EIOPA: Introductory Statement by Gabriel Bernardino at the Scrutiny Hearing on PRIIPs of the ECON Committee of the European Parliament

21 February 2019

Mr Bernardino provides in his statement an update on the ESAs’ work in relation to the delegated acts for the key information documents (KID) for packaged retail and insurance-based investment products (PRIIPs).

First of all, I would like to underline the importance of the KID in increasing the transparency and comparability of investment products through the issue of a standardised short form disclosure document.

We are committed to supporting an effective and convergent implementation of these rules as a variety of different national approaches to the KID will not help PRIIP manufacturers, distributors, or most importantly, consumers, particularly in the context of cross-border business.

We are also committed to reviewing the existing rules, where this is needed,so they can apply equally well to all different types of PRIIPs. It is normal with rules as complex as these to refine and adjust them based on practical experience with what works well and what less well.

We are aware that stakeholders have raised strong concerns regarding some aspects of the current rules.

We have been examining these issues and considering what to do. In some cases, we have published Questions and Answers to clarify technical points. However, we decided in the 2 autumn of last year that the best course of action on some issues was to propose targeted amendments to the PRIIPs Delegated Regulation.

We launched a public consultation in November last year, which focused on changes to the performance scenarios. These have been the part of the KID that have raised the most critical issues. We also proposed changes in the consultation to avoid a duplication of disclosures between PRIIPs and UCITS, which we were concerned risked undermining the aims of these disclosures.

I would like to summarise briefly some of the main themes that emerged from this public consultation:

When deciding on our final recommendations, we carefully considered this feedback. We also took into account the expected decision by the co-legislators to defer the application of the KID to UCITS by two years to the end of 2021. Given this, we concluded, as published in early February, that it was not appropriate to propose narrowly targeted amendments at this stage.

However, we consider that immediate supervisory steps are needed to reduce the risk that the meaning of the current performance scenario figures is misinterpreted or there is undue reliance on them.

We have therefore issued a joint ESA Supervisory Statement to promote consistent approaches and improve the protection of retail investors prior to the conclusion of a fuller review. In the statement, the ESAs recommend PRIIP manufacturers to include a warning in the KID to ensure that retail investors are fully aware of the limitations of the figures provided.

In our February publication, we also said we would launch a more comprehensive review of the PRIIPs Delegated Regulation this year, and set out the main areas of the rules that we intended to address. I would like to highlight a number of these aspects now:

The important thing is to keep a firm view on the original aims of the Regulation – giving consumers better and easier to understand information – and to avoid endangering this aim further during the upcoming review process.

In this regard we welcome input from Members of Parliament on how to improve the transparency and comparability of the KID, to make it work better for the consumers it has been designed for.

Finally, we welcome the confirmation that amendments to the PRIIPs Regulation will be made this year regarding the issue of the duplication of disclosures between PRIIPs and UCITS; some minor consequential adjustments to align the PRIIPs Delegated Regulation with the new deadline will also be needed. We now have the time to ensure the PRIIPs KID can work for all products, including UCITS. This will enhance the ability for consumers to compare between investment products and ensure a level-playing field for providers.

Full statement


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