Considerations on COM(2020)280 - Amendment of Directive 2014/65/EU as regards information requirements, product governance and position limits to help the recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic

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table>(1)The COVID-19 pandemic is severely affecting people, companies, health systems and the economies and financial systems of Member States. In its Communication of 27 May 2020 entitled ‘Europe’s moment: Repair and Prepare for the Next Generation’ the Commission stressed that liquidity and access to finance will be a continued challenge. It is therefore crucial to support the recovery from the severe economic shock caused by the COVID-19 pandemic through the introduction of limited targeted amendments to existing Union financial services law. The overall aim of those amendments should therefore be to remove unnecessary red tape and introduce carefully calibrated measures that are deemed effective in order to mitigate the economic turmoil. Those amendments should avoid making changes that increase administrative burdens on the sector and should leave complex legislative questions to be settled during the planned review of Directive 2014/65/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council (3). Those amendments form a package of measures and are adopted under the label ‘Capital Markets Recovery Package’.
(2)Directive 2014/65/EU was adopted in 2014 in response to the financial crisis that unfolded in 2007 and 2008. That Directive has substantially strengthened the financial system of the Union and guaranteed a high level of investor protection across the Union. Further efforts to reduce regulatory complexity and investment firms’ compliance costs and to eliminate distortions of competition could be considered, provided that investor protection is sufficiently taken into consideration at the same time.

(3)As regards the requirements that were intended to protect investors, Directive 2014/65/EU has not fully achieved its objective to adopt measures that take the particularities of each category of investors, i.e. retail clients, professional clients and eligible counterparties, sufficiently into account. Some of those requirements have not always enhanced investor protection but at times have rather hindered the smooth execution of investment decisions. Therefore, certain requirements set out in Directive 2014/65/EU should be amended to facilitate the provision of investment services and the performance of investment activities, and those amendments should be made in a balanced way which fully protects investors.

(4)The issuance of bonds is crucial in order to raise capital and to overcome the COVID-19 crisis. Product governance requirements can restrict the sale of bonds. Bonds with no other embedded derivative than a make-whole clause are generally considered safe and simple products that are eligible for retail clients. In the event of its early redemption, a bond with no other embedded derivative than a make-whole clause protects investors against losses by ensuring that those investors are provided with a payment equal to the sum of the net present value of the remaining coupon payments and the principal amount of the bond that they would have received if the bond had not been called. Product governance requirements should therefore no longer apply to bonds with no other embedded derivative than a make-whole clause. In addition, eligible counterparties are considered to have sufficient knowledge of financial instruments. It is therefore justified to exempt eligible counterparties from the product governance requirements applicable to financial instruments exclusively marketed or distributed to them.

(5)The call for evidence, launched by the European Supervisory Authority (the European Securities and Markets Authority) (ESMA) established by Regulation (EU) No 1095/2010 of the European Parliament and of the Council (4), on the impact of inducements and costs and charges disclosure requirements under Directive 2014/65/EU and the public consultation conducted by the Commission both confirmed that professional clients and eligible counterparties do not need standardised and mandatory costs information as they already receive the necessary information when they negotiate with their service provider. The information provided to professional clients and eligible counterparties is tailored to their needs and often more detailed. Services provided to professional clients and eligible counterparties should therefore be exempted from the costs and charges disclosure requirements, except with regard to the services of investment advice and portfolio management because professional clients entering into investment advice or portfolio management relationships do not necessarily have sufficient expertise or knowledge to allow such services to be exempted from those requirements.

(6)Investment firms are currently required to undertake a cost-benefit analysis of certain portfolio activities in cases of ongoing relationships with their clients in which financial instruments are switched. Investment firms are thereby required to obtain the necessary information from their clients and to be able to demonstrate that the benefits of such switching outweigh the costs. As that procedure is overly burdensome with regard to professional clients, who tend to switch on a frequent basis, services provided to them should be exempted from that requirement. Professional clients would, however, retain the possibility to opt in. As retail clients need a high level of protection, that exemption should be limited to services provided to professional clients.

