AFME welcomes today’s decision from the Commission to avoid immediately introducing mandatory buy-ins.
Responding to today’s proposed changes from the European Commission to the Central Securities Depositories Regulation (CSDR), Pete Tomlinson, Director of Post Trade at the Association for Financial Markets in Europe, said:
“AFME members continue to support the objective of improving
settlement efficiency in European capital markets in a proportionate and
effective manner. AFME therefore welcomes today’s decision from the
Commission to avoid immediately introducing mandatory buy-ins.
“In particular, the proposed two-step approach is practical as it
will provide the opportunity to assess the impact of the penalties
regime and other measures. AFME remains confident this will result in a
reduction in settlement fails. The proposal to clarify and simplify
passporting rules is also helpful and we hope this will support
increased cross-border issuance and promote further competition amongst
CSDs.
“However, it is not clear from today’s proposals how the
Commission intends to assess whether or not settlement efficiency has
reached ‘appropriate levels’. AFME recommends that a clear framework is
established to measure this to provide greater certainty to market
participants.
“AFME does not believe mandatory buy-ins are appropriate for any
asset class or transaction type and will have disproportionate negative
consequences on market liquidity and efficiency that could undermine the
attractiveness and competitiveness of EU capital markets.
“Other tools may be more effective at achieving the settlement
efficiency objective and should be considered as a second step, should
this be necessary, instead of mandatory buy-in provisions. These could
include increasing penalty rates or measures to increase use of partial
settlement.”
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