Daily Observer (Jamaica)

British finance sector’s ‘EU passport’ set to expire

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PARIS, France (AFP) — On January 1, 2021 the European finance sector will lose a major player as Britain begins to chart its own course, regardless of Thursday’s last-minute deal in Brexit talks.

The key economic activity was never a part of the drawnout negotiatio­ns between Brussels and London.

British financial institutio­ns will no longer benefit from a “European passport” that has allowed them to pitch their services across the entire 27nation bloc without supplement­al agreements.

Many have therefore had to either move their headquarte­rs to the European Union (EU) or set up a subsidiary there.

Bank of America moved some activities to Paris, while the new fintech group Bankable chose to relocate to Brussels.

Paris Europlace, which promotes the French capital as a place to do business, estimates more than 3,500 direct jobs have been created there since the Brexit referendum in mid-2016.

Companies that remain based in Britain must prove that EU subsidiari­es employ sufficient staff and have the means to do business, to ensure they are not simply “letter boxes” set up to flout EU regulation­s.

A key question here is the meaning of the word “sufficient”, so EU authoritie­s reserve the right to harden criteria at a later point creating uncertaint­y for financial interests that are working hard to create a viable organisati­onal model.

In September, the EU authorised London clearing houses to continue operating on the continent for 18 months, acknowledg­ing the fact that EU members cannot do without them.

Once that period has expired however, EU authoritie­s have suggested that compensati­on for goods and services in euros will have to take place within the union.

Further down the road, a key question is whether British financial institutio­ns will still benefit from so-called equivalenc­e decisions.

These exist in many European directives on financial services, and recognise that other countries’ regulation­s are equivalent to EU rules, opening access to the European market.

They would allow many companies based in Britain to conserve some access without having to relocate activities to the continent.

London “has granted a certain number of equivalenc­es to European financial companies”, noted Marc Perrone, a corporate lawyer with the Freshfield­s firm.

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