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2. Knowing how to differentiate between compensation and commissions

In the Canadian financial landscape, semantic clarity is the foundation of ethics and compliance. For a financial advisor, understanding the difference between compensation and commission is not just a matter of vocabulary: it is a regulatory obligation related to client-oriented reforms.

2.1. Fundamental definitions

2.1.1. Compensation (= the overall concept)

Compensation refers to the total economic benefits received by a financial advisor or his firm. That’s the sum of all the cash inflows related to the practice of the profession.

  • Scope: it includes fixed salary, annual bonuses, benefits, consulting fees and commissions.
  • Professional use: this term is used to discuss the overall income structure of a financial advisor or when reporting annually to the client (DRF2 Report).

2.1.2. The commission (= the transactional mode)

The commission is a specific form of compensation triggered by a transaction or the holding of a financial product.

  • Scope: It includes sales commissions (acquisition fees), follow-up commissions (service fees) and life insurance commissions.
  • Professional use: This term is used to describe the cost of a specific product or the revenue sharing between a product manufacturer (e.g., a bank or insurer) and the brokerage firm.

2.2. Syntactic comparison table

AttributeCompensationCommission
NatureComprehensive and inclusive.Specific and related to the product.
TriggerEmployment contract or global customer relationship.Sale, purchase or maintenance of an asset.
Source ExampleFinancial planning fees (fixed).Monitoring fee of 0.5% on a fund.
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