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Cboe Canada
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Cboe Canada (formerly NEO Exchange) is a stock exchange based in Toronto.[2] Part of the Cboe Global Markets network, the exchange has over 260 listings for public companies, exchange-traded funds (ETFs), Canadian Depositary Receipts (CDRs), Special Purpose Acquisition Companies (SPACs), and closed-end funds. Cboe Canada handles 15% of the volume traded across Canadian marketplaces, including 20% of Canadian ETF transactions.[3]
Key Information
History
[edit]NEO Exchange received a recognition order from the Ontario Securities Commission on November 17, 2014[4] and commenced trading of 45 Toronto Stock Exchange-listed securities on March 27, 2015. On the first day, about 6.1 million securities worth approximately $106.3 million were traded on the exchange.[5]
In January 2016, NEO secured its first listing: the Invesco PowerShares DWA Global Momentum Index ETF, which began trading on March 31, 2016.[6][7] In September 2016, BlackRock Asset Management Canada Ltd. announced their intention to change the listing venue of five iShares exchange-traded funds, consisting of 12 listings in total, from the Toronto Stock Exchange to NEO. The transition of all 12 listings was completed on February 22, 2017.[8][9]
In early 2017, Redwood Asset Management and BMO Asset Management separately announced plans to list exchange-traded funds on NEO for the first time, while Invesco Canada applied to list two additional PowerShares listings on NEO.[10][11][12] On April 20, 2017, Mackenzie Financial announced the imminent launch of a new Global High Yield Fixed Income ETF, becoming the fifth issuer to list on the NEO Exchange.[13]
Cannabis Strategies Acquisition Corp. (NEO:CSA.A), a special purpose acquisition corporation backed by Canaccord Genuity Corp., completed its initial public offering of US$125, 000, 000 and began trading its shares on December 21, 2017, becoming the first corporate issuer to list on the NEO Exchange.[14][15]
RBC Global Asset Management Inc. (RBC GAM) launched seven new ETFs that began trading on the NEO on Thursday, September 21, 2017.[16] It was the first time RBC GAM listed ETFs on NEO and the firm became the sixth provider to list on the exchange in 2017.[17]
Purpose Investments Inc. changed the listing venue for certain closed-end funds (CEFs) and unit-traded funds (UTFs) from the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX) to NEO Exchange on December 29, 2017. These investment funds will be the first of their kinds to list on NEO, and include the first products to launch on NEO under the Purpose brand.[18]
The NEO Exchange welcomed Nobilis Health (NEO:HLTH), the first company to complete a cross-listing on NEO and the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), on March 7, 2017.[19] Nobilis Health was previously listed on the TSX and chose to return to Canada because of NEO's focus on "liquidity, their investor communication services and the streamlined disclosure-based listing model, coupled with their unwavering dedication to meeting the needs of public companies and investors".[20]
The NEO Exchange welcomed three ETF providers in the first quarter of 2018, beginning in February when AGF Investment Inc. launched two new ETFs on NEO and Horizons ETFs Management (Canada) Inc. announced the launch of the Horizons Emerging Marijuana Growers Index ETF (NEO:HMJR).[21][22] On March 29, Evolve Funds Group Inc. launched Evolve Active Core Fixed Income ETF on NEO.[23]
By April 2018, NEO accounted for close to 10% of all Canadian equity trading (over 6%, excluding block trades), close to 20% of all Canadian ETF trading (over 10%, excluding block trades), and over 60 NEO-listed ETFs and closed-end fund symbols from 9 different issuers.[24]
On October 2, 2018, Starlight Capital became the tenth ETF provider to list funds on NEO, when they launched their first ETFs: the Starlight Global Real Estate Fund (ticker symbol SCGR) and the Starlight Global Infrastructure Fund (SCGI).[25][26][27]
Consolidated market data
[edit]Cboe Canada has consistently advocated for enhanced access to consolidated market data for Canadian investors, claiming retail investors and the majority of investment advisors have access only to a partial view of market as less than 35% of ETF trading activity and less than 60% of overall trading activity in TSX and TSXV-listed securities is reflected in TSX and TSXV data.[28]
In December 2015, Cboe Canada, then the NEO Exchange, filed a complaint with the Competition Bureau alleging the TMX Group was “using its dominant market position to maintain control over the pricing of market data in the Canadian capital markets.”[29] On November 21, 2016 the Competition Bureau concluded their investigation after determining the TMX Group's refusal to share the requested market data was likely not a violation of competition rules.[30]
In response to the Competition Bureau's decision to close their investigation, the NEO Exchange called on the Canadian Securities Administrators to “mandate access to consolidated market data for all investors, including retail investors and their investment advisors.”[31]
NEO Connect
[edit]NEO Connect is a fund distribution platform offered by Cboe Canada, allowing investment products not listed on an exchange be purchased and redeemed by investors, working through an IIROC dealer, in a similar fashion to publicly traded securities and exchange traded funds.[32] The platform streamlines the purchase and redemption process for prospectus mutual funds and offering memorandum funds,[33] making it easier and more cost-effective for investors and advisors to access investment products.
Invesco Canada became the first fund manufacturer to launch PTFs with NEO in 2015.[34][35] In April 2018, NEO Connect and software maker Univeris Corp. announced a partnership that will provide investors working through an MFDA dealer with direct access to NEO Connect investment products.[36][37] Vancouver-based First Block Capital's FBC Bitcoin Trust became available on the fund distribution platform in September 2018.[38][39]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Cboe Canada Listings". 2021-07-20.
