Eastern Eye (UK)

‘UK will have freedom to set its own finance rules’

SUNAK CHARTS ROADMAP FOR LONDON IN MANSION HOUSE SPEECH

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THE chancellor pledged last Thursday (1) to “sharpen” the competitiv­e advantage of the UK financial services sector as he set out his vision for its future after the City of London lost business to the bloc after Brexit.

In his first Mansion House speech, traditiona­lly an annual address given by the chancellor in the City of London financial district, Rishi Sunak said Britain’s departure from the European Union was a unique opportunit­y to tailor rules while maintainin­g high regulatory standards and open markets.

Brexit has largely severed the City’s ties with investors in the EU, triggering a shift in more than 7,500 financial jobs from London to new hubs in the bloc, with Amsterdam leapfroggi­ng London to become Europe’s biggest share trading centre.

Last year the Treasury rolled out reviews to listings rules, fintech and insurance capital rules, and last Thursday it announced there would be further public consultati­ons on financial reforms. The Treasury set out plans to change a slew of rules inherited from the EU, which could make Brussels think even harder about granting any direct City access to the bloc due to inevitable difference­s emerging in hitherto identical rules.

Britain said it plans to scrap curbs on “dark” or off exchange trading favoured by big investors wanting anonymity but distrusted by EU regulators. Rob Moulton, a lawyer at Latham & Watkins, said it was clear the UK was unafraid to diverge from EU regulation and “may be seen in Brussels as an attempt to promote the City and walk away from common standards”.

Sunak said there will be new sustainabi­lity disclosure requiremen­ts for companies to report on the impact they have on the environmen­t, a step the EU has already taken.

To date, sustainabi­lity disclosure­s look only at how climate change affects a company’s financial performanc­e. Sunak will publish more details before the UN COP26 climate conference in Glasgow in November.

Miles Celic, CEO of TheCityUK which promotes UK financial services abroad, said there was a need to ensure a compelling propositio­n for Britain to remain a world leading financial centre.

“This includes simplifyin­g our regulatory regime while maintainin­g its quality and strength, providing certainty and clarity with a business tax roadmap, and enhancing efforts to attract and retain the talent we need,” Celic said.

The financial sector was largely left out of Britain’s trade deal with the EU, cutting lucrative ties with investors in the bloc, and the industry wants a government strategy for the City. The EU has yet to decide how much direct access it will grant the City in future, while trying to engineer a shift in clearing in euro derivative­s from London to Frankfurt.

Sunak said while EU access for the City “has not happened”, the bloc would never have cause to deny Britain access because of poor regulatory standards.

“So I see no reason of substance why the UK cannot or should not continue to provide clearing services for countries in the EU and around the world,” he said.

Petr Wagner from the European Commission’s internatio­nal affairs unit told the Investment Associatio­n’s annual conference that the EU does not want to “put up a wall” and wanted to deepen its own capital market.

Sunak said Britain could take a more nuanced approach to serve the fast growing Chinese financial services market of £40 trillion while still taking a “principled stand on issues we judge to contravene our values”, a reference to human rights. He said Britain wanted to deepen ties with the US and would establish a “ground-breaking” system of cross-border access for the sector with Switzerlan­d.

 ??  ?? UNIQUE OPPORTUNIT­Y: Rishi Sunak delivers his ‘Mansion House’ speech
in London last Thursday (1)
UNIQUE OPPORTUNIT­Y: Rishi Sunak delivers his ‘Mansion House’ speech in London last Thursday (1)

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