The Long Long Game: The EU Financial Regulatory Agenda Into 2016 and Beyond

2016 will mark the eighth anniversary of the collapse of Lehman Brothers and the raft of regulatory reforms introduced in the aftermath of that event and the wider financial crisis will continue to be implemented during the year and in the coming years. Although many of these reforms have now been in the pipeline for a number of years, some new regulation does however continue to be worked on. In particular, in 2015, we saw the initiative to develop a Capital Markets Union (“CMU”) in the European Union (“EU”) which focused on a number of issues including reform of the Prospectus Directive and the introduction of a new regime for simple, transparent and standardised securitisations. Some major pieces of legislation, including the Market Abuse Regulation and the PRIIPs Regulation (both referred to in more detail below), will come into effect during or at the end of 2016 and this coming year will see the finalisation of many regulatory technical standards (“RTS”) and Implementing Technical Standards (“ITS”) in connection with such legislation. Although it looks like implementation of MiFID II will be delayed from 2017 to 2018 (as described more fully below), work will continue in relation to developing the vast number of RTS and ITS that need to be prepared in connection with this legislation.

Although the EU continues to push through its regulatory reform agenda, the cumulative effect of all the new regulation on the financial markets remains uncertain and there are some concerns that there may be unintended and unforeseen consequences arising from the reform agenda. On 20 January 2016, the European Parliament published a resolution on stocktaking and challenges of EU financial regulation.1 The resolution calls on the EU Commission to pursue an integrated approach to the CMU, pay attention to other relevant policy agendas including the development of a digital single market and threats to cyber security and provide regular (at least annual) “coherence and consistency” checks on a cross-sectoral basis on draft and adopted legislation. The resolution also calls on the EU Commission to publish a green paper exploring new approaches to promoting proportionality in financial regulation and to provide, at least every five years, a comprehensive qualitative and quantitative assessment of the cumulative impact of EU financial services regulation on financial markets and participants, both at EU and member state level. The EU Commission has yet to formally respond to this resolution but the points raised by the EU Parliament in the resolution echo many concerns already raised by market participants.

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DISCLAIMER: Because of the generality of this update, the information provided herein may not be applicable in all situations and should not be acted upon without specific legal advice based on particular situations.

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