- ^ New Aequitas Neo stock exchange launches in Toronto pitching 'fairness' in markets, CBC News, 27-March-2015
- ^ "Listings Directory | Cboe". NEO Exchange. Retrieved 2023-10-23.
- ^ New Aequitas stock exchange gets green light from OSC, CBC News, 17-November-2014
- ^ Trading begins on Aequitas NEO Exchange, TheStar.com, 27-March-2015
- ^ Upstart stock exchange Aequitas NEO snags first listing: a new PowerShares ETF, Financial Post, 28-January-2016.
- ^ PowerShares Canada launches global momentum ETF, Canada Newswire, 31-March-2016
- ^ Startup exchange Neo poaches a dozen listings from TSX, The Globe and Mail, 13-September-2016.
- ^ ISHARES RAFI ETFS MIGRATING TO NEO EXCHANGE TODAY/TOMORROW Archived 2017-09-03 at the Wayback Machine ETF Insight, 21-February-2017.
- ^ REDWOOD ASSET MANAGEMENT TO LAUNCH ETFS ON NEO Advisor.ca, 12-January-2017.
- ^ BMO to List New ETFs on NEO Marketsmedia.com, 07-February-2017.
- ^ INVESCO TO LAUNCH ETFS ON NEO IN 2017 Advisor.ca, 18-January-2017
- ^ Mackenzie to introduce new ETF on NEO exchange Investment Executive, 20-April-2017.
- ^ [1] The Globe and Mail, 07-November-2017.
- ^ [2] Aequitas NEO, 21-December-2017
- ^ [3] Advisor's Edge, 21-September-2017.
- ^ [4] Investment Executive, 21-September-2017.
- ^ [5] Investment Executive, 13-December-2017.
- ^ [6] Investment Executive, 5-March-2018.
- ^ [7] Financial Post, 20-December-2017.
- ^ [8] Wealth Professional, 12-February-2018.
- ^ [9] Wealth Professional,13-February-2018.
- ^ [10] The Globe and Mail, 1-April-2018.
- ^ [11] Wealth Professional, 18-April-2018.
- ^ [12] The Globe and Mail, 28-September-2018.
- ^ [13] Investment Executive, 2-October-2018.
- ^ [14] Wealth Professional, 3-October-2018.
- ^ A Regulatory Solution to Canada’s Market Data Problem BusinessWire, 21-November-2016
- ^ Aequitas files complaint about TMX Group to Competition Bureau over data pricing Canadian Business 08-December-2015
- ^ Canada competition watchdog finds TMX Group did not violate competition rules Reuters, 21-November-2016
- ^ Aequitas urges mandatory access to market data Wealth Professional, 28-November-2016
- ^ [15] Trader's Magazine, 4-April-2018
- ^ [16] Aequitas NEO
- ^ [17] The Globe and Mail, 19-April-2018.
- ^ [18] Business Wire, 12-November-2015.
- ^ [19] The Globe and Mail, 19-April-2018.
- ^ [20] Investment Executive, 19-April-2018.
- ^ [21] Investment Executive, 10-September-2018.
- ^ [22] The Globe and Mail, 10-September-2018.
Cboe Canada
View on GrokipediaHistory
Founding as NEO Exchange
NEO Exchange originated from Aequitas Innovations Inc., which was established in 2012 by a consortium of financial institutions and industry leaders seeking to create a more investor-focused alternative to the dominant Toronto Stock Exchange operated by TMX Group.[9][10] The initiative addressed concerns over high-frequency trading's disproportionate influence on market dynamics, aiming to prioritize long-term investors through innovative order protection rules and reduced maker-taker pricing incentives that favored speed over value.[11] Key backers included RBC Dominion Securities Inc., Barclays Capital Inc., and OMERS Capital Markets, which provided initial funding and strategic support to challenge TMX's market share.[10][12] NEO Exchange Inc. was formally incorporated on January 17, 2014, as a wholly-owned subsidiary of Aequitas Innovations, with regulatory approval granted by Canadian securities commissions to operate as a national exchange offering trading, listings, and market data services.[13] Jos Schmitt, who had begun developing the concept in 2012 in collaboration with RBC Capital Markets, co-founded and led the exchange as CEO, emphasizing a principles-based approach to market structure that protected against predatory trading practices.[10] Trading commenced on March 27, 2015, marking the first new Canadian equities exchange in over a decade, initially handling a subset of TSX-listed securities while building toward full market integration.[14][11] The founding raised approximately C$30 million in oversubscribed funding shortly before launch, broadening the shareholder base to include prominent figures such as Don Ross of Jones Gable & Co. and other market participants committed to fostering competition and efficiency.[15] This capital supported the deployment of a technology platform from MillenniumIT (now LSEG Technology) and the establishment of NEO's core principles: protecting client orders from non-displayed liquidity, minimizing information leakage, and promoting equitable access for retail and institutional traders alike.[16] By design, NEO avoided reliance on payment for order flow or aggressive rebates, positioning itself as a counter to the fee-driven models prevalent in the incumbent market.[17]Acquisition and Integration into Cboe Global Markets
In November 2021, Cboe Global Markets announced an agreement to acquire NEO Exchange Inc., a Canadian securities exchange operator, to expand its global equities and listings capabilities.[18] The deal, subject to regulatory approvals including from the Ontario Securities Commission, was expected to close in the first half of 2022.[10] The acquisition was completed on June 1, 2022, with Cboe gaining full ownership of NEO, thereby integrating its Canadian equities trading, listings, and data services into the parent company's global infrastructure.[2] [19] This followed the Ontario Securities Commission's approval on May 27, 2022, of the related acquisition of Aequitas Innovations Inc., NEO's parent entity, by Cboe Canada Holdings ULC, simplifying the ownership structure while maintaining NEO's operational independence initially.[20] Post-acquisition integration focused on aligning NEO's operations with Cboe's standards, including technology upgrades and structural unification. On December 18, 2023, Cboe Canada announced plans to consolidate its Canadian subsidiaries under a single entity and migrate the NEO trading platform—encompassing lit venues NEO-L and NEO-N, and dark venue NEO-D—to Cboe's proprietary Titanium technology platform, targeted for the first quarter of 2025.[3] This 15-month process culminated on March 3, 2025, when the migration was successfully executed, enabling enhanced performance, lower latency, and seamless connectivity with Cboe's global systems without disrupting trading activities.[6] [21] The integration preserved NEO's regulatory compliance as a recognized Tier-1 exchange under Canadian securities rules while leveraging Cboe's expertise in scalable market infrastructure.[22]Rebranding and Operational Unification
