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Implementing Technical Standards Published For Reporting by Money Market Fund Managers
05/15/2018
A Commission Implementing Regulation has been published in the Official Journal of the European Union, setting out Implementing Technical Standards for a standard reporting template to be used by money market fund managers when complying with their reporting requirements under the Money Market Funds Regulation. The Commission Implementing Regulation is based on the final draft ITS submitted by the European Securities and Markets Authority to the European Commission in November 2017.
The MMFR requires MMF managers to report quarterly to the relevant national regulator, supplying information including on the characteristics, portfolio indicators, assets, and liabilities of the MMF. This information is required to enable those national regulators to detect, monitor and respond to risks in the MMF market. The information is also forwarded to ESMA, which maintains a central database of MMFs.
Read more. -
EU Fifth Money Laundering Directive Adopted
05/14/2018
The Council of the European Union has adopted the EU's Fifth Money Laundering Directive, following the agreement reached between the European Parliament and the Council in December 2017. 5MLD will amend the existing EU Money Laundering Directive.
Read more. -
International Bodies Publish Identification Criteria and Capital Treatment for Simple, Transparent and Comparable Short-Term Securitizations
05/14/2018
The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision and the International Organization of Securities Commissions have published an updated version of the sound practices document, "Criteria for identifying simple, transparent and comparable short-term securitisations", which was originally published in 2015. The Basel Committee has also published an updated version of its standards document, "Capital treatment for simple, transparent and comparable short-term securitisations".
The Basel Committee and IOSCO consulted on the proposed updated Criteria in July 2017. The Basel Committee consulted at the same time on proposed additional guidance and requirements for the purpose of applying preferential regulatory capital treatment for banks acting as investors in, or as sponsors of, STC short-term securitizations, typically in asset-backed commercial paper structures.
Read more. -
FFIEC Publishes Customer Due Diligence and Beneficial Ownership Overviews and Examination Procedures
05/11/2018
The U.S. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation published the customer due diligence and beneficial ownership examination sections of the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council BSA/AML Examination Manual.
Read more. -
UK Competition and Markets Authority Issues Working Paper on Gains from Engagement as Part of Its Investment Consultants Market Investigation
05/10/2018
The U.K. Competition and Markets Authority has issued the latest in a series of working papers as part of its Investment Consultants Market Investigation. This latest Working Paper sets out the CMA's findings following its analysis of whether pension schemes that are more engaged with the market receive better outcomes, in terms of price, than pension schemes that are less engaged. It should be read alongside the Issues Statement on the investigation, published in September 2017, as well as the other working papers, published earlier in 2018.
The CMA's emerging findings are that engaged schemes pay significantly less, and disengaged schemes pay significantly more, when schemes transition into fiduciary management with the same provider as they used for investment consultancy services. The CMA believes that this is indicative that the market is not working well for disengaged schemes, or for schemes facing barriers to engagement.
Read more.Topic: Competition -
Draft UK Legislation Published to Broaden Range of Permitted Trading Venues for Islamic Finance Instruments
05/09/2018
A draft of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Regulated Activities) (Amendment) Order 2018 has been laid before Parliament. The draft Order makes amendments to the definition of "Alternative Finance Investment Bonds" in the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Regulated Activities) Order 2001.
AFIBs, such as Sukuk, are currently not permitted to trade on multilateral trading facilities or organised trading facilities, due to the wording of the AFIB definition in the RAO, however conventional bonds can be traded on these venues. This disparity of treatment between AFIBs and conventional bonds creates an obstacle to the use of U.K. venues for the issue and trading of AFIBs and is contrary to the U.K. Government's standing commitment to provide a level playing field for Islamic finance instruments in regulation and taxation in the U.K. The draft Order amends the RAO to expand the criteria for AFIBs to qualify as a specified investment under the RAO. This will allow AFIBs to be traded on U.K. MTFs and OTFs and ensure AFIBs are treated in the same way as conventional bonds for trading purposes.
Read more.Topic: Securities -
Jens Weidmann Re-Elected as Chair of the Bank of International Settlements Board
05/08/2018
The Board of Directors of the Bank for International Settlements has announced the re-election of Jens Weidmann, President of the Deutsche Bundesbank, as Chair of the BIS Board.
View the announcement.Topic: Other Developments -
Eurozone Risk Data Aggregation and Risk Reporting Needs Strengthening
05/08/2018
The European Central Bank has published a report on the thematic review on effective risk data aggregation and risk reporting. The ECB launched the thematic review in 2016 to carry out an in-depth assessment of credit institutions' governance, data aggregation capabilities and reporting practices. The thematic review was based on 25 Eurozone significant institutions and took into account the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision's principles for effective risk data aggregation and risk reporting.
The ECB has ascertained that implementation of the Basel Committee's principles is unsatisfactory and that the issues are mostly as a result of a lack of clarity around responsibility for data quality. The ECB considers that further efforts are needed to enhance the effectiveness of risk data aggregation and risk reporting.
View the report.Topic: Prudential Regulation -
Final Global Strategy to Address Wholesale Payments Fraud
05/08/2018
Following a consultation late last year, the Committee on Payments and Market Infrastructure has published the final strategy for reducing the risk of wholesale payments fraud related to endpoint security. The strategy is directed to all relevant public and private sector stakeholders in reducing the risk of wholesale payments fraud, including the operators of wholesale payments systems and messaging networks, their participants and relevant regulators and authorities responsible for supervising these operators and participants.
