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

UK Firms Behind on their Plans for EMIR Refit, Novatus Survey Finds

Subscribe to our newsletter

UK firms are largely behind in their plans to comply with the EU’s EMIR Refit transaction reporting regulation, which comes into effect April 29, 2024. Moreover, they are finding the increased technological complexities introduced by the update particularly challenging.

These are among the main findings of a survey conducted by Novatus Advisory on readiness for the EMIR Refit among UK regulated entities. The survey explored the expected impact of the regulatory update from the perspective of 100 transaction reporting decision-makers.

The research – conducted in the fourth quarter of 2022 – was undertaken after the announcement of the April 2024 go-live date but before the release of guidelines and technical documentation by the European Securities Markets Authority (ESMA). It found that despite the announcement of the go-live date, many firms were behind the curve in their preparations, with 21% of respondents unsure of what will be required in practice.

The Novatus survey found that a significant number of respondents have no action plan in place, despite the go-live date being just over a year away. Of those who plan to manage the reporting process themselves, 37% currently have no action plan while 3% started considering the requirements.

According to Novates, 40% of regulated firms have no plan in place, and run the risk of being unready or noncompliant when the regulation goes live. Some 56% of respondents said they believed that 18 months is enough time for implementation.

These firms may struggle when it comes to dealing with the technological challenges of the EMIR Refit, which the Novatus research found to be a major concern among survey respondents. Under the revised EMIR rules, the number of reporting fields is increasing from 129 to 203, which will require firms to put in place a robust technical solution to ensure data is being consumed and reported accurately. The regulation is also introducing a requirement to use an automated XML reporting solution based on the ISO 20022 schema, adding to the technological challenge.

Elsewhere, the research suggested that firms risk spending a significant amount of time and money remediating issues if they fail to put in place a fully tested technological solution by the go-live date. This was the case with the last update to the existing EMIR rules back in late 2017, Novatus says, which forced 90% of respondents to review or assess how they report, with 76% still undertaking ongoing remediation. In short, if firms are unprepared and don’t have technology in place, there is a real risk that remediation will become a considerable (and costly) long-term problem.

Finally, the research found that a large number of firms are turning to external providers for support with their EMIR Refit implementation. Firms are adopting different approaches, with 59% intending to self-report and 41% planning to delegate to third-parties. Of those self-reporting, 68% still intend to use external providers for assurance that what they are doing is correct. Of those delegating, 76% say that their broker requires external support.

According to Novatus, this suggests there is a much wider ecosystem of providers across EMIR Refit, and also demonstrates that firms feel they don’t have the necessary expertise, knowledge or people to deliver the required changes.

The research – EMIR Refit: The current state of play – is available for free download from the Novatus website.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Best approaches for trade and transaction reporting

Compliance practitioners and technology leaders in capital markets face mounting pressure to ensure that reporting processes are efficient, accurate, and aligned with global standards. Market developments and jurisdictional nuances in regulatory frameworks like MiFID II, EMIR, SFTR and MAS create a continual challenge for compliance teams. This webinar brings together senior RegTech executives and seasoned...

BLOG

Inside the FCA’s Data Factory: How the Regulator Is Re-Composing MiFID, EMIR and SFTR Reporting for a New Era

When the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) talks about innovation in financial markets, it is often interpreted as guidance for firms and RegTech providers. But one of the lesser-recognised realities – made clear in its recent speech on innovation and human expertise – is that the FCA is itself one of the country’s largest consumers of...

EVENT

AI in Data Management Summit New York City

Following the success of the 15th Data Management Summit NYC, A-Team Group are excited to announce our new event: AI in Data Management Summit NYC!

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,...