Following the acquisition of NEO Exchange by Cboe Global Markets on June 1, 2022, the exchange underwent a rebranding to Cboe Canada in 2023, aligning its identity with the parent company's global brand while maintaining its Canadian operations.[2][1] On December 18, 2023, Cboe Canada announced the formal unification of its Canadian operations, integrating the NEO Exchange lit and dark trading venues with the previously acquired MATCHNow dark pool and other related entities under a single legal structure.[3] This process received regulatory approvals from Canadian securities authorities, culminating in the amalgamation of NEO Exchange Inc., TriAct Canada Marketplace LP (operator of MATCHNow), and affiliated entities into Cboe Canada Inc., effective January 1, 2024.[23] The unification aimed to streamline governance, compliance, and market data dissemination while preserving distinct trading functionalities.[3] As part of the operational integration, Cboe Canada migrated its trading platform from the legacy NEO system to the Cboe Titanium technology infrastructure over a 15-month period, completing the transition on March 3, 2025.[6] This upgrade enhanced matching engine performance, latency, and scalability, enabling unified access to Cboe's global technology stack without disrupting ongoing trading.[6] The move supported consolidated market data feeds and improved interoperability across Cboe Canada's lit (NEO-L, NEO-N), dark (NEO-D, MATCHNow), and crossing facilities.[3][6]Technological Advancements and Recent Milestones
Cboe Canada completed a significant technological upgrade by migrating its NEO-L, NEO-N, and NEO-D trading books to the Cboe Titanium platform on March 3, 2025, concluding a 15-month integration process.[6] [24] This migration unified Cboe Canada's infrastructure with the global Cboe network's core technology, which had been rebranded as Cboe Titanium on January 15, 2025, to reflect its role in powering equities, options, and futures trading across multiple markets.[25] The platform incorporates modular architecture designed for high-performance matching engines, enabling sub-millisecond latency and scalability to handle peak volumes without proportional increases in hardware.[24] Post-migration, Cboe Canada's trading systems demonstrated enhanced efficiency, with reduced latency supporting higher messaging rates and trading volumes on the NEO platform.[24] Cboe Titanium receives weekly software updates informed by trader feedback, prioritizing reliability and customization for diverse order types and market conditions.[26] This iterative development contrasts with legacy systems by emphasizing real-time adaptability, as evidenced by seamless handling of increased activity following the upgrade.[24] In parallel, regulatory approvals on January 16, 2025, enabled new functionalities for the NEO trading books, including advanced order handling capabilities integrated with the Titanium platform.[27] These enhancements, stemming from proposed trading policy amendments filed in August 2024, facilitate improved liquidity provision and execution strategies tailored to Canadian market dynamics.[27] By mid-2025, the reengineered infrastructure had positioned Cboe Canada to process elevated transaction loads efficiently, marking a milestone in operational resilience.[24]Trading Platforms and Functionality
Lit Trading Venues (NEO-L and NEO-N)
NEO-L and NEO-N constitute Cboe Canada's lit trading venues, featuring displayed order books that provide visible liquidity and price discovery for Canadian equities. These platforms support continuous trading in securities listed across major Canadian exchanges, including Cboe Canada, the Canadian Securities Exchange (CSE), Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX), and TSX Venture Exchange (TSXV). As of the third quarter of 2022, NEO-L held a 5.8% share of total Canadian equity trading volume, while NEO-N accounted for 3.3%. Both venues prioritize broker preferencing in matching, allowing orders from the same broker to execute first, followed by distinctions between non-latency-sensitive traders (such as retail and institutional investors) and latency-sensitive traders (typically high-frequency firms).[28][29][30] NEO-L operates as a market-by-order (MBO) venue with a make-take fee model, displaying individual orders with broker attribution (unless anonymous) to enhance transparency. Matching follows price, then broker, NEO trader priority over latency-sensitive orders, and time sequencing. It includes a speed bump of 3-9 milliseconds on liquidity-removing orders from high-frequency traders to favor natural liquidity provision. Trading occurs from 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. ET in continuous mode, with extended hours until 5:00 p.m. for Cboe Canada-listed securities, plus opening and closing auctions using calculated prices to determine equilibrium. Supported order types encompass market, limit, pegged variants, iceberg, and auction-specific orders like market-on-open (MOO), with features for odd-lot and mixed-lot handling. NEO-L serves as the primary listing market for Cboe Canada securities, offering auctions exclusively for eligible listings, and integrates designated market makers who must maintain quotes 95% of core hours with specified size and spread requirements to earn volume allocation priority.