The strategy comprises seven elements that are intended to work holistically for preventing, detecting, responding to and communicating about wholesale payments fraud. The elements are:
1. Identifying and understanding the range of risks;
2. Establishing endpoint security requirements;
3. Promoting adherence;
4. Providing and using information and tools to improve prevention and detection;
5. Responding in a timely way to potential fraud;
6. Supporting ongoing education, awareness and information-sharing; and
7. Learning, evolving and coordinating.
The CPMI and each of its member central banks have committed to promoting the effective operationalization of the strategy within and across jurisdictions and systems. They will be monitoring progress in 2018 and 2019 with a view to assessing whether further action is needed.
View the strategy. -
US Department of Labor Issues Guidance on Fiduciary Rule Compliance
05/07/2018
The U.S. Department of Labor issued a Field Assistance Bulletin regarding an anticipated mandate by the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit effectuating its opinion that vacates the Fiduciary Rule and related exemptions and amendments in their entirety. The DOL guidance notes that fiduciaries may continue to rely on its previously issued temporary enforcement policy, which notes that the DOL will not pursue prohibited transaction claims against fiduciaries who are working in good faith to comply with certain prohibited transaction exemptions issued in connection with the Fiduciary Rule or treat those fiduciaries as violating the applicable prohibited transaction rules. In addition, the temporary enforcement policy notes that investment advice fiduciaries may also choose to rely upon other available exemptions to the extent applicable after the Fifth Circuit’s decision.
View full text of the DOL bulletin.Topic: Consumer / Retail -
US Federal Reserve Board Approves Amendments to Regulation A
05/07/2018
The U.S. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System approved final amendments to Regulation A (Extensions of Credit by Federal Reserve Banks). The amendments make technical changes to provisions regarding establishing the primary credit rate in a financial emergency and delete obsolete provisions of Regulation A. With respect to the former, Regulation A will be amended to provide that in a financial emergency (defined as “a significant disruption to the U.S. money markets resulting from an act of war, military or terrorist attack, natural disaster, or other catastrophic event”), the primary credit rate will be the target federal funds rate or, if the Federal Open Market Committee has established a target range for the federal funds rate, a rate corresponding to the top of the target range. The amendments also delete references to credit ratings for Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facilities, given that the program has expired. The amendments to Regulation A will take effect on June 8, 2018.
View full text of the final rule.Topic: Prudential Regulation -
European Banking Authority to Provide Technical Advice on Implementation of Final Basel III Reforms
05/07/2018
The European Banking Authority has announced that the European Commission had requested technical advice on implementing the final Basel III reforms into EU law. The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision published the final revisions to Basel III on December 7, 2017. The revisions cover the standardized approach and the Internal Ratings-Based approach for credit risk, the Credit Valuation Adjustment risk framework, the leverage ratio framework, including the introduction of a leverage buffer for Global Systemically Important Banks, the operational risk framework and the new output ratio floor. The revised standards will take effect from January 1, 2022, except for the output floor which may be phased-in until January 1, 2027.
The Commission has asked the EBA to provide technical advice on the potential impact of the revisions on the EU banking sector and the wider EU economy and on any potential implementation challenges. The Commission has also requested that the EBA consider the potential changes to the Basel market risk framework, on which the Basel Committee is currently consulting.
Read more.Topic: Prudential Regulation -
Financial Stability Board Consults on Reporting on the Use of Compensation Tools to Address Misconduct Risk
05/07/2018
The Financial Stability Board has published proposed Recommendations for consistent national reporting of data concerning the use of compensation tools to address misconduct risk in significant financial institutions. The FSB is proposing a supervisory framework for the collection and reporting of data, which can be used by supervisors for monitoring and analyzing the effectiveness of compensation frameworks in addressing misconduct risk. The information so collected is intended to assist supervisors to understand and review: (i) the importance of individual conduct within the firm's incentive compensation framework and the role of compensation policy in establishing a sound risk and conduct culture; and (ii) the use of compensation tools in practice and their role in ensuring accountability when misconduct occurs.
Read more. -
European Commission Adopts Delegated Legislation on Central Contact Points for AML/CTF Purposes
05/07/2018
The European Commission has adopted a draft delegated regulation under the Fourth Money Laundering Directive. The draft regulation sets out Regulatory Technical Standards on the criteria that EU Member States should use when deciding whether or not payment service providers or electronic money institutions that are headquartered in another EEA Member State and that operate establishments (other than a branch) in their territory should appoint a central contact point for compliance with anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing obligations. The draft regulation also sets out RTS on the functions that may be entrusted to such a central contact point.
The draft regulation will now be subject to a three-month scrutiny period by the European Parliament and the Council of the European Union. Following this period, should neither of the co-legislators object, the draft regulation will then be published in the Official Journal of the European Union and enter into force twenty days later. Once in force, the delegated regulation will have direct effect across the EU.
View the draft delegated regulation. -
US Federal Reserve Board Vice Chairman for Supervision Randal Quarles Discusses Liquidity Regulation and the Federal Reserve Board’s Balance Sheet
05/04/2018
U.S. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Vice Chairman for Supervision Randal Quarles discussed the relationship between liquidity and other post-crisis regulation and the Federal Reserve Board’s balance sheet.
