About a-team Marketing Services
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry

A-Team Insight Blogs

LEI Regulatory Oversight Committee Names Leadership and Reprieves PSPG

Subscribe to our newsletter

The formation of a global legal entity identifier (LEI) system took a large step forward late last week when the first meeting of the Regulatory Oversight Committee (ROC) took place in Toronto, taking over leadership and direction of the LEI initiative from the Financial Stability Board (FSB) and naming its leadership team.

The meeting was hosted by the Ontario Securities Commission last Thursday and Friday, 24 and 25 January, and was attended by 49 public authorities as LEI ROC members and 16 as observers, a handful more participants than those signed up to be part of, or observe, the governance body of the global LEI system at the last count on 10 January 2013.

At the inaugural meeting, the ROC selected Matthew Reed from the US Treasury Department as its first chair. He is joined by vice chairs Jun Mizuguchi of Japan’s Financial Services Agency and Bertrand Couillault of Banque de France. An initial executive committee was also formed with representatives from around the world and the meeting began the process of establishing the Committee of Evaluation and Standards.

Following ongoing investigation by the LEI Implementation Group and LEI Private Sector Preparatory Group (PSPG) into the best location for the LEI foundation that will operate the Central Operating Unit of the global LEI system – an essential operating component along with federated local operating units – the ROC decided to form the LEI foundation in Switzerland and agreed to take forward necessary work to establish its presence.

The ROC also reprieved the LEI PSPG that was due to be wound down when responsibility for the LEI initiative transferred from the FSB. A statement following the ROC meeting welcomes the development work of the close to 300 private sector experts that played a part in the PSPG, and adds: “The ROC . . . looks forward to continue[ing] active coordination with the group to further the development of the global LEI system, including the operational framework, relationship data, intellectual property, data privacy and confidentiality.”

No doubt, the financial services industry will welcome the outcomes of the first ROC meeting and the retention of the PSPG as its work, particularly on relationship data and an operational framework, remains critical to the success of a global LEI system.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: GenAI and LLM case studies for Surveillance, Screening and Scanning

As Generative AI (GenAI) and Large Language Models (LLMs) move from pilot to production, compliance, surveillance, and screening functions are seeing tangible results – and new risks. From trade surveillance to adverse media screening to policy and regulatory scanning, GenAI and LLMs promise to tackle complexity and volume at a scale never seen before. But...

BLOG

Global Regulators Turn Up Heat on Exaggerated AI Claims

Supervisors on both sides of the Atlantic are no longer content with soft warnings about artificial intelligence (AI) hype. From the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to the United Kingdom’s Advertising Standards Authority (ASA), the direction of travel is clear: say what you do, do what you say – and prove it. Regulators...

EVENT

ExchangeTech Summit London

A-Team Group, organisers of the TradingTech Summits, are pleased to announce the inaugural ExchangeTech Summit London on May 14th 2026. This dedicated forum brings together operators of exchanges, alternative execution venues and digital asset platforms with the ecosystem of vendors driving the future of matching engines, surveillance and market access.

GUIDE

Regulatory Data Handbook 2025 – Thirteenth Edition

Welcome to the thirteenth edition of A-Team Group’s Regulatory Data Handbook, a unique and practical guide to capital markets regulation, regulatory change, and the data and data management requirements of compliance across Europe, the UK, US and Asia-Pacific. This year’s edition lands at a moment of accelerating regulatory divergence and intensifying data focused supervision. Inside,...