Canaccord Genuity Group Inc., Canada’s main impartial funding financial institution, restructures management in its U.S. division following an $80-million settlement with U.S. regulators.
Key Management Transition
Jeff Barlow, who led the New York-based U.S. funding banking operations for 11 years, retires efficient instantly. He’ll stay as an adviser to the agency. Toronto-based CEO Dan Daviau assumes short-term oversight of the U.S. division whereas a successor search proceeds.
Daviau beforehand headed the U.S. funding banking workforce from 2012 to 2015 earlier than ascending to CEO, with Barlow succeeding him.
Regulatory Settlement Particulars
The settlement resolves a three-year probe into compliance shortcomings, together with deficiencies within the anti-money-laundering surveillance program. Regulators imposed the largest-ever penalty on a broker-dealer for Financial institution Secrecy Act violations. Concerned businesses embrace the U.S. Division of the Treasury’s Monetary Crimes Enforcement Community and the Securities and Alternate Fee.
Canaccord states it has overhauled its compliance framework over the previous three years to satisfy regulatory requirements. The agency confronted a possible main penalty disclosure in June 2023 associated to its U.S. fairness buying and selling arm, which it offered to Cantor Fitzgerald LP in April 2025.
U.S. Division Development Below Barlow
Barlow joined Canaccord in 2007 after 15 years at competing U.S. banks. He drove acquisitions and hires, increasing the division to 350 professionals producing $500 million in annual income, now the corporate’s largest unit contributing 21% of funding banking revenues.
“Jeff is transitioning at a time when this enterprise is stronger than ever and positioned for its subsequent section of progress,” Daviau acknowledged. “We’re grateful to Jeff for his long-standing partnership and contributions.”
Sturdy Monetary Efficiency and Outlook
The settlement had no affect on shares, up 38.5% over the previous 12 months. Canaccord opinions strategic choices for its British wealth administration enterprise, managing $74.6 billion in property, probably valued over $1 billion in a sale.
Analyst Jeff Fenwick at ATB Cormark Capital Markets notes: “We stay centered on the prospect of a strategic transaction to divest the U.Okay. wealth administration unit, which may present a fabric catalyst to valuation.”
Complete property below administration throughout Canadian, British, U.S., and Australian items attain $144.8 billion. For the primary 9 months of fiscal 2026 (ended December 31, 2025), revenues rose 24% to $1.6 billion, with adjusted internet earnings climbing 48% to $127.8 million, fueled by mining and tech deal exercise.
In June 2023, executives halted a $1.1-billion privatization bid amid regulatory uncertainty. The present workforce stays, with market capitalization regular at about $1.2 billion.

