EU seeks post-Brexit powers over foreign finance firms

EU seeks post-Brexit powers over foreign finance firms
European Commission (EC) President Jean-Claude Juncker rings a bell to signal the beginning of a meeting of the college of commissioners at EU headquarters in Brussels. A draft law, presented by EC vice president Valdis Dombrovskis, is intended to toughen EU financial rules. (AP)
Updated 21 September 2017
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EU seeks post-Brexit powers over foreign finance firms

EU seeks post-Brexit powers over foreign finance firms

BRUSSELS: The EU on Wednesday unveiled plans for sweeping new powers over foreign financial firms in Europe that would give the bloc strict oversight over the London financial hub after Brexit.
The draft law, presented by European Commission vice president Valdis Dombrovskis, is intended to toughen EU financial rules and better coordinate national regulation on banking and trading in Europe.
“In the context of Brexit, we had to ensure that there is not a supervisory race to the bottom to attract business from London,” Dombrovskis told a news conference in Brussels.
The proposal tightens the oversight of non-EU financial companies that are allowed to operate in the bloc under so-called equivalence regimes — special bilateral arrangements already used by Wall Street, Japan and China whereby they agree to meet EU rules to keep access to the bloc’s single market.
Though Brexit negotiations are still ongoing, insiders expect that Britain and its financial hub in London will mainly function in Europe under this regime once the EU divorce is completed, officially in March 2019.
“We want to make cross border operations easier for companies, more effective to monitor for supervisors, and more trustworthy for consumers,” Dombrovskis said.
The proposal addresses fears that London firms after Brexit will take advantage of fragmented national rules in the EU to seek out member states with lighter touch regulation.
The new rules complement an earlier proposal by Brussels to deny London the right to host banking “clearing houses” that deal in euros after Brexit, which angered Britain.
Under the new plan, the Paris-based European Securities and Markets Authority will win vast new powers to oversee all financial services operating under the equivalency regime, including on-site spot checks to ensure compliance.
Financial firms would pay for the beefed up watchdog, according to the proposal.
The reform plan will need the approval of the EU member states as well as the European Parliament, a process that could take months to achieve.