursday that Ernst & Young, which was appointed to administer the distributi­ons, began sending out notificati­ons this week.

The money comes from five Canadian financial institutio­ns that reached settlement­s in 2009 with the two financial market regulators.

Scotia Capital agreed to pay $28.95 million, CIBC paid $21.8 million, HSBC Canada agreed to $5.93 million, Canaccord Financial Ltd. $3.1 million and Credential Securities Inc. $200,000.

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