News

Apr14

FCA’s Inter-Regnum Plan

The Regulator’s rather unexciting Plan has all the appearance of a document produced under orders to ‘say nothing new’. With a caretaker CEO, that is, no doubt, what we should expect.

Having made that point, to what extent does the Plan meet our forecast? Most of it is there, in one form or another. There is coverage of MiFID II and three references to CASS. Cyber-crime is on the menu, albeit with the promise of ‘working directly with firms and markets’. MAR will be ‘applied’, rather like a poultice, and the Asset Management Market Study will roll on with its implications for competition. Individual responsibility is firmly in favour – all part of the SM&CR plan, but no mention of the switch of focus from corporate fines to a more personalised form of discipline. Add to that financial crime being the subject of systematic supervision and culture the Nevada for which they will continue to strive, dragging in reviews of remuneration structures and proper use of whistleblowing ‘intelligence’.

But they did not remember everything. The items on the conveyor that eluded them included getting properly stuck-in to conflicts of interest, despite their indirect references through MiFID II and the Asset Management Study, and best execution, about which they appear to have said nothing, not even under Thematic Reviews, while Supervision continues its work in this very area. And what about security of sensitive information? Have they forgotten what they wrote on that already? No memory games for them, then.

So what? Well, we know which areas they remembered to mention, but I am not sure that their omissions prove anything. We know they are looking at best execution and Tracey has told us that she is fed up with huge fine (now that it all goes to HMT). They have only just sounded off about sensitive information, telling us how much there was to do, so they should be following up on that before too long. And if they don’t come back to Use of Dealing Commission this year, I will do an Ashdown – eating the hat, that is, not the other.

 

Posted in: FCA, MAR, MiFID, Remuneration Code
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Feb16

Use of European Commission

Two months on from the European Commission’s announcement that MiFID II would have to be delayed, we have now had a further announcement from the European Commission that MiFID II will have to be delayed. Even the process of delay has been delayed.

Two months ago, we welcomed the plan for a realistic postponement. Now that we have a little more detail, we can again welcome the move, in so far as it goes. Two aspects of the decision look right: that the delay should be for a full 12 months and that it should apply to the whole directive, not just selected parts.

However, inexplicably, the Commission has decided not to delay the date of transposition, the all important date by which national regulators must have published their rules for implementing the directive. That date remains set at 3rd July, just over four months from today. What is wrong with that when it has been known for several years? What is wrong is that the Commission has still not finalised Level 2 and therefore national regulators still lack the complete picture from which to work. ESMA provided the Commission with Level 2 drafts in its Advice a full year ago.

This delay at the Commission is not an isolated occurrence. Take a look at UCITS V. There the Commission received Advice from ESMA in November 2014. It is now expected that Level 2 will finally emerge from the Commission sometime in Q3 of this year, whereas UCITS V comes into force just one month from now. And take the Market Abuse Regulation. MAR comes into force on 3rd July, but Level 2 is nowhere to be seen.

Why does this really matter? Working in a regulated industry entails a great many risks, pitfalls and uncertainties, but, while that is now a largely accepted fact of life in the world of financial services, it does not excuse incompetence on the part of the regulators, of which the European Commission is determined to make itself the biggest cheese. The knock-on effects of its actions are that national regulators will have to attempt to produce requirements without having the full foundation on which to base them and, in addition, there will be inadequate time to consult properly before finalising rules and guidance. It is, frankly, unacceptable to have requirements in place that are ill-considered and incomplete.

If such delays were incurred by national regulators, there would be threats of infraction proceedings. When delays are caused by the European Commission, there is hardly a squeak of protest. You will have noticed that deadlines for national regulators appear in the directive, providing enforceability. No such deadlines are set for the Commission’s own work.

 

Posted in: EU, MiFID, Miscellaneous
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Feb9

ESMA clouds MAR with Guidelines

As the forthcoming EU Market Abuse Regulation creeps up on us, we now have a further dollop of related regulation, this time in the form of draft ‘Guidelines’ from ESMA (Draft guidelines on the Market Abuse Regulation, ESMA/2016/162). We aren’t very used to paying any real attention to EU Guidelines. In fact we aren’t all that used to implementing European regulations, given that EU measures usually come out as directives. MAR is not exactly breaking new ground, but, for many, it is still largely unfamiliar territory.

Before reading the Guidelines, take several anti-depressants. It is difficult to escape the conclusion that it was written by an unaccompanied minor hurrying home for tea. No doubt this is ESMA’s very best English – an unusual twist on the concept of the best driving out the good. Those who have read it will be seen reaching for the ballot paper as they contemplate life regulated by a single European rulebook.

The Guidelines cover two issues from MAR: market soundings and “legitimate interests of issuers to delay inside information and situations in which the delay of disclosure is likely to mislead the public”. This note focuses on the former, given that it is likely to have a wider audience, not only because it is more succinctly entitled.

Among the childish niggles is that most of the draft guidelines are little more than statements of the obvious. There ESMA might reasonably argue that it is only doing what it is mandated to do by its parent. Rather more substantive is the complaint that several guidelines are so poorly drafted that the Regulation would be clearer without them. More seriously, we have an example of drafting where it is unclear whether ESMA means what it says, genuinely intending that ‘Insider Lists’ should include people who are not in possession of inside information. Or is it just another typo? For proponents of the single European rulebook, this CP should be required reading.

So what is the big issue? It is the absence of actual guidance where the going gets tough. ESMA puts its finger – intelligently – on a vexed matter: that brokers who have received inside information and pass it on to clients in the normal way are not expressly protected from allegations of unlawful disclosure. So what does ESMA, the entity charged with bringing about ‘harmonisation’ in supervision, do about it? Nothing. They offer no guidance on whether this remains a legitimate practice of benefit to those seeking capital from the market – and what is CMU all about, one wonders – or whether this is a deliberate move to discourage or even surreptitiously to eliminate, without any CBA or other tiresome process discipline, this unscrupulous conduct. How should firms react? How should national regulators react? Let us hope the FCA will have the balls to go where eurocrats fear to tread.

But back to the big picture. No one could describe MAR as revolutionary; it is just about European standardisation, ensuring the removal of any national delinquency. As with so many measures that fall into that exploding corpus, it reflects that infamous military order to move the encampment six feet to the left. But this is not just some commander’s joke; this is for real. Firms must comply with MAR by 3rd July (by which time ESMA may or may not have published its finalised Guidelines). FCA is unlikely to be slow to insist that it happens.

 

Posted in: ESMA, EU, MAR
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