EU depositories settled a quadrillion of transactions in 2019;  Plan to simplify passporting to boost cross-border volumes
      
    
    
      The European Union is introducing new rules to boost its efficiency 
in securities settlement and to attract more volumes as it vies for 
dominance with the U.K. after Brexit. 
The EU’s executive arm on 
Wednesday proposed changes to its Central Securities Depositories 
Regulation to help reduce compliance costs and regulatory burdens and to
 allow the system to offer more cross-border services, the European 
Commission said in an e-mailed statement.
        
    
        
    CSDs help deliver securities to a buyer in 
exchange for cash and are central to EU’s capital markets, settling more
 than a quadrillion euros ($1.1 quadrillion) in shares and bonds, 
according to data for 2019. The EU wants to boost its members’ ability 
to win clients and liquidity away from U.K. clearing houses which will lose access to the bloc’s markets after 2025.
        
    “By 
reducing red tape for Central Securities Depositories that want to 
expand their activities cross-border, we are creating a truly single 
market for securities settlement in the EU, and promoting competition in
 the market,” the EU’s financial markets chief Mairead McGuinness said 
in the statement. “This contributes to our ultimate goal of building up 
the Capital Markets Union.”
The main improvements 
would simplify so-called passporting, allowing CSDs to operate across 
the bloc with a single license while removing costly and duplicate 
procedures.
Bloomberg
      
      
      
      
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