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 Releases Long-Awaited Third-Country Draft Rules

Subscribe to our newsletter

ESMA this week published its final report containing draft rules for third-country firms providing investment services in the EU under the MIFIR and MiFID II regimes. The document should provide some long-awaited clarity around the ability of third-country firms to operate in Europe – including, of course, the UK, upon its final departure from the EU on 31 December, 2020.

The draft rules outline a number of new elements – including the information third-country firms are required to provide to ESMA in order to register. It also lays out the changes to the MiFIR and MiFID II regimes for authorised third-country firms, under the Investment Firms Regulation and Directive (IFD) of 2019 (to learn more about the complexities of IFR/IFD reporting, check out our comprehensive analysis from AxiomSL here).

These changes include new reporting requirements for third-country firms to ESMA on an annual basis, and include the possibility for ESMA to ask third-country firms to provide substantially more granular information relating to all orders and transactions in the EU.

This could include information on the scale and scope of their activities; specific figures regarding their dealing on own account and underwriting and placing activities; the turnover and aggregated value of the assets corresponding to their activities in the EU, their investor protection and risk management arrangements, their governance arrangements and any other information ESMA deems necessary. New annual reporting requirements from branches of third-country firms to NCAs have also been introduced.

In addition, the draft rules give ESMA a raft of new regulatory powers such as the ability to request information or to temporarily restrict or prohibit operations by a third-country firm.

While the new reporting requirements were expected, their granularity might come as a surprise to some firms expecting to be able to carry on business as usual. And for UK firms, for whom uncertainty around Brexit continues to abound, it raises a stark concern over what will be expected of them in the new year.

“This report reflects the reality of what being a third-country means,” emphasises Volker Lainer, VP of Product Management and Regulatory Affairs at GoldenSource.

“Regardless of whether or not a trade agreement between the EU and the UK is struck, it will not be business as usual when it comes to regulatory reporting from January 2021. This report is a wakeup call to UK-based firms who have not yet got to grips with precisely what needs to be reported on to whom, and when. Only through centralising all their data can firms ensure they’re not just avoiding both non-compliance and costly over-reporting, but also prepare themselves for any future regulatory changes across other third-countries.”

A particularly on-topic trend for 2020 has been the growing shift towards handling regulatory data in the cloud – increasingly important in today’s remote working world, where financial firms are facing the challenge of meeting all their compliance requirements and regulatory deadlines without having the cohesive teamwork that comes from a central office location. While that is driving a strong movement towards cloud-based operations, it also throws up some compelling questions around how to make this process as efficient, effective and secure as possible. To learn more about why transitioning operating risk and regulatory reporting to on the cloud might be the right move for financial institutions to future-proof their global regulatory programs, why not check out our upcoming webinar on 20 October, 2020: ‘Moving Regulatory Data to the Cloud: A Use Case Discussion’ and book your complimentary place here.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Sponsored by FundGuard: NAV Resilience Under DORA, A Year of Lessons Learned

The EU’s Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) came into force a year ago, and is reshaping how asset managers, asset owners and fund service providers think about operational risk. While DORA’s focus is squarely on ICT resilience and third-party dependencies, its implications extend deep into core operational processes that are critical to market integrity, investor...

BLOG

AI Agents Need Better Data, Not Bigger Models – Daloopa Benchmark

AI-powered fundamental and historical data provider Daloopa has published new benchmark research examining how well leading AI agent systems perform on real-world financial research tasks. Titled Benchmarking AI Agents on Financial Retrieval, the study evaluates whether recent advances in agentic AI translate into reliable outcomes when accuracy matters most. The benchmark focuses on a core...

EVENT

TEST Event page 2

Now in its 15th year the TradingTech Summit London brings together the European trading technology capital markets industry and examines the latest changes and innovations in trading technology and explores how technology is being deployed to create an edge in sell side and buy side capital markets financial institutions.

GUIDE

FRTB Special Report

FRTB is one of the most sweeping and transformative pieces of regulation to hit the financial markets in the last two decades. With the deadline confirmed as January 2022, this Special Report provides a detailed insight into exactly what the data requirements are for FRTB in its latest (and final) incarnation, and explores what needs to be done in order to meet these needs on a cost-effective and company-wide basis.