Financial Times: MiFID II caution hits small business research

21 January 2018

Small companies and their brokers are increasingly concerned about fund managers who are overcautious with regard to MiFID II.

European regulators had left a way for brokers to distribute, free of charge, research on companies that retained their services. This was designed to prevent the amount of research on small and medium-sized companies drying up. Fund managers, though, have been wary of using free brokerage services. They point to one of the main principles of MiFID II being increased transparency — and making fund companies pay directly for research.

Analysts say large asset managers have refused to accept services and research from brokers unless they have a transactional relationship with them. The amount of research on small and medium sized companies has fallen significantly since the introduction of MiFID I in 2007. A fifth of the UK’s 2,000 smallest public companies have no coverage. The European Commission is consulting on how to improve the regulatory environment to support listings of small and medium-sized companies. It is due to give its findings by the end of the year.

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