Energy traders could be hit by a  tightening deadline to establish an organised trading facility (OTF) and new  legal clearing requirements under the second Markets in Financial Instruments  Directive (MiFID II) published on Monday (17th June). 
  These details  emerged after the European Council agreed with the European Parliament on a  preliminary regulation proposal on Friday (14th June). 
  MiFID II aims  to increase transparency in the way a vast range of financial instruments are  traded in Europe, including energy and commodity products, and could become law  as early as 2014 (see sister publication ESGM 26 October 2012). 
  The new  legislation should consist of two different legal instruments, a directive and  a regulation. Together, both legal instruments form the legal framework that  will affect investment firms, regulated markets, and data reporting service  providers. 
  The European  Council under the Irish presidency is moving forward the timetable to create a  new category of OTF, expanded from the multilateral trade facility (MTF)  defined under MiFID I. 
  The OTF  widens the number of items that require clearing under regulation. It is  supposed to capture financial trades which do not correspond to the regulatory  specifications of existing venues. This will include financial transactions for  commodity derivatives. 
  To implement  OTFs, companies will need to apply new transparency rules and adhere to new  organisational requirements listed under MiFID II. These include broker  crossing systems and systems for clearing.  
  The draft  text also includes the regulation setting out the criteria according to which  classes of over the counter (OTC) trades would be subject to clearing  obligation. The exact criteria still need to be specified under the EU`s  mandatory position on commodities. 
Trader opposition 
Market  players are worried about the portion of trading that must be cleared under the  new proposal. 
  One trader  told ICIS there was concern that this might have an impact on participants,  forcing them to clear, while it will not boost volumes. 
  This applies  particularly to bigger companies who see little incentive to clear. “If you are  big enough, granting credit to smaller players means you get a favourable  credit condition, which you lose with clearing,” the trader said. 
  The next  developments could happen quickly. On Monday, a technical briefing was held and  a mandatory position could be hammered out before the Irish presidency of the  European Council ends on 30 June and Lithuania takes over. 
  In a new  report on EU financial regulation published on Monday, trading system provider  Trayport said that MiFID II could hit energy traders heavily. 
(THE ICIS HEREN REPORTS - EDEM 17115 / 17 June 2013) |