These necessary measures could put individual investors further at risk and erode their trust in capital markets once more. .. BETTER FINANCE is disappointed..
On
24 July 2020, the European Commission (EC) announced the “Capital Markets Recovery Package”, as part of the its overall
coronavirus recovery strategy, aimed at making it easier for capital markets to
support European businesses in their recovery from the fallout from the ongoing
Covid-19 crisis. To this end the EC proposes changes to capital market rules,
including a reduction of investor protection levels.
BETTER
FINANCE, as the representative of EU citizens as users of financial services,
sympathises with the need for such temporary measures and understands the
priority given to ramping up the financing of the real economy. These necessary
measures could nevertheless put individual investors further at risk and erode
their trust in capital markets once more. It is for this reason that BETTER
FINANCE is disappointed by the fact that the recovery package contains nothing
to counterbalance this reduction in investor protection, ignoring the very
recent recommendations from the European Commission’s own High Level Forum on the Capital
Markets Union
that could finally provide EU citizens as investors in capital markets with the
possibility of remedy in case they suffer from abuse .
Specifically,
BETTER FINANCE calls the European Commission to follow the recommendation of the High-Level
Forum on capital markets union (HLF CMU) and at long last allow
non-professional individual investors in capital market instruments to be
included in the EU-wide collective redress directive project currently on
the table of the European co-legislators and ensure they have access to
recourse in cases of market abuses.
The
HLF CMU report includes collective redress as a key recommendation to restore
the trust of financial consumers and attract more investments from EU
households in the real economy via capital markets.
Guillaume
Prache, Managing Director of BETTER FINANCE, pointed out that “the recent outrageous corporate governance,
external auditing and supervisory failures in the sudden collapse of Wirecard
AG -
wiping out about €20 billion of EU citizens’ pension savings - clearly shows
that EU regulators need to do better, starting with the implementation of a
more balanced CMU recovery plan in which EU citizens as individual investors
and pension savers are not forgotten”.
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