IMT Exam 1 Syllabus — Learning Objectives by Topic

Blueprint-aligned learning objectives for CSI Investment Management Techniques (IMT) Exam 1, organized by topic with quick links to targeted practice.

Use this syllabus as your coverage checklist for IMT Exam 1. Topic weightings and exam structure are from CSI’s official Exam & Credits page; chapter mapping follows the official Curriculum page.

What’s covered

Investment Policy and Understanding Risk Profile (10%)

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Chapter 1 - The Portfolio Management Process

  • Outline the seven steps of the portfolio management process.
  • Identify information required by regulation and law when onboarding and servicing clients (KYC, identity, disclosures, recordkeeping).
  • Describe methods investment advisors use to learn about their clients (interviews, questionnaires, documents, and observation).
  • Define investment objectives and common constraints (time horizon, liquidity, taxes, legal, and unique constraints).
  • Explain how to translate objectives and constraints into clear, measurable Investment Policy Statement (IPS) language.
  • Identify core components of an IPS (objectives, constraints, asset mix ranges, benchmarks, rebalancing, and monitoring).
  • Differentiate risk tolerance, risk capacity, and required return as inputs to portfolio design.
  • Recognize why documentation and periodic review are central to disciplined portfolio management.
  • Describe communication skills needed to explain risk/return trade-offs and set expectations with retail clients.
  • Identify common process failures that lead to poor outcomes (incomplete facts, weak constraints, and inconsistent follow-through).

Chapter 2 - Understanding a Client's Risk Profile

  • Define behavioural finance and distinguish it from traditional finance assumptions.
  • Explain why behavioural finance is relevant to investment advisors and suitability decisions.
  • Identify limitations of risk profile questionnaires (context effects, self-report bias, and changing market conditions).
  • Define common investor biases (e.g., loss aversion, overconfidence, anchoring, confirmation bias, and herding).
  • Recognize investor personality types and how they can influence decisions under uncertainty.
  • Describe how an advisor can diagnose biases from client behaviour, language, and decision patterns.
  • Explain how bias diagnosis can influence asset allocation and implementation choices at a high level.
  • Identify practical techniques to reduce behavioural errors (education, guardrails, rules-based rebalancing).
  • Describe the role of robo-advisors and how automation can mitigate or amplify behavioural biases.
  • Match communication approaches to client biases to improve long-term adherence to the plan.

Asset Allocation and Investment Management (8%)

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Chapter 3 - Asset Allocation and Investment Strategies

  • Define an asset class and distinguish asset classes from investment vehicles.
  • Explain the benefits of asset allocation and diversification in portfolio construction.
  • Describe the asset allocation process from strategic policy to ongoing rebalancing.
  • Differentiate strategic, tactical, and dynamic asset allocation strategies.
  • Explain asset location and why tax characteristics can influence where assets are held.
  • Describe common equity investment strategies at a high level (value, growth, dividend, index, and factor).
  • Define correlation and explain how it affects diversification benefits across asset classes.
  • Explain how objectives and constraints (liquidity, horizon, taxes) affect allocation choices.
  • Differentiate policy allocation ranges from current (actual) allocation and drift.
  • Calculate portfolio weights and simple rebalance trades using basic arithmetic.

Chapter 4 - Investment Management Today

  • Describe the roles of key participants in investment management (client, advisor, manager, analyst, trader, custodian).
  • Differentiate active and passive management and summarize common trade-offs (cost, tracking error, and style risk).
  • Explain how fees, turnover, and taxes affect net (after-cost) investment results.
  • Identify common benchmarks and explain why benchmark selection matters for evaluation.
  • Describe high-level manager due diligence factors (mandate, process, people, risk controls, and consistency).
  • Explain investment discipline and the concept of avoiding unintended style drift.
  • Describe how liquidity and market structure can affect implementation quality at a high level.
  • Identify the purpose of portfolio constraints (concentration limits, risk limits, and permitted instruments).
  • Recognize professional and ethical considerations in portfolio management (fair dealing, conflicts, and suitability).
  • Describe how technology supports monitoring, reporting, and risk analytics at a high level.

