Financial sector preparations for the end of the transition period with the EU are now in their final stages. Most risks to UK financial stability that could arise from disruption to the provision of cross-border financial services at the end of the transition period have been mitigated.
Financial sector
preparations for the end of the transition period with the EU are now in
their final stages. Most risks to UK financial stability that could
arise from disruption to the provision of cross-border financial
services at the end of the transition period have been mitigated. The
mitigation of these risks reflects extensive preparations made by
authorities and the private sector over a number of years. However,
financial stability is not the same as market stability or the avoidance
of any disruption to users of financial services. Some market
volatility and disruption to financial services, particularly to
EU-based clients, could arise. Irrespective of the particular form of
the UK’s future relationship with the EU, and consistent with its
statutory responsibilities, the FPC will remain committed to the
implementation of robust prudential standards in the UK.
The UK’s transition period with the EU will end on 31 December 2020.
The
UK left the EU with a Withdrawal Agreement on 31 January 2020, entering
an 11-month transition period that will end on 31 December 2020.
Negotiations on a free trade agreement (FTA) covering the broad
arrangements for trading goods and services between the UK and EU are
continuing. The ability to provide cross-border financial services
between the UK and the EU will largely be determined by regulatory
decisions made autonomously by the UK and EU, distinct from the broader
FTA negotiations.
To facilitate continued access by UK households
and businesses to financial services provided by EU financial
institutions after the end of the transition period, the UK has
temporary permissions and recognition regimes in place, alongside
temporary powers allowing UK regulators to delay or phase-in changes to
UK regulatory requirements. In addition, following its equivalence
assessments of the EU, the Government has made a number of equivalence
determinations in relation to the EU, with the intention of supporting
well-regulated open markets.
Those equivalence decisions will,
beyond the end of the temporary regimes and powers, allow favourable
regulatory treatment for UK banks’ and insurers’ cross-border activity
with the EU, and facilitate UK users’ continued access to EU central
counterparties (CCPs) and central securities depositories (CSDs). The
Government may make further equivalence determinations in the future.
The
EU’s equivalence assessment of the UK is ongoing. The European
Commission has stated that it will not assess the UK for equivalence in
nine areas in the short or medium term, including MiFIR Article 47,
which covers the direct provision of investment banking services across
borders. It has provided time-limited equivalence for the UK legal and supervisory framework for UK CCPs and CSDs.
Irrespective
of the particular form of the UK’s future relationship with the EU, and
consistent with its statutory responsibilities, the FPC will remain
committed to the implementation of robust prudential standards in the
UK. This will require maintaining a level of resilience that is at least
as great as that currently planned, which itself exceeds that required
by international baseline standards, as well as maintaining UK
authorities’ ability to manage UK financial stability risks.
Most
risks to UK financial stability that could arise from disruption to the
provision of cross-border financial services at the end of the
transition period have been mitigated.
Financial sector
preparations for the end of the transition period are now in their final
stages. Consistent with its financial stability objective, since 2016
the FPC has identified and monitored risks of disruption that could
arise if no further arrangements were put in place for the provision of
cross-border financial services when the UK’s trading arrangements with
the EU change. The FPC reviewed its checklist of actions that would
mitigate risks of disruption at the end of the transition period to
important financial services used by households and businesses (Table 3.A).
The FPC also reviewed other risks to the provision of cross-border
financial services that could cause some, albeit less material,
disruption if they are not mitigated (Table 3.B).
As
set out above, temporary permission and recognition regimes and other
preparations have been made by UK authorities to facilitate UK
households’ and businesses’ access to existing and new services from EU
financial institutions for a period after the end of the year. UK
authorities have also acted to allow UK firms to continue trading all
shares on EU trading venues after the end of the transition period.
UK financial institutions have continued to prepare for the continued provision of services to EU users.
All material subsidiaries of UK firms have been authorised in the EU
and are fully operational and over two thirds of clients of major
UK-based banks have now completed the necessary documentation to enter
into derivatives trades with EU entities. Many clients are also actively
trading from the new EU entities. UK firms also continue to novate
existing trades where necessary to ensure clients can manage risks
related to ‘lifecycle’ events.
