ESMA has written to the European Commission (EC) with its proposals to improve the Transparency Directive (TD) following the Wirecard case. The letter addresses provisions related to enforcement of financial information.
ESMA recommends that the EC considers modifying the TD to meet four aims:
- Enhance cooperation between authorities across the EU via:
- Eliminating confidentiality impediments that prevent an efficient
and effective exchange of information between TD competent authorities
(CAs) and MAR/Prospectus CAs, audit oversight bodies, prudential
supervisors, and Anti Money Laundering (AML) supervisory authorities;
and
- Developing RTS on cooperation and information exchange between
accounting enforcers and audit oversight bodies, prudential supervisors
as well as, where relevant, with AML supervisors.
- Enhance coordination and governance on a national level via:
- Requiring that national transposition measures clarify the
responsibilities, reporting obligations and roles when delegation or
designation models concerning enforcement of financial information are
implemented; and
- Including regular review clauses to ensure that delegation and designation models are fit for purpose.
- Strengthen independence of the NCAs via:
- Not allowing the outsourcing of the task of regular examinations of financial information to audit firms; and
- Modifying the TD to ensure that the central competent authority,
designated authorities and/or delegated entities and their staff are
independent from market participants and they perform their duties and
act independently from Governments.
- Strengthen harmonised supervision of information across the EU via:
- Modifying the TD, to ensure that the powers of accounting enforcers
are harmonised across the EU. Notably, to ensure that all accounting
enforcers, including the delegated entities and designated authorities,
have the binding powers to request information and to require corrective
information;
- Supplementing the powers of NCAs to, amongst others, require an
independent second audit or forensic examination and carry out joint
on-site inspections or investigations;
- Reinforcing ESMA’s role in financial reporting by including the IAS Regulation into Article 1 (2) of the ESMA Regulation; and
- Strengthening consistent application and enforcement of disclosures related to Alternative Performance Measures.
The proposed modifications to the TD are based on ESMA’s experience
gained while coordinating the enforcement of financial information in
Europe, notably, when preparing reports, discussing supervisory cases or
preparing statements and opinions. In addition, the letter addresses
some of the deficiencies encountered when conducting the ESMA Peer
Reviews on the application of Guidelines on Enforcement of financial
information in 2017 and in the context of the Wirecard case.
Background
In November 2020 ESMA published the results
of its Peer Review which assessed the events leading to the collapse of
Wirecard and the supervisory response by BaFin and the Financial
Reporting Enforcement Panel.
In July 2017 ESMA published the results of its Peer Review on the application of ESMA Guidelines on enforcement of financial information.
More
ESMA
© ESMA
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