The European Union will extend permission for banks in the bloc to continue using clearing houses in London for a further three years from June while efforts to end "over-reliance" on Britain are stepped up, its financial services chief said on Tuesday.
The
European Union wants to directly supervise clearing of euro-denominated
derivatives and build up "autonomy" in its own capital market as
Britain is no longer subject to the bloc's financial rules since Brexit.
Mairead McGuinness had already said last November
that such permission, known as equivalence, would be extended for an
unspecified period from June 2022, when it is due to expire, to give
more time to shift clearing from London to the continent.
"We
are now consulting member states on this draft equivalence decision,
which will take the form of an implementing act. We envisage to propose
an extension of the equivalence decision of three years - until end June
2025," a spokesperson for McGuinness said.
Brussels
has sought to persuade banks in the EU to relocate swathes of clearing
from operators like London Stock Exchange Group, whose LCH arm clears
about 90% of euro-denominated interest rate swaps or about 90 trillion
euros, to Deutsche Boerse in Frankfurt but with little success.
Failing
to extend clearing permission beyond June risked disrupting markets by
forcing banks to rapidly close positions in London and reopen them
elsewhere, a costly undertaking.
U.S.-based
clearing houses have long-term EU equivalence and banks said they could
shift clearing to New York rather than Frankfurt if forced to stop
using London.
McGuinness
said that in coming weeks she would also launch a public consultation
on measures to make the bloc an attractive clearing hub, and on the
supervisory arrangements for EU central counterparties (CCPs)...
more at Reuters
© Thomson Reuters
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