The European Commission has today adopted a Capital Markets Recovery Package, as part of the Commission's overall coronavirus recovery strategy.
On 28 April, the Commission had already proposed a Banking Package
to facilitate bank lending to households and businesses throughout the
EU. Today's measures aim to make it easier for capital markets to
support European businesses to recover from the crisis. The package
proposes targeted changes to capital market rules, which will encourage
greater investments in the economy, allow for the rapid
re-capitalisation of companies and increase banks' capacity to finance
the recovery.
Valdis Dombrovskis, Executive Vice-President for an Economy that works for the people said: “We
are continuing with our efforts to help EU citizens and businesses
during the coronavirus crisis and the subsequent recovery. One way of
doing so is to help businesses raise capital on public markets. Today's
targeted amendments will make it easier for our businesses to get the
funding they need and to invest in our economy. Capital markets are
vital to the recovery, because public financing alone will not be enough
to get our economies back on track. We will present a wider Capital
Markets Union Action Plan in September.”
The package contains targeted adjustments to the Prospectus Regulation, MiFID II and securitisation rules. All of the amendments are at the heart of the Capital Markets Union
project aimed at better integrating national capital markets and
ensuring equal access to investments and funding opportunities across
the EU.
Targeted amendments to the prospectus regime - EU Recovery Prospectus: Easy to produce – Easy to read – Easy to scrutinise
A prospectus is a document that companies need to disclose to their
investors when they issue shares and bonds. The Commission is today
proposing to create an “EU Recovery Prospectus” – a type of short-form
prospectus – for companies that have a track record in the public
market. This temporary prospectus would be easy to produce for
companies, easy to read for investors, and easy to scrutinise for
national competent authorities. It would cut down the length of
prospectuses from hundreds of pages to just 30 pages. This will help
companies to raise capital – such as shares - instead of going deeper
into debt. A second set of targeted amendments to the Prospectus
Regulation aims at facilitating fundraising by banks that play an
essential role in financing the recovery of the real economy.
Targeted amendments to the MiFID II requirements for European firms
The Commission is today proposing to make some targeted amendments to
MiFID II requirements, in order to reduce some of the administrative
burdens that experienced investors face in their business-to-business
relationships. Lesser-experienced investors (such as households
investing their savings for retirement) will remain just as protected as
before. These amendments refer to a number of requirements that were
already identified (during the MiFID/MiFIR public consultation) as being
overly burdensome or hindering the development of European markets. The
current crisis makes it even more important to alleviate unnecessary
burdens and provide opportunities to nascent markets. The Commission
therefore proposes to recalibrate requirements to ensure that there is a
high level of transparency towards the client, while also ensuring the
highest standards of protection and acceptable compliance costs for
European firms. In parallel, the Commission has today opened a public
consultation on amendments to the MiFID II delegated directive to
increase the research coverage regime for small and mid-cap issuers and
for bonds. In particular, SMEs need a good level of investment research
to give them enough visibility to attract new investors. We are today
also proposing to amend the MiFID rules affecting energy derivatives
markets. This is intended to help the development of euro-denominated
energy markets – important for the international role of the euro
– as well as allow European companies to cover their risks, while
safeguarding the integrity of commodity markets, especially for
agricultural products.
Targeted amendments to securitisation rules
The Commission is today proposing a package of measures amending the Securitisation Regulation and the Capital Requirements Regulation.
Securitisation is a tool through which banks can bundle loans, turn
them into securities, and sell them onto capital markets. The aim of
these changes is to facilitate the use of securitisation in Europe's
recovery by enabling banks to expand their lending and to free their
balance sheets of non-performing exposures. It is helpful to let banks
transfer some of the risk of SME (small and medium-sized enterprises)
loans to the markets so that they can keep lending to SMEs. In
particular, the Commission proposes creating a specific framework for
simple, transparent and standardised on-balance-sheet securitisation
that would benefit from a prudential treatment reflecting the actual
riskiness of these instruments. In addition, the Commission proposes to
remove existing regulatory obstacles to the securitisation of
non-performing exposures. This can help banks offload non-performing
exposures that can be expected to grow because of the coronavirus
crisis. Today's changes are based on extensive work and analysis carried
out by the European Banking Authority in 2019 and 2020.
For more information
Link to today's package
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