Better Finance: Capital Markets Union at Risk as European “Retail” Investors have less and less access to Equity Market Data

25 March 2021

New research by BETTER FINANCE[1] found that the equity market data published by the four largest EU equity markets (in 2019, according to ESMA) on their websites are either totally or partially[2] de facto not accessible for non-professional users.

Access to equity market data is essential for “retail” investors to make informed investment decisions. However, new research by BETTER FINANCE[1] found that the equity market data published by the four largest EU equity markets (in 2019, according to ESMA) on their websites are either totally or partially[2]  de facto not accessible for non-professional users.

Equity trading venues (Regulated Markets and Multilateral Trading Facilities) operating in the European Union are required to publish pre- and post-trade data that is accessible and understandable for end-users. This data must be provided free of charge and has to be directly available in an easily accessible and non-discriminatory manner, in a format that can easily be read, used, copied and understood by the average reader, and respecting a maximum delay of 15 minutes. Any practices diverging from - or circumventing these basic rules would be in breach of EU law.

The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) also found that many equity markets fail to fully comply with the law, especially with regards to the timeliness (a maximum delay of 15 minutes) and format of the information provided.[3]

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A quick look at European equity markets in recent years reveals a dramatic shift away from EU-based “lit” regulated equity trading venues (down to less than a fifth of trades in 2019) to less transparent and less retail investor-friendly non-EU based players. The research carried out by BETTER FINANCE clearly shows how poorly the new market leaders disclose pre- and post-trade data to non-paying non-professional users on their own public websites, from requiring registration and little known securities codes instead of issuers’ names, to using unintelligible jargon, or burying it deep within their platforms, only accessible through a maze of clicks and redirections or downloads of “csv” tables, making it de facto impossible for the average non-professional investor to access it (see table below).

Guillaume Prache, Managing Director of BETTER FINANCE, couldn’t be clearer: “As stated by the European Commission, EU households are the main source of long-term financing for the real economy. For the Capital Markets Union (CMU) to succeed, individual investors and savers should be at the heart of the project and have trust in capital markets. Therefore, the EU must end the discrimination of consumers as “retail equity investors” in terms of:

-        access to market data,

-        access to Pan-European collective redress, 

-        best execution of “retail” trade orders and prevention of conflicts of interests such as those generated by the practice of “payments for order flows”.

These findings revealing the very poor retail access to market data, the recent collapse of Wirecard[4], - wiping out close to 20 billion of pension savings with no right to Pan-European collective redress for the victims – and the issues with payments for order flows that recently finally emerged with the GameStop case[5] in Germany, all further demonstrate that it is urgent for the EU Authorities to better protect EU financial consumers.”

  



[2] See table below: only partially for the LSE since only pre-trade data was found to be de facto not accessible for “retail” investors.

[4] BETTER FINANCE Press Release: “Wirecard abuse review by ESMA reveals significant failures and conflicts of interests in national financial supervision and the need for effective collective redress for abused investors”

[5] BETTER FINANCE Press Release: “GameStop Case Highlights Discrimination of “Retail” Investors in Stock Markets”


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