City faces fresh post-Brexit blow as EU moves to restrict certain trades

Battle focuses on what EU sees as bloc’s over-reliance on London’s clearing houses handling euro-denominated derivatives

The City of London faces another post-Brexit blow to its dominance after the EU moved to require firms to settle more financial-risk reducing trades within the bloc.

The plan centres on trades in securities known as derivatives, and on financial market clearing houses, the intermediaries that enable the transfer of funds to sellers and financial products to buyers. Handling trillions of transactions each year, they are deemed an essential part of financial market plumbing that reduces risk.

Since Britain voted to leave the EU in 2016, the subject has become a battleground, as Brussels seeks to end what it sees as an over-reliance of European firms on London for euro-denominated derivatives trades.

At the end of 2020, the London Stock Exchange’s LCH clearing house handled more than 90% of interest-rate derivatives, denominated in euros. These interest-rate swaps are widely used by firms to protect themselves against unexpected changes in borrowing costs.

Under draft proposals issued by the European Commission on Wednesday, financial firms will be required to clear a yet-to-be determined proportion of “systemic” derivatives via active accounts in EU clearing houses. The minimum requirement will be set by the EU regulator, the European Securities and Markets Authority, one year after the law is adopted.

An EU official said the legislation meant it was “less likely” that the commission would extend a temporary deal that allows London’s clearing houses to continue serving customers in the bloc. An “equivalence” decision granting permission to Britain’s clearing houses to carry on the pre-Brexit trade expires on 30 June 2025, one of several temporary fixes agreed after Britain’s EU exit.

The official stressed that decision would be taken by the political leadership of the next commission, which takes office in 2024.

The plans emerged as the boss of Europe’s largest exchange group said London’s standing had slipped because of Brexit. “London used to be the largest financial centre of the European Union and everybody liked it,” said Stéphane Boujnah, the chief executive of Euronext, a pan-European organisation that competes with London groups.

“Today, London is the largest financial centre of the United Kingdom,” he told Bloomberg Television,

Companies choosing to float on stock exchanges outside the UK was becoming the “new normal” he said, citing Ryanair’s decision to quit the London stock exchange for a sole listing in Dublin and Universal Music Group’s choice of Amsterdam.

Nevertheless – despite repeated Brussels pleas to reduce dependence on the UK – European banks and financial firms continue to use London’s clearing houses. In a report published last December, the EU regulator ESMA concluded that three UK clearing houses were of “substantial systemic importance” to the EU and could pose financial stability risks.

One EU official said the commission didn’t have “a specific problem” with UK regulations, but the bloc was over-reliant on external providers. “What recent experience has told us, with the pandemic and the effects of the war [in Ukraine], is that supply chains, no matter how robust they may seem from the outside … are vulnerable.”

The official added: “This is not to say we don’t trust people [or that] we don’t trust [British] regulation. It is simply to say that if something goes wrong we will be vulnerable.”

The plans form part of the EU’s efforts to forge a “capital markets union”, an attempt to make Europe’s fragmented financial centres more attractive to international investors. The commission also wants to harmonise corporate insolvency rules and make it easier for small companies to get stock market listings.

European banks have warned that the clearing plans could backfire, saying they could shift business to the United States.

The proposals must now be agreed by EU finance ministers and the European parliament before becoming law.

Contributor

Jennifer Rankin in Brussels

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Bond market sell-off sends UK long-term borrowing cost to 25-year high
Rate tops level last seen after Liz Truss mini-budget as fears of global inflation and US political instability spook markets

Phillip Inman and Graeme Wearden

04, Oct, 2023 @11:36 AM

Article image
Global markets rattled over Greece debts as Osborne talks tough on EU in Brussels
British chancellor’s warning about UK referendum on EU membership earns mixed reaction while fears of Greek bankruptcy mount

Ian Traynor in Brussels and Katie Allen

12, May, 2015 @6:03 PM

Article image
Pound falls below $1.09 for first time since 1985 following mini-budget
Sell-off as investors take fright at prospect of surge in government borrowing to cover huge tax cuts

Richard Partington and Angela Monaghan

23, Sep, 2022 @2:03 PM

Article image
UK loses triple-A credit rating after Brexit vote
Standard & Poor’s issues downgrade and pound hits 31-year low despite chancellor’s attempts to soothe markets

Jill Treanor and Katie Allen

27, Jun, 2016 @6:24 PM

Article image
As with everything Brexit, the battle for the City will be messy | Nils Pratley
Brussels has retained a nuclear option: the possible relocation of the £880bn-a-day euro clearing business

Nils Pratley

13, Jun, 2017 @6:26 PM

Article image
London Stock Exchange boss warns 100,000 jobs at risk from Brexit vote
Xavier Rolet says jobs will be lost across UK if City of London loses ability to process euro-denominated transactions, with knock-on effects across country

Jill Treanor City editor

23, Sep, 2016 @5:17 PM

Article image
Bonanza for Europe-bound Britons as single currency hits a post-crash low
Currency traders brace for single currency to fall below parity against dollar as slowing Chinese economy and prospect of higher US rates buoy greenback

Larry Elliott

10, Mar, 2015 @8:16 PM

Article image
Bank's post-Brexit strategy hits snag as gilt buyback falls short
Threadneedle Street offered to buy back £1.17bn of bonds from institutional investors but received offers of only £1.11bn

Jill Treanor and Larry Elliott

09, Aug, 2016 @7:04 PM

Article image
Greece edges towards passing final debt swap hurdle needed for €130bn bailout
Athens says it may have persuaded up to 75% of private-sector creditors to accept debt haircut needed for rescue

Larry Elliott, economics editor

07, Mar, 2012 @6:55 PM

Article image
What are bond yields and why are they at a 25-year high in UK?
Inflation expectations have pushed up government’s long-term cost of borrowing, which is expected to slow economy

Richard Partington Economics correspondent

04, Oct, 2023 @2:19 PM