Read more.Topic: Prudential Regulation -
EU Supervisory Authorities Consult on Aligning EMIR Clearing and Risk-Mitigation Obligations For Securitizations With Those For Covered Bonds
05/04/2018
The Joint Committee of the European Supervisory Authorities has published two consultations on proposed amendments to: (i) Regulatory Technical Standards on the clearing obligation under the European Market Infrastructure Regulation for certain classes of OTC derivatives; and (ii) RTS on risk-mitigation techniques for OTC derivative contracts not cleared by a CCP. The proposed changes aim to incorporate the provisions of the Securitization Regulation (also known as the STS Regulation), which entered into force on January 17, 2018.
The Securitization Regulation notes that there is a degree of substitutability between covered bonds and securitizations. The Securitization Regulation therefore amends EMIR, among other things, to ensure consistency of treatment between the regime for derivatives transactions associated with covered bonds and the one for securitizations, with respect to the clearing obligation and the margin requirements for non-centrally cleared OTC derivatives. The ESAs have been mandated to make the necessary changes to existing RTS to effect consistent treatment.
Read more.Topic: Derivatives -
FINRA Updates AML Rules to Conform to Upcoming Customer Due Diligence Requirements
05/03/2018
The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority published amendments to FINRA Rule 3310, the anti-money laundering compliance program rule. The FINRA amendments seek to harmonize Rule 3310 with the Customer Due Diligence Requirements for Financial Institutions rule issued by the U.S. Financial Crimes Enforcement Network on May 11, 2016. Amended Rule 3310 requires firms to conduct ongoing customer due diligence, establish procedures to understand the nature and purpose of customer relationships for the purpose of developing a customer risk profile, conduct ongoing monitoring to identify and report suspicious transactions and, on a risk basis, maintain and update customer information, including information regarding the beneficial ownership of legal entity customers. Amended Rule 3310 becomes effective on May 11, 2018, which coincides with the compliance date for FinCEN’s CDD Rule.
View full text of Regulatory Notice 18-19. -
EURIBOR Administrator Starts 3-Month Testing Phase for Hybrid Methodology
05/02/2018
The European Money Markets Institute has announced the start of the testing phase for a new hybrid methodology it proposes to introduce to determine Euribor. The testing phase will run from May 2, 2018 to July 31, 2018.
EMMI launched a consultation on the introduction of the hybrid methodology and on some related issues in March 2018. That consultation closes on May 15, 2018 and EMMI intends to publish a summary of responses in June 2018.
The testing phase will involve EMMI conducting data analysis and assessing the methodology's parameters. EMMI hopes to gain a better understanding of panel banks' overall contribution patterns and how they make submissions using Level 3 of three-level "hybrid" methodology. Based on the results, EMMI will launch a second consultation in Q3 2018.
It is intended that the new hybrid methodology will be launched by Q4 2019 at the latest, in line with the transitional period provided by the EU Benchmarks Regulation.
View the EMMI announcement.
View details of the March 2018 consultation. -
New Payment Systems Operator for UK Retail Payment Systems
05/01/2018
The Bank of England and the Payment Systems Regulator have announced that the New Payment System Operator is now responsible for the operation of BACS and Faster Payments, two U.K. retail payment systems. The NPSO is expected to assume responsibility for the Cheque and Credit Clearing Company over the next few months. The consolidation of the three payment systems was one of the recommendations made in the Payments Strategy Forum's November 2016 report, which sets out a wide-ranging strategy for reforming the U.K. retail payments industry. The NPSO will also be responsible for delivering the New Payments Architecture, which is an industry-led initiative to increase competition, resilience and innovation across the payments and banking industry.
View the BoE and PSR announcement.
View the NPSO press release. -
US District Court Dismisses Challenge to US Office of the Comptroller of the Currency FinTech Charter
04/30/2018
The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia granted the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency’s motion to dismiss a lawsuit brought by the Conference of State Bank Supervisors challenging the OCC’s authority to grant special purpose national bank charters to companies that provide bank-like services but do not accept deposits (largely FinTech companies.) The D.C. District Court’s decision follows the December 2017 dismissal by the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York of a similar lawsuit filed by the New York State Department of Financial Services against the OCC. The court found that CSBS did not have standing to bring the action, as it did not plead an injury in fact and that any of the grounds asserted by the CSBS were speculative and contingent on whether the OCC in fact charters a FinTech company, and that regardless, CSBS failed to identify an imminent injury to a particular member of its organization. In addition, the court dismissed the action on ripeness grounds, citing, among other reasons, that the OCC still has yet to issue a charter to a FinTech company.
View full text of the court’s decision.Topic: FinTech -
US Treasury Counselor to the Secretary Craig Phillips Discusses Regulatory Reform
04/30/2018
U.S. Treasury Counselor to the Secretary, Craig Phillips, spoke at the International Swaps and Derivatives Association’s 33rd annual general meeting regarding regulatory policies of relevance to ISDA members.
Read more.Topic: Derivatives -
UK Prudential Regulation Authority Finalizes Policy on Groups and Double Leverage
04/30/2018
The U.K. Prudential Regulation Authority has published a Policy Statement setting out its proposals to amend the Groups policy framework it has in place for the application of prudential standards to firms on an individual and consolidated basis within banking groups.
