Non-Equity Transactions with Certain Non-EU Central Banks Exempt from Trade Transparency Requirements under MiFID II

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A Commission Delegated Regulation exempting compliance with the pre- and post-transparency requirements for non-equity transactions with the Bank for International Settlements and the central banks of 12 third countries has been published in the Official Journal of the European Union. The Market in Financial Instruments Regulation, which applies from January 3, 2018, exempts transactions from the trade transparency rules where a member of the European System of Central Banks is a counterparty to the transaction, provided that the transaction is entered into in the performance of monetary, foreign exchange or financial stability policy and the central bank notifies its counterparty that the exemption applies. The exemption does not apply to transactions entered into by a member of the ESCB in the performance of their investment operations. MiFIR allows the European Commission to extend the exemption to other central banks. The Delegated Regulation provides for the exemption to be extended to the BIS and to central banks in Australia, Brazil, Canada, Hong Kong, India, Japan, Mexico, the Republic of Korea, Singapore, Switzerland, Turkey and the US. The list may be amended in the future to add or remove a central bank. The Delegated Regulation enters into force on October 27, 2017, and will apply from January 3, 2018.

View the Delegated Regulation.

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