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

ESMA has Published Its Technical Standards for MiFIR!

Subscribe to our newsletter

By Chris Pickles, Co-Chair of FIX Trading Community’s Reference Data Subgroup and Member of the Bloomberg Open Symbology Team

At last the document has arrived – you can find it on the ESMA web site at http://tinyurl.com/nh5spx7. And there are changes in there that are very significant to anyone involved in reference data, in compliance, in trading – almost any aspect of an investment firm, an exchange, an ARM, whatever.

This is about the fundamental data that financial institutions will have to have access to, manage and use in order to operate their businesses and comply with EU/EEA regulations. In terms of reference data, one of the key recommendations of ESMA to the European Commission in this document is that all instruments admitted to trading on any exchange or trading venue should be identified by an ISIN (International Securities Identification Number).

One victory for ‘standards geeks’ is that ESMA has accepted that its proposal for the use of Alternative Instrument Identifiers (AIIs) to identify exchange-traded derivatives does not meet the requirement. AIIs are not a recognised industry standard, and they are also not used anywhere outside of the EEA.

One of the reasons why the concept of the AII was created was the recognition in the UK back in the days of MiFID I implementation that the then ISO 6166/ISIN standard would not allow for the identification of the vast quantity of derivatives instruments in the marketplace. Since then, the ISO 6166 standard has been enhanced and can now cope with a larger number of financial instruments.

The total number of ISINs that has been allocated has also increased significantly during ESMA’s consultation phase on this topic. The Association of National Numbering Agencies (ANNA) indicated in its 2014 Annual Report that some 13 million ISINs had been issued to date (ISINs first began to be issued in 1983). A public presentation by ANNA earlier this month indicated that that number had risen to some 31 million, which would mean that more ISINs have been allocated in the last 12 months than have been allocated since the ISIN standard was first created over 30 years ago.

This is where ideas differ about “how big is Big Data?” The number of ISINs has gone up by around 18 million in one year, but the number of financial instruments that major data vendors are having to manage has gone up by over 60 million over the last 12 months.

Market participants, infrastructures and regulators will now have to find a way to get the necessary number of ISINs allocated before MiFIR comes into force in January 2017. That work will be up to the individual ISIN issuers – the ‘national numbering agencies’ – for each of the 31 EEA countries. Only one organisation per country is currently allowed to issue ISINs, and this extra work will place a significant burden on them.

In its Technical Standards proposals, ESMA has also commented on data elements that are included in the current version of the Market Model Typology (MMT), which is maintained by the FIX Trading Community. The specialist subgroups that it has created to examine the requirements of MiFID II / MiFIR and of ESMA’s new proposed Technical Standards will now be adding this changed set of requirements to its work in order to ensure that the FIX Protocol, as an open, free and non-proprietary standard, is fully able to meet the financial sector’s needs and in good time.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Detecting and preventing market abuse

Market abuse – unlawful disclosure of inside information, insider trading, circular trading, “pump and dump” schemes, etc. – poses significant threats to the integrity of capital markets. In 2024, global trading house Trafigura agreed to pay a $55 million fine to the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) for trading with non-public information, manipulating a...

BLOG

AI is Helping to Solve New ESG Data Challenges: ESG Briefing Review

The peculiar demands that ESG data integration places on capital markets participants requires powerful techniques that are increasingly being provided through artificial intelligence, A-Team Group’s recent ESG Data and Tech Briefing London heard. From data quality monitoring and analytics to supply chain analysis and investment management, AI-based tools are already offering automated solutions to some...

EVENT

TradingTech Briefing New York

Our TradingTech Briefing in New York is aimed at senior-level decision makers in trading technology, electronic execution, trading architecture and offers a day packed with insight from practitioners and from innovative suppliers happy to share their experiences in dealing with the enterprise challenges facing our marketplace.

GUIDE

The DORA Implementation Playbook: A Practitioner’s Guide to Demonstrating Resilience Beyond the Deadline

The Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) has fundamentally reshaped the European Union’s financial regulatory landscape, with its full application beginning on January 17, 2025. This regulation goes beyond traditional risk management, explicitly acknowledging that digital incidents can threaten the stability of the entire financial system. As the deadline has passed, the focus is now shifting...