New EU derivatives rules to come into force in mid-March

New rules on the processing of derivatives contracts over exchange platforms are set to come into force in mid-March after being passed by the European Parliament.

  1 1 comment

New EU derivatives rules to come into force in mid-March

Editorial

This content has been selected, created and edited by the Finextra editorial team based upon its relevance and interest to our community.

The rules, which lay out the requirements for processing of OTC contracts on electronic trading platforms and for reporting to trade repositories, have been the subject of political wrangling in the European Parliament. A resolution to exempt non-financial firms from compliance - which would have delayed the passage through Parliament of the rulebook - was defeated following some last-minute horse trading at a European Parliament meeting in Strasbourg

EU Commissioner Michel Barnier welcomed the vote: "I take note of the fact that the European Parliament has decided not to object to our proposed technical standards to implement our new rules on derivatives. This reform is essential to bring more responsibility and transparency to derivative transactions. As a result, financial institutions and non-financial companies will be subject to new transparency rules in terms of reporting and supervision, and to clearing obligations for derivative contracts."

Barnier says he will travel to the US next week to meet with CFTC commissioner Gary Gensler to persuade him of the merits of the EU legislation.

"With my visit I hope to make progress towards a system whereby the EU and the USA recognise the application of their respective rules on both sides of the Atlantic as equivalent," he says.

Sponsored [On-Demand Webinar] Preventing disaster: How banks can address operational resilience to prepare for global outages

Comments: (1)

A Finextra member 

The regulation mentioned is this article is EMIR (European Markets in Infrastructure Regulation) which will mandate reporting, clearing and collateral management against OTC Derivatives for Financial Insitutions. Although this regulation mentions electronic trading, this part of the activity will be rather covered by MIFID 2, which should come into force by 2015. Therefore no mandatory exchange trading of OTC Derivatives is expected before that date.

[Webinar] Solving the KYC challenge with end-to-end processesFinextra Promoted[Webinar] Solving the KYC challenge with end-to-end processes