[30][28][31] In contrast, NEO-N functions as an inverted, take-make venue with market-by-price (MBP) aggregation, displaying total visible volume at the national best bid and offer (NBBO) levels while maintaining pre-trade anonymity. Its matching algorithm employs price priority, followed by broker, NEO trader precedence, and a size-time mechanism that equally weights order size and resting time, with adjustments for last fill, to incentivize larger, persistent liquidity. A 3-9 millisecond speed bump applies to immediate-or-cancel (IOC) and fill-or-kill (FOK) orders from latency-sensitive participants. Extended hours from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. ET support broader access, but order durations are limited to day or good-til-time (GTT), excluding longer-term options. Order types include limit, mid-point pegged, iceberg, and short-sale designations, with odd lots executable only via IOC/FOK. NEO-N, a non-listing venue, emphasizes price improvement and reduced latency for aggressive flows through its inverted structure.[30][32][33] Both venues migrated to the Cboe Titanium platform in March 2025, unifying operations for enhanced reliability and low-latency execution across Cboe Canada's ecosystem. This integration supports self-trade prevention, protect-and-reprice mechanisms to avoid suboptimal fills, and bypass orders for routing efficiency. Retail participation has notably increased on these lit books, rising from 13% to 27% of volume in recent periods, correlating with faster execution times for non-professional orders.[6][30][34]Dark Trading Venues (NEO-D and MATCHNow)
NEO-D and MATCHNow represent Cboe Canada's dark trading venues, enabling anonymous execution of orders without pre-trade transparency to reduce market impact for institutional and retail participants. These platforms match buy and sell orders internally, typically at the midpoint of the national best bid and offer (NBBO), supporting securities listed on Cboe Canada as well as other Canadian exchanges like the TSX, TSXV, and CSE. Unlike lit venues, dark trading prioritizes confidentiality and price improvement opportunities, with NEO-D employing a taker-maker fee model that incentivizes liquidity provision and distinguishes retail flow for enhanced execution quality.[31][32][30] NEO-D operates as a continuous dark book, accepting non-displayed orders that execute against resting liquidity at the NBBO midpoint, subject to minimum size requirements under Universal Market Integrity Rules (UMIR) amended in 2022 to promote better access to dark liquidity. It supports trading in Cboe Canada-listed securities and other traded securities, with orders rejected if they specify expiry dates beyond the entry date. As of September 8, 2025, NEO-D's pre-open session aligns with MATCHNow, running from 7:00 a.m. to 9:30 a.m. ET, facilitating early liquidity accumulation without public dissemination. The venue's integration into Cboe Canada's unified operations, effective January 2024, preserved its distinct branding while migrating to the Cboe Titanium platform by March 3, 2025, enhancing matching speed and reliability.[35][36][37] MATCHNow, acquired by Cboe from Virtu Financial in August 2020, functions as Canada's largest equities dark pool by trading volume, capturing approximately 64.5% of total dark volume and over 3% of overall Canadian equity volume as of late 2022. This broker-neutral platform combines periodic call auctions with continuous execution, using conditional indications of interest (IOIs) to identify potential matches while maintaining full confidentiality—no orders or participant data are displayed publicly. It supports block-sized trades through features like "Willing to Trade," which allows liquidity seekers to probe for hidden interest without revealing specifics, and operates a dark order book that delays transmission to information processors until post-execution. MATCHNow's liquidity pool prioritizes broker-preferenced matches and provides midpoint execution for eligible orders, with recent fee structures including separate access charges for data distribution as of December 2024. Like NEO-D, it unified under Cboe Canada in January 2024 and completed Titanium migration in March 2025, ensuring seamless interoperability across venues.[3][38][39]Crossing Facility and Order Types
The Crossing Facility is Cboe Canada's electronic system for executing intentional crosses, operating exclusively during the continuous trading session from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. ET.[30] It enables members to submit and report pre-arranged trades, such as block crosses, without interacting with resting orders in the lit trading venues NEO-L or NEO-N, thereby isolating these executions from the continuous matching process in those books.[30][40] All crosses are free of charge to participants, with a monthly cross credit cap of $10,000 per member beyond which excess intentional crosses incur no fees.[41] Intentional crosses submitted to the facility must comply with pricing rules tied to the national best bid and offer (NBBO), typically executing at or within the NBBO to ensure equivalence or improvement over prevailing quotes.[40] Regular, contingent, internal, and derivative crosses require execution at the NBBO or better if only one side of the market is quoted, while bypass and specialty crosses (such as VWAP or basis trades) do not contribute to the national last sale price (NLSP) or daily high/low calculations.[30] Crosses support prices to four decimal places and can set the NLSP if they establish a new price level, subject to trade reporting and regulatory oversight under Universal Market Integrity Rules (UMIR).[30][40] Priority among crosses is determined by submission time, with no matching against external liquidity; executions occur systematically upon validation.[30] The Crossing Facility specializes in cross-specific order types rather than standard limit or market orders, focusing on intentional, pre-negotiated trades. Supported cross types include:| Cross Type | Description |
