Regulators – from the EU, US, Australia and Latin America – practitioners and other stakeholders exchanged views on implementing lessons learned from the past to maintain trust, creating financial awareness amongst investors, and increasing investor protection on the road to economic recovery.
CFA Institute organized its annual Financial Regulatory Symposium
last week where two key topics were discussed: ESG & sustainability
disclosure and business conduct during the pandemic. During the two day
event
“The aim of the event is to be a leading discussion platform on
regulatory and policy developments that effect the global finance and
investment industry through the lenses of investor protection, business
conduct and professionalism, which together constitute the cornerstone
of the mission of CFA Institute,” said Sandy Peters, Senior Head, Global Financial Reporting Advocacy at CFA Institute.
During the first discussion, panellists debated on ESG and
sustainability disclosures for investors and regulators. They underlined
that Europe stepped up its work on ESG and sustainability disclosures
with the Green Deal initiative, but that there should be jurisdictional
alignment with a baseline of global disclosure standards such as those
being developed by the International Financial Reporting Standards
(IFRS) Foundation.
The second panel discussion focused on business conduct in the investment industry during the pandemic. Keynote speaker, Paul Andrews,
Managing Director of Research, Advocacy and Standards at CFA institute,
commented that “Investor trust goes to the heart of what makes
financial markets work. The CFA Institute report from April 2020 Earning Investors’ Trust found that 67% of investors who do not have an advisor did not trust markets as opposed to 43% with an advisor.”
Andrews also referenced a follow-up study conducted by CFA Institute from March this year COVID-19, One Year Later: Capital Markets Entering Uncharted Waters,
which found that the industry perceived regulators handled the crisis
well. “Investors and regulators are now demanding more on
sustainability, but our main concern is about disclosure. For making the
right investment decisions, disclosures and availability of data are
major components,” said Andrews.
As moderator of the second panel, Josina Kamerling, Head,
Regulatory Outreach EMEA, CFA Institute, stated that “COVID19 and the
low interest environment have had an impact on trust erosion. These
issues are not new but seemed to have increased in pace.”
“This increased further with online trading becoming more popular
during the pandemic. The younger generation especially is turning to
Apps and the online world. And our recent survey on investor trust
shows that these younger generations trust technology much more, than
would be a financial advisor, with all the consequences that come with
this”, said Kamerling.
CFA
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