(7)Clients with an ongoing relationship with an investment firm receive mandatory service reports, either periodically or based on triggers. Neither investment firms nor their professional clients or eligible counterparties find such service reports useful. Those reports have proven to be particularly unhelpful for professional clients and eligible counterparties in extremely volatile markets, as the reports are provided in a high frequency and number. Professional clients and eligible counterparties often react to those service reports either by not reading them, or by making quick investment decisions rather than continuing with a long-term investment strategy. Eligible counterparties should therefore no longer receive mandatory service reports. Professional clients should also no longer receive such service reports, but they should have the possibility to opt in to receiving them.

(8)In the immediate aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, issuers, and in particular small and middle-capitalisation companies, need to be supported by strong capital markets. Research on small and middle-capitalisation issuers is essential to help issuers to connect with investors. That research increases the visibility of issuers and thus ensures a sufficient level of investment and liquidity. Investment firms should be allowed to pay jointly for the provision of research and for the provision of execution services provided certain conditions are met. One of the conditions should be that the research is provided on issuers whose market capitalisation did not exceed EUR 1 billion, as expressed by the end-year quotes, for the 36 months preceding the provision of the research. That requirement relating to market capitalisation should be construed as covering both listed companies and non-listed companies, on the understanding that, for the latter, the balance sheet item on own capital did not exceed the EUR 1 billion threshold. It should also be noted that newly listed companies and non-listed companies established for less than 36 months are included within the scope as long as they can demonstrate that their market capitalisation did not exceed the EUR 1 billion threshold, as expressed by end-year quotes since their listing, or expressed by the own-capital for the financial years when they are or were not listed. To ensure that newly established companies that exist for less than 12 months can equally benefit from the exemption, it is sufficient that they did not exceed the EUR 1 billion threshold since the date of their establishment.

(9)Directive 2014/65/EU introduced reporting requirements for trading venues, systematic internalisers and other execution venues on how orders were executed on terms most favourable to the client. The resulting technical reports contain large amounts of detailed quantitative information about the execution venue, the financial instrument, the price, the costs and the likelihood of execution. They are rarely read, as is evidenced by the very low numbers of views on the websites of trading venues, systematic internalisers and other execution venues. As they do not enable investors and other users to make any meaningful comparisons on the basis of the information they contain, the publication of those reports should be temporarily suspended.

(10)In order to facilitate communication between investment firms and their clients and thus facilitate the investment process itself, investment information should no longer be provided on paper but should, as a default option, be provided electronically. Retail clients should however be able to request the provision of that information on paper.

(11)Directive 2014/65/EU allows persons that trade in commodity derivatives or emission allowances or derivatives thereof on a professional basis to make use of an exemption from the requirement to obtain authorisation as an investment firm when their trading activity is ancillary to their main business. Currently, persons applying for the ancillary activity exemption are required to notify annually the relevant competent authority that they make use of that exemption and to provide the necessary elements to satisfy the two quantitative tests that determine whether their trading activity is ancillary to their main business. The first test compares the size of an entity’s speculative trading activity to the total trading activity in the Union on an asset class basis. The second test compares the size of the speculative trading activity, with all asset classes included, to the total trading activity in financial instruments by the entity at group level. There is an alternative form of the second test, which consists of comparing the estimated capital used for the speculative trading activity to the actual amount of capital used at group level for the main business. For the purposes of establishing when an activity is considered to be an ancillary activity, competent authorities should be able to rely on a combination of quantitative and qualitative elements, subject to clearly defined conditions. The Commission should be empowered to provide guidance on the circumstances under which national authorities can apply an approach combining quantitative and qualitative threshold criteria, as well as to develop a delegated act on the criteria. Persons that are eligible for the ancillary activity exemption, including market makers, are those dealing on own account or those providing investment services other than dealing on own account in commodity derivatives or emission allowances or derivatives thereof to customers or suppliers of their main business. The exemption should be available for each of those cases individually and on an aggregate basis where the activity is ancillary to their main business, when considered on a group basis. The ancillary activity exemption should not be available for persons who apply a high-frequency algorithmic trading technique or are part of a group the main business of which is the provision of investment services or banking activities, or acting as a market maker in relation to commodity derivatives.

