10 June 2014
This special report is the third in the FIA and FIA Europe’s series covering specific areas of the European Securities and Markets Authority’s (“ESMA”) consultation process for the implementation of the recast Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (“MiFID II”) and Regulation (“MiFIR”). This Special Report provides an overview of the proposals for open access for trading venues and central counterparties (“CCPs”) set out in its Discussion Paper (ESMA/2014/548) published on 22 May 2014. ESMA has been mandated to develop draft regulatory technical standards (“RTS”) on a number of issues relating to non-discriminatory access.
Articles 35-37 of MiFIR set out requirements for trading venues and CCPs to have non-discriminatory access to one another and non-discriminatory access to benchmarks. These provisions require that CCPs clear financial instruments on a “non-discriminatory and transparent” basis regardless of the trading venue on which a transaction is executed, and that trading venues provide, on request, trade feeds on a non-discriminatory and transparent basis to a CCP that wishes to clear transactions that are traded on the relevant venue. They also require that both CCPs and trading venues be given non-discriminatory access to benchmarks.
ESMA has proposed conditions under which CCPs may refuse access to a particular trading venue, which are summarised below:
ESMA notes that it is not clear how the conditions in (i) - (iii) above could constitute grounds for trading venues to deny access to CCPs, and has invited the views of market participants on this issue.
ESMA has been mandated to draft RTS on the conditions under which CCPs and trading venues must grant one another access. ESMA has considered certain conditions in its Discussion Paper, some of which are specific to either CCPs or trading venues, and others that are common to both sets of entities.
ESMA’s proposals for common conditions include requirements that (i) the information provided in access requests be kept up-to-date and used only for specific purposes; (ii) the relevant CCP and trading venue agree on procedures for communication, dispute resolution, termination of the access arrangements and risk management and (iii) the access arrangements meet certain standards, including those relating to transparency, monitoring and not impeding the users’ ability to extend existing access and comply with their respective regulatory obligations. ESMA expects both CCPs and trading venues to comply with these common conditions on a standalone basis.
ESMA has been mandated to explain what “transparent” and “non-discriminatory” mean in relation to the fees charged by trading venues and CCPs. ESMA considers “transparent” in this context to mean that there should be no difficulties in accessing information on fee schedules, which in turn must identify the fees per service with sufficient granularity to ensure that the fees charged are predictable. “Non-discriminatory”, in relation to the clearing fees charged by CCPs, means that the fees are based on a set of objective criteria regardless of where the transaction takes place, and in relation to trading venue fees, means that a CCP accessing a trading venue should be subject to the same fees and rebates as another CCP accessing the trading venue for similar instruments.
Trading venues are entitled under MiFIR to non-discriminatory treatment by CCPs regarding how contracts traded on that trading venue are treated in terms of collateral requirements and netting of economically equivalent contracts, and cross-margining with correlated contracts cleared by the CCP. ESMA has been mandated to explain what non-discriminatory treatment means in each case. ESMA’s proposals are summarised below:
ESMA has been mandated to specify the conditions under which granting access to CCPs and trading venues will threaten the smooth and orderly functioning of the markets or would adversely affect systemic risk. ESMA considers that this could occur in two circumstances: firstly, where national regulators are in possession of knowledge that a trading venue or CCP is not meeting its relevant legal obligations, or is unlikely to meet them as a consequence of granting access, and there are no remedial actions to allow compliance within a sufficient timeframe.; secondly, in circumstances related to liquidity fragmentation (defined by MiFIR as a situation in which there is an inability to trade because of the absence of clearing arrangements or where clearing members would be forced to hold their positions in an instrument in more than one CCP limiting the potential for netting financial exposures).
MiFIR permits trading venues that trade derivatives at volumes falling below a specified threshold to opt-out of the non-discriminatory access requirements under MiFIR, in relation to exchange-traded derivatives only, for a period of 30 months. MiFIR expresses this threshold as an annual notional amount traded of €1,000,000 million.
To calculate annual notional amount, ESMA suggests a trading venue should be required to aggregate the notional amount of every transaction in exchange-traded derivatives concluded under its rules for the preceding calendar year, and sum this with the equivalent calculations for any other trading venues within its group that are based in the European Union. ESMA also sets out examples of how notional amounts should be calculated for certain instrument types.
MiFIR requires that a person with proprietary rights to a benchmark ensure that CCPs and trading venues are permitted non-discriminatory access to certain information relating to the benchmark, and to licences.
ESMA has been mandated to formulate RTS specifying the information to be made available to CCPs and trading venues by the proprietary owners of benchmarks, and its proposals are summarised below:
ESMA acknowledges that it is important to balance the regulatory goal under MiFIR of providing CCPs and trading venues with non-discriminatory access to benchmarks against the proprietary rights held by the owner of the benchmark. A key proposal by ESMA in this respect is that persons with proprietary rights in the benchmark may decide how to license relevant information to users of CCPs and trading venues. For example, relevant information can be licensed directly to users or via the trading venue or CCP.
ESMA also proposes certain conditions to be complied with by parties to a benchmark licence agreement. These include requirements that the information provided by parties be kept up-to-date and used only for specific purposes, the parties agree on procedures for communication, dispute resolution, termination and risk management, and that the licence agreement meet certain standards, including those relating to transparency, monitoring and not impeding the parties’ ability to extend existing access arrangements.
MiFIR permits the person holding the proprietary rights to a “new” benchmark to postpone the obligation to license the benchmark for a period of 30 months. MiFIR requires that a person with proprietary rights to a new benchmark, who also owns an existing benchmark, establish that the new benchmark meets certain criteria relative to the existing benchmark. These criteria are that the benchmark is not a duplication or an adaption of, or a substitute for, an existing benchmark, and that the methodology of the new benchmark is substantially different from the methodology of the existing benchmark. ESMA has been mandated to specify standards guiding how a benchmark may be proved to be new.
ESMA considers that a benchmark may be less likely to be new in certain circumstances. Examples of indicators that a benchmark is not new are if the contracts based on the newer benchmark are fungible or capable of being netted by a CCP with contracts based on an existing benchmark, the regions/industry sectors covered by the new and the established benchmarks are the same or relatively similar, the benchmark values are highly correlated or the methodologies of each benchmark are the same or relatively similar. 5
In the coming days, FIA and FIA Europe will issue will issue special reports on the remaining topics addressed in the two papers:
For more information about these reports contact Will Acworth at FIA (wacworth@fia.org) or Emma Davey at FIA Europe (edavey@fia-europe.org)
Additional MiFID II/MiFIR documents are available here.
Disclaimer: This report was drafted by the London office of Covington & Burling LLP on behalf of FIA and FIA Europe. The report is part of a series of reports intended to provide factual summaries of MiFID/MiFIR on certain topics of interest to the members of FIA and FIA Europe. The reports are provided for general informational purposes only. They do not constitute legal or regulatory advice and should not be relied upon for this purpose.
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