Securities Law

Overview

We guide companies through the labyrinth of securities regulations, offering a full range of services including initial public offerings, public and private financing, reorganization of capital, mergers and acquisitions, joint ventures, stock exchange listing, preparing shareholder meetings, and corporate governance.

We also advise securities dealers, venture capital corporations, and institutional investors that assist businesses seeking to raise the capital needed to fund their projects. We are also strategic partners in the registration and regulatory compliance of financial intermediaries. Lavery’s expertise in this field is recommended by the Canadian Legal Lexpert Directory.

Our clients appreciate our pragmatic, solutions-oriented approach, our availability, and our timely assistance.

Services

  • Public offerings and private placements
  • Stock exchange listings
  • Take-over bids, business combinations, mergers and acquisitions
  • Reorganization of capital
  • Going private transactions
  • Shareholders' rights plans
  • Security-based compensation arrangements
  • Registration of financial intermediaries
  • Creation of investment funds
  • Shareholder meetings
  • Continuous disclosure and compliance
  • Governance

Representative mandates

  • Legal counsel to GDI Integrated Facilities Services Inc. in a reorganization by way of a plan of arrangement, the listing of the company's securities on the Toronto Stock Exchange, and the prospectus distribution of subordinate voting shares for gross proceeds of more than $161 million
  • Legal counsel to a syndicate of underwriters led by National Bank Financial and BMO Capital Markets in the prospectus distribution of a $300 million principal amount of 4.164% Series 9 senior unsecured debentures for the Cominar Real Estate Investment Trust
  • Legal counsel to Exploration Midland Inc. in a private placement for gross proceeds of more than $14 million
  • Legal counsel to TSO3 Inc. in a prospectus distribution for gross proceeds of $11.5 million
  • Legal counsel to Richmont Mines Inc. in a prospectus distribution for gross proceeds of $38.5 million
  • Legal counsel to a syndicate of underwriters led by National Bank Financial and BMO Capital Markets in the prospectus distribution of units of the Cominar Real Estate Investment Trust for total net proceeds of approximately $148.8 million
  • Legal counsel to Bestar Inc. in the privatization of the company by merger
  • Legal counsel to Redevances Aurifères Osisko Ltd. in a private placement with the Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec and the Fonds de solidarité FTQ for gross proceeds of about $42 million
  • Legal counsel to the offeror in the privatization of the BLF Real Estate Investment Trust by way of an insider takeover bid
  • Legal counsel to the Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec in the financing transactions of Stornoway Diamond Corporation for a total investment by the Caisse of more than $100 million in the form of debt, equity, and streaming (the purchase of part of production)
  • Legal counsel to Héroux-Devtek and some of its subsidiaries in the acquisition of the share capital of APPH Limited and APPH Wichita, Inc., integrated providers of landing gear, for approximately US$124 million
  • Legal counsel to the Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec in private placements in Groupe WSP Global totalling $240 million
  • Legal counsel to Industrial Alliance, Insurance and Financial Services Inc. in the redemption of its Class A preferred shares, C Series, for a total of $100 million

