The EMIR  website page was updated in February with a statement that it expects firms to adhere to the regulations in "the shortest timeframe possible" and to "have a detailed and realistic plan to achieve compliance" by 30 April 2014. The risk mitigation requirements apply to operational elements of non-cleared OTC derivatives and have been in fully in place since the 1 September 2013:
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		Portfolio Compression: FC and NFC counterparties that have >500 mutual trades must assess portfolio compression;
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		Portfolio Reconcilation: Key terms of each trade must be reconciled with respective counterparties to isolate any discrepancies, frequency varies according to party classification and number of shared trades;
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		Dispute Resolution:  Requirements for detailed procedures to identify and resolve disputes over 5 business days old. FC must report all disputes > €15million. Notional that are unresolved by 15 business days.
	The remaining two risk mitigation techniques came into force earlier, on 15th March 2013:
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		Timely Confirmation: the confirmation, preferably electronic, of all OTC derivative terms. Variable by product phase-in, to be T+1 for FCs\NFC+s and T+2 for NFC
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		Daily Valuation: FCs and NFC+s daily mark to market (or mark to model) valuations and to exchange appropriately segregated collateral
	While there will be very few firms who do not already have a large part of the above elements in place, the other side of the compliance coin is the ability to provide evidence thereof on request. The FCA  has given no formal guidance as to what will constitute satisfactory evidence. However, the following elements are likely minima:
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		Formal agreements, whether bilateral or by protocol adherence,  with each counterparty  for each of the above requirements;
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		Fully documented procedures relating to the implementation of each requirement;
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		Defined and assigned roles and responsibilities for each requirement;
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		Relevant training undergone, ongoing and planned;
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		An audit\ gap analysis of existing processes’ compliance with EMIR  and completed remediation;
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		An internal compliance QA process.
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