Equity Securities (19%)

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Chapter 5 - Equity Securities

  • Describe key characteristics of equity securities (ownership, residual claim, voting, and dividends).
  • Differentiate common shares and preferred shares and identify typical features of each.
  • Identify major Canadian and U.S. equity markets at a high level and how listings/trading occur.
  • Differentiate primary market issuance from secondary market trading conceptually.
  • Explain factors to consider when choosing individual equities versus managed products for a client.
  • Identify key equity risks (market, business, financial, liquidity, currency, and concentration).
  • Describe how corporate actions can affect equity holders (splits, dividends, and mergers) conceptually.
  • Explain the role of equity indices and why index construction matters conceptually.
  • Calculate a simple holding period return for an equity investment (price change plus dividends).
  • Match common investor objectives to equity exposures (growth, income, and inflation sensitivity).

Chapter 6 - Analysis of Equity Securities I: Economic and Industry Analysis

  • Explain the purpose of economic analysis in equity investment decisions.
  • Identify major economic indicators and describe their conceptual link to markets (growth, inflation, rates, currency).
  • Describe business cycle phases and how they can influence sectors and styles at a high level.
  • Explain how monetary and fiscal policy can affect economic conditions and risk assets conceptually.
  • Describe how economic forecasts are formed and identify limits and uncertainty in forecasting.
  • Explain how economic analysis can support investment strategy development at a high level.
  • Identify key metrics used in macro analysis (yield curve, spreads, and leading indicators) conceptually.
  • Describe the purpose and components of industry analysis (structure, competition, and regulation).
  • Recognize common frameworks for industry competitiveness (e.g., barriers to entry and pricing power) at a high level.
  • Differentiate secular trends from cyclical movements when evaluating industries conceptually.

Chapter 7 - Analysis of Equity Securities II: Company Analysis and Valuation

  • Differentiate IFRS and GAAP at a high level and recognize implications for comparing firms.
  • Describe core components of company analysis (business model, strategy, management quality, and financial condition).
  • Interpret basic relationships among the financial statements at a conceptual level.
  • Calculate and interpret common equity ratios (P/E, P/B, ROE, margins, and leverage) at a basic level.
  • Describe major valuation approaches (DCF, dividend discount, and multiples/comparables) conceptually.
  • Explain intrinsic value versus market price and the role of assumptions in valuation.
  • Identify special considerations for analyzing resource companies at a high level (commodity sensitivity and reserves).
  • Recognize limits of accounting data (estimates, one-time items, accruals) and why adjustments may be needed.
  • Describe how key assumptions (growth and discount rate) drive valuation sensitivity.
  • Identify common red flags in company analysis (earnings quality, governance issues, and unsustainable distributions).

Chapter 8 - Technical Analysis

  • Define technical analysis and describe its core assumptions at a high level.
  • Explain chart analysis concepts (trends, support/resistance, and pattern recognition) conceptually.
  • Identify common technical indicators (moving averages, RSI, MACD, and volume) and what they signal conceptually.
  • Describe statistical approaches in technical analysis (momentum and mean reversion) at a high level.
  • Explain sentiment indicators and what they attempt to measure conceptually.
  • Describe intermarket analysis and how asset classes can influence each other conceptually.
  • Identify typical uses of technical analysis (timing, risk management) and common limitations (false signals, regime shifts).
  • Explain how technical and fundamental analysis can be combined coherently (confirmation and risk controls).
  • Recognize how to express technical views in communications without implying certainty or guarantees.
  • Identify common behavioural pitfalls that technical rules aim to reduce (chasing, anchoring, and overtrading).

Debt Securities (17%)

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Chapter 9 - Debt Securities

  • Explain common reasons investors hold debt securities (income, diversification, and liability matching).
  • Identify key characteristics of debt securities (coupon, maturity, yield, issuer, and seniority).
  • Differentiate government, corporate, and other debt types at a high level.
  • Identify major fixed-income risks (interest rate, credit, inflation, liquidity, and reinvestment).
  • Explain yield measures conceptually (current yield and yield to maturity) and what they represent.
  • Describe mechanics of debt market trading at a high level (OTC structure, dealer role, and quotations).
  • Explain accrued interest and settlement concepts for bond transactions at a high level.
  • Describe the inverse relationship between yields and bond prices conceptually.
  • Use intuition to estimate direction of bond price changes when yields change.
  • Explain how embedded features (call, put, convertibility) can affect bond risk and pricing conceptually.