Canadian Legal Lexpert Directory

  1. Federal Budget 2022: Good News for Mining Exploration Compagnies!

    On April 7, 2022, Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland tabled the federal government’s new budget for 2022. This budget includes several tax measures relevant to the mining industry in Canada. The Canadian federal government intends to provide $3.8 billion over eight years to implement Canada’s first critical minerals strategy. One of the methods used to implement this new strategy and stimulate exploration is an investment vehicle well known to the mining industry: flow-through shares. The 2022 budget proposes to create a new 30% Critical Mineral Exploration Tax Credit (CMETC) for certain specified minerals. Specified minerals that would be eligible for the new CMETC are: copper, nickel, lithium, cobalt, graphite, rare earth elements, scandium, titanium, gallium, vanadium, tellurium, magnesium, zinc, platinum group metals and uranium. As for the regular mineral exploration tax credit, the exploration expenses must have been incurred in Canada. The renunciation of expenses must also have been made under flow-through share agreements entered into after budget day and before March 31, 2027. It is important to note that there will be no cumulation of tax credits. Eligible expenditures will not be eligible for both the proposed new CMETC and the 15% regular mineral exploration tax credit (METC). In order for exploration expenses to qualify for the CMETC, a qualified person (as defined in National Instrument 43–101 issued by the Canadian Securities Administrators) will further have to certify that the expenses renounced will be incurred in the course of an exploration project for specified minerals. On this point, the measure seems to insert a new legal test of “reasonable expectation” that the minerals targeted by the exploration are “primarily specified minerals”. No details have yet been issued on the mechanics of applying this test.  However, if the qualified person is unable to demonstrate that there is a reasonable expectation that the minerals targeted by the exploration project are predominantly specified minerals, the related exploration expenses would not be eligible for the CMETC and consequently, any credit granted for ineligible expenses would be recouped from the flow-through share holder who received the credit. Pending the tabling of a more detailed legislative version, careful attention and planning will therefore be required for new flow-through share financings to ensure that they meet the legal criteria for this new tax credit. Our team of professionals in securities, mining law and taxation is available to answer all your questions regarding this new measure and to assist you in the implementation of a successful flow-through financing: Josianne Beaudry René Branchaud Ali El Haskouri Charles-Hugo Gagné Éric Gélinas Sébastien Vézina

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  2. Five good reasons to list your company on the stock exchange and opt for equity financing

    In 2020, the pandemic disrupted the Quebec economy and the trend continued in 2021. After a difficult year for local businesses, there is an opportunity for business owners to rethink their business model as they develop their recovery plan. In this context, an initial public offering and equity financing might be a good idea. While the process is relatively costly and time-consuming for senior management, not to mention that it results in a series of obligations for the company and its executives and major shareholders, the benefits far outweigh the disadvantages. Here are five good reasons to take your company public and use equity financing to ensure a successful future. 1. Equity financing: financing your company’s growth differently The moment your company goes public, you significantly expand and diversify your equity financing sources. You are no longer dependent on traditional bank loans. Your company can now raise capital much more easily and at a much lower cost, for example through the issuance of convertible securities, share capital, rights or warrants. In addition, your pool of funders expands considerably, going far beyond founding shareholders, your banker and your very close friends and relatives. All these equity financing tools make it possible to more aggressively manage the growth of your business and take advantage of new business opportunities. 2. Equity financing: facilitating mergers and acquisitions Having a company listed on the stock exchange means having a key advantage when it comes to your expansion plan. Once listed, you can acquire another business using your company’s shares as leverage. This added flexibility increases your chances of success in negotiations. You can thus be more bold in your growth management, as you will no longer be limited to conventional financing methods. 3. Equity financing: gaining notoriety By making the decision to take your business public and opting for equity ?nancing, you will give your business greater visibility. First, the initial public offering will be an opportunity to make your company known to investors through promotional events organized by the brokers participating in the issuance, among others. Second, public companies are often followed by ?nancial analysts, and such attention can be an asset when it comes to marketing products and services. In short, by having your company in the spotlight, it will inevitably gain notoriety, both with investors and economic partners. Finally, for many customers and suppliers, doing business with a publicly traded company is reassuring. They see it as a sign of a well-established business, and this perception can facilitate the conclusion of a sale or supply contract. 4. Equity financing: increasing the market value of your business Better ?nancing costs, greater liquidity for your company’s shares, improved growth potential and increased visibility will all make the market value of your company signi?cantly higher than it was before going public. Once listed, book value will no longer be the main indicator used to determine your company’s worth. It will be worth what investors recognize its value to be, based on its potential for growth and pro?tability and its performance relative to competitors. 5. Company succession made easier When the time comes, it will be much easier for you to retire from your business and bene?t from the fruits of your years-long effort. You will have a number of options, including disposing of your shares through a secondary offering. It will also be easier to attract talented people to take over your business because of the multiple bene?ts that come with the status of public company. The advantages of listing your company on the stock exchange and opting for equity ?nancing are many. In addition to the ?ve points presented here, we could add increased credibility with clients and suppliers, better compensation for key employees, less dilution during fundraising, and others. More companies entering the stock market will rebuild our economy. If you are thinking of transforming your company into a public one, opting for equity ?nancing and taking the plunge into the stock market, do not hesitate to call on one of our lawyers practicing in business law to guide and advise you in the process.

