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Changes will cut red tape and help make the City of London an
even more attractive place to invest and to do business
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Commitment to upholding the highest regulatory standards will
remain a top priority
The UK will seize its newfound freedoms since leaving the EU to
reform the rules for listing companies in the UK and the
regulation of wholesale capital markets, the Economic Secretary
to the Treasury & City Minister announced today.
Speaking to the Association of Financial Markets in Europe today
(Tuesday 1 March), outlined plans to amend
unnecessary rules in a move which will make the City of London an
even more attractive place to invest and to do business,
supporting jobs and generating investment in the UK.
Reforms outlined today to wholesale capital markets will give
firms greater choice about where they can trade, while a new,
simpler and more agile regime for companies listing and raising
capital will encourage more innovative firms to list in the UK,
and facilitate wider participation in the ownership of public
companies.
The Economic Secretary to the Treasury said:
We are using our post-Brexit freedoms to create the right
legislation to support an even stronger financial services sector
- one that is open, green, competitive and technologically
advanced.
Our plans to improve our wholesale markets regulation will
liberate businesses from unwieldy and stifling rules that hold
back their ability to grow and innovate, while our reforms to the
prospectus rules will replace the current system with a new,
simpler, and more agile regime.
Last year over 120 companies went public in the UK– raising
£17bn, the most raised in any year since 2007. Under these
reforms, it is expected that even more innovative and exciting
companies will choose to list and raise capital in the UK.
UK wholesale capital markets have been subject to the EU’s MIFID
rules since 2018, after they were introduced to harmonise
wholesale markets regulation across EU member states. Similarly,
the ability to float companies and raise capital in the UK has
been governed by EU prospectus regulation since 2017.
Consultations on the wholesale markets rules and prospectus
regime were launched last summer alongside the Chancellor’s
Mansion House speech. The consultation responses, published today
set out the changes being taken forward.
Proposed MIFID reforms, developed by HM Treasury
alongside the UK regulators include
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Giving firms greater choice about where they can trade and
allowing them to get the best price for investors.
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Removing a number of burdens for Systematic Internalisers- a
group of businesses that a play a key role in financial
markets.
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Delegating the fixed income and derivatives, and part of the
pre-trade, transparency regimes to the Financial Conduct
Authority, who are well equipped to ensure rules are applied
proportionately
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Giving the FCA the tools it needs to help the industry
develop a Consolidated Tape. This will combine market data
from multiple areas, giving investors a clear source of
information, while cutting costs and complexity for firms.
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Reducing the scope of the commodities position limits regime
and delegating it to trading venues to ensure that market
activity is not unnecessarily restricted, while ensuring that
markets function efficiently
Changes to the prospectus regime include:
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Facilitating wider participation in the ownership of public
companies, including for retail investors. This will allow a
broader cross-section of society to benefit from companies’
growth as well as increase market liquidity.
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Simplifying the regulation of prospectuses and removing
unnecessary red tape.
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Improving the quality of information that investors receive.
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Ensuring that the regulation of prospectuses will be better
able to respond to innovation and change.
Further information
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The Economic Secretary’s speech is available here
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MIFIDII is a legislative framework instituted by the European
Union to harmonise capital markets regulation across the
bloc. It covers regulation of virtually all aspects of
financial investment and trading and came into force in 2018.
- Consultation responses on reforms to MIFIDII and the EU
Prospectus Regulation can be found below
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UK Prospectus Regime
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UK Wholesale Markets
Review