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Recent regulatory developments of interest to most financial institutions. See also our sector specific updates in the Related Materials links.
The Financial Services Act 2021 (Commencement No 1) Regulations 2021 (SI 2021/671) have been published. SI 2021/671 is a commencement regulation made under the Financial Services Act 2021 and sets out the following commencement dates for provisions concerning the prudential regulation of investment firms and credit institutions:
HM Treasury has announced the appointment of the Green Technical Advisory Group (GTAG), an expert group which will provide independent advice to the government on the development and implementation of a UK green taxonomy. It has also published the terms of reference and a membership list for the GTAG.
The GTAG will produce a series of issues papers to be delivered according to an indicative timetable agreed after the inaugural meeting of the group in June 2021. It will provide initial recommendations to the government in September 2021.
HM Treasury expects the GTAG to be convened initially for two years, after which its remit and membership will be reviewed. During the first year, the GTAG will meeting on a quarterly basis.
The Taskforce on Innovation, Growth and Regulatory Reform (TIGRR), which was commissioned by the UK government to identify post-Brexit regulatory reforms, has produced its report. Among other things, the report contains recommendations relating to financial regulation relating to:
In a letter to the TIGRR in response to the report, the Prime Minister states that the government will publish a formal response to the report as soon as practicable.
The government has published its response to the House of Lords Liaison Committee's third follow-up report on tackling financial exclusion, which was published in April 2021. In the response, the government states that it is committed to tackling financial exclusion and that this remains high up on its agenda, particularly given the impact of COVID-19 on people's personal finances. It has responded to each of the committee's conclusions and recommendations.
HM Treasury has announced that Sam Woods has been reappointed as the PRA Chief Executive and Bank of England (BoE) Deputy Governor for Prudential Regulation. Mr Woods will serve a second term of five years, from 1 July 2021 to 30 June 2026.
The BoE has published a discussion paper on new forms of digital money. It has also published a summary of responses to its March 2020 discussion paper on central bank digital currencies.
The discussion paper on new forms of digital money is based on a number of assumptions, such as that new forms of digital money are stable in value, with a retail focus, and are denominated in sterling. It considers the role of money in the economy; public policy objectives; an illustrative example; implications for macroeconomic stability; and the regulatory environment.
Comments can be made on the discussion paper until 7 September 2021. Responses will help inform the BoE's thinking on digital money and support the ongoing work of the recently announced central bank digital currency (CBDC) taskforce, engagement and technology forums.
In its separate summary of responses to the discussion paper on CBDC, the BoE explains that respondents showed strong agreement that the BoE should, at the very least, be carefully studying CBDC. However, there was a range of views on whether one was ultimately likely to be needed or desirable.
The BoE has identified five core principles from the responses that will guide its future exploration of CBDC. These include financial inclusion being a prominent consideration in the design of any CBDC and, when assessing the case for CBDC, the BoE should assess whether non-CBDC payment innovations could deliver the same benefits.
The BoE and Bank for International Settlements (BIS) have announced the launch of a BIS Innovation Hub London Centre, to foster international collaboration on innovative FinTech within the central banking community. The London centre will help advance the Innovation Hub's work on priority themes, which currently focus on six areas:
This is the fourth new innovation hub centre to be opened in the past two years, with existing hubs already established in Basel, Hong Kong and Singapore. BIS also plans to open further new centres in due course including in Toronto, Frankfurt and Paris, and Stockholm.
The Bank of England (BoE) has published a speech by Andrew Bailey, BoE Governor, about tackling climate change. In the speech, Mr Bailey reflects on central banks' climate-related work to date and considers how it will need to evolve if banks are going to continue to meet their remit.
The PRA has published a statement providing an update on its approach to authorising firms within the temporary permissions regime (TPR). The PRA explains that it has an extended period to process authorisation applications from EEA banks and insurers in the TPR (currently up to the end of 2023). It has received a considerable volume of applications of varying scale and complexity across a range of different business models, and some firms in the TPR may choose not to apply for authorisation until the end of 2022 (or otherwise as the PRA may direct).