The PRA consulted between October 2017 and January 2018 on proposals to enable: (i) assessment and mitigation of the risks to group resilience due to the use of "double leverage" (which occurs when one or more parent entities in a group funds some of the capital in its subsidiaries by raising debt or lower forms of capital externally); (ii) assessment and mitigation of the risks highlighted by prudential requirements applied by local national regulators on overseas subsidiaries of U.K. consolidation groups; and (iii) improved monitoring of the distribution of financial resources across different group entities.
Following feedback received, the PRA has made three changes to the proposals, which it does not consider to be significant changes. The first and second changes affect the PRA Supervisory Statement, "The Internal Capital Adequacy Assessment Process (ICAAP) and the Supervisory Review and Evaluation Process (SREP)" by: (a) changing the definition of "double leverage" so that it is accounting based to reflect the reporting practices of stand-alone holding companies; and (b) clarifying the level of application of the double leverage formula. The third change affects the PRA Statement of Policy, "The PRA's methodologies for setting Pillar 2 capital" by amending the formula for double leverage.
Read more.Topic: Prudential Regulation -
UK Prudential Regulation Authority Finalizes Model Risk Management Principles for Stress Testing
04/30/2018
The U.K. Prudential Regulation Authority has published a Policy Statement and a finalized Supervisory Statement following a consultation which ran from December 2017 to March 2018 on model risk management principles for stress testing. In the consultation, the PRA proposed that firms that use stress testing models, and that participate in the Bank of England's annual concurrent stress test, should follow in full a set of four proposed principles when establishing and adopting risk management practices in relation to their models. Firms not participating in the BoE's annual stress test should instead seek to apply the four principles on a proportionate basis, taking into account their size, complexity, risk profile and the relevance to the firm of using stress test models.
The Policy Statement sets out feedback on the three responses it received to the consultation. The PRA has made a number of changes to the consultation draft of the Supervisory Statement to address issues raised by respondents. In particular, the PRA has made changes to the wording of Principles 1.2 (Model Inventory), 2.1 (Board oversight), 2.3 (Model developers, owners, users and control functions), 3.1 (Model purpose and design), 3.7 (Business Involvement), 3.8 (Model uncertainty), 3.9 (Model Monitoring), 4.1 (Scope and validation of review) and 4.2 (Independence). In addition, it has included a further section in the Supervisory Statement to set out its expectations on the application of materiality considerations.
Read more.Topic: Prudential Regulation -
UK Regulator Confirms Revised Pillar 2 Reporting Requirements
04/30/2018
The Prudential Regulation Authority has published a Policy Statement confirming that updated Pillar 2 reporting requirements will apply from October 1, 2018 for banks, building societies and PRA-designated investment firms. This follows the PRA's consultation on the proposed updates, which ran from December 6, 2017 to March 5, 2018. The PRA proposed a new data item to capture stress-testing data currently included in firms' Internal Capital Adequacy Assessment Process documents. This change aims to increase transparency and comparability in stress test data provided alongside ICAAP documents and to decrease the operational risks associated with capturing stress test data manually. The PRA also proposed reducing the frequency of reporting of the data items in the Reporting Pillar 2 part of the PRA Rulebook for some firms as well as consolidating the definition of several reporting parts of the PRA Rulebook into the Glossary.
Read more.Topic: Prudential Regulation -
Thomas M. Hoenig Steps Down as US Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Vice Chairman
04/27/2018
Thomas M. Hoenig announced that, effective April 30, 2018, he was stepping down as Vice Chairman and Member of the Board of Directors of the U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. Mr. Hoenig served a full six-year term at the FDIC, since joining in April of 2012. Prior to his service with the FDIC, Mr. Hoenig served as President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, and was a member of the Federal Open Market Committee.
View full text of the FDIC press release.Topic: Other Developments -
EU and UK to Establish Technical Working Group for Risk Management Around Brexit
04/27/2018
The European Commission and HM Treasury have announced that the European Central Bank and the Bank of England will establish a technical working group on risk management in the period around March 30, 2019 for financial services. The U.K. leaves the EU on March 29, 2019, although the provisionally agreed transition period means that most EU laws will continue to apply in the U.K. until December 31, 2020.
The Terms of Reference for the working group state that the European Commission and HM Treasury will attend the group as observers. Other regulatory authorities will be invited to attend on an issue-specific basis.
View the announcement.
View the terms of reference. -
European Banking Authority Consults on Draft Guidelines on Disclosure of Non-Performing and Forborne Exposures
04/27/2018
The European Banking Authority has launched a consultation on draft Guidelines on disclosure of non-performing and forborne exposures. Since the 2007/08 financial crisis, there has been a build-up of non-performing loans in the EU, which impacts banks' viability and lending capabilities. The European authorities have agreed various actions to tackle NPLs in Europe, resulting in several recent steps being taken by the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the EBA.
The proposed Guidelines set out the content, format and frequency of disclosures for non-performing exposures, forborne exposures and foreclosed assets. The draft Guidelines would apply to all banks that are subject to any of the disclosure requirements under the Capital Requirements Regulation and would apply to all exposures that fall within the definition of either non-performing or forbearance in the ITS on Supervisory Reporting (Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 680/2014). The level and frequency of disclosure will depend on the significance of a firm and the level of NPEs.
The draft Guidelines should be read with the EBA's proposed Guidelines on sound risk management practices for banks for managing NPEs, FBEs and foreclosed assets.