Chapter 10 - Analysis of Debt Securities I: Valuation, Term Structure and Pricing

  • Apply present value concepts to fixed-income cash flows at a high level.
  • Describe the term structure of interest rates and common yield curve shapes (normal, flat, inverted).
  • Explain spot rates and forward rates conceptually and their role in valuation.
  • Describe discounting bond cash flows using appropriate rates across maturities conceptually.
  • Explain credit spreads conceptually and what they imply about perceived issuer risk.
  • Calculate a simple bond price given coupon, yield, and maturity using simplified examples.
  • Describe how changes in yield curve level, slope, and curvature affect bond prices across maturities conceptually.
  • Explain nonlinearity in the price-yield relationship at a high level (convexity intuition).
  • Differentiate clean price and dirty price (including accrued interest) conceptually.
  • Interpret how coupon structure influences price sensitivity and expected cash flows conceptually.

Chapter 11 - Analysis of Debt Securities II: Price Volatility and Investment Strategies

  • Define duration and explain what it measures (interest rate sensitivity) conceptually.
  • Differentiate Macaulay duration and modified duration at a high level.
  • Define convexity and explain how it refines duration-based price change estimates conceptually.
  • Explain how maturity and coupon level affect bond price volatility conceptually.
  • Describe how embedded options can create negative convexity and alter price behaviour conceptually.
  • Identify common fixed-income strategies (ladder, barbell, bullet) and the interest-rate views behind them conceptually.
  • Describe immunization and duration matching concepts at a high level.
  • Explain why longer-duration portfolios are more sensitive to yield changes conceptually.
  • Calculate approximate bond price change using modified duration and a yield change (simple approximation).
  • Identify reinvestment risk and explain its interaction with duration for total return.

Managed Products (19%)

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Chapter 12 - Analyzing Conventionally Managed Products

  • Define conventionally managed products and distinguish them from direct security portfolios conceptually.
  • Explain the role of conventionally managed products in investment management and retail portfolios.
  • Describe mutual fund features at a high level (NAV pricing, diversification, and professional management).
  • Differentiate mutual funds and closed-end funds at a high level (liquidity, pricing, and premiums/discounts).
  • Describe wrap products and managed account structures at a high level.
  • Define overlay management and describe common overlays (currency hedging and risk controls) conceptually.
  • Identify how fees and turnover can affect net returns of managed products over time.
  • Explain the relationship between taxes and returns on managed products conceptually (distributions and after-tax return).
  • Identify key due diligence questions for managed products (mandate, risk, fees, liquidity, and performance consistency).
  • Recognize common selection pitfalls (performance chasing, ignoring style drift, and overlooking structural risks).

Chapter 13 - Analyzing Non-Conventional Asset Classes and Their Structures

  • Define alternative investments and explain why investors may allocate to them (diversification and inflation sensitivity) conceptually.
  • Describe hedge fund strategies at a high level and identify associated risks (leverage, liquidity, and model risk).
  • Describe commodities as an asset class at a high level and identify key drivers of returns and risks conceptually.
  • Describe real estate as an asset class and common structures used to access it (REITs, funds, direct) at a high level.
  • Describe infrastructure and private markets at a high level and identify typical constraints (illiquidity and valuation).
  • Explain collectibles and digital assets as alternative exposures and identify unique risks (custody and valuation) conceptually.
  • Identify common ways to invest in alternatives and trade-offs (fees, liquidity, transparency, and governance).
  • Explain how commodity producers manage financial risk conceptually, including the role of derivatives.
  • Identify key due diligence items for alternatives (structure, leverage, liquidity terms, valuation, and conflicts).
  • Recognize suitability and disclosure considerations when recommending non-conventional assets to retail clients.

International Investing and Taxation (7%)

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Chapter 14 - International Investing

  • Explain the theoretical basis for international diversification and potential portfolio benefits conceptually.
  • Describe the size of the global equity market and major regional exposures at a high level.
  • Identify major international equity benchmarks and what they represent at a high level.
  • Explain primary advantages of international investing (broader opportunity set and diversification) conceptually.
  • Identify primary disadvantages and risks of international investing (currency, political, regulatory, and settlement).
  • Describe foreign investment vehicles available to investors at a high level (funds, ETFs, and depositary receipts).
  • Identify skills necessary for effective international investing (country analysis, currency awareness, governance differences).
  • Explain how assumptions can affect whether asset allocation models correctly assess international opportunities conceptually.
  • Describe currency exposure and currency hedging as concepts and when they may be considered.
  • Differentiate developed and emerging markets at a high level and identify typical risk factors.

