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

Global Trade Surveillance Requirements Across MiFID II, MAR and Benchmark Regulation

Subscribe to our newsletter

By: Jordan Dilworth, research analyst, JWG

Since the financial collapse in 2008, regulators have been concerned about the vulnerability of firms engaged in trading activities and have reacted by emphasising preventive measures. Out of this drive emerged trade surveillance, which aims to prevent market abuse and market manipulation.

In June 2016, the Market Abuse Regulation (MAR) was enforced. This regulation repealed and replaced the Market Abuse Directive. The key changes were to increase regulatory scope by covering European regulated markets, multilateral trading facilities and organised trading facilities, updating the definition of inside information, defining market abuse as suspicious orders and transactions, and introducing more prescriptive monitoring obligations.

Whilst MAR and Markets in Financial Instruments Directive II (MiFID II) were initially to be enforced around the same time, the deadline for MiFID II was pushed back a year. The result? While firms have prepared for MAR, risk operating models must be recalibrated to ensure compliance with both MAR and MiFID II. In addition, contributors of input data must comply with the Benchmark Regulation by monitoring and identifying suspicious data. This article outlines three main points that are based around the first and second lines of defence, real-time monitoring and benchmarks.

Building the first line of defence

Traditionally, firms operate in a ‘three lines’ risk model. The first line of defence is line management, second is an independent compliance risk management team, and third is an internal audit. While this model works in theory, it can be difficult to define clearly which functions are the responsibility of each line of defence.

Concerns around the first two lines of defence include: who and what functions should sit in the first and second lines of defence? For instance, who is responsible for real-time monitoring and is the line between these lines too blurred, making it difficult to breakdown the distinction between the two. How can this problem be overcome? Greater collaboration between firms and regulators is required to understand regulators’ expectations.

How to monitor in real time

Market structures of liquid securities are converging across asset classes. Liquidity is increasingly spread across different trading venues and MAR highlights the need to be looking across products, such as when a connection exists between the derivative of a security and the security itself. In these market structures, MAR requirements to perform surveillance of activity demand micro-second records to replay market conditions and successfully identify any potential market manipulation.

‘Real-time’ monitoring and its position is difficult to define. Regardless of responsibility within an organisation, ensuring that monitoring takes place in real time is increasingly being demanded by regulators and it is clearly a prominent issue for compliance with both MAR and MiFID II.

Surveying benchmarks

The Benchmark Regulation (BMR) has been enforced for critical benchmarks and most of the provisions of the regulation will apply from January 1, 2018. There are significant challenges with regards to implementation, particularly in relation to EU firms referencing non-EU benchmarks.

Although most of the surveillance obligations in BMR are the responsibility of administrators of benchmarks, firms that contribute input data to benchmarks fall under the scope of surveillance requirements. If a firm contributes input data, then the firm will have to comply with the administrator’s code of conduct. Part of this compliance will include conducting surveillance for suspicious input data to be reported to a firm’s compliance team. As this issue is not being widely considered, it is important that this requirement is not forgotten in the rush to comply with the regulatory tsunami coming in 2018.

What is the future of trade surveillance?

2018 will bring a range of challenges and opportunities within the transparency space. With MiFID II being enforced, firms will have to be in continuous dialogue with each other, regulators and vendors to comply with trade surveillance obligations.

In addition, firms will have to rely on regulatory technology to ensure compliance. By using innovative technological solutions to automate the capture and analysis of multiple sources of data, such as decision making, behavioural bias and conduct management, suspicious orders will be more effectively flagged and analysed to comply with obligations.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Trade South Africa: Considerations for Connecting to and Trading the Johannesburg Markets

Interest among the international institutional community in trading South African markets is on the rise. With connectivity, data and analytics options for trading on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange growing more sophisticated, and the emergence of A2X as a credible alternative equity market, South Africa is shaping up as a financial centre that can offer a...

BLOG

CTM Debuts New Tri-Party Matching Workflow for Prime Brokers with Société Générale as First to Go Live

The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC), the leading provider of post-trade market infrastructure for the global financial services industry, has announced Société Générale as the first Prime Broker to adopt the Central Trade Manager’s (CTM) automated tri-party trade matching workflow. This development comes as the financial services sector worldwide braces for T+1 and more...

EVENT

Data Management Summit London

Now in its 14th year, the Data Management Summit (DMS) in London brings together the European capital markets enterprise data management community, to explore how data strategy is evolving to drive business outcomes and speed to market in changing times.

GUIDE

Regulatory Data Handbook 2023 – Eleventh Edition

Welcome to the eleventh edition of A-Team Group’s Regulatory Data Handbook, a popular publication that covers new regulations in capital markets, tracks regulatory change, and provides advice on the data, data management and implementation requirements of more than 30 regulations across UK, European, US and Asia-Pacific capital markets. This edition of the handbook includes new...