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						Bank of England's Carney 
						calls for UK-EU bank rules pact after Brexit 
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		 [April 07, 2017] 
		By David Milliken, Huw Jones and Alessandra Galloni 
 LONDON 
		(Reuters) - Bank of England Governor Mark Carney called on Friday for 
		Britain and the European Union to reach a sweeping deal to recognize 
		each others' bank rules after Brexit or risk a potentially damaging hit 
		to financial services across Europe.
 
 Carney said in a speech at Thomson Reuters' London office that banks had 
		to be ready for a "hard" Brexit and he set a July 14 deadline for 
		cross-border finance firms operating in Britain to tell the BoE how they 
		would cope with an abrupt EU exit.
 
 He also said he would push to ensure some clearing of euro-denominated 
		transactions remains in London after Brexit.
 
 Banks, including many from the United States and other countries around 
		the world, use London as their base for operating across the European 
		Union, making the British capital the biggest financial center in the 
		region by far.
 
 Britain's financial sector accounts for almost a quarter of all EU 
		financial services income and 40 percent of EU financial services 
		exports, according to the BoE.
 
		
		 
		But the EU financial services "passports", which enable firms to operate 
		throughout Europe from a single office in London, are set to be lost 
		once the UK pulls out of the bloc's single market in two years' time, 
		and it remains far from clear what kind of deal will replace it.
 Banks were making contingency plans, at some financial cost, but should 
		not rush to leave London, Carney said.
 
 He also said it would be hard for other EU countries to match the scale 
		of the financial services industry in Britain "in terms of investment 
		and supervisory capacity, market infrastructure, the expertise that is 
		resident here... That's very difficult to replicate."
 
 Prime Minister Theresa May mentioned the importance of reaching a trade 
		deal with the EU that includes financial services as a "crucial sector" 
		when she triggered the two-year process of Britain’s exit from the EU 
		last week.
 
 However, many bankers have said they are not convinced the government 
		will prioritize their industry, with May making controls on immigration 
		a top aim.
 
 Carney said he expected financial services to be part of a "bigger deal" 
		on trade between the UK and EU.
 
 "How Brexit negotiations conclude will be a litmus test for responsible 
		financial globalization," Carney said.
 
 "The EU and UK are therefore ideally positioned to create an effective 
		system of deference to each other's comparable regulatory outcomes, 
		supported by commitments to common minimum standards and open 
		supervisory co-operation," he said.
 
 But major global trade deals to date have largely excluded financial 
		services due to their complexity.
 
		
		 
		Against a backdrop of global concern that U.S. President Donald Trump 
		may undo some of the reforms implemented since the financial crisis, 
		Carney said the global financial system was at a "fork in the road". 
		
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			Mark Carney, Governor of the Bank of England, speaks during a 
			question and answer session with Reuters Global Editor Alessandra 
			Galloni at a Reuters Newsmaker event in London, Britain April 7, 
			2017. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls 
            
			 
Governments had to choose between maintaining high standards of regulation and 
respecting each others' rules, or looking inward with big costs to global trade, 
he said.
 Trump has said that internationally-inspired banking rules are holding back U.S. 
lending, and has ordered a review of regulation, raising concerns that the 
global approach to financial regulation will splinter.
 
Carney 
said the United States under Trump seemed focused on rules unique to the 
country, rather than a radical overhaul which would have global implications.
 "I'd be very wary of interpreting anything that the U.S. administration does as 
a rollback of regulation, of a turning inwards, of a fragmentation," Carney 
said.
 
 CHALLENGING AMBITION
 
 Recognition of financial rules between Britain and the EU has not been tried 
before on the scale envisaged by Carney, which could make negotiations tricky 
and protracted.
 
 The EU may also be reluctant to forgo the jurisdiction of the bloc's top court 
in policing rule breaches.
 
 The system could be bolstered by third-party peer reviews and a new independent 
dispute resolution mechanism, Carney said -- adding that this could be a 
template for the wider world.
 
 
Banks 
are concerned that Britain and the EU will not reach a deal in time for Brexit 
which is due in two years' time, and are preparing to move staff from London, 
and Germany and France are trying to lure jobs to their financial capitals.
 HSBC <HSBA.L>, UBS <UBSG.S> and Morgan Stanley <MS.N> have decided to move about 
1,000 staff each from London in the next two years, sources familiar with their 
plans have told Reuters.
 
 Goldman Sachs <GS.N> said last month it would begin moving hundreds of people as 
part of its contingency plans.
 
 Carney said the BoE needed to be prepared for a worst-case Brexit outcome, and 
alongside his speech, the BoE's top banking regulator, Sam Woods, sent a letter 
to financial firms with cross-border activities ordering them to set out Brexit 
plans.
 
 European banks which operated in London on the basis of passporting should be 
prepared to set up separately capitalised subsidiaries in Britain and submit to 
direct BoE regulation if Britain and the EU could not reach a deal, Woods said.
 
 (Editing by William Schomberg/Jeremy Gaunt)
 
				 
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