The EBF  agrees with the characterisation of the situations when a person is considered to own a financial instrument for the purpose of the definition of a short sale. EBF  supports that legal and beneficial ownership are defined according to the respective civil law or securities law applicable. EBF  thinks that the proposed arrangements for calculating long and short positions are broadly fine. Whilst EBG agrees with the method of calculation of net short positions, it thinks that netting for debt instruments from issuers outside the EU should be permitted.
	With regard to ESMA’s proposals on sovereign CDS transactions for hedging purposes:
	- 
		EBF  is reassured that ESMA’s intention to avoid setting out exhaustive lists of particular cases where risks could be hedged via sovereign CDS is the right approach.
 
	- 
		Yet another aspect that should deserve attention is ESMA’s proposals that positions in sovereign CDS that have become partially uncovered due to value fluctuations should only be allowed for a limited time. EBF  fears that imposing a time limit would lead to increased volatility in sovereign CDS markets as a result of certain correlations in those markets.
 
	- 
		Furthermore, EBF  is concerned by potential territorial restrictions as regards the scope of the assets/liabilities that can be hedged.
 
	- 
		Finally, EBF  welcomes the non-prescriptive, qualitative approach that ESMA  proposes with regard to extent of the correlation required between non-sovereign debt asset/liability and sovereign debt referenced in the CDS for the CDS to be eligible as hedging.
 
	Full response
      
      
      
      
        © EBF
     
      
      
      
      
      
      Key
      
 Hover over the blue highlighted
        text to view the acronym meaning
      

Hover
        over these icons for more information
      
      
     
    
    
      
      Comments:
      
      No Comments for this Article