
Trump Administration Executive Order (EO) Tracker
On 5 May 2020, the HM Treasury confirmed that it plans to remove the open access regime for exchange-traded derivatives (ETDs), which is currently within the UK version of the Markets in Financial Instruments Regulation (UK MiFIR (600/2014)).
This follows the HM Treasury’s review of the regime, which it announced on 30 December 2020. HM Treasury has indicated that the reason for the decisions is that these provisions are not relevant in the UK-only context as they were designed to create competition across the EU.
The regime on open access for ETDs is set out in Articles 35 and 36 of UK MiFIR. Article 35 requires a central counterparty (CCP) to accept to clear financial instruments on the request of a trading venue on a non-discriminatory and transparent basis. Article 36 requires a trading venue to provide trade feeds to a CCP on request, on a non-discriminatory and transparent basis, essentially to enable the clearing of financial instruments by that CCP. These provisions allow the trading venue or CCP to reject the request only for certain limited reasons. The provisions also provide for the Financial Conduct Authority to restrict access in certain cases.
The following points may be of interest to exchanges and CCPs operating in the UK and EU:
If you would like to discuss the implications of this development on your business, please get in touch with one of the contacts above.
The UK has a number of current and planned consultations in the pipeline, including, for example, an HM Treasury consultation on wholesale markets reform due this summer. Stakeholders are encouraged to grasp every opportunity to engage with consultation processes where appropriate.
Authored by Anahita Patwardhan