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  3. Securities and class actions: screening authorizations

    Anyone who wants to bring an action in damages relating to the secondary securities market must prove that the action is brought in good faith and has a reasonable chance of success (s. 225.4 QSA). In Quebec,1 as elsewhere in Canada,2 no prior disclosure of evidence may be obtained by plaintiff for the purpose of meeting this burden. The procedure prescribed by the QSA is complete and sufficient, so recourse to the rules Code of Civil Procedure is unwarranted. Where such an action is brought by way of class action, the court must furthermore be convinced that the criteria for authorizing a class action are also met. The Court of Appeal does not expressly rule on whether prior disclosure is available to the investor  to sustain the proposed class action. These specific rules have no impact on the general rules regarding insurance, such as a plaintiff's direct right of action against the insurer of the person who caused the damage (art. 2501 CCQ). Regardless of the subject matter (the secondary market) or the procedural vehicle (class action), a court may order a defendant to disclose such documents which are necessary for a meaningful exercise of this right, such as insurance policies. In its recent decision in Amaya Inc. v. Derome, 2018 QCCA 120, the Court of Appeal ruled on the interaction between the Securities Act, CQLR, c.V-1.1 (QSA) and the rules specific to class actions in relation to applications by investors for prior disclosure of documents by a public issuer. We summarize here a much-anticipated decision. The Specific Framework of the QSA The QSA governs actions relating to financial markets. Although such actions may be introduced on an individual basis, class actions are regarded as the preferred vehicle, “given that publicly-traded issuers generally have many investors in like circumstances and, if something goes wrong, they are likely to come together to avail themselves of the advantages of a class action.”3 Class actions are merely one of the available vehicles, and it is in no way a requirement to use this type of proceeding. With respect to actions relating to the secondary market, section 225.4 QSA requires that any investor, whether acting personally or as representative of a proposed group, be authorized by the court before bringing the proposed action. This restriction was enacted –and similarly so across Canada–4 to preserve public confidence in stock markets,5 but also to protect public issuers against opportunistic actions brought in hopes of obtaining a settlement rather than to obtain compensation for actual damage.6 Accordingly, an investor who claims to have been defrauded will have to prove to the court from which authorization is requested that the proposed action is “in good faith and there is a reasonable possibility that it will be resolved in favour of the plaintiff” (s. 225.4 para. 3 QSA). Motions for authorization should be addressed as early as possible, so that judicial resources are allocated only to meritorious cases. Interaction With Class Actions If the action takes the form of a class action, the investor must also meet the criteria for authorization of a class action (art. 575 CCP), a burden which has been established to be a light one, since it simply involves proving that “the facts alleged appear to justify the conclusions sought” (art. 575(3) CCP).7 Not only do the QSA and the CCP impose different burdens, but the authorization they require arises at different moments in the course of the proceedings o: the authorization required by section 225.4 QSA must, necessarily, precede the authorization required by article 575 CCP. As the Court of Appeal points out: “This is eminently logical: where leave is required under the Act, there is no action upon which the class action, as a procedural vehicle, can rest until that leave is granted.”8 Of course, both issues can be disposed of in one judgment.9 With these distinctions made, it is clear that any application brought for the purpose of enabling an investor to meet the burden established by section 225.4 QSA must be analyzed pursuant to the rules set out in that provision and not the rules that generally apply to class actions.10 The judgment appealed from was therefore not a “pre-authorization class action judgment”; it was a “judgment prior to leave under the [QSA]”.11 Accordingly, it had to be reviewed in accordance with the requirements and the spirit of the QSA.12 The Judgment Under Appeal The trial judge had granted an application for documentary disclosure, relying on the parties’ general duty to cooperate set forth by article 20 of the CCP.13 He thus arrived at a solution that is unique in the Canadian legal