The OSC is completing a set of conditions, known as draft recognition orders, under which it might allow the proposed deal to proceed.
As part of its proposal, Maple wants to buy the Canadian Depository for Securities Ltd, or CDS, which clears and settles all trades in Canada, and fold it into TMX, the operator of most of the country's securities exchanges.
That has spurred fears that clearing and settlement of transactions would favor Maple shareholders, which include Canada's top banks, insurers, big pension fund managers and some broker-dealers.
Another area of concern is that the CDS would turn into a for-profit model from its current cost-recovery model, which could open the door to price hikes. To get the deal done, Maple has said it is ready to give the OSC a role in overseeing clearing and settlement pricing.
Another sticking point is Maple's plan to acquire Alpha Group, TMX's biggest domestic competitor. Alpha - once a so-called alternative trading system that now has full status as an exchange - is owned by some of the members of the Maple consortium. Such concentration of power must be supervised, critics say.
The combined TMX-Alpha entity would control some 85 percent of all stock trades in Canada.
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