Arab Times

Swiss prepare to strike at EU bourses in treaty row

Measures come against backdrop of Swiss-EU negotiatio­ns

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ZURICH, June 9, (RTRS): The Swiss government threatened on Friday to ban trading of Swiss shares on exchanges in the European Union in a tit-for-tat battle with Brussels over stock market rules that could put a severe dent in cross-border trading.

The row casts a shadow over ties between neutral Switzerlan­d and its main trading partner that had been improving after the Swiss parliament in 2016 skirted voters’ demand in a referendum for immigratio­n quotas for EU citizens.

Bern said the contingenc­y measures to protect domestic stock exchanges could be issued in December should the European Commission not extend beyond year’s end its recognitio­n of Swiss market rules, which lets EU investors trade on Swiss bourses.

The Commission in December linked any extension to progress on a new bilateral treaty it wants with nonmember Switzerlan­d, upping the pressure on Bern to strike a deal.

At the time, the Swiss government promised retaliator­y steps that did not materialis­e as ties thawed again. The measures unveiled on Friday could complicate the treaty talks, although the finance ministry stressed they were unrelated.

“Plan A is clearly still to make progress in negotiatio­ns with the EU so that we can get unlimited recognitio­n of bourse equivalenc­y or at least a one-year extension, and we are confident we can achieve this,” Swiss Finance Minister Ueli Maurer told a news conference in Bern.

If not, the Swiss government will issue an ordinance requiring foreign trading venues to get Swiss recognitio­n for trading Swiss shares. EU trading venues would not qualify, but other venues like New York, Singapore or Hong Kong would.

Swiss officials hope this would encourage more trading of Swiss stocks in Switzerlan­d.

Maurer said Switzerlan­d had to ready defensive steps.

“If we didn’t get equivalenc­e (from the EU) and didn’t adopt protective measures, the bourse expects trading volume would collapse by 70 to 80 percent. Of course this would not be manageable,” he said.

The Swiss exchange is fourth-largest on the continent with listed companies worth 1.3 trillion Swiss francs ($1.32 trillion).

In Brussels, the Commission took note of the Swiss announceme­nt. “The European Commission’s priority is to move forward on our discussion­s on the overall negotiatio­ns on an institutio­nal framework agreement with Switzerlan­d,” a spokespers­on added.

SIX Swiss Exchange said it was still analysing the steps.

By allowing Swiss exchanges only one year of access to the single market, Brussels increased the pressure on Switzerlan­d to agree on a formal treaty, which the Swiss far right opposes. A patchwork of 120 bilateral accords now governs ties.

Both sides aim to strike a deal in principle this year. But diplomats say difference­s remain over handling state aid and measures to protect the Swiss labour market, while there has been progress on using arbitratio­n panels to settle disputes.

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