landscape.14 Though rendered during a case management conference, the judgment under appeal  went significantly beyond the confines of case management. Accordingly, the application for leave should follow the rules applicable to judgments rendered in the course of proceedings, set out in article 31 para. 2 CCP.15 The trial judge's decision has addressed a point of law regarding to discovery, which impacted “the character of the proceedings themselves,” and which, if decided wrongly could cause irreparable harm to defendant, regardless of the expenses involved.16 Leave was granted and the Court of Appeal had to consider, on the merits, whether the trial judge was correct in applying the general principles of Quebec civil procedure to the applications for documentary disclosure that were before him. For the Code of Civil Procedure to “compensate[e] for the silence of the other laws if the context so admits,” as provided by its preliminary provision, such a silence must exist. In the opinion of the Court of Appeal, considering the purpose and history of section 225.4 QSA – in particular its goal of screening out opportunistic actions as soon as possible17 – and the uniformity of legislation on this subject in Canada,18 no such silence can be found to exist. On the contrary: in order to avoid short-circuiting the requirement for prior authorization and avoid fishing expeditions and mini-trials, judges who are responsible for authorizing actions of this nature must require that applicants meet their burden themselves.19 Neither the combination of articles 20 and 221 CCP or the specific context of class actions can sidestep that prohibition.20 Insofar as it was sought to allow the investor to meet the burden imposed by section 225.4 QSA, the application for documentary disclosure should have been dismissed. By contrast, the application to obtain disclosure of the insurance policies did not fall within the specific context of section 225.4 SA, and the trial judge's order was left undisturbed, Given the principle of cooperation (art. 20 CCP), but most importantly the long-settled principle that a third party seeking to exercise their right of action against the insurer of the person who caused the damage they suffered (art. 2501 CCQ) such applications can be justified in that they allow potential parties to the case to be identified.21 The Court of Appeal’s decision does not directly address whether class counsel may succeed in a request for “relevant evidence to be submitted” within the meaning of article 574 para. 3 CCP; such requests are traditionally considered to be properly made to contest  the application, that is, necessarily by defendant,  given that the allegations in the application for authorization to institute a class action must be assumed to be true at that stage.22 Summary Section 225.4 QSA is the expression, in Quebec law, of an intent common to all Canadian legislatures to create a screening mechanism for actions relating to the secondary market, in order to preserve investor confidence and deter frivolous suits. Accordingly, where an applicant seeks prior disclosure in order to meet the criterion for authorization set out in section 225.4 QSA, his or her application should be dismissed, including in a class action context. Where the objective of the application for prior disclosure is not one germane to the QSA, for instance, where an applicant seeks information to join an insurer to the proceedings, such application needs to be considered under the ordinary rules of Quebec law.   Theratechnologies Inc. v. 121851 Canada inc., [2015] 2 SCR 106, 2015 SCC 18 Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce v. Green, [2015] 3 SCR 801, 2015 SCC 60 Par. 52 Par. 97 Par. 84 Paras. 49 and 84; following, inter alia, Theratechnologies Inc. v. 121851 Canada inc., [2015] 2 SCR 106, 2015 SCC 18 or Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce v. Green, [2015] 3 SCR 801, 2015 SCC 60 Para. 50 Para. 46. Paras. 20, 46 and 54 Para. 45 Paras. 42, 45 and 55 Para. 55 Derome v. Amaya inc., 2017 QCCS 44, paras. 79 et seq. Para. 36; compare: Mask v. Silvercorp Metals Inc., 2016 ONCA 641 and Mask v. Silvercorp Metals Inc., 2014 ONSC 4161 – leave to appeal ref’d: Mask v. Silvercorp Metals, Inc., 2014 ONSC 464 (Ont. Div. Ct); Bayens v. Kinross Gold Corp., 2013 ONSC 6864; Silver v. Imax, (2009) 66 B.L.R. (4th) 222, leave to appeal ref'd, Silver v. Imax,2011 ONSC 1035 (Ont. Div. Ct) Paras. 73 to 79 Paras. 66 et seq.; leave to appeal had been referred to a panel of the Court: Amaya inc. v. Derome, 2017 QCCA 335. Paras. 49 and 84 Paras. 9 and 97 Paras. 9 and 93 Paras. 106 and 107 Collège d'enseignement général et professionnel de Jonquière (CÉGEP) v. Champagne, 1996 CanLII 4413 (CA) Benizri v. Canada Post Corporation, 2016 QCCS 454, para. 6

