No deadline on equivalence, Commissioner McGuinness says; Brexit has ‘come home to roost’ for U.K., access will change. The European Union’s top financial-services official warned the City of London that any deal for the industry remains a distant prospect.
Mairead
McGuinness, European commissioner for financial services, said in a
Bloomberg TV interview Friday that the EU doesn’t have a fixed timeline
for reaching a decision on financial services and emphasized that Brexit
would inevitably hinder access to the bloc.
“Change
is coming,” McGuinness said. “There is no recreating the single market
for financial services when they have decided to leave the single
market.”
The realities of leaving the EU have “come home to roost” for Britain, McGuinness said.
With the financial industry largely sidelined in the trade
deal enacted when Britain finally split from the EU on Dec. 31, firms
are racing to adjust to the rupture in European markets. London lost
more than 6 billion euros ($7 billion) in daily stock trades to EU
venues on Jan. 4, the first business day after the transition period.
Derivatives traders are routing more trades to New York and away from the continent altogether. JPMorgan Chase & Co., Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
and other firms that relied on London hubs for decades have moved
billions of euros in assets and thousands of staff to new offices in
Frankfurt, Paris and across the bloc.
McGuinness signaled that the European Commission will first
discuss a memorandum of understanding on regulatory cooperation with the
U.K., due in March, before granting U.K. firms access to the single
market. That so-called equivalence process will determine how much
investment banking and trading business can stay in London, and so far
the EU is in no hurry to offer it to Britain.
Read more on how equivalence holds the key to post-Brexit banking
While the U.K. started 2021 with almost identical rules to
the bloc following a post-Brexit transition period, British officials
are contemplating modifications in a number of areas. Chancellor of the
Exchequer Rishi Sunak has hinted the potential changes could become a
“Big Bang 2.0,” akin to Margaret Thatcher’s deregulation in the 1980s.
Any such changes will be closely monitored by the EU, McGuinness said.
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