As with the proposed risk management Guidelines, the EBA intends to publish the finalized disclosure Guidelines before the end of 2018 and for the Guidelines to apply from January 1, 2019. Feedback on the proposed Guidelines can be provided by June 27, 2018. The EBA is holding a public hearing on the draft Guidelines on June 27, 2018.
View the consultation paper.
View the EBA's proposed Guidelines on sound risk management practices for NPEs.
View the Commission's proposals to address the build-up of NPLs.Topic: Prudential Regulation -
Clarification on Scope of EMIR Obligations for Public Entity Clearing Members Needed
04/27/2018
The Chair of the European Securities and Markets Authority, Steven Maijoor, has written to the European Commission recommending that clarification of certain provisions of the European Market Infrastructure Regulation should be made during the current revision of EMIR. EMIR requires clearing members of CCPs to provide initial margin and default fund contributions. ESMA has noticed that CCPs across the EU, as well as their national regulators, are adopting different approaches to these requirements for public entities. Some CCPs and national regulators exempt public entity clearing members from the requirement to provide initial margin and default fund contributions while others grant no exemptions.
ESMA requests the Commission to consider whether the scope of EMIR needs to be clarified and whether a specific amendment could be made to EMIR during the current review process.
The European Commission published legislative proposals to amend EMIR in May - the technical revisions in so-called EMIR 2.1 - and June 2017 - the Brexit-driven CCP "location policy" or so-called EMIR 2.2, which attempts to force the relocation of UK CCPs to the Eurozone. The legislative procedures to finalize those changes are ongoing.
View the letter.
View the Commission's technical amendments legislative proposal.
View the Commission's location policy legislative proposal. -
Financial Stability Board Publishes Second Consultation on Governance of the Unique Product Identifier
04/26/2018
The Financial Stability Board has opened a second consultation on governance of the Unique Product Identifier. The FSB identified UPIs in September 2014 as a critical element towards a mechanism to produce and share global aggregated derivatives reporting data, along with the development of a unique transaction identifier and the harmonization of other key data elements. The receipt of aggregated derivatives reporting data will enable national regulators to better assess systemic risk and perform other market oversight functions.
The purpose of the UPI is to uniquely identify OTC derivatives products that regulators require, or may require in the future, to be reported to trade repositories. The UPI system will assign a code to each OTC derivative product which maps to a set of data elements describing the product in a corresponding reference database, the UPI Reference Data Library. The Library will be administered by either one or a number of UPI Service Provider(s).
This second consultation paper seeks feedback on specific issues relating to the UPI Governance Arrangements, including fee models and cost recovery, intellectual property, standardization and potential restrictions on the activities of a UPI service provider. The FSB is also asking for feedback on whether a single UPI service provider model would be more suitable than having a competitive multi-UPI service provider model.
The consultation closes on May 24, 2018. The FSB intends to finalize the UPI governance arrangements and identify one or more UPI service provider(s) by mid-2019.
View the consultation paper.Topic: Derivatives -
UK Competition and Markets Authority Consults Further on Aspects of the Investment Consultants Market Investigation
04/26/2018
The U.K. Competition and Markets Authority has published three more consultative working papers as part of its Investment Consultants Market Investigation. The CMA is assessing the supply and acquisition of investment consultancy services and fiduciary management services. These working papers should be read alongside the Issues Statement on the investigation, published in September 2017, as well as the other working papers, published earlier this year.
The first working paper is on barriers to entry and expansion in the investment consultancy and fiduciary management sectors. The paper sets out the CMA's emerging findings, focusing on the financial and other costs of entry and expansion. The CMA has neither identified, nor concluded whether there is, any adverse effect on competition in relation to barriers to entry or expansion. The CMA's separate emerging finding in relation to new market entrants is that the barriers are not excessively high but are greater in the fiduciary management sector than in the investment consultancy sector. In relation to barriers to expansion, the CMA's emerging finding is that the potential barriers to winning new clients are greater than the barriers to new entry and are also greater in the fiduciary management sector than in the investment consultancy sector.
Read more.Topic: Competition -
ICE LIBOR Administrator Sets Out Transition Plan for New Submission Methodology
04/25/2018
ICE Benchmark Administration, the administrator of the LIBOR benchmark, has published a report setting out how it proposes to transition panel banks to the new "Waterfall Methodology" outlined in its ICE LIBOR Output Statement, which was updated following a feedback statement in March 2017 on the evolution of the London Interbank Offered Rate. LIBOR is a widely used benchmark for short-term interest rates. It is produced for five currencies and seven tenors, resulting in the publication of 35 rates every applicable London business day.
The ICE LIBOR Output Statement sets out a single LIBOR definition and a more standardized, transaction data-driven methodology for LIBOR panel banks’ submissions. IBA’s intention in introducing the new methodology is to publish, in all market circumstances, a wholesale funding rate anchored in unsecured, wholesale funding transactions to the greatest extent possible.
Read more. -
European Commission Adopts Revised Implementing Technical Standards on Mapping of External Credit Ratings
04/24/2018
A Commission Implementing Regulation has been published in the Official Journal of the European Union. This Amending Regulation, which takes effect on May 15, 2018, revises a Commission Implementing Regulation adopted in October 2016 under the Capital Requirements Regulation.