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  4. Comprehensive reform of the rules governing the regulation
    and operations in the Québec financial sector

    On October 5, 2017, Québec's Minister of Finance, Carlos J. Leitão, has tabled Bill 141 in Québec's National Assembly. The Bill, which is 470 pages long and includes some 750 sections, is entitled An Act mainly to improve the regulation of the financial sector, the protection of deposits of money and the operation of financial institutions. It proposes a major overhaul of the rules governing the operation of deposit-taking institutions and insurance companies, as well as the distribution of financial products and services (“FPS”) in the province. The Bill proposes amendments to the following laws: Act respecting insurance (repealed) Professional Code Act respecting trust companies and savings companies (replaced) Act respecting financial services cooperatives Act respecting the Mouvement Desjardins (repealed) Deposit Insurance Act (renamed Deposit Institutions and Deposit Protection Act) Derivatives Act Money-Services Businesses Act Automobile Insurance Act Act respecting the Autorité des marchés financiers (renamed Act respecting the regulation of the financial sector) Act respecting the distribution of financial products and services Real Estate Brokerage Act Insurers Act (enacted) Securities Act Based on the Minister's speech unveiling the Bill, the following is a summary of the 13 main categories of measures provided for in that draft legislation: Insurance — The Insurers Act is proposed as a replacement for the Act respecting insurance. It contains provisions governing the supervision and control of insurance business and of the activities of authorized (former permit holding) Québec insurers, as well asprovisions governing the constitution, operation and dissolution of Québec-incorporated insurers. The new Insurers Act also updates the rules applicable to the insurance activities of self-regulatory organizations (“SROs”), including professional orders. Financial services cooperatives — The Bill amends the Act respecting financial services cooperatives (essentially, credit unions which are members of the Groupe Coopératif Desjardins) to specify, among other things, rules relating to the organization and functioning of such cooperatives. The Bill adds a chapter concerning the Groupe coopératif Desjardins in replacement of the Act respecting the Mouvement Desjardins, which will be repealed. Deposit insurance — The Bill amends the Deposit Insurance Act and puts in place a new framework to supervise and control the deposit-taking business and authorized deposit-taking institutions in Québec. It includes provisions allowing for the resolution of problems arising from the failure of such an institution when affiliated to a cooperative group. The title of that Act is also changed to reflect the amendments made to it. Trust companies — The Act respecting trust companies and savings companies is replaced by a new legislation bearing the same title, but which redefines the regulatory framework governing those kinds of companies and their business. This framework is consistent with the new legislation to be applied to insurance companies and deposit-taking institutions. Real estate brokerage — The Act respecting real estate brokerage is to be amended to, among other things, define the concept of real estate brokerage contract, and to transfer to the Autorité des marches financiers (“AMF”) the supervision and control of mortgage brokers in the province. Financial products and services — The Bill amends The Act respecting the distribution of financial products and services to transfer to the AMF and the Financial Markets Administrative Tribunal ("FMAT") the SRO responsibilities currently entrusted to the Chambre de la sécurité financière and the Chambre de l’assurance de dommages. It also proposes a set of amendments aimed at facilitating the online offering and distribution of FPS. Act respecting the AMF — The Bill amends the Act respecting the Autorité des marchés financiers by introducing provisions to protect whistleblowers who denounce regulatory breaches of third parties to the AMF, to establish a committee tasked with taking submissions from consumers of FPS, and to structure the FMAT in a way similar to other provincial administrative tribunals, such as the Administrative Tribunal of Québec. The Act respecting the AMF is to be renamed an Act respecting the regulation of the financial sector. Funeral expenses insurance — The Bill amends the Civil Code of Québec to permit funeral expense insurance contracts to be entered into. It also modifies the Act respecting prearranged funeral services and sepultures, to provide for a more proper regulation of such contracts. Automobile insurance — The Bill amends the Automobile Insurance Act to specify how information relating to the acquisition or renewal of automobile insurance is to be filed. Money services — The Bill amends the Money-Services Businesses Act to provide for periodic checks (every three years) to be conducted on money-services businesses by the competent local police. Derivatives — The Bill adds derivatives trading platforms to the entities regulated under the Derivatives Act. Securities — The Bill amends the Securities Act to, among other things, replace the definition of "non-redeemable investment fund", prescribe restrictions on sharing commissions for certain dealers, and provide for the suspension of prescription when an application for authorization of an action for damages is filed under that Act. Legislation administered by the AMF — Finally, the Bill amends the laws administered by the AMF (listed in Schedule I to the Act respecting the Autorité des marchés financiers) to prescribe the duration of freeze orders obtainable under those laws and to prescribe the terms of administration and distribution of amounts remitted to the AMF pursuant to a disgorgement order issued thereunder. Bill 141 thus proposes wide-ranging reforms. It embodies measures which: amount to a major overhaul of certain financial laws (Desjardins’ financial services cooperatives, trust companies, deposit insurance); aim at providing a legal basis for operations that are either currently unregulated or unauthorized by law (e.g., the offering or distribution of FPS online); incorporate certain supranational standards into Québec's regulatory framework (e.g., resolution / orderly winding up of unstable systemically important financial institutions); redeploy the exercise of regulatory, supervisory and enforcement / disciplinary functions in the financial sector; and enact numerous new specific rules, particularly in the field of insurance (reciprocal insurance unions; exemption from authorization (permits) respecting suppliers of insurance-like extended warranty products; commercial practices; etc.). The scope is far-reaching for our clients operating in the Québec financial sector, and those who wish to efficiently seize the opportunities offered by the new rules that will govern the Québec's financial marketplace. They would now want: to learn more about the measures of the Bill and the way they may affect them, to position themselves competitively or adjust their ongoing projects in preparation for what is to come; to consult to knowledgeably define new strategies and be able to effectively implement them, in compliance with the new rules; to participate, separately or jointly with others stakeholders, to the consultations that the Minister of Finance has announced would be held on the Bill by a parliamentary committee, to present their views and propose enhancements to its provisions.