In view of this, the PRA expects to take authorisation decisions on a case-by-case basis, dependent on its resourcing and governance processes. This approach may also result in the PRA taking multiple decisions on the same date. While this means that some firms may receive an authorisation application outcome ahead of others, it states that the timing of authorisation should not be taken as an indication of its view of risks at individual institutions.
The PRA's dedicated webpage on the TPR contains further information on its approach.
The FCA has published Quarterly Consultation Paper No. 32, CP21/16, in which it invites comments on proposed miscellaneous amendments to the FCA Handbook in the following sections:
The FCA has published a new webpage providing details of the 13 firms that were successful in applying to begin testing in the seventh cohort of the regulatory sandbox.
Although the regulatory sandbox is currently run on a cohort basis, with application windows opened periodically throughout the year, the FCA says that it intends to move to "Always Open" later in 2021 to make the regulatory sandbox available throughout the year. It will also expand and clarify the scope of qualifying propositions. The FCA will make further announcements about these changes.
The FCA has updated its policy development update webpage for June 2021, setting out information on recent and future FCA publications.
The FCA has announced that the deadline for responding to the call for input it published jointly with The Pensions Regulator (TPR) on the behaviour of consumers at key points in the pension saving journey has been extended by four weeks, to 30 July 2021.
The Money and Pensions Service (MaPS) has announced that it has released a Beta version of the MoneyHelper consumer website to share with stakeholders and partners. MoneyHelper is a single access service for people needing pensions and money guidance. It replaces and consolidates the MaPS' legacy brands (Money Advice Service, The Pensions Advisory Service and Pension Wise). Pension Wise will continue to operate as a named service provided by MoneyHelper.
The release of the Beta MoneyHelper site is to allow MaPS to continue testing and to gather feedback ahead of the full consumer launch. MaPS has set a working date of 30 June 2021 for this.
While the Beta MoneyHelper site is live, MaPS will not be promoting it to consumers, and no webpages beyond the homepage will show up on search results. MaPS' legacy brand websites and services will continue to operate during the transition period.
The International Regulatory Strategy Group (IRSG) has published a report on "Accelerating the S in ESG – a roadmap for global progress on social standards".
Among other things, the report sets out recommendations for how public policy, companies and financial markets participants can drive more socially sustainable investment. These include pursing global consensus on social principles, developing minimum standards for social issues, choosing a single social principle (such as modern slavery) to drive momentum, and using legislation to drive socially sustainable finance. Specifically, financial institutions should act as a catalyst of change by applying consistent standards across all jurisdictions they operate in to raise social standards. They should "use the levers available to them to engage and promote best practice across their own activities, their supply chains and in the business they facilitate".
The European Commission has updated a webpage to confirm it has adopted Commission Delegated Regulation supplementing the Taxonomy Regulation relating to climate change mitigation and adaptation (known as the Taxonomy Climate Delegated Act).
The text of the adopted Taxonomy Climate Delegated Act has also been published (along with Annex 1 and Annex 2 to it). The legislation contains a set of technical screening criteria that define which activities contribute to environmental objectives contained in the Taxonomy Regulation (climate change adaptation and climate change mitigation).
The Taxonomy Climate Delegated Act will enter into force 20 days after it has been published in the Official Journal of the European Union (OJ). It will apply from 1 January 2022.
The European Commission has announced the publication of its EU Taxonomy Compass, which provides a visual representation of the content of the EU Taxonomy, starting with the Taxonomy Climate Delegated Act.
The EU Taxonomy Compass provides a visual representation of the contents of the EU Taxonomy. It aims to enable a variety of users to access the contents of the EU Taxonomy more easily, by allowing them to check which activities are included in the EU Taxonomy (taxonomy-eligible activities), which objectives they substantially contribute to and what criteria they have to meet. It also aims to make it easier to integrate the criteria into business databases and other IT systems by including a number of download options.