Under the CRR, firms that use the Standardised Approach for the purposes of calculating their capital requirements for credit risk can use external credit assessments to determine the credit quality of exposures. These external credit assessments must be made by External Credit Assessment Institutions. ECAIs are either credit rating agencies registered under the CRA Regulation or central banks that issue credit ratings (which are exempt from the application of the CRA Regulation). The 2016 Implementing Regulation set out Implementing Technical Standards for the mapping of the credit quality of exposures (obtained from ECAIs) to their corresponding risk weights.
The Joint Committee of the European Supervisory Authorities consulted in July 2017 on the need to make changes to the 2016 Implementing Regulation to reflect the fact that, since it was adopted, five additional ECAIs had been recognized and one ECAI had been de-registered. The Joint Committee submitted draft revised ITS to the Commission in December 2017 and the Commission has adopted them in the Amending Regulation.
View the Amending Regulation ((EU) 2018/634).
View details of the July 2017 consultation. -
Financial Action Task Force Publishes Outcomes of its 2018 Private Sector Consultative Forum
04/24/2018
The Financial Action Task Force held its annual private sector consultative forum in Vienna on April 23 – 24, 2018. The annual forum provides a platform for the FATF to learn more about the private sector's views and concerns on issues related to anti-money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism. Attendees at the forum included representatives from the financial sector and other businesses and professions subject to AML/CTF obligations.
Read more. -
Basel Committee on Banking Supervision Progress Report on Basel III Implementation
04/23/2018
The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision has published its 14th progress report on implementation of the Basel III prudential framework, based on responses from Basel Committee member jurisdictions, and reports the status as of the end of March 2018. The Report sets out in tabular form the results of the Basel Committee's monitoring of the adoption progress of all Basel III standards agreed to date, which will come into effect by 2022. The table omits details of those Basel III standards that have already been implemented by all Basel Committee member jurisdictions. It sets out the ongoing implementation progress of each member jurisdiction on aspects of the risk-based capital standards, leverage ratio requirements, liquidity requirements, the requirements for systemically important banks, interest rate risk in the banking book, the supervisory framework for large exposures and the Pillar 3 disclosure requirements.
Read more.Topic: Prudential Regulation -
European Commission Proposes Protective Legislation for Whistleblowers Reporting EU Law Breaches
04/23/2018
The European Commission has published a proposal for a Directive on the protection of persons reporting on breaches of Union law. Whistleblowers help prevent damage and detect threat or harm to the public interest that may otherwise remain hidden, but fear of retaliation can often discourage them from reporting concerns.
The importance of providing effective whistleblower protections for safeguarding the public interest has been acknowledged both at European and international level. At EU level, whistleblower protections are currently provided only for specific sectors and to varying degrees. This means that, in many situations, whistleblowers are not properly protected against retaliation. The proposed Directive will address this fragmentation by encompassing "the broadest possible range of categories of persons, who, by virtue of work-related activities (irrespective of the nature of these activities and whether they are paid or not), have privileged access to information about breaches." Areas covered include financial services, money laundering and terrorist financing.
Read more. -
Corrigendum to the Revised Payment Services Directive Published
04/23/2018
A two-page corrigendum to the revised Payment Services Directive has been published in the Official Journal of the European Union. The corrigendum makes 11 corrections to the text of the PSD2 across one recital and eight of the directive's articles.
In addition to minor textual corrections, the corrigendum makes important clarifications to provisions on: (i) the liability of a payment service provider for initiation or execution of payment transactions; (ii) liability in respect of payment initiation services among those provisions of PSD2 that can be disapplied, or applied only in part, by agreement between a payment service provider and a non-consumer payment service user; (iii) the limited circumstances in which a payment services provider is permitted to charge for fulfilling information obligations or performing corrective or preventive measures; and (iv) the circumstances in which compensation can be obtained by a payment service provider from another payment service provider or intermediary for losses incurred for non-execution or defective execution of a payment order.
View the corrigendum. -
Bank of England Confirms Implementation of SONIA reforms
04/23/2018
The Bank of England has confirmed that it has implemented its reforms to the SONIA interest rate benchmark. SONIA, the Sterling Overnight Index Average Rate, which has been administered since April 2016 by the BoE, is the existing unsecured reference rate for the sterling Overnight Indexed Swap market.
The BOE announced in October 2017 that the methodology for calculating SONIA would move from being based on a market for brokered deposits (which has limited transaction volumes) to a methodology involving a volume-weighted trimmed mean. The BOE has also separately published the key features and policies for SONIA, which summarize how SONIA is calculated and administered, including the governance arrangements. The BoE intends to publish an assessment of the benchmark's compliance with the International Organization of Securities Commissions' Principles for Financial Benchmarks in Summer 2018.
View the BoE press release.
View the SONIA key features and policies document. -
Financial Stability Board Publishes Toolkit to Abate Misconduct Risk
04/20/2018
The Financial Stability Board has published a report, "Strengthening Governance Frameworks to Mitigate Misconduct Risk: A Toolkit for Firms and Supervisors." The report is part of the FSB's work on measures to reduce misconduct in the financial sector and follows the FSB's stocktake of endeavors by international bodies, national authorities, industry associations and firms.