|---|---|
| Basis Cross | Executes basis trades relative to a benchmark, without impacting NLSP.[30] |
| Bypass Cross | Permits execution at an agreed price after satisfying better-priced visible orders via a bypass mechanism; does not set NLSP.[30][40] |
| Contingent Cross | Conditional execution tied to another trade or event, at or within NBBO.[30] |
| Derivative Cross | Facilitates crosses linked to derivative instruments, adhering to NBBO rules.[30] |
| Internal Cross | Internalizes trades within a member or affiliate, at or within NBBO.[30] |
| Regular Cross | Standard intentional cross at or within NBBO during continuous trading.[30][40] |
| VWAP Cross | Volume-weighted average price cross for algorithmic or block trading, without NLSP impact.[30] |
Products and Listings
Public Equity Listings
Cboe Canada operates as a senior stock exchange facilitating the listing of public equity securities for growth-stage issuers, positioning itself as an alternative to larger venues like the Toronto Stock Exchange for companies with innovative business models or those not qualifying under stricter criteria. Listings occur primarily on the NEO-L venue, which serves as the designated marketplace for primary equity issuances and ongoing trading of listed securities. The exchange emphasizes transparency, liquidity, and efficiency, attracting issuers in sectors such as technology, life sciences, and resource exploration.[42] Initial listing requirements for corporate issuers are structured around several financial and distribution standards to ensure viability and broad investor access. Under the Equity Standard, applicants must demonstrate shareholders' equity of at least $5 million, a public float market value of $10 million, at least 1 million publicly held securities, and a minimum of 150 public holders. Alternative pathways include the Net Income Standard, requiring $750,000 in net income from the last fiscal year or two of the three preceding years alongside the same float and distribution thresholds; the Market Value Standard, with $50 million in listed securities market value; or the Assets and Revenues Standard, mandating $10 million in each category. Special purpose acquisition companies (SPACs) face modified criteria, such as a $30 million public float without initial investor relations obligations. All standards necessitate at least two years of operating history, except where waivers are granted, and a $100,000 investor relations budget for the first 12 months.[42][43]| Standard | Shareholders' Equity | Net Income | Public Float MV | Publicly Held Securities | Public Holders |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Equity | $5M | N/A | $10M | 1M | 150 |
| Net Income | N/A | $750K (last FY or 2/3 FYs) | $10M | 1M | 150 |
| Market Value | N/A | N/A | $10M | 1M | 150 |
| Assets & Revenues | N/A | N/A | $10M | 1M | 150 |
Exchange-Traded Funds and Innovative Products
Cboe Canada serves as a primary listing venue for exchange-traded funds (ETFs) in Canada, hosting over 260 ETFs from leading issuers as of August 2025.[7] These listings emphasize innovative structures designed to meet evolving investor demands for targeted exposure, income generation, and alternative assets, distinguishing the exchange from traditional equity-focused platforms.[7] The platform's ETF ecosystem includes actively managed funds, leveraged products, and cryptocurrency-linked offerings, which have driven approximately 20% of Canada's total ETF trading volume to Cboe Canada.[46] Innovative ETF launches on Cboe Canada have accelerated in recent years, with notable debuts including Canada's first single-stock ETFs introduced by Purpose Investments on August 21, 2025.[7] These products provide leveraged exposure to individual blue-chip stocks alongside monthly income distributions, marking a shift toward concentrated, high-yield strategies previously more common in U.S. markets.[47] Similarly, Global X Investments Canada launched four BetaPro ETFs on August 12, 2025, offering 3x leveraged and inverse daily exposure to major Canadian equity indices, enabling sophisticated hedging and amplification tactics for institutional and retail traders.[48] Other pioneering products include cryptocurrency-enhanced funds, such as the Harvest Bitcoin Enhanced Income ETF (HBIX), listed in April 2025, which combines Bitcoin holdings with options strategies for capital appreciation and monthly distributions.[49] BMO Global Asset Management introduced active ETF series in 2023, focusing on structured solutions that blend ETF liquidity with customized risk profiles for sector-specific or thematic investments.[50] These developments underscore Cboe Canada's emphasis on accommodating dynamic issuers like Fidelity Investments Canada, which listed four new actively managed ETFs in May 2023 targeting innovation themes beyond traditional technology sectors.[51] Overall, the exchange's ETF listings facilitate broader access to non-traditional assets, supported by low-latency trading infrastructure tailored for high-volume, complex products.[34]NEO Connect for Non-Listed Securities
