Khaleej Times

London to lose $100B from loss of clearing

- Will Hadfield

london — Banks and investors will end up $100 billion worse off if the European Union forcibly repatriate­s the clearing of euro-denominate­d derivative­s after Brexit, according to London Stock Exchange Group’s CEO Xavier Rolet.

Writing in the London-based Times on Monday, Rolet said the EU “should not meddle with a safe, transparen­t system” that underpins global markets. The CEO has the ear of Prime Minister Theresa May as she navigates Brexit negotiatio­ns with the EU, and Rolet has been advising 10 Downing Street, the office for prime ministers, for years.

The $100 billion estimate is the increased cost of trading for banks that use off-exchange interest-rate contracts. Rolet had previously touted an estimate of $77 billion in additional costs for banks from any decision by EU regulators to strip the business from London.

The LSE CEO has a track record of making dire warnings about the fragmentat­ion of clearing. In September, Rolet said that at least 100,000 jobs would be at risk if clearing left the UK, then raised that figure to 232,000. The LSE is the majority owner of LCH, the world’s biggest clearingho­use. LCH handles more than 90 per cent of cleared interest rate trades in the world’s main currencies. — Bloomberg

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