Currencies

EU pushes forward with post-Brexit forum for EU, UK financial regulators


LONDON (Reuters) – The European Union’s executive body said on Wednesday it has formally adopted a draft memorandum of understanding (MoU) to allow financial regulators from Britain and the bloc to cooperate more closely, though stopping short of market access.

Britain has left the EU, largely severing its financial sector’s previously unfettered access to the bloc.

As part of Britain’s Brexit terms with the bloc, the EU agreed to formalise cooperation between financial watchdogs, but it was put on hold by Brussels following disagreements between the bloc and Britain over Northern Ireland.

That spat was resolved with the Windsor Framework.

The European Commission said on Wednesday is has adopted the draft MoU, though it still needs final political endorsement from EU states before it can be signed on behalf of the EU by the Commission.

“I am confident that our relationship and future engagement in financial services will be built on a shared commitment to preserve financial stability, market integrity, and the protection of consumers and investors,” Mairead McGuinness, the EU’s financial services commissioner, said in a statement.

The MoU will create a joint EU-UK Financial Regulatory Forum, similar to what the EU already has with the United States.

“The MoU does not deal with the access of UK-based firms to the Single Market – or EU firms’ access to the UK market – nor does it prejudge the adoption of equivalence decisions,” the Commission said.

The EU has granted ‘equivalence’ or EU market access to derivatives clearing houses in London until the end of June 2025.

In the meantime, the bloc has proposed a draft law to force banks and asset managers in the EU to shift a yet-to-be-decided chunk of their clearing from London to the bloc, though industry officials expect equivalence to be extended in some form after June 2025.

(Reporting by Huw Jones; Editing by Paul Simao)

By Huw Jones



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