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Vecchio 22-08-05, 14:34   #1 (permalink)
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Banks attack complex new EU markets law

22 agosto 2005
Banks attack complex new EU markets law


Banks and investment companies in the European Union are voicing growing concern over new legislation that they say could hurt the liquidity and smooth functioning of Europe's capital markets.

Their worries are related to an ambitious EU law known as the markets in financial instruments directive (Mifid), which seeks to create a pan-European market for investment products.

The law will allow investment companies to operate across the EU based on the authorisation of their home regulator. Brussels hopes the regime will stimulate cross-border competition in financial services, but banks have complained about the cost of implementing its complex provisions.

Although Mifid was adopted last year, it left many crucial details to be settled later in a procedure involving the European Commission, national governments and regulators. That process has now reached a decisive stage, and many companies say draft proposals contained in internal Commission working documents would be highly damaging to the sector if implemented unchanged.

The European Banking Federation (FBE) has hit out at a draft plan to force banks to reveal to the market details of large equity positions they have taken. In a paper submitted last week as part of the Commission's consultation on Mifid, the FBE describes the proposed rules as “too complex, cumbersome and restrictive”. It also warns that “investment firms which have entered into risk positions will be in danger of the market turning against them if they are unable to unwind their positions rapidly”.

The FBE has also criticised a Commission plan that would force banks to record and retain tapes of all client orders. “Our calculations clearly indicate that the costs of setting up the system would exceed the expected benefits for the clients,” the federation says.

Wim Mijs, chairman of the FBE's financial markets committee and the head of government affairs at ABN Amro, told the FT: “We are sailing into unknown territory. Industry and the EU institutions are trying to build a European capital market, but because some of the concepts used in Mifid are radically new there may be mistakes that would destroy value rather than help create a European capital market.”

A large group of international and European associations, including the London Investment Banking Association, the International Capital Market Association and the Bond Market Association, have also raised concerns. They made clear in their public response to the Commission that they are concerned about a range of issues “which appear to have been introduced at a late stage without any formal assessment of their market impact”.

Among the issues raised by the group are the Commission's proposal to require the reporting of share loans and Brussels' plans for resolving conflicts of interests. The group told the Commission last week that the proposal on stock lending “would lead to an intricate and costly infrastructure to generate information which will be meaningless and misleading”.

The Commission stressed that none of the plans contained in the working documents were final, and that it would only table a formal proposal in October at the earliest. It insisted it would take account of industry complaints.

FT
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Vecchio 22-08-05, 14:40   #2 (permalink)
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Per capire meglio di che si parla si veda parte terminale dell'articolo

http://leggefiscofinanza.oltreover.o...termediari.pdf
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