NEO Connect is a distribution platform operated by Cboe Canada that facilitates the electronic trading, purchase, and redemption of non-listed securities, including mutual funds, private funds, and shares in private corporations.[52] Launched in 2015 as part of the NEO Exchange ecosystem—initially under Aequitas Innovations—it enables investment dealers registered with the Canadian Investment Regulatory Organization (CIRO) to offer these illiquid assets to clients through integrated brokerage platforms. Following Cboe's acquisition of NEO on June 1, 2022, NEO Connect has been unified under Cboe Canada's operations, enhancing its technological infrastructure for broader distribution.[53] The platform digitizes traditionally paper-based non-listed securities, such as common stock, preferred shares, warrants, notes, and debt instruments, converting shareholder certificates into electronic form for visibility in investor accounts.[54] This process assigns unique ticker symbols to products like Platform Traded Vehicles (PTVs), which are special purpose vehicles aggregating retail investors into institutional-scale private opportunities, such as limited partnerships or stakes in early-stage companies.[55] For public companies with unlisted share classes, NEO Connect provides on-book settlement and management services, streamlining dealer handling without requiring full exchange listing.[54] Key functionalities include seamless redemption and conversion mechanisms: upon liquidation, merger, or initial public offering, PTV shares can transition to exchange-tradable status within days, rather than weeks, minimizing delays in liquidity access.[55] Investors benefit from consolidated account views where private holdings appear alongside listed equities and ETFs, improving transparency and oversight by financial advisors.[55] The platform supports efficient shareholder management for private issuers, reducing administrative burdens through automated workflows for issuance, transfers, and reporting.[56] By bridging the gap between private markets and dealer networks, NEO Connect enhances liquidity for non-listed assets while maintaining regulatory compliance under CIRO oversight.[52] Early adopters, such as Invesco Canada in 2015 for platform-traded funds, demonstrated its utility in democratizing access to alternative investments previously limited to high-net-worth individuals. Post-integration with Cboe's global technology, it has expanded capabilities for private corporates and funds, positioning it as a complementary service to Cboe Canada's listed trading venues.[53]Market Data Services
Consolidated Equities Data
The Cboe One Canada Feed, introduced by Cboe Global Markets on September 12, 2022, serves as the primary consolidated equities data service for Cboe Canada's trading venues.[57] This real-time feed aggregates quote, trade, and Aggregated Depth At Price (ADAP) information from multiple Cboe Canada platforms, including the lit trading on NEO-L and NEO-N, dark trading on NEO-D, and the MATCHNow dark pool.[58] By delivering this data through a unified protocol, the feed enables market participants to access a comprehensive snapshot of activity across these venues without needing separate subscriptions for each.[57] Coverage encompasses all Canadian-listed stocks and exchange-traded funds (ETFs) traded on Cboe Canada's infrastructure, supporting both depth-of-book and top-of-book views for efficient order routing and analytics.[58] The feed's design emphasizes low-latency dissemination, with multicast distribution available on-premise at Cboe's data centers in Secaucus, New Jersey, and Chicago, Illinois, as well as via cloud access through Amazon Web Services (AWS).[59] This infrastructure aligns with Cboe's broader Titanium technology platform, ensuring sub-millisecond performance for time-sensitive applications like algorithmic trading and compliance monitoring.[60] As of its launch, the Cboe One Canada Feed addressed fragmentation in Canadian equities data by consolidating intra-Cboe venue information, reducing operational complexity for clients compared to fragmented feeds from individual exchanges.[58] Pricing is structured on a tiered basis, with access fees varying by usage level—such as professional versus non-professional subscribers—and additional costs for depth data, promoting broader adoption among institutional investors and vendors.[60] Independent distributors, including dxFeed, have since integrated summary versions of the feed to extend reach, further enhancing its utility in third-party analytics tools as of July 2024.[61]Real-Time Feeds and Analytics Tools
Cboe Canada provides real-time market data feeds aggregating trading activity across its lit venues (NEO-L and NEO-N) and dark pools (NEO-D and MATCHNow), enabling subscribers to access unified quotes, trades, and volume information for Canadian equities.[58] The flagship offering, the Cboe One Canada Feed, launched in late 2022 following its announcement on September 6, 2022, delivers low-latency, comprehensive coverage including over 230 securities exclusively listed on the NEO Exchange.[62][63] This feed supports both top-of-book (Level 1) and full depth-of-book (Level 2) data, with real-time dissemination via multicast protocols for high-frequency applications.[64] The Cboe Canada Equities Multicast PITCH feed offers tick-by-tick granularity, capturing all order submissions, modifications, cancellations, and executions on the NEO platform in real time.[64] Designed for professional traders and data vendors, it provides depth-of-book visibility essential for algorithmic trading and market surveillance, with data structured for efficient parsing and low-latency delivery.[64] Access to these feeds is tiered by usage: display fees for NEO-N Level 1 and Level 2 data are free for professional, retail-professional, and non-professional users, while NEO-L equivalents incur $1.70 (Level 1) and $4.00 (Level 2) per user monthly for professionals; non-display analysis usage fees $500 per recipient for Level 1 or 2 across NEO-L and NEO-N.[65] Digital media licensing for public website distribution of real-time Level 1 and 2 data remains free as of February 1, 2025.[65] Analytics tools integrated with these feeds support risk assessment and trading strategy development, though primarily through non-display data entitlements rather than standalone products tailored exclusively to Canada.[60] Subscribers can leverage real-time feeds for custom analytics, such as volume analysis or liquidity metrics, with Cboe emphasizing cost-effective solutions for Canadian equities market participants.[60] Third-party distributors like dxFeed extend accessibility via the Cboe One Canada Summary Feed, aggregating real-time equities data for broader trader adoption since July 2024.[61] Real-time data for top-listed securities is also freely available via Cboe's public Market Activity portal, facilitating retail and institutional monitoring without subscription barriers.[66]Technology and Infrastructure
