Einde inhoudsopgave
EU Equity pre- and post-trade transparency regulation (LBF vol. 21) 2021/4.III
4.III SIs
mr. J.E.C. Gulyás, datum 01-02-2021
- Datum
01-02-2021
- Auteur
mr. J.E.C. Gulyás
- JCDI
JCDI:ADS266519:1
- Vakgebied(en)
Financieel recht / Bank- en effectenrecht
Financieel recht / Europees financieel recht
Financiële dienstverlening / Financieel toezicht
Voetnoten
Voetnoten
D. Busch, ‘MiFID II and MiFIR: stricter rules for the EU financial markets’, Law and Financial Markets Review, 2017, p. 7. A broader definition of internalisation is also used, namely where the definition includes both the situation where (i) an investment firm executed a client order by trading on its own account on the one hand and by acting on behalf of a client on the other hand; and (ii) an investment firm matches client orders against each other, that is – the investment firm acts on behalf of the clients on both sides of the trade (agency crossing) (see G. Ferrarini and F. Recine, ‘The MiFID and internalisation’, in G. Ferrarini and E. Wymeersch (Eds.), Investor Protection in Europe, Oxford University Press, 2006, p. 236). In this chapter, the narrow definition of internalisation is used, meaning that ‘agency crossing’ is not included.
For an examination of the concept of (systematic) internalization, reference is made to chapter 1(section IV) .
Recital 5 MiFID I Implementing Regulation.
The MiFID I best execution-obligations required investment firms to ‘take all reasonable steps to obtain, when executing orders, the best possible result for their clients (…)’. See art. 21 MiFID I Directive. For an examination of the relation between equity pre-trade data and best execution, reference is made to chapter 1(section IV).
Recital 5 MiFID I Implementing Regulation and CESR, MiFID I Review, July 2010(CESR/10-802), p. 7.
European Parliament, MiFID I Proposal Report, 4 September 2003(A5-0287/2003), p. 95-96.
See G. Ferrarini and F. Recine, ‘The MiFID and Internalisation’, in G. Ferrarini and E. Wymeersch (Eds.), Investor Protection in Europe, Corporate Law Making: the MiFID and Beyond, Oxford University Press, 2006, p. 241-263.
The foregoing paragraph examined the MiFID I equity pre-trade transparency regime for RMs and MTFs. Instead of transmitting a client order to an RM or MTF, MiFID I also permitted investment firms to execute orders internally (in house). One way of doing this was through internalisation of client orders. Internalisation of client orders occurs where an investment firm acts on one side of the transaction for the account of the client and on the other side on its own account.1 Under MiFID I internalisation was not a separate investment service or investment activity. Instead, it was a combination of an investment service (acting on behalf of the client) and an investment activity (trading on own account). MiFID I encompassed a distinct classification for investment firms that engaged in so-called ‘systematic internalisation’ (SI) (under the ISDno SI classification was in place).2
MiFID I subjected SIs to a distinct equity pre-trade transparency regime. The aim of the MiFID I pre-trade transparency regime for SIs was to ensure that investors were adequately informed as to the true level of potential share transactions (pre-trade), also where those transactions took place outside RMs and MTFs.3 The pre-trade transparency requirements for SIs were also in place for related aims, including the support of price formation, the ability for investment firms to achieve best execution,4 as well as facilitating the level playing field between RMs, MTFs, and SIs.5
The MiFID I equity pre-trade transparency rules for SIs were lighter than the pre-trade transparency regime for RMs and MTFs. The reason for this was that SIs traded for their own account (in executing client orders), which meant that SIs faced position risks.6 Although not entirely clear due to political compromise, the MiFID I regime aimed to find a middleground between the merits of equity pre-trade transparency and the position risks of SIs.7
4.III.1 Definition4.III.2 Obligation to publish quotes4.III.3 Obligation to execute quotes4.III.4 Obligation to give access to quotes4.III.5 Concluding remarks