(12)Competent authorities currently have to set and apply limits on the size of a net position which a person can hold at all times in commodity derivatives traded on trading venues and in economically equivalent over-the-counter (EEOTC) contracts. As the position limit regime has proved to be unfavourable for the development of new commodity markets, nascent commodity markets should be excluded from the position limit regime. Instead, position limits should only apply to critical or significant commodity derivatives that are traded on trading venues, and to their EEOTC contracts. Critical or significant derivatives are commodity derivatives with an open interest of at least 300 000 lots on average over a one-year period. Due to the critical importance of agricultural commodities for citizens, agricultural commodity derivatives and their EEOTC contracts will remain under the current position limit regime.

(13)Directive 2014/65/EU does not allow hedging exemptions for any financial entities. Several predominantly commercial groups that set up a financial entity for their trading purposes have found themselves in a situation where their financial entity could not carry out all the trading for the group, as the financial entity was not eligible for the hedging exemption. Therefore, a narrowly defined hedging exemption for financial entities should be introduced. That hedging exemption should be available where, within a predominantly commercial group, a person has been registered as an investment firm and trades on behalf of that commercial group. To limit the hedging exemption to those financial entities that trade on behalf of the non-financial entities in a predominantly commercial group, that exemption should only apply to the positions held by such financial entity that are objectively measurable as reducing risks directly relating to the commercial activities of the non-financial entities of the group.

(14)Even in liquid contracts, only a limited number of market participants typically act as market makers in commodity markets. When those market participants have to apply position limits, they are not able to be as effective as market makers. Therefore, an exemption from the position limit regime should be introduced for financial and non-financial counterparties for positions resulting from transactions undertaken to fulfil obligations to provide liquidity.

(15)The amendments as regards the position limit regime are designed to support the development of new energy contracts, and do not seek to relax the regime for agricultural commodity derivatives.

(16)The current position limit regime also does not recognise the unique characteristics of securitised derivatives. Securitised derivatives are transferable securities within the meaning of point (c) of point (44) of Article 4(1) of Directive 2014/65/EU. The securitised derivatives market is characterised by a large number of different issuances, each one registered with the central securities depository for a specific size, and any possible increase follows a specific procedure duly approved by the relevant competent authority. That is in contrast to commodity derivative contracts, for which the amount of open interest, and thereby the size of a position, is potentially unlimited. At the time of issue, the issuer or the intermediary in charge of the distribution of the issuance holds 100 % of the issue, which challenges the very application of a position limit regime. In addition, most securitised derivatives are then ultimately held by a large number of retail investors, which does not raise the same risk of abuse of a dominant position or to orderly pricing and settlement conditions as for commodity derivative contracts. Moreover, the notion of spot month and other months, for which position limits are to be set under Article 57(3) of Directive 2014/65/EU, is not applicable to securitised derivatives. Securitised derivatives should therefore be excluded from the application of position limits and reporting requirements.

(17)Since the entry into force of Directive 2014/65/EU, no same commodity derivative contracts have been identified. Due to the concept of same commodity derivative in that Directive, the calculation methodology for determining the other months’ position limit is detrimental to the trading venue with the less liquid market when trading venues are competing on commodity derivatives based on the same underlying and sharing the same characteristics. Therefore, the reference to ‘same contract’ in Directive 2014/65/EU should be deleted. Competent authorities should be able to agree that the commodity derivatives traded on their respective trading venues are based on the same underlying and share the same characteristics, in which case the central competent authority within the meaning of the first subparagraph of Article 57(6) of Directive 2014/65/EU should set the position limit.

(18)Significant differences exist in the way positions are managed by trading venues in the Union. Therefore, position management controls should be reinforced where necessary.

(19)In order to ensure the further development of euro-denominated commodity markets in the Union, the power to adopt acts in accordance with Article 290 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union should be delegated to the Commission in respect of all of the following: the procedure by which persons are able to apply for an exemption for positions resulting from transactions undertaken to fulfil obligations to provide liquidity; the procedure by which a financial entity that is part of a predominantly commercial group is able to apply for a hedging exemption for positions held by that financial entity that are objectively measurable as reducing risks directly relating to the commercial activities of the non-financial entities of that predominantly commercial group; the clarification of the content of position management controls; and the development of criteria for establishing when an activity is to be considered to be ancillary to the main business at group level. It is of particular importance that the Commission carry out appropriate consultations during its preparatory work, including at expert level, and that those consultations be conducted in accordance with the principles laid down in the Interinstitutional Agreement of 13 April 2016 on Better Law-Making (5). In particular, to ensure equal participation in the preparation of delegated acts, the European Parliament and the Council receive all documents at the same time as Member States’ experts, and their experts systematically have access to meetings of Commission expert groups dealing with the preparation of delegated acts.