Chapter 15 - International Taxation

  • Define international tax conflicts and explain how double taxation can arise in cross-border investing.
  • Describe sources of international tax law and how they interrelate (domestic law and treaties) conceptually.
  • Explain jurisdiction to tax at a high level (residence and source) and why it matters for investors.
  • Describe source country taxation concepts (withholding taxes) and the role of treaties conceptually.
  • Describe residence country taxation concepts and how foreign tax credits may reduce double taxation conceptually.
  • Recognize how tax considerations can influence investment vehicle selection and account choice at a high level.
  • Identify common cross-border tax frictions that can reduce after-tax return (withholding and reporting complexity).
  • Explain why international tax rules change and must be verified using current sources.
  • Calculate simple after-withholding income examples using basic arithmetic.
  • Identify when to escalate tax questions to qualified professionals or firm resources rather than guessing.

Managing Your Client's Investment Risk (5%)

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Chapter 16 - Managing Your Client's Investment Risk

  • Identify common investment risks and classify them at a high level (market, credit, liquidity, currency, inflation).
  • Describe methods of measuring investment risk conceptually (volatility, beta, and value-at-risk).
  • Explain how diversification can reduce portfolio risk and the role of correlation conceptually.
  • Explain how asset allocation contributes to risk management across market regimes conceptually.
  • Describe how options can be used to reduce investment risk conceptually (protective puts and collars).
  • Describe how futures contracts can be used to reduce investment risk conceptually (hedging equity or rate exposure).
  • Describe contracts for difference (CFDs) at a high level and identify key risks (leverage and counterparty).
  • Recognize trade-offs of risk reduction strategies (hedge cost, basis risk, and foregone upside).
  • Identify suitability and disclosure considerations when using derivatives for risk management in retail accounts.
  • Calculate basic exposure and hedge-size intuition using simplified examples.

Impediments to Wealth Accumulation (8%)

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Chapter 17 - Impediments to Wealth Accumulation

  • Identify key impediments to wealth accumulation conceptually (taxes, inflation, fees, and behavioural errors).
  • Explain why after-tax, after-fee compounding is the relevant metric for long-term wealth accumulation.
  • Describe tax-minimization portfolio management strategies at a high level (deferral, asset location, and loss realization).
  • Identify characteristics of tax-efficient investments at a high level (lower turnover and favourable income types).
  • Explain inflation risk and identify inflation-sensitive assets conceptually.
  • Describe cost-efficient investing principles and how small fee differences compound over time.
  • Recognize behavioural impediments that damage wealth (panic selling and return chasing) conceptually.
  • Explain the role of disciplined rebalancing in managing risk and maintaining alignment with objectives.
  • Calculate the impact of fees and taxes on ending wealth using simplified compounding examples.
  • Describe why leverage can both accelerate wealth accumulation and increase the probability of large losses.

Portfolio Monitoring and Performance Evaluation (7%)

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Chapter 18 - Portfolio Monitoring and Performance Evaluation

  • Describe portfolio monitoring objectives (risk control, drift detection, suitability, and communication).
  • Identify key portfolio items to monitor (allocation, concentration, liquidity, quality, duration, and exposures).
  • Explain rebalancing triggers and methods conceptually (calendar versus threshold rebalancing).
  • Differentiate time-weighted return and money-weighted return conceptually and when each is appropriate.
  • Explain why benchmark selection matters for performance evaluation and client reporting.
  • Describe risk-adjusted performance concepts at a high level (Sharpe ratio and information ratio).
  • Identify common performance evaluation pitfalls (short horizons, inappropriate benchmarks, and survivorship bias).
  • Describe how to present performance and risk to clients in a clear, fair, and balanced way.
  • Calculate simple holding period return and compare to a benchmark using basic arithmetic.
  • Identify when monitoring should trigger updates to risk profile, constraints, or the IPS.

Tip: If you can (1) restate the client constraint, (2) choose the right tool/formula, and (3) explain the trade-off, you’ll score well on IMT.

Sources: https://www.csi.ca/en/learning/courses/imt/curriculum and https://www.csi.ca/en/learning/courses/imt/exam-credits