EFAMA: Cross-Industry Consensus on EU Equity Consolidated Tape
31 May 2022
AFME, BVI, Cboe Europe and EFAMA have today jointly published a position paper which provides a set of key principles needed to ensure the successful creation of an EU Equity Consolidated Tape (CT). These 11 principles would help ensure a CT is commercially viable and appropriately constructed to deliver the most benefit to European issuers, investors, exchanges and other intermediaries.
These organisations believe a successful equities
CT will democratise access to equities data, contributing to the
creation of a truly pan-European market in line with the goals of the
European Commission’s Capital Markets Union project. An appropriately
constructed CT would substantially increase the number of market data
users with access to pan-EU data, increase the visibility of issuers
listed in every EU market and drive the growth of the region’s capital
markets.
While the group supports many aspects of the
European Commission’s blueprint for a CT across European markets, as set
out as part of its Markets in Financial Instruments Regulation (MiFIR)
review in 2021, AFME, BVI, Cboe Europe and EFAMA believe the EU needs to
be more ambitious with its proposals to realise the full benefits of
this crucial initiative.
Tanguy van de Werve, Director General of EFAMA, said: “The
signatories to these Principles represent a broad cross-section of
capital market participants in Europe. It highlights the importance of
delivering a consolidated tape for equities in what is a global trading
marketplace. The ability to access a single source of consolidated data
is paramount for continuing to attract global investment flows, for
enhancing capital market participation in Europe, and for building
investor confidence through transparency on trade data.”
Adam Farkas, chief executive of AFME,
said: “Until now, the development of a consolidated tape has been a
slow burn in the EU. To ensure the EU can compete as a global player, it
needs to implement this vital price comparison tool, which will provide
investors with a holistic view of investment opportunities across
Europe, instead of limiting themselves to their home markets. However,
in order for this to be achieved, the tape must be appropriately
constructed. This cross-industry paper sets out the key principles for
establishing a consolidated tape which can be both commercially viable
and of genuine use to EU investors and market participants.”
Thomas Richter, CEO of BVI, said:
“The consolidated tape supports the Capital Markets Union and
transparency for investors as well as issuers. Not only trading but also
the public listing of companies would increase, especially on the
smaller stock exchanges in the EU. In addition, a CT would improve
trading processes and best execution of orders by giving institutional
and retail investors direct access to trading activity, liquidity, and
prices.”
Natan Tiefenbrun, President of Cboe Europe, said: “These principles would help ensure the EU achieves a commercially viable Consolidated Tape, dramatically improving the accessibility of EU market data to investors of all types. It would help achieve an integrated and more resilient EU market and,
crucially, encourage greater retail participation in EU equity markets
via improved data access and enhanced investor protections.”
The cross-industry consensus (initially endorsed by AFME, BVI, Cboe Europe and EFAMA), includes the following principles:
- Any CT should not serve latency-sensitive users,
with the emphasis instead on displayed uses by professional and retail
investors. The CT infrastructure does not need to be the most expensive
low-latency infrastructure and those firms engaging in latency sensitive
activities will, in all likelihood, continue to source their market
data via direct feeds.
- Revenue sharing model should include all contributors. This model should be simple, remunerate all contributors with higher weighting given to pre-trade transparent and multilateral mechanisms versus others, incentivise the provision of pre-trade data and provide certainty of revenues to smaller exchanges.
- There should be one single CT provider, subject to appropriate governance and regulatory oversight.
- There should be mandatory contribution of pre-trade and post-trade data,
to overcome the complexities and variances of licensing data from
multiple sources and ensure the CT is viable business opportunity.
- Commercial Viability requires real-time, pre-trade data.
Based on significant market research, demand for a purely post-trade CT
is limited, and most use cases require the inclusion of real-time
post-trade data and pre-trade data.
- Engineering of the CT and its feeds should be simplified.
The CT infrastructure should be built to receive pre-trade data from
the outset, as this will allow for subsequent flexibility.
- CT content should be designed to cover the full trading day, and to improve resilience.
- A CT does not require a change to Best Execution rules.
Brokers should continue to be allowed to have discretion about which
venues to access when trading for customers. However, ensuring that
consumers are well informed about the availability of better prices may,
over time, lead to commercial demand for brokers to enhance their
access to liquidity
- The CT should be priced to succeed.
The CT needs set pricing that balances maximising the user base with
generation of sufficient revenues to fairly compensate all contributors,
and with particular emphasis on ensuring a preferential compensation to
smaller venues
- CT should be sold with a simple, single market data licensing framework
covering a variety of use cases. This would remove the existing
disincentive to access data (and thus to invest) across the EU, which
arises from current complexities of managing multiple licenses with
differing terms and policies.
- There should be no mandatory consumption of a CT,
given that some firms will source direct feeds due to the need for
lower-latency data, and hence would have no need for the CT for this
purpose.
EFAMA
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