Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

US regulators warn over 'Brexit' risk to global markets, companies

- By Pete Schroeder and Michelle Price

WASHINGTON, Dec 06 (REUTERS) - Two top US regulators called on Britain and the European Union on Thursday to ensure a path forward for Britain's exit from the EU that would minimise disruption for financial firms and markets, emphasisin­g the need for clarity and stability.

In unusually punchy statements, the chairs of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission ( CFTC) and the Securities and Exchange Commission ( SEC) separately said Brexit was already having an impact on some U.S. companies and investors, and that the risk to global markets was underestim­ated.

“The potential adverse effects of Brexit are not well understood and, in the areas where they are understood, are underestim­ated,” said SEC chair Jay Clayton in a speech delivered in New York.

He added it would be a “tall order” for the EU and UK authoritie­s to provide a path that minimised disruption and costs if they failed to come up with a transition geared towards broad, long-term economic stability.

Earlier on Thursday, CFTC chairman Christophe­r Giancarlo said Brexit uncertaint­y could create instabilit­y in the global derivative­s market and urged the EU and Britain to agree terms “in a manner that provides sufficient legal and regulatory certainty” to markets.

Prime Minister Theresa May's government has agreed on a Brexit deal with Brussels, but there is a strong chance it could be rejected by parliament when it is put to a vote next week, political analysts say. Concerns that Britain will leave the EU next March without a deal have hammered the pound and could cause dislocatio­n in global markets, regulators and business leaders have warned.

Last week, the U. S. Federal Reserve said that a no- deal Brexit posed nearterm risk to the U. S. financial system by disrupting cross- border financial services arrangemen­ts and potentiall­y underminin­g confidence in the euro zones fiscal and financial prospects.

Brexit worries are adding to already jittery global markets that have been roiled by fears over a breakdown in U. S.- China trade relations and weak oil prices, with the U. S. Dow Jones stocks benchmark dropping 1.8 per- cent on Thursday.

The CFTC is the primary regulator of the U. S. derivative­s market, which is the worlds largest and is deeply interconne­cted with markets around the world. The regulator is worried that changes to the terms of cross-border EU- UK derivative­s rules after Brexit could have ripple effects globally market since UK clearing houses also operate in the United States and Asia.

In particular, the EU has said it will still allow EU trades to be pushed through UK clearing houses after Brexit, even if Britain is not able to reach a final deal that would establish cross-border financial rules.

On Thursday, Giancarlo said the EU needed to provide greater clarity on the details of that arrangemen­t, including which products would be included and how long it would last.

“This additional clarity and certainty are necessary to limit substantia­l operationa­l and market risks that will result from the sudden transfer of potentiall­y trillions of euros in swap exposures in the remaining weeks before a possible no-deal Brexit,” he said.

 ??  ?? A Brexit supporter holds a placard next to anti-Brexit demonstrat­or during a protest opposite the House of Parliament / REUTERS
A Brexit supporter holds a placard next to anti-Brexit demonstrat­or during a protest opposite the House of Parliament / REUTERS

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