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EuropeanIssuers has a strong interest in the protection of client assets, since the reduction of intermediary risk, inter alia through stronger and clearer obligations put on intermediaries to safeguard assets, contributes to increased trust in direct investment in shares and bonds. There is currently an adverse impact on end-user confidence (both shareholders and companies) in markets, if cross-border votes and other forms of communication are not getting through the investment chain, due in part to problems with regulations regarding the protection of client assets.
EuropeanIssuers has been involved in the negotiation of the Unidroit (Geneva) Securities Convention and has contributed to the debate on securities law in the EU. The Consultation report touches upon several aspects that are also treated in those and other legislative international instruments. EuropeanIssuers would like to reiterate its previous position on securities law, i.e. that:
These elements contribute to reinforcing the direct relation between issuers and investors and therefore to the protection of investor’s assets.
EuropeanIssuers fully agrees with the two main concerns addressed in the Introduction to the IOCV-IOSCO consultation report, i.e.:
EuropeanIssuers has expressed opinions to the effect of the first concern in the European working groups on General Meetings and Corporate Actions, where the benefit of shares (and sometimes bonds) can be waived by the client. Such waiver should always be explicit and in writing.
On the second concern, although EuropeanIssuers fully agrees with clear and transparent obligations for intermediaries, EuropeanIssuers would also like to underline that a client asset protection regime that provides all necessary certainty, reduces the risks of inflation of securities and facilitates the restitution of securities needs in the first place to be put in place by public authorities. However, EuropeanIssuers regrets to see that in certain jurisdictions, markets liquidity is privileged over asset protection and ownership rights in securities appear no longer to exist.