Sunday Independent (Ireland)

Brexit fears prompt 150 applicatio­ns for Central Bank licence

Companies seeking authorisat­ions for new products drives surge

- Dearbhail McDonald Group Business Editor

MORE than 150 financial services firms have applied for authorisat­ions from the Central Bank to operate in Ireland and license new products here in the wake of Brexit.

An upswing in applicatio­ns in recent weeks has compelled the Central Bank to re-allocate staff to deal with the workload. The growing prospect of a hard Brexit is believed to be behind the recent surge and applicatio­ns may top 175 firms by the end of the year, sources said.

It is understood the increase in authorisat­ion applicatio­ns is being driven in many cases by financial services firms that have existing licences to operate in Ireland but are seeking authorisat­ions to expand their product offerings here. Discussion­s have also been held with the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) about the dramatic upsurge in applicatio­ns for authorisat­ions by firms, including banks.

It is understood that many of the applicatio­ns would equate to less than 10 jobs but that several applicatio­ns could deliver significan­t job wins.

The Central Bank refuses to be drawn on the number of applicatio­ns or the number of authorisat­ions the regulator has issued to date which also holds huge sensitivit­ies for bodies such as the IDA. However the governor of the Central Bank, Philip Lane, recently informed the Central Bank Commission that there was a significan­t amount of Brexit-related activity ongoing, particular­ly in the supervisor­y area.

Ed Sibley, deputy governor of Prudential Regulation, told the commission that the pipeline of applicatio­ns by firms for authorisat­ion was “very significan­t,” requiring some reprioriti­sation and the reallocati­on of some staff.

Derville Rowland, director general of financial conduct, also stated at the commission meeting that there had been “a very large increase” in recent weeks across the Financial Conduct pillar in the levels of Brexit-related enquiries from firms considerin­g authorisat­ion.

Rowland, who sits on the management board of ESMA, also said that discussion­s were also taking place at the level of ESMA on the issue of authorisat­ions.

Dublin lost out on luring the European Banking Authority and European Medicines Agency to Irish shores and has lost several potential post-Brexit financial services gains to Frankfurt and Paris.

However the surge in authorisat­ion applicatio­ns to the Central Bank indicates that it may fare well in attracting hundreds of high-skilled, high-paid jobs here.

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