The EU has announced its intention to provide relief from margin and
clearing requirements for certain existing trades that are novated from
UK to EU counterparties before January 2022. If implemented, this would
create further time for those trades to be novated without triggering
additional requirements.
Reflecting the extensive preparations by
UK authorities and the financial sector, the FPC continues to judge
that most risks to UK financial stability that could arise from
disruption to the provision of cross-border financial services at the
end of the transition period have been mitigated.
Financial stability is not the same as market stability or the avoidance of any disruption to users of financial services.
Financial
markets can be expected to react to the outcome of the negotiations on
arrangements for trading goods and services between the UK and EU.
As reflected in the residual risks identified by the FPC in Table 3.A and Table 3.B, some disruption to financial services could arise. This could particularly affect EU-based clients and customers.
Some
participants may not be fully ready to trade with EU counterparties or
on EU or EU-recognised venues when EU participants’ ability to trade
with UK entities or on UK venues becomes restricted. This could
reinforce market volatility.
For example, on the basis of the
approach that has been announced by the EU and in the absence of further
authority action, EU firms in scope of the EU Derivatives Trading
Obligation (DTO) would no longer be able to trade some classes of
derivatives, such as certain interest rate swaps and credit default
swaps, on UK trading venues, and UK firms in scope of the UK DTO would
no longer be able to trade these derivatives on EU trading venues.
Based
on transaction reporting data as of October 2020, it is estimated that
around US$200 billion of interest rate swap trading that takes place
daily in the UK is currently captured by the DTO. Absent a further
change in policy, the portion of this covered by the EU DTO after the
end of the transition period would be required to be traded on EU
trading venues, or trading venues elsewhere recognised by the EU. To put
this into context, the 2019 BIS triennial survey of derivative
activity, which would include activity taking place on and off trading
venues, suggested around US$1.2 trillion of interest rate swaps were
traded in the UK daily.
UK-based
branches of EU firms would be subject to the UK DTO as well as the EU
regime. As a result, these branches would only be able to trade those
derivatives captured by the obligation on trading venues in other
jurisdictions deemed equivalent by both the UK and the EU.
Firms
are preparing to comply with the relevant obligations after the end of
the transition period, including by executing some trades currently
taking place on UK trading venues in the EU or other jurisdictions if
necessary. This would result in fragmentation, and could give rise to
disruption if some counterparties are not ready to trade immediately
after the end of the transition period.
Other examples of
disruption would affect households and businesses. Some UK banks have
notified EU-based customers that they will not continue to provide
certain retail banking services in some jurisdictions.
Processing
payments, including Single Euro Payments Area (SEPA) payments, between
the UK and EU will require additional information to be included after
the end of the transition period, such as payers’ addresses. While banks
will generally hold payers’ information for credit transfers
originating from their customers, they are less likely to hold it for
direct debits, where payments are initiated by creditors. Banks have
been putting the necessary information in place. Larger UK firms are
generally well advanced in providing the information, but there is less
clarity about the progress of EU firms. To the extent that gaps remain
at the end of the transition period, they are likely to result in some
disruption to both EU and UK customers and businesses seeking to make
and receive such payments.
Financial institutions should continue taking measures to minimise disruption, including by engaging with clients and customers.
Table 3.A: Checklist of actions to avoid disruption to end-users of financial services at the end of the transition period
This
checklist reflects the risk of disruption to end-users including
households and companies if no further arrangements are put in place for
cross-border trade in financial services at the end of the transition
period on 31 December 2020. The risk assessment takes account of
progress made in mitigating any risks. It assesses risks of disruption
to end-users of financial services in the UK and, because the impact
could spill back, also to end-users in the EU.
Risks of disruption
are categorised as low (green), medium (amber) or high (red). Arrows
reflect developments since the FPC’s previously published checklist
alongside the October 2020 Financial Policy Summary. Blue text is news since then.
The
checklist is not a comprehensive assessment of risks to economic
activity arising from the end of the transition period. It covers only
the risks to activity that could stem from disruption to provision of
cross-border financial services.
Bank of England
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