The Commission explains that, to start with, the EU Taxonomy Compass covers the Taxonomy Climate Delegated Act (see report above), which was adopted on 4 June 2021 but has not yet entered into force. However, it plans to update the Compass over time to include future delegated acts specifying technical screening criteria for additional economic activities substantially contributing to the climate objectives and the other environmental objectives of the Taxonomy Regulation. It will also reflect any future reviews of the delegated acts.
The European Central Bank (ECB) has published an opinion on the proposal for a Regulation on digital operational resilience for the financial sector (DORA) and the related proposal for a Directive that clarifies and amends certain existing EU financial services Directives to align them with the proposed Regulation. Points of interest in the opinion include the following:
Where the ECB recommends that the proposed Regulation is amended, it has set out specific drafting proposals in a technical working document (at the end of the opinion) accompanied by explanatory text.
The Joint Committee of the European Supervisory Authorities (ESAs) has published the following final reports on the mapping of external credit assessment institutions' (ECAIs) credit assessments:
The ITS have been amended following the recognition of two new credit rating agencies (CRAs) and the de-registration of a number of CRAs. The amendments reflect the allocation of appropriate risk weights to the newly established ECAIs, and remove reference to the de-registered CRAs. They also reflect the outcome of a monitoring exercise on the existing mappings, based on the additional quantitative and qualitative information collected after the original Implementing Regulation entered into force. In particular, the ESAs propose to change the credit quality step allocation for two ECAIs, and to introduce new credit rating scales for nine ECAIs.
The ESAs have also published individual draft mapping reports showing how the methodology was applied to produce the amended mappings.
The ITS will be submitted to the European Commission for endorsement, following which they will be published in the OJ. The ITS will apply 20 days following their publication in the OJ.
The European Banking Authority (EBA) has published a consultation paper on regulatory technical standards (RTS) on the reclassification of investment firms as credit institutions.
Article 8a of the Capital Requirements Directive (CRD), which was introduced by the Investment Firms Directive (IFD), specifies the triggers for when a systemically important investment firm must seek authorisation as a credit institution. Broadly, the trigger is that the average of the firm's monthly total assets, calculated over a period of 12 consecutive months on a solo consolidated basis, is equal to or exceeds EUR30 billion. Article 8a(6)(b) mandates the EBA to produce RTS on the calculation of the EUR30 billion threshold.
In the draft RTS, the EBA sets out provisions on calculation of the value of assets for determining the threshold. The RTS cover issues including the concept of consolidated assets, the accounting standards for determining asset values, the procedure to calculate the total assets on a monthly basis and the treatment of assets of branches of third country groups.
The deadline for responses is 17 July 2021. The EBA intends to finalise the RTS and submit them to the European Commission in early Q4 2021. This is the second consultation on these RTS.
The G7 finance ministers and central bank governors have issued a communique following their June 2021 meeting in London. In the communique, among other things, the ministers and governors:
The TCFD has published a consultation on its Proposed Guidance on Climate-related Metrics, Targets, and Transition Plans and published Measuring Portfolio Alignment: Technical Supplement.
The consultation closes on 7 July 2021 and the TCFD aims to finalise the guidance in autumn 2021.
The NGFS has published:
Although the climate scenarios have been primarily developed for central banks and supervisors, they can also be used by financial institutions. A related press release explains the scenarios and highlights some key themes which can be used to help set more granular targets, enhance strategic thinking, and form a part of climate-related financial disclosures.
The NGFS plans to continue developing the scenarios and is due to work with industry ahead of COP26 in November 2021 to ensure the scenarios are suitable for wider use.
The Global Financial Markets Association (GFMA) has published a paper containing global guiding principles for developing climate finance taxonomies. The GFMA calls on global policymakers, standard setters, and market participants to agree on a minimum set of global guiding principles and definitions to underpin all existing and new taxonomies across regions and to align their taxonomies to globally consistent definitions to promote this common understanding.
The Financial Stability Board (FSB) has published a note providing an overview of the responses it received to its November 2020 discussion paper on regulatory and supervisory issues relating to outsourcing and third-party relationships. Respondents generally welcomed the discussion paper and agreed with the challenges and issues it identified. They suggested the following measures to address these challenges and issues:
Authored by Yvonne Clapham