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On the 24th of October, BETTER FINANCE heartily congratulated EU parliamentary groups for taking a strong stance on conflicts of interest in retail investment services by proposing an outright ban on sales commissions for investment firms when dealing with “retail” clients (press release here).
The Council of the EU, composed of representatives of the Member States, is the last remaining obstacle standing in the way of this prohibition becoming EU law.
Worryingly a “non-paper” from the Presidency of the Council not only shamelessly ignores a straightforward ban, but actually aims to institutionalise a detrimental practice for “retail” investors (payment for order flows, or PFOF), in spite of strong evidence produced by national supervisors indicating its harmful nature.[1] This is why the European Commission and the European Parliament Rapporteur proposed to ban PFOF.
In particular, proposals to lower the “best execution” standard by reducing it to a “give or take” margin on a very limited reference price[2] whilst paving the way for non-transparent venues to capture “retail” orders – affecting liquidity and price formation – would significantly weaken the current “retail” investor protection framework.
Instead, and in case an outright ban remains politically unpalatable to some Member States, BETTER FINANCE advised EU authorities to consider:
Guillaume Prache, Managing Director at BETTER FINANCE, highlighted that “there is a strong will from EU authorities to improve the retail investor protection framework, address conflicts of interests and ensure bias-free advice. The political momentum is here, we just hope it will not be blocked by Governments opposing EU integration to protect national industry players”.
[1] See AFM Paper here and CNMV here.
[2] A 2% margin of error in relation to the European Best Bid and Offer (EBBO) produced by a Consolidated Tape Provider (CTP) aggregating data that does not include systematic internalisers, which make up for a very large part of equity trading in the EU.