The Toolkit is designed to provide firms and authorities with a set of tools that can be used, taking into account the applicable legislative, judicial and regulatory frameworks. Rather than creating an international standard or adopting a prescriptive approach, the FSB's Toolkit allows firms and supervisors to decide whether and how to use the Toolkit to address misconduct risk. The FSB also states that firms and their supervisors can use individual tools separately or in combination.
The Toolkit comprises 19 tools, divided into three categories and assigned between firms and national authorities.
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European Banking Authority Consults on Simple Transparent and Standardized Criteria for ABCP and non-ABCP Securitizations
04/20/2018
The European Banking Authority has published consultations on two sets of draft guidelines under the Securitization Regulation (also known as the STS Regulation) which, along with targeted amendments to the Capital Requirements Regulation, forms part of the new EU Securitization Framework for simple, transparent and standardized securitizations from January 2019. The STS Regulation establishes two sets of criteria for STS securitizations, namely for term (i.e. non-Asset Backed Commercial Paper) securitizations and for short-term (i.e. ABCP) securitizations respectively. The EBA is mandated under the STS Regulation to develop, by October 18, 2018, (i) guidelines and recommendations interpreting the STS criteria applicable to non-ABCP securitization; and (ii) guidelines and recommendations interpreting the transaction level and programme level criteria applicable to ABCP securitization.
Read more.Topic: Securities -
US Federal Reserve Board Governor Lael Brainard Discusses Cyclical Regulation
04/19/2018
U.S. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Governor Lael Brainard spoke at the Global Finance Forum regarding maintaining resiliency across economic cycles. Governor Brainard drew comparisons between the current state of the economy and the economy prior to the financial crisis, noting positive growth, but highlighting elevated risks in asset valuation and business leverage. Governor Brainard discussed that post-crisis regulation has greatly improved the capital and liquidity positions of financial institutions, and highlighted the importance of maintaining a dynamic capital regime, but cautioned against purely backward-looking analysis, rather than proactively seeking out emerging risks. Governor Brainard discussed the importance of properly tailoring and calibrating existing regulations, such as the countercyclical capital buffer rule, but also stressed the importance of implementing additional critical regulatory elements, such as finalizing the net stable funding ratio, which she noted was close to finalization, and the Dodd-Frank Act limits on large counterparty exposure. Governor Brainard also expressed her support for improving the efficiency of the Volcker Rule without undermining its efficacy, and for moving forward with minimum haircuts for securities financing transactions. Governor Brainard distinguished these regulations, designed to promote the resiliency of large financial institutions, with the regulation of smaller institutions, suggesting that with respect to the latter, regulations should be appropriately tailored to reduce regulatory burden.
View full text of Governor Brainard's speech.Topic: Prudential Regulation -
US Federal Reserve Board Vice Chairman for Supervision Randal Quarles Delivers Semi-Annual Supervision and Regulation Testimony to Congress
04/19/2018
U.S. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Vice Chairman for Supervision Randal Quarles testified before the U.S. Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs regarding the Federal Reserve Board’s regulation and supervision of financial institutions. Vice Chairman Quarles submitted identical remarks to the U.S. House Financial Services Committee two days earlier on April 17, 2018.
Read more.Topic: Prudential Regulation -
UK Regulator Warns CEOs of Listed Companies About Their Obligations on Irredeemable Preference Shares
04/19/2018
The U.K. Financial Conduct Authority has published a "Dear CEO" letter to the Chief Executive Officers of U.K. listed companies on capital instruments expressed to be perpetual, irredeemable or in some other way that suggests permanence. The FCA wishes to ensure that investors have access to all the information necessary for them to be able to assess properly the risks and rewards attaching to such shares. The letter lists the information that listed companies may wish to make readily accessible to all holders and potential holders of such shares, including:- the terms and conditions of the instrument as included in the original prospectus or similar document issued at the time of the offer or admission of the shares, and details of any changes made after the issue of the shares;
- the articles of association of the issuer, particularly the articles relevant to the shares concerned; and
- a Q&A or similar publication.
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US and UK Establish Financial Regulatory Working Group
04/19/2018
The U.S. Treasury Department and HM Treasury have issued a joint statement announcing the establishment of a Financial Regulatory Working Group. The Working Group will be a forum for treasury staff and financial regulatory authorities to exchange views on the regulatory relationship between the United States and the U.K. The objectives of the Working Group will be to further financial regulatory cooperation, improve transparency, reduce regulatory uncertainty, identify possible cross-border implementation issues, address regulatory arbitrage and work towards achieving compatibility of U.S. and U.K. laws and regulations.
View the statement. -
US Securities and Exchange Commission Proposes Broker-Dealer Standard of Care and Guidance on Investment Advisers’ Fiduciary Standard
04/18/2018
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission published three proposed rules with request for public comment that would seek to enhance and clarify the standards of care applicable to broker-dealers and investment advisers when dealing with retail clients. The three proposals are designed to be interlocked and complementary, and, as noted by SEC Chairman Jay Clayton in his introduction of the proposals, are aimed, in part, at better aligning regulations and obligations of broker-dealers and investment advisers with the expectations of retail investors, and preserving retail investor choice.
Read more.Topic: Securities -
US Federal Reserve Board Governor Lael Brainard Discusses Modernization of the Community Reinvestment Act
04/17/2018
U.S. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Governor Lael Brainard spoke at the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Baltimore Community Development Gathering regarding efforts to modernize the Community Reinvestment Act. Governor Brainard provided a brief summary of the history and importance of the CRA, noting that the current CRA regulations date back to 1995 and are in need of update to better reflect how banks currently operate and the customer base they serve, given structural and technological changes in the banking industry.
