EBF response to ESMA call for evidence costs and inducements

12 September 2019

EBF members welcome ESMA’s call for evidence on costs and charges and inducements which have been major changes to investor protection requirements and which have required heavy technical development for EU banks.

ESMA has so far produced Q&s on cost and charges disclosure on an ongoing basis. Most of these Q&As have gradually addressed the ex-ante disclosure, while very few Q&A have been released on the ex-post periodic disclosure. This approach proved challenging as:

At this stage, in case ESMA should decide to go on providing further clarification on this subject EBF strongly recommends the use of the Guidelines tool instead of the Q&As in order to:

The call for evidence focuses on the disclosure rules relating to inducements. EBF would also like to point out that many of the implementation challenges relating to inducements rather relate to other areas of the regime such as divergent legal interpretations by competent authorities regarding the “quality enhancement” regime, the principle of  proportionality and application to primary market transactions. Whilst noting that the mandate to ESMA is restricted to disclosure, EBF would welcome a more extensive study on the impact of the inducement rules in MiFID II.

It should be noted that the industry (both manufacturers and distributors across EU) is heavily engaged in self-regulatory work through FinDatEx, under the governance of EU wide associations including EBF, to create a better standard and more harmonized framework for data exchange related to cost & charges and target market data. One of the consequences of the MiFID II cost & charges regime is that this has become a truly massive data exercise between manufacturers and distributors. This data exercise should be taken into consideration by the legislators and the regulators when setting out the rules. The industry’s self-regulatory work will take some time to finalize and implement, and the regulator should be aware of and should take this into consideration.

Full response on EBF


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