Stabroek News

EU markets watchdog looks to stop unfair Brexit sweeteners

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LONDON (Reuters) - The European Union’s market watchdog is investigat­ing ways to stop national regulators competing unfairly with each other as they try to attract firms from Britain after Brexit in a beauty parade of financial centres.

The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) told Reuters it is studying the risk of “regulatory arbitrage” - where some EU states might offer financial firms lighter supervisio­n than other member states in return for the jobs and high tax revenue they would bring.

While the issue concerns business coming from any non-EU country, ESMA’s move is an early sign of how some regulators believe there may be a particular need for precaution­ary measures for when Britain leaves the bloc.

Regulators in a number of EU countries have made clear they will not tolerate “brass plate” arrangemen­ts, where business is officially routed through an office in a member state but senior executives and IT systems remain in London, Europe’s dominant financial centre.

However, the risk is that some EU states might be tempted to break ranks and allow such front operations after Brexit.

The issue is particular­ly likely to affect asset management; Britain is the second largest centre for this after the United States, managing 5.7 trillion pounds ($7 trillion) on behalf of clients, many of them in continenta­l Europe.

Financial firms in the UK, worried they will lose access to the bloc’s capital market, are deciding whether to move some operations and staff to new bases on the continent or in Ireland.

Frankfurt, Paris, Luxembourg and Dublin are vying to attract banks, market infrastruc­ture firms, insurers or asset managers.

A spokesman for Parisbased ESMA said its inquiries concerned issues that a national regulator in the EU may face when financial firms from another country show an interest or make an applicatio­n for a licence.

“It is not focused on efficiency issues of different financial centres, but rather looking at issues around outsourcin­g and delegation which could lead to regulatory arbitrage,” an ESMA spokesman said.

Outsourcin­g and delegation refers to when key functions of operations in an EU state are being carried out in a country outside the bloc, such as in fund management. Worries could centre around, for example, a firm being granted a licence to operate a subsidiary in an EU country but being allowed to run much of unit’s operations from its office in Britain.

EU rules require safeguards to ensure continuity of service and clear lines of management responsibi­lities.

Financial watchdogs have told banks they will have to have a certain amount of capital, senior staff on the ground and approved risk models to get a licence to operate across the EU.

The European Central Bank has considerab­le powers to clamp down, as it must first grant the licence for, say, a Londonbase­d bank that wants to move operations to Frankfurt.

This is not necessaril­y the case in other areas like markets, which lack such powerful pan-European regulators.

A financial industry official in London said that it made sense to have some sort of common approach among regulators across the EU for the authorisat­ion of new firms.

“But ESMA is hamstrung as they can only provide a non-legally binding recommenda­tion, which the national regulators can freely ignore,” the official said.

Discussion­s of Brexitrela­ted moves are already well underway.

Hiscox, an insurance

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 ??  ?? Kevin Ramnarine
Kevin Ramnarine

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