The Daily Telegraph

Brussels stock research rules axed in boost for City

- By Michael Bow

EU RULES on stock market research underpinni­ng Britain’s £9 trillion money management industry will be scrapped in a post-brexit boost for the City.

The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) is consulting on plans to remove laws forcing fund managers to pay separately for research on Uk-listed companies.

EU rules prevented stock brokers from “bundling” their research into a package of trading services sold to fund managers in 2018.

The FCA said the current system was too complex and disadvanta­ged smaller fund managers.

The system has also been blamed for the current malaise on the UK stock market, with a lack of research contributi­ng to less investment in UK stocks.

Under the new proposals, research and trading fees will be combined in a single payment.

Sarah Pritchard, an FCA director, said: “High quality, easily accessible investment research is a vital part of a healthy, dynamic capital market. It supports the decisions investors make. We are proposing to provide more options on how to pay for such research, helping boost competitio­n and making it easier to buy research across borders.”

The regulation­s were part of Brussels’ Mifid II rulebook, which were introduced in early 2018 before the UK quit the EU.

Before this, fund managers would get their company research for free from stockbroke­rs.

The overhaul led to a dearth of research on UK companies, as brokers cut back on offering research.

“One major reason for the City of London’s current malaise is a dearth of investment research to inform decisions,” said Fraser Thorne, founder of Edison, the investment research firm.

“Asset managers and institutio­nal investors remain unaware of the breadth of opportunit­ies, and innovative new firms are left to languish in obscurity,” he said.

The EU is also planning to scrap the rules but it will take longer to do so.

A two-year procedure required to rewrite rules and enact them across the 27 member trading bloc means the City will get a headstart on the rest of Europe.

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