An
UK-EU trade agreement from Jan. 1 does not cover financial
services, leaving the global financial hub largely adrift from
the bloc that had been its biggest export customer.
Both sides are committed to agreeing a memorandum of
understanding (MoU) by the end of March for informal, regular
talks between their regulators.
Swathes of stock and swaps trading have already left London for
Amsterdam, piling pressure on the government to boost the City's
competitiveness in future rulemaking.
Once an MoU is agreed, Brussels has said it would assess access
for the City under the bloc's "equivalence" system, but only if
it gets sufficient information on British intentions to diverge
from EU rules.
"We are not taking part in a race to the bottom, we are not
building an enormous bonfire of EU regulation... that would be
totally counterproductive," Britain's Financial Services
Minister John Glen told an event held by PIMFA, a financial
advisors' industry body.
Britain has published proposed changes to company flotations and
fintechs, and will amend solvency rules for insurers.
"We have set out our direction of travel. What we are not going
to do is to be in a situation where we don't do the right thing
by the UK financial services sector," Glen said.
Britain will wait to see what happens with EU equivalence
decisions, Glen said. In the meantime, it would hold a second
public consultation on its plans for revamping Britain's post-Brexit
regulatory framework.
"We will look at what we need to do going forward in light of
the absence of any determinations from the EU on equivalence,"
Glen said.
"It's up to the EU how much they want to embrace global high
standards or how much they wish to take a different approach,
looking perhaps more inwardly."
(Reporting by Huw Jones; Editing by Alex Richardson)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|