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  1. Lavery represents ImmunoPrecise Antibodies as it acquires BioStrand

    On March 29, 2022, ImmunoPrecise Antibodies Ltd (IPA) announced that it acquired BioStrand BV, BioKey BV, and BioClue BV (together, “BioStrand”), a group of Belgian entities pioneers in the field of bioinformatics and biotechnology. With this €20 million acquisition, IPA will be able to leverage BioStrand’s revolutionary AI-powered methodology to accelerate the development of therapeutic antibody solutions. In addition to creating synergies with its subsidiaries, IPA expects to develop new markets with this revolutionary technology and strengthen its position as a world leader in biotherapeutics. Lavery was privileged to support IPA in this cross-border transaction by providing specialized expertise in cybersecurity, intellectual property, securities and mergers and acquisitions. The Lavery team was led by Selena Lu (transactional) and included Eric Lavallée (technology and intellectual property), Serge Shahinian (intellectual property), Sébastien Vézina (securities), Catherine Méthot (transactional), Jean-Paul Timothée (securities and transactional), Siddhartha Borissov-Beausoleil (transactional), Mylène Vallières (securities) and Marie-Claude Côté (securities). ImmunoPrecise Antibodies Ltd. is a biotherapeutic, innovation-powered company that supports its business partners in their quest to discover and develop novel antibodies against a broad range of target classes and diseases.