(20)The EU Emissions Trading System (ETS) is the Union’s flagship policy for achieving the decarbonisation of the economy in line with the European Green Deal. Trading in emission allowances and derivatives thereof is subject to Directive 2014/65/EU and to Regulation (EU) No 600/2014 of the European Parliament and of the Council (6) and represents an important element of the Union’s carbon market. The ancillary activity exemption under Directive 2014/65/EU enables certain market participants to be active in emission allowance markets without having to be authorised as investment firms, provided certain conditions are met. In view of the importance of orderly, well-regulated and supervised financial markets, the significant role of the ETS in achieving the Union’s sustainability objectives, and the role that a well-functioning secondary market in emission allowances has in supporting the functioning of the ETS, it is essential that the ancillary activity exemption is appropriately designed to contribute to those objectives. That is particularly relevant where trading in emission allowances takes place on third-country trading venues. In order to ensure the protection of the Union’s financial stability, market integrity, investor protection and the level playing field, and to ensure that the ETS continues to function in a transparent and robust manner to ensure cost-effective emission reductions, the Commission should monitor the further development of trading in emission allowances and derivatives thereof in the Union and in third countries, assess the impact of the ancillary activity exemption on the ETS and, where necessary, propose any appropriate amendment as regards the scope and application of the ancillary activity exemption.

(21)In order to provide additional legal clarity, avoid an unnecessary administrative burden for Member States and ensure a uniform legal framework for investment firms, which will fall within the scope of Directive (EU) 2019/2034 of the European Parliament and of the Council (7) as of 26 June 2021, it is appropriate to postpone the date of transposition of Directive (EU) 2019/878 of the European Parliament and of the Council (8) as regards the measures applicable to investment firms. In order to ensure a consistent application of the legal framework applicable to investment firms set out in Article 67 of Directive (EU) 2019/2034, the transposition deadline for Directive (EU) 2019/878 with respect to investment firms should therefore be extended to 26 June 2021.

(22)In order to ensure that the objectives pursued by the amendments to Directives 2013/36/EU (9) and (EU) 2019/878 are achieved, and in particular to avoid any disruptive effects for Member States, it is appropriate to provide that those amendments become applicable as of 28 December 2020. While providing for a retroactive application of the amendments, legitimate expectations of the persons concerned are nevertheless respected as the amendments do not encroach on the rights and obligations of economic operators or individuals.

(23)Directives 2013/36/EU, 2014/65/EU and (EU) 2019/878 should therefore be amended accordingly.

(24)This amending Directive aims to supplement existing Union law and its objective can therefore best be achieved at Union level rather than by different national initiatives. Financial markets are inherently cross-border and are becoming more so. Because of that integration, isolated national intervention would be far less efficient and would lead to the fragmentation of markets, resulting in regulatory arbitrage and distortion of competition.

(25)Since the objective of this Directive, namely to refine existing Union law ensuring uniform and appropriate requirements that apply to investment firms throughout the Union, cannot be sufficiently achieved by the Member States but can rather, by reason of its scale and effects, be better achieved at Union level, the Union may adopt measures, in accordance with the principle of subsidiarity as set out in Article 5 of the Treaty on European Union. In accordance with the principle of proportionality, as set out in that Article, this Directive does not go beyond what is necessary in order to achieve that objective.

(26)In accordance with the Joint Political Declaration of 28 September 2011 of Member States and the Commission on explanatory documents (10), Member States have undertaken to accompany, in justified cases, the notification of their transposition measures with one or more documents explaining the relationship between the components of a directive and the corresponding parts of national transposition instruments. With regard to this Directive, the legislator considers the transmission of such documents to be justified.

(27)In view of the need to introduce targeted measures to support economic recovery from the COVID-19 crisis as quickly as possible, this Directive should enter into force as a matter of urgency on the day following that of its publication in the Official Journal of the European Union,