Suche
Contact
19.07.2017 | KPMG Law Insights

Derivate – Insights – Derivatives | Edition No. 3/2017

Dear readers,

A major step towards facilitation of reporting under the European Markets Infrastructure Regulation (EMIR) has been made: the European Commission (EC) proposed to streamline the reporting obligations for all counterparties in its EMIR review.

Furthermore, the Delegated Regulation postponing the clearing obligation under EMIR for Category 3 counterparties (small financial counterparties) was published in the Official Journal of the EU.

There were also developments on the revised Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID II) and the Markets in Financial Instruments Regulation (MiFIR): Inter alia, the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) published an opinion on the concept of traded on a trading venue (TOTV) and an opinion determining third-country trading venues for the purpose of position limits.

To read more about these and other regulatory developments affecting the derivatives and / or securities markets, please see the news items below.

Sincerely yours,

Andres Prescher

EC

European Commission proposes EMIR reform

On 4 May 2017, the European Commission (EC) published its proposal on the reform of the European Markets Infrastructure Regulation (EMIR) following a public consultation. The main changes to EMIR as proposed by the EC can be summarised as follows:

Reporting:

In order to streamline the reporting obligations for all counterparties, the EC proposed that:

  • Exchange-traded derivatives should have to be reported only by the central counterparty (CCP) on behalf of both parties;
  • Transactions between small non-financial counterparties (NFCs) and a financial counterparty (FC) should only have to be reported by the FC on behalf of both parties;
  • Intragroup transactions should not have to be reported any longer if one of the counterparties is a NFC; and
  • The obligation to report historic data (“backloading”) should be removed.

But not everyone is convinced the proposal will sufficiently facilitate EMIR reporting. In fact, some market participants expect the changes to cause additional confusion as to who is responsible for reporting the client leg of the transaction to the CCP. Moreover, NFCs are afraid of misreporting by the FCs.

Clearing:

Furthermore, the proposal aims at reforming the clearing obligation for NFCs by reducing it only to the asset classes for which they have breached the clearing threshold.

A clearing threshold is introduced for small FCs. Only FCs exceeding that threshold would be obliged to clear centrally.

Pension Funds:

Finally, consideration has been given to pension funds and a three-year temporary exemption from central clearing is granted to them.

Further information

EC Proposal for EMIR Amendment

EC

EC proposes more robust supervision of CCPs

On 13 June 2017, the European Commission (EC) proposed reforms to ensure a more consistent supervision of Central Counterparties (CCPs) in the EU. The proposal is widely interpreted to aim at forcing London based CCPs to move into the EU in the course of the Brexit.

Due to the growing importance of CPPs in the financial sector and to the UK’s withdrawal from the EU, the EC deems it necessary to adopt new measures in the regulation and supervision system of clearing in Europe. Thus, the EC proposed an assessment of the supervisory arrangements for CCPs.

To achieve this, a newly-created supervisory mechanism shall be established within European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) („CCP Executive Session“), which will be responsible for ensuring a more coherent supervision of EU CCPs and more robust supervision of CCPs in non-EU countries.

In addition, the proposal introduces a new „two tier“ system for classifying third-country CCPs. Non-systemically important CCPs will continue to be able to operate under the existing European Market Infrastructure Regulation (EMIR) equivalence framework. However, systemically important CCPs (so-called Tier 2 CCPs) will be subject to stricter requirements.

Depending on the significance of the third-country CCPs’ activities for the EU and Member States’ financial stability, a number of CCPs may be of such systemic importance that the requirements are deemed insufficient to mitigate the potential risks. In such instances, the EC, upon request by ESMA and in agreement with the relevant central bank can decide that a CCP will only be able to provide services in the EU if it establishes itself in the EU.

With London currently being the global center of euro clearing (i.e. the clearing of derivatives priced in euros), the EC proposal can be seen as an attempt to use the future of euro clearing as a bargaining chip during the upcoming Brexit negotiations.