Platform Architecture and Migration to Cboe Titanium
Cboe Titanium serves as the core trading engine for Cboe Canada, featuring a high-performance, globally consistent architecture optimized for local markets while supporting equities, options, and futures trading across Cboe's international venues.[67] The platform employs protocols such as FIX 4.2 for order entry alongside Binary Order Entry (BOE) version 3, enabling efficient low-latency submissions, and delivers market data through Multicast PITCH feeds with redundant A and B streams on distinct infrastructure to enhance reliability.[68] [69] Connectivity is streamlined via a single physical link for both order entry and data feeds, available in 1 Gbps or 10 Gbps options, with primary operations at the Equinix TR2 data center in Toronto and disaster recovery at 350 Cermak in Chicago to minimize latency and ensure failover capabilities.[69] Prior to migration, Cboe Canada's NEO trading platform operated on a legacy system distinct from Cboe's global stack, which limited scalability and uniformity in client interfaces.[24] The transition to Cboe Titanium unified the NEO-L (lit equities), NEO-N (National Best Bid and Offer book), and NEO-D (dark trading) books under a single, resilient framework, completing a 15-month integration effort initiated in late 2023.[6] [70] The migration occurred on March 3, 2025, requiring participants to certify new sessions via the Cboe Customer Web Portal, establish physical connectivity with equalized latency of 8 microseconds, and adapt to updated billing with four-character firm IDs.[69] Most order types and trading hours remained unchanged, with detailed changes outlined in the NEO Platform Change Matrix.[69] Post-migration enhancements included a 45.5% reduction in FIX order latency, dropping from 105-115 microseconds to 60 microseconds, and BOE achieving 68.3% faster performance through the 90th percentile compared to FIX.[24] Time to first fill improved by 28.7% on NEO-L and 20.2% on NEO-N, while daily messaging capacity rose from 120.7 million to 173 million messages, supporting peak loads of 200 billion orders/quotes and 1 trillion messages on April 7, 2025, with 100% uptime across Cboe's 25 of 27 global platforms during volatility.[24] This architecture enables weekly software updates driven by client feedback, fostering scalability for features like Primary Peg orders and Dedicated Cores, pending regulatory approval, and provides a consistent global experience through shared protocols.[67][24]Key Trading Features and Performance Enhancements
Cboe Canada's trading platform incorporates specialized books tailored to different liquidity provision strategies, including the transparent NEO-L book, which employs a make-take fee model and supports price-broker-NEO trader-time priority matching; the hybrid NEO-N book with size-time priority and a speed bump delaying lit side taker orders by 3-9 milliseconds; the dark NEO-D book utilizing price-time priority with minimum average quantity commitments and contra elections; and the MATCHNow dark book featuring randomized 1-3 second call auctions at the mid-point for pro-rata allocation to maximize volume.[30] These books support diverse order types such as market, limit, mid-point, pegged variants (including primary peg to national best bid/offer and market peg to far side), immediate-or-cancel, fill-or-kill, iceberg, and conditional orders for block trading via Cboe BIDS Canada, which facilitates large trades exceeding 50 units or $100,000 notional with minimal market impact.[30] The crossing facility enables bypass and intentional crosses at or inside the national best bid and offer, free of charge, accommodating odd and mixed lots.[30] Following the March 3, 2025, migration to the Cboe Titanium platform, key enhancements include the introduction of Binary Order Entry (BOE), a low-latency protocol marking its first deployment in Canada, alongside a closing call blind auction on NEO-L and support for odd/mixed lots on NEO-N.[24] Planned additions pending regulatory approval encompass primary peg order modifiers and dedicated cores for members seeking optimized access.[24] Self-trade prevention mechanisms, such as suppress, cancel newest, or decrement-and-cancel options, further refine execution controls.[30] Performance improvements post-migration are evidenced by a 45.5% reduction in FIX protocol latency from 105-115 microseconds to 60 microseconds, with BOE achieving 68.3% faster latency at the 90th percentile compared to FIX.[24] Time to first fill decreased by 28.7% on NEO-L and 20.2% on NEO-N, enabling the platform to process 200 billion orders/quotes and 1 trillion messages on peak days like April 7, 2025, while supporting a 13.2% daily volume surge to 1.18 billion shares and 43.3% messaging increase to 173 million.[24] The platform maintained 100% uptime across 25 of Cboe's 27 global venues during heightened volatility, with overall reliability exceeding 99.9%, demonstrating enhanced scalability and resiliency.[24] Dedicated cores, proposed in October 2025, promise further latency reductions and throughput gains by isolating member processing from shared resources.[71]Regulatory Framework and Market Role
Oversight by Canadian Regulators
