Search
Contact
17.08.2018 | KPMG Law Insights

Investment | Law | Compact – Issue 08/2018

Dear Readers,

sometimes questions to ESMA lead to answers that have major implications for supervision and practice.
For example, ESMA recently clarified in its Q&A catalogs on the UCITS and AIFM Directives that hedging transactions may not be taken into account when determining the issuer limits. As a result, an amendment to the Derivatives Regulation is now under discussion, according to which credit default swaps can be explicitly counted in the calculation of issuer limits. This is also likely to affect one or another investment strategy, especially in the UCITS sector.
We also report on the final report of a peer review conducted by ESMA. The European Securities and Markets Authority has examined the application of the guidelines on ETFs and other UCITS issues by various national supervisory authorities and has identified a number of shortcomings.
BaFin has announced that the new model cost clauses must also be implemented for existing funds by December 31, 2019. Accordingly, the industry expects a renewed need for major adjustments to the relevant investment conditions and sales prospectuses in the next 15 months.

ESMA

ESMA updates Q&A catalog on benchmark regulation

ESMA updated its Q&A catalog on the Benchmark Regulation on July 17, 2018.
Among other things, it clarifies that the calculation agent is generally not considered to be a user of benchmarks.
Furthermore, ESMA states that a benchmark can in principle also qualify as a benchmark for regulated data if third parties are involved in the data procurement process.

The updated Q&A can be found here.

ESMA

ESMA updates Q&A catalogs on UCITS and AIFM Directive

ESMA added further questions and answers to its Q&A catalogs on the UCITS Directive and AIFM Directive on July 23, 2018. The following topics or points will be clarified:

  • The supervisory authority of the Member State in which the branch of an AIF/UCITS management company is located should be responsible for supervising its organizational and conduct obligations in relation to MiFID services.
  • UCITS may also acquire units in target UCITS whose investment policies and investment restrictions deviate from the investing UCITS, provided this is disclosed in the prospectus and does not lead to a circumvention of the investment strategy of the UCITS.
  • As a matter of principle, a UCITS depositary may also simultaneously be a counterparty to transactions involving assets held in custody by it.
  • The determination of the utilization of issuer limits for UCITS may only be made on the basis of netting, but not on the basis of hedging. BaFin is therefore examining the need to amend the Derivatives Ordinance, which explicitly allows exceptions for credit default swaps.

 

You can find more information here.

ESMA

ESMA sees shortcomings in the application of guidelines for ETFs and other UCITS issues

ESMA has published the final report of a peer review on the implementation of the guidelines on exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and
other UCITS topics (ESMA/2014/937) published.
The subject of the study is the implementation of the requirements of the guidelines by six national supervisory authorities (Germany, England, Estonia, France, Ireland and Luxembourg) on the following topics:
– Disclosure obligations to investors,
– Internal risk management and compliance,
– Handling of income from securities lending and
– Provision of collateral.
In the last two areas in particular, ESMA criticizes deficits in the national implementation of the guidelines. BaFin’s supervisory practices are also rated as inadequate. The German supervisory authority has already commented on this (see Annex 5 of the final report). It considers the assessment of its supervisory practices to be too formalistic and points out, among other things, that it has already taken measures in line with the ESMA investigations.
The recommendations of the investigation must first be confirmed by the competent committee of ESMA. Thereafter, ESMA will decide whether the questions requiring clarification require a revision of the guidelines or are to be answered in the context of Q&A catalogs.

 

Further information with all relevant details and additional links can be found here.

BaFin

New model cost clauses to be applied by December 31, 2019 at the latest

The new model building blocks for cost clauses of open-ended mutual securities and real estate fundshave been applicable to both new applications for approval of investment terms and amendments since their publication on June 22, 2018.
According to BaFin, all investment terms and conditions already approved must also be compatible with the new model modules by December 31, 2019. As already reported (see Newsletter 07/2018), BaFin has in particular restricted the pricing freedom of the capital management company in connection with the execution of securities lending transactions and repurchase agreements. Furthermore, under the new model cost clauses, the capital management company can no longer be remunerated for the successful enforcement of disputed claims.

Explore #more

02.05.2026 | In the media

Guest article in IT Business: Business Judgement Rule in the use of AI

AI is increasingly becoming the basis for important business decisions. But what happens if the “black box” AI delivers faulty or inadequate results? Nikolaus Manthey

29.04.2026 | KPMG Law Insights

The Procurement Acceleration Act changes access to Bundeswehr contracts

The Planning and Procurement Acceleration Act, which came into force on February 14, 2026, is intended to significantly accelerate Bundeswehr procurement by allowing deviations from…

24.04.2026 | KPMG Law Insights

Correct application of the Transport Block Exemption Regulation – Guidelines for public bodies

On March 16, 2026, the European Commission adopted a comprehensively renewed state aid framework for land and multimodal transport, which came into force on…

21.04.2026 | In the media

Guest article in HR Journal: Working without borders, limited legal certainty: Managing the risks of international remote work

Cross-border home office is strategically relevant – but also an underestimated area of risk. Between permanent establishment risk and residence law hurdles, companies are faced…

16.04.2026 | KPMG Law Insights

Index clauses in commercial leases: BGH ruling opens up clawback risks for landlords

Value assurance provisions in the form of index clauses in standard commercial leases are not only subject to the restrictions of the Price Clause Act,…

16.04.2026 | In the media

Guest article in Beschaffung aktuell: Faster procurement for the Bundeswehr

With the Planning and Procurement Acceleration Act, the German government wants to make Bundeswehr procurement significantly faster. The temporary special law simplifies procurement procedures, allows…

09.04.2026 | Press releases

KPMG Law strengthens its insurance practice in Cologne with Dr. Julia Faenger

Since April 1, 2026, Dr. Julia Faenger, LL.M., has been strengthening the insurance law advice of KPMG Law Rechtsanwaltsgesellschaft mbH (KPMG Law) in Cologne as…

08.04.2026 | KPMG Law Insights

New Package Travel Directive 2026: Complaint management becomes mandatory

The EU is reforming the Package Travel Directive. The amendments were adopted by the European Parliament and Council in March 2026 and are expected to…

02.04.2026 | KPMG Law Insights

Building Modernization Act (GMG): What is now important for companies

The planned Building Modernization Act (GMG) is set to replace significant parts of the previous Building Energy Act (GEG). Companies in the real estate industry,…

01.04.2026 | In the media

Manager Magazin: KPMG Law in first place for legal advice

Every two years, Manager Magazin, together with the Wissenschaftliche Gesellschaft für Management und Beratung (WGMB), awards Germany’s best auditors with a “Best-in-Class” seal and evaluates

Contact

Henning Brockhaus

Partner

THE SQUAIRE Am Flughafen
60549 Frankfurt am Main

Tel.: +49 69 951195061
hbrockhaus@kpmg-law.com

© 2026 KPMG Law Rechtsanwaltsgesellschaft mbH, associated with KPMG AG Wirtschaftsprüfungsgesellschaft, a public limited company under German law and a member of the global KPMG organisation of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Limited, a Private English Company Limited by Guarantee. All rights reserved. For more details on the structure of KPMG’s global organisation, please visit https://home.kpmg/governance.

KPMG International does not provide services to clients. No member firm is authorised to bind or contract KPMG International or any other member firm to any third party, just as KPMG International is not authorised to bind or contract any other member firm.

Scroll