Further Information

European Commission – Press release

EU

Recent developments on EMIR application and supervision

Recently, there have been several new developments regarding the application and / or supervision of the European Markets Infrastructure Regulation (EMIR), including:

Clearing obligation for Category 3 counterparties

On 29 April 2017, the Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2017/751 amending Delegated Regulations (EU) 2015/2205, (EU) 2016/592 and (EU) 2016/1178 as regards the deadline for compliance with clearing obligations for certain counterparties dealing with OTC derivatives was published in the Official Journal of the EU. Thus, the start of the clearing obligations under EMIR for counterparties in Category 3 (in particular, small financial counterparties) is now officially postponed until 21 June 2019. It might also be completely removed following the recent proposal of the European Commission (see above). For additional information please also refer to our previous newsletter.

ESMA’s Guidelines on CCP conflicts of interest management

The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) published on 1 June 2017 a consultation paper on future guidelines regarding the management and avoidance of conflicts of interest by central counterparties (CCPs). The consultation will last until 24 August 2017.

List of CCPs

On 7 June 2017, ESMA published an updated list of central counterparties authorized to offer services and activities in the EU in accordance with EMIR.

List of exempted entities

On 10 June 2017, the Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2017/979 amending EMIR with regard to the list of exempted entities was published in the Official Journal of the EU. Hereby, central banks and other public bodies managing debt of the following third countries will be exempted from EMIR: Australia, Canada, Hong Kong, Mexico, Singapore and Switzerland.

ESMA

MiFID II / MiFIR developments

The most relevant recent developments regarding MiFID II / MiFIR in the context of derivatives, markets and trading affect, inter alia, the following areas:

OTC derivatives traded on a trading venue

The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) published on 22 May 2017 an opinion on the concept of traded on a trading venue (TOTV). ESMA is of the view that only OTC derivatives sharing the same reference data details as the derivatives traded on a trading venue should be considered TOTV. Same reference data details are determined in Table 3 of the Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2017/585.

Trading obligation for derivatives

On 19 June 2017, ESMA published the consultation paper “The trading obligation for derivatives under MIFIR” regarding its relevant draft technical standards. Consultation will be open until 31 July 2017.

Position limits

On 7 June 2017, the Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2017/953 laying down implementing technical standards with regard to the format and the timing of position reports under the revised Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID II) was published in the Official Journal of the EU.

Furthermore, on 31 May 2017, ESMA published an opinion determining third-country trading venues for the purpose of position limits under MiFID II. ESMA clarified that commodity derivatives traded on third-country trading venues should not be regarded as OTC trades and, thus, positions stemming from these trades should not fall into the EU position limit regime. The third-country venues should meet the objective criteria of operating a multilateral system, being subject to authorization, supervision and enforcement.

Questions and Answers on MiFID II / MiFIR

On 31 May, ESMA also updated its Questions and Answers (Q&As) on practical questions regarding the implementation of MiFID II and MiFIR.

DE

BaFin issued a general order about “contracts for difference” (CFDs)

On 8 May 2017, the Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (Bundesanstalt für Finanzdienstleistungsaufsicht, BaFin) issued a general order (Allgemeinverfügung) pursuant to § 4b paragraph 1 of the German Securities Trading Act (Wertpapierhandelsgesetz, WpHG). Hereby, BaFin limits the marketing, distribution and sale of contracts for difference (CFDs). Contracts with a margin call may no longer be offered to private customers.

Further information

General order about CFDs

Explore #more

23.06.2026 | KPMG Law Insights

Deutschland modernisiert das Schiedsverfahrensrecht

Die Bundesregierung hat am 10. Juni 2026 den Entwurf eines „Gesetzes zur Modernisierung des Schiedsverfahrensrechts“ vorgelegt. Damit möchte sie die gesetzlichen Regeln für die Streitbeilegung…

18.06.2026 | In den Medien

KPMG Law Gastbeitrag in Innovative Verwaltung: Schutz in stürmischen Zeiten

Organe kommunaler Unternehmen tragen ein persönliches, unbegrenztes Haftungsrisiko, das durch die Besonderheiten des öffentlichen Sektors zusätzlich exponiert ist. Eine D&O-Versicherung schützt Vermögen und deckt die…