Cboe Canada Inc. is recognized as an exchange by the Ontario Securities Commission (OSC), the principal securities regulator for the marketplace, pursuant to section 21 of the Ontario Securities Act. This recognition, continued under a December 7, 2023, order following the amalgamation of NEO Exchange Inc. into Cboe Canada, subjects the exchange to ongoing compliance with Ontario securities law, including requirements for fair access, marketplace integrity, and investor protection.[72] The order mandates that Cboe Canada establish and maintain a Regulatory Oversight Committee comprising independent directors to oversee regulatory functions, risk management, and compliance with recognition terms, ensuring separation from commercial interests.[72] Pursuant to National Instrument 21-101 and related instruments, Cboe Canada is exempt from formal recognition as an exchange in the other twelve Canadian jurisdictions, with the OSC serving as the principal regulator coordinating multi-jurisdictional oversight through the Canadian Securities Administrators (CSA) framework.[73] This exemption, granted via a December 14, 2023, exempting order, requires the exchange to adhere to standardized marketplace rules across provinces, including timely reporting of significant changes, fee proposals, and operational modifications to the OSC for review and publication.[73] Regulators conduct periodic reviews of the exchange's operations, systems capacity, and conflict-of-interest policies to mitigate risks such as those arising from its integration with Cboe Global Markets, Inc. Trading activities on Cboe Canada fall under the supervisory purview of the Canadian Investment Regulatory Organization (CIRO), the self-regulatory organization responsible for enforcing the Universal Market Integrity Rules (UMIR) among participants.[40] CIRO oversees dealer members' compliance with trading conduct, best execution, and manipulation prevention standards, while the exchange itself implements front-line surveillance systems approved by regulators to detect irregularities in real-time.[31] This dual-layered oversight—securities commissions for marketplace structure and CIRO for participant behavior—aligns with Canada's decentralized regulatory model, where provincial authorities harmonize rules via CSA notices without a national securities commission.[74] Violations can result in enforcement actions, such as fines or trading halts, as evidenced by OSC approvals of exchange-proposed rule changes following regulatory scrutiny.[75]Competition and Market Share Dynamics
Cboe Canada competes primarily with TMX Group Ltd., the operator of the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX) and TSX Venture Exchange (TSXV), which together command the majority of trading volume in Canadian equities.[76] As of the second quarter of 2024, TMX venues held approximately 64% market share in trading of TSX and TSXV-listed issues, excluding intentional crosses.[76] TMX's dominance stems from its established position as the primary listing venue for large-cap and resource companies, extensive clearing and settlement infrastructure, and integrated data services. Other participants include alternative trading systems (ATS) like Alpha Exchange (also under TMX), the Canadian Securities Exchange (CSE), and Nasdaq CXC, though these collectively account for smaller portions of overall volume.[31] Cboe Canada's market share in Canadian cash equities trading has fluctuated between 12% and 15% in recent years, reflecting gradual encroachment on TMX's lead through technological differentiation and targeted product offerings.[77] In the third quarter of 2023, Cboe achieved 15.2% share, up from 12.2% in the same period of 2022, driven by migration to its high-performance Titanium platform and appeal to high-frequency traders seeking low-latency execution.[78] By the fourth quarter of 2024, this stood at approximately 14.3%.[79] More recent data shows stability, with 12.7% in July 2025 and 12.6% in September 2025, amid overall market volume growth of 4.4% year-over-year.[80][77] In TSX-listed securities specifically, Cboe's share reached 11.1% as of late 2022, compared to TMX's 61.7%.[28]| Period | Cboe Canada Market Share | TMX Group (TSX/TSXV) Share | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q3 2022 | 12.2% | N/A | [78] |
| Q3 2023 | 15.2% | N/A | [78] |
| Q4 2024 | 14.3% | N/A | [79] |
| Q2 2024 (TSX/TSXV issues) | N/A | 64% (excl. crosses) | [76] |
| July 2025 | 12.7% | N/A | [80] |
| September 2025 | 12.6% | N/A | [77] |
Performance and Impact
Trading Volume Trends and Growth Metrics
Since its acquisition by Cboe Global Markets in May 2023 and rebranding from NEO Exchange, Cboe Canada has experienced variable trading volume growth amid broader Canadian equities market expansion. Average daily volume (ADV) for Canadian cash equities reached 1.18 billion shares in August 2025, reflecting a 27% year-over-year increase, though down slightly 0.15% month-over-month.[77] By September 2025, matched shares totaled 192.6 million, up 29.6% from the prior year, contributing to national ADV of 1.57 billion shares, a 33% month-over-month rise.[84][85] A standout growth area has been Canadian Depositary Receipts (CDRs), with average daily notional value (ADNV) surging from $39.14 million in the first quarter of 2023 to $243.7 million in the fourth quarter of 2024, a 523% increase driven by expanded listings and investor interest in U.S. equities exposure via Canadian-traded instruments.[86] This product innovation has bolstered Cboe Canada's niche within the ecosystem, handling approximately 20% of Canadian ETF transactions overall. Market share metrics indicate steady but fluctuating positioning, with Cboe Canada capturing 12.25% of total Canadian equities volume as of early October 2025.[85] Quarterly data shows a decline from 15.0% in the second quarter of 2024 to 12.7% in the second quarter of 2025, attributable to competitive pressures from dominant venues like the TSX, which held 51.89% in early October 2025.[87][88] Despite this, overall platform volumes have aligned with national trends of heightened activity, supported by Cboe's technology integrations and product diversification.[89]| Period | Key Metric | Value | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q1 2023 | CDR ADNV | $39.14 million | Baseline |
| Q4 2024 | CDR ADNV | $243.7 million | +523% YoY |
| Q2 2024 | Market Share | 15.0% | - |
| Q2 2025 | Market Share | 12.7% | -2.3 pp |
| Sep 2025 | Matched Shares | 192.6 million | +29.6% YoY |
| Oct 2025 (early) | Market Share | 12.25% | Stable |

