About a-team Marketing Services

A-Team Insight Blogs

ESMA Sends Letters to CFTC and SEC Asking for Greater Cooperation Across the Pond on Swaps Data

Subscribe to our newsletter

In light of the recent discussions going on in the US between the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) around the introduction of new data repositories and reporting requirements for the swaps market, the European Securities and Markets Authority has sent a letter to both regulators stressing the need for them to be mindful of global data standards and foreign regulatory supervision. The recently established pan-European regulator raises some concerns about the CFTC’s proposed rules regarding foreign swap data repositories and the lack therein of the recognition of reporting requirements and data formats mandated in other jurisdictions.

ESMA notes that, as they stand, the US rules would force swap data repositories based in Europe and elsewhere to report directly to US regulators as well as their own national regulators. These bodies and their participants may therefore be forced to adopt multiple data formats to comply with the requirements and be subject to on site inspection by the CFTC with regards to scrutiny of their data. The letter to the CFTC states: “This would in practice be very challenging for regulated entities and would significantly raise the costs for both the industry and supervisors. Moreover, this system would raise concerns about the possibility for the CFTC to carry out on-site inspections on entities based in Europe that are supervised by European authorities.”

The European regulator is instead suggesting that the SEC and CFTC should cooperate more closely with other regulators in order to “ensure the application and enforcement of equivalent rules and to guarantee access to the information needed for regulatory purposes and not necessarily to all data and records held by a foreign swap data repository”. After all, the notion of all this data flying about the place direct from repositories could also potentially pose a privacy and security risk.

ESMA refers the US regulators to its own proposals regarding trade repositories, which state that third country regulators will be recognised as equivalent to domestic supervisors and memorandums of understanding will be drawn up regarding information sharing between these regulators (provided the relevant criteria are met, of course). It highlights the “efficient exchange of information” between these authorities as the more sensible option.

This proposal is likely to prove popular within the practitioner community, given the resulting reduction in the reporting burden and greater global cooperation on the issue of standards required. European firms in particular are likely to be wary of facing the direct glare of US regulators with regards to their swaps data management practices.

Both letters are available to download below (although they are almost identical in content).

Let’s hope the Letter from America is not too long in coming with the US regulators’ responses.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Upcoming Webinar: How to ensure employees meet fit and proper requirements under global accountability regimes

Date: 17 September 2024 Time: 10:00am ET / 3:00pm London / 4:00pm CET Duration: 50 minutes Fitness and proprietary requirements for employees of financial institutions are not an option, but a regulatory obligation that calls on employers to regularly assess employees’ honesty, integrity and reputation, competence and capability, and financial soundness. In the UK, these...

BLOG

ESG Space Has Strengthened Under Pressure, Summit Lead Speaker Says

The ESG space has emerged stronger from a bruising year of criticism, with financial institutions and companies alike taking a more considered approach to integrating sustainability considerations into their operations. That is the message from the lead speaker at this year’s ESG Data and Tech Summit London, who also forecasts that vendors and users will...

EVENT

RegTech Summit New York

Now in its 8th year, the RegTech Summit in New York will bring together the regtech ecosystem to explore how the North American capital markets financial industry can leverage technology to drive innovation, cut costs and support regulatory change.

GUIDE

Valuations – Toward On-Demand Evaluated Pricing

Risk and regulatory imperatives are demanding access to the latest portfolio information, placing new pressures on the pricing and valuation function. And the front office increasingly wants up-to-date valuations of hard-to-price securities. These developments are driving a push toward on-demand evaluated pricing capabilities, with pricing teams seeking to provide access to valuations at higher frequency...