18.06.2026 | In den Medien

Handelsblatt und Best Lawyers zeichnet KPMG Law Expert:innen aus

Best Lawyers hat erneut exklusiv für das Handelsblatt die besten Wirtschaftsanwältinnen und -anwälte Deutschlands für das Jahr 2026 ermittelt. Insgesamt wurden 31  Anwältinnen und Anwälte…

15.06.2026 | KPMG Law Insights

Mehr Honorar für Planer wegen Kostensteigerungen? Was Auftraggeber wissen sollten

Immer häufiger landen Nachforderungen von Architekten und Ingenieuren auf den Schreibtischen ihrer Auftraggeber. „Das Projekt zieht sich, die Baupreise steigen und auch unsere Kosten

12.06.2026 | KPMG Law Insights

12. GWB-Novelle: Was sich bei Transaktionen, Vergaben und bestimmten Branchen ändert

Die geplante 12. GWB-Novelle bringt für Unternehmen voraussichtlich einige wichtige Änderungen: unter anderem höhere Schwellen in der Fusionskontrolle, eine weiter gefasste Transaktionswertschwelle mit neuem Anzeigeverfahren…

09.06.2026 | KPMG Law Insights

Umsetzung der Entgelttransparenzrichtlinie: Das empfiehlt die Expertenkommission

Die EU-Entgelttransparenzrichtlinie ist seit Juni 2023 in Kraft und hätte bis zum 7. Juni 2026 in deutsches Recht umgesetzt…

02.06.2026 | Dealmeldungen

KPMG begleitet die hpm Henkel Projektmanagement bei der Integration in das BKW Engineering Netzwerk

KPMG Law hat den Gesellschafter der hpm Henkel Projektmanagement exklusiv bei der Integration in das Netzwerk BKW Engineering juristisch beraten. KPMG Law hat in rechtlichen…

02.06.2026 | In den Medien

KPMG Law Zitat in der Welt und im Business Insider zu den wichtigsten Änderungen im Juni

Im Juni treten gleich mehrere Änderungen in Kraft, die Millionen Verbraucher in Deutschland direkt betreffen. Von neuen Rechten beim Online-Shopping über Änderungen bei der Rente…

29.05.2026 | In den Medien

Statement von KPMG Law Experten in der Süddeutschen Zeitung zum Thema Embedded Insurance

Immer öfter werden beim Kauf von Autos, Handys oder Konzertkarten auch Versicherungen angeboten. Besonders gefragt sind eingebettete Versicherungen beim Kauf von Elektrogeräten wie Smartphones. In…

26.05.2026 | KPMG Law Insights

Der Industriestrompreis – Kostenentlastung mit neuen Voraussetzungen und Nachweispflichten

Der Industriestrompreis steht in den Startlöchern: Mit der Veröffentlichung der Förderrichtlinie am 6. Mai 2026 liegt nun der lange erwartete Rechtsrahmen für den deutschen Industriestrompreis…

©2026 KPMG Law Rechtsanwaltsgesellschaft mbH, assoziiert mit der KPMG AG Wirtschaftsprüfungsgesellschaft, einer Aktiengesellschaft nach deutschem Recht und ein Mitglied der globalen KPMG-Organisation unabhängiger Mitgliedsfirmen, die KPMG International Limited, einer Private English Company Limited by Guarantee, angeschlossen sind. Alle Rechte vorbehalten. Für weitere Einzelheiten über die Struktur der globalen Organisation von KPMG besuchen Sie bitte https://home.kpmg/governance.

KPMG International erbringt keine Dienstleistungen für Kunden. Keine Mitgliedsfirma ist befugt, KPMG International oder eine andere Mitgliedsfirma gegenüber Dritten zu verpflichten oder vertraglich zu binden, ebenso wie KPMG International nicht autorisiert ist, andere Mitgliedsfirmen zu verpflichten oder vertraglich zu binden.

Scroll