Four Financial Pillars of Canada

The Canadian financial system has historically been divided into four distinct legal areas — the four financial pillars. Each pillar represents a different category of financial institution with a different primary function. The lines between pillars have blurred significantly due to deregulation.

graph TD
    FS["Canadian Financial System"]
    FS --> P1["Pillar #1<br/>Chartered Banks"]
    FS --> P2["Pillar #2<br/>Alternate Banks"]
    FS --> P3["Pillar #3<br/>Specialized Lending &<br/>Savings Intermediaries"]
    FS --> P4["Pillar #4<br/>Investment Dealers"]

    P1 --> P1a["Big Six<br/>Schedule I & II"]
    P1 --> P1b["Deposit expansion<br/>Prime rate loans"]

    P2 --> P2a["Trust Companies<br/>(declining)"]
    P2 --> P2b["Credit Unions /<br/>Caisses Populaires"]

    P3 --> P3a["Life Insurance"]
    P3 --> P3b["Factoring Companies"]
    P3 --> P3c["Sales Finance"]
    P3 --> P3d["Consumer Finance"]
    P3 --> P3e["Venture Capital"]
    P3 --> P3f["Pension Funds"]

    P4 --> P4a["Buy/sell securities<br/>for investors"]
    P4 --> P4b["Primary & secondary<br/>markets"]

(diagram saved)


Pillar #1 — Chartered Banks

The largest and most important financial institutions in Canada. Privately owned, profit-seeking firms that serve individuals, businesses, and non-business organizations as financial intermediaries.

  • Assets: ~$4.34 trillion (March 2021)
  • Schedule I — Canadian-owned; no single interest can hold more than 10% of voting shares
  • Schedule II — foreign-controlled, or domestically owned but doesn’t meet the 10% limit
  • The Big Six: RBC, TD, Scotiabank, BMO, CIBC, National Bank — hold ~90% of all chartered bank assets; act in concert on the prime rate

Key functions:

  • Accept deposits (chequing, savings); make short- and long-term loans
  • Create money through deposit expansion (each deposit → reserve kept + rest lent → cycle repeats)
  • Charge the prime rate — the lowest rate, available only to the most creditworthy borrowers
  • Secured loans (collateral-backed) vs. unsecured loans (promise only)

See CharteredBanks for full detail.


Pillar #2 — Alternate Banks

Alternate banks operate alongside chartered banks and include trust companies and credit unions/caisses populaires.

Trust Companies

  • Safeguard funds and estates
  • Three corporate roles: trustee (protects bondholders), transfer agent (records ownership changes), registrar (certifies stock issues)
  • Also accept deposits and pay interest
  • Declining in importance — many absorbed by chartered banks or insurance companies

Credit Unions / Caisses Populaires

  • Member-owned cooperatives formed by groups with common interests
  • Lend short-term, long-term, and mortgage funds to members; accept deposits; invest in securities
  • Pay dividends to members when profitable
  • Mouvement Desjardins = largest credit union federation in North America (7.5M members)
  • Growing in popularity — offer similar services to banks with a cooperative model

See AlternateBanks for full detail.


Pillar #3 — Specialized Lending and Savings Intermediaries

Serve specific financing niches rather than providing general banking. Includes six distinct types:

TypeWhat They DoKey Detail
Life Insurance CompaniesShare risk via premiums; invest in mortgages & bonds2nd largest intermediary in Canada; $860B+ invested
Factoring CompaniesBuy accounts receivable at a discount; collect full face valueFirm gets cash now; factor absorbs collection risk
Sales Finance CompaniesFinance instalment purchasesThe purchased item serves as security for the loan
Consumer Finance CompaniesMake personal loans; often no collateral requiredDo not lend to businesses
Venture Capital FirmsEquity investment in high-potential firmsMay demand 50%+ ownership + board seat
Pension FundsAccumulate contributions; invest; pay out to subscribers laterAging population = long-term funding concern

See SpecializedLendingIntermediaries for full detail.


Pillar #4 — Investment Dealers

Investment dealers buy and sell securities (stocks, bonds) on behalf of investors. They act as agents/brokers — they do not accept deposits.

  • Earn fees and commissions rather than interest-rate spreads
  • Operate in primary markets (underwriting new issues of stocks/bonds for companies) and secondary markets (facilitating trading between investors)
  • Regulated by IIROC (Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada)
  • Examples: RBC Dominion Securities, TD Waterhouse, BMO Nesbitt Burns

Why this pillar is hard to find in the textbook: The Investment Dealers section falls on pages of the Ch14 PDF that were blanked out in the printed copy. The intro paragraph (p.14) confirms it as Pillar #4.


The Blurring of the Four Pillars

Deregulation has significantly blurred the boundaries between pillars:

  • Banks (Pillar #1) can now own securities dealers, establish subsidiaries to sell mutual funds, and sell commercial paper — overlapping with Pillar #4
  • Trust companies (Pillar #2) have declined; most absorbed by Pillar #1 or Pillar #3 institutions
  • The lines between all four pillars continue to erode as financial services consolidate
graph LR
    P1["Pillar #1<br/>Chartered Banks"] -->|"now own"| P4["Pillar #4<br/>Investment Dealers"]
    P1 -->|"absorbed many"| P2["Pillar #2<br/>Trust Companies"]
    P1 -->|"sell mutual funds<br/>& commercial paper"| P3["Pillar #3<br/>Specialized Intermediaries"]
    style P1 fill:#c0392b,color:#fff
    style P2 fill:#7f8c8d,color:#fff
    style P3 fill:#2980b9,color:#fff
    style P4 fill:#27ae60,color:#fff

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How It Appears Per Course

ADMN 201

Covered under LO 14.4 (Ch14: Money & Banking). The four pillars are the organizational framework for understanding Canada’s financial system. The exam may ask you to name all four pillars, distinguish their functions, or identify which type of institution belongs to which pillar.


Key Points for Exam/Study

  • Pillar #1 — Chartered Banks: largest; deposit expansion; prime rate; Big Six; Schedule I vs. II
  • Pillar #2 — Alternate Banks: trust companies (trustee, transfer agent, registrar; declining) + credit unions (cooperative; Desjardins = #1 in N. America)
  • Pillar #3 — Specialized Intermediaries: life insurance (2nd largest), factoring (buy AR at discount), sales finance (instalment), consumer finance (personal loans), VC (50%+ equity), pension funds
  • Pillar #4 — Investment Dealers: buy/sell securities; fees not interest; primary + secondary markets; IIROC-regulated
  • Blurring: banks can now own securities dealers and sell mutual funds — pillars are no longer clearly separate

Cross-Course Connections

CharteredBanks — deep dive on Pillar #1
AlternateBanks — deep dive on Pillar #2
SpecializedLendingIntermediaries — deep dive on Pillar #3
BankOfCanada — regulates chartered banks; separate from the four pillars
Money — the four pillars all facilitate the flow of money through the economy
ADMN201-Ch14 — chapter summary where the four pillars are introduced