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  2. Lavery is representing Walter Innovations Inc. in its acquisition by Golo Mobile Inc.

    On July 7, 2020, Golo Mobile Inc., a company listed on the TSX Venture Exchange that specializes in eco-delivery in large business centres, announced the acquisition of Walter Innovations Inc., a building automation technology start-up that has created a solution to connect property managers and residents of condominiums and apartment buildings. A Lavery team composed of Étienne Brassard, Éric Lavallée and Jean-François Maurice represented the selling shareholders of Walter Innovations Inc. in an exit context, allowing Walter's initial investors and entrepreneurs to successfully sell the company and its underlying technology. More concretely, the Lavery team assisted the sellers in negotiating and implementing a transaction structure adapted to their objectives and to the consideration offered by the buyer, i.e. publicly traded shares. Through a holdback of a portion of the shares and an alignment between the duration of the holdback and the obligations of the sellers, our team enabled the seed investors to make a profitable exit and the selling shareholders involved in the direct management of Walter Innovations Inc. to transition as key employees of Golo Mobile Inc. while aligning the interests of the buyer and the sellers in order to achieve a result that is beneficial to all parties.

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  3. Lavery welcomes Eric Stevenson, ex-superintendent, client services and distribution oversight at the AMF to its Business Law group

    Lavery is pleased to announce the arrival of a new partner, Eric Stevenson, who is joining the Business Law group at our Québec office. Eric’s leading expertise will increase the quality and depth of Lavery’s consulting and representation service offering, in particular with its financial sector clients and stakeholders. For Eric Stevenson, this represents a return to his roots, given that he worked for the firm prior to joining the Autorité des marchés financiers (AMF). A professional who has an outstanding reputation and whose leading expertise and keen knowledge are renowned in Québec, Canada and abroad Until just recently, Eric Stevenson was the superintendent, client services and distribution oversight at the AMF.He lead a team of 150 employees with the mandate of overseeing the activities relating to the distribution of financial services and products in Québec all in the while establishing the regulatory framework governing this sector of activities. His role also included issuing exercise rights to insurance and securities operators. Eric was also in charge of the AMF team tasked with evaluating the integrity of companies and their directors who were seeking to conclude agreements with the Québec government and granting the requested authorization, when applicable. Eric Stevenson has represented the AMF before several key organisations in particular by serving as a member of the market intermediaries’ commission of the International Organization of Securities Commissions. He also presided or took part in numerous committees of the Canadian Council of Insurance Regulators as well as served on several committees of the Canadian securities regulatory authorities. “Coming back to Lavery was an evident choice considering that the firm benefits from an outstanding reputation and the financial sector’s stakeholders regularly recognize the excellence of its integrated legal services offering”, says Eric Stevenson. “I am delighted to rejoin a consulting team that is devoted to offering a memorable client-based approach that is well-rooted in a deep understanding of the client’s actual business reality. I am also eager to help Lavery’s current and future clients benefit from my knowledge andvast network of contacts that I had the privilege to develop over the past years.” A leadership connected to the client’s business reality coinciding with Lavery’s vision “As a seasoned attorney, experienced manager and a proven strategist, Eric’s profile, rooted in the realities of the financial industry, is well suited to meet our client’s expectations. With a unique career path, Eric will leverage his leadership and know-how to play an active part in Lavery’s role as a leader of transformation in Québec’s legal market. We are especially proud of the fact that he has chosen Lavery and our Québec City office as a re-entry point into the professional services sector. Eric’s return to Lavery is a testament to the firm’s power to attract exceptional talents”, concludes Anik Trudel, Lavery’s Chief Executive Office.

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