Read more.Topic: Prudential Regulation -
US Federal Financial Regulators Propose Revisions to Capital Rules to Reflect Change in US AAP Relating to Credit Losses
04/17/2018
The U.S. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation announced proposed revisions to the agencies’ regulatory capital rules to reflect changes to U.S. generally accepted accounting principles regarding credit losses. The proposed revisions will identify which of the new credit loss allowances will be eligible for inclusion in a financial institution’s regulatory capital. The proposal will further provide for an optional transition period that will allow financial institutions to phase in the adverse effects on certain regulatory capital components over a three-year period. The proposal also seeks to amend the stress testing regulations to allow covered institutions that have adopted these changes to U.S. GAAP to not include the effects from adopting this new standard until the 2020 stress test cycle. The proposed amendment will also make conforming changes, including with respect to certain definitions, disclosures and regulatory reporting forms. Comments to the proposal are due 60 days from the proposal’s publication in the Federal Register.
View ​full text of the agencies’ proposal.Topic: Prudential Regulation -
European Banking Authority Proposes Draft Guidelines on the Exposures to be Associated With High Risk
04/17/2018
The European Banking Authority has launched a consultation on draft Guidelines on certain types of exposures and the circumstances in which they can be categorized as being associated with high risk for regulatory capital purposes. The Capital Requirements Regulation provides that when firms use the Standardised Approach for determining minimum capital requirements for credit risk, risk weightings must be allocated to an exposure, based on its exposure class. One of the exposure classes is "exposures associated with particularly high risk," which are: investments in venture capital firms or private equity, speculative immovable property financing and investments in Alternative Investment Funds where the fund's mandate allows a higher leverage than required in the UCITS Directive. An exposure that is of particularly high risk receives a risk weight of 150%.
The EBA's mandate is to prepare guidelines on the types of exposures other than those set out in the CRR that must be associated with particularly high risk and under which circumstances. The EBA's draft Guidelines aim to implement that mandate by specifying that firms should classify exposures as items of high risk where the exposure has a "high risk of loss due to being structurally different from common exposures of the same asset class." The EBA provides a list of those exposures that would fall within the scope of this category.
Read more.Topic: Prudential Regulation -
European Commission Proposes Legislation Broadening Access to Centralized Financial Information
04/17/2018
The European Commission has published a proposal for a directive aimed at increasing security within EU member states and across the EU by improving access to financial information, including bank account information, to the relevant authorities and bodies in charge for the prevention, investigation and prosecution of serious forms of crimes. It is envisaged that this will enhance their ability to conduct financial investigations and analysis and improve their cooperation. In addition, the proposal contains measures to improve the ability of Financial Intelligence Units to carry out their tasks under the 4th Money Laundering Directive.
Currently, most EU national authorities competent for the prevention, detection, investigation or prosecution of criminal offences do not have direct access to information on the identity of bank account holders held in centralized account registries or data retrieval systems. Indeed, such registries and systems are currently only operational in 15 EU member states and the relevant authorities only have direct access in 6 of those member states. This lack of, or lack of access to, centralized information means the relevant authorities must send blanket information requests to all financial institutions. Delays in replies to these blanket requests can significantly hamper criminal investigations.
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European Commission Consults on Again Extending the Transitional Measures for Exposures to CCPs
04/17/2018
The European Commission has published a legislative proposal to extend until December 15, 2018 the transitional periods related to own funds requirements for exposures to CCPs set out in the Capital Requirements Regulation and European Market Infrastructure Regulation. Thirty-two third-country CCPs have been recognized by the European Securities and Markets Authority to date. However, there are still third-country CCPs that are awaiting recognition status. Without an extension of the transitional periods, banks and investment firms in the EU (or which are subject to consolidated supervision in the EU) would need to increase their own funds requirements for their exposures to those CCPs that are not yet recognized.
Feedback on the proposal can be provided until May 15, 2018.
The proposals to amend the CRR include an amendment to these transitional provisions. The proposed amendment would remove the need for the European Commission to continuously extend the transitional period by basing the transitional deadline instead on the timing of an application for recognition by a third-country CCP.
View the proposed ITS and the consultation feedback page.Topic: Prudential Regulation -
President Donald Trump Announces Intent to Nominate Two New Board Members of the US Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
04/16/2018
President Donald Trump announced his intent to nominate Michelle Bowman and Richard Clarida to serve as Members of the U.S. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. Ms. Bowman, currently the Kansas State Bank Commissioner, is to be nominated to serve as a Member of the Federal Reserve Board as the Community Bank Representative representing Region eight. She is being nominated to serve the remainder of a 14-year term that expires on January 31, 2020. Mr. Clarida, currently the Lowell Harriss Professor of Economics at Columbia University, is to be nominated to serve as Vice Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board for a 4-year term, and to serve the remainder of a 14-year term as a Member of the Federal Reserve Board representing Region 1, expiring on January 31, 2022.
View full text of the White House press release.Topic: Other Developments
The following posts provide a snapshot of selected UK, EU and global financial regulatory developments of interest to banks, investment firms, broker-dealers, market infrastructures, asset managers and corporates.