Bank of England says it won't take 'risky bets' to help City's
competitiveness
Send a link to a friend
[September 27, 2022] By
Huw Jones
LONDON (Reuters) -The Bank of England's new
objective of helping the financial sector remain globally competitive
should not encourage risky bets on regulatory standards to win business,
BoE executive director Victoria Saporta said on Tuesday.
Britain wants a "Big Bang 2.0" - a reference to deregulation of the
stock market in the 1980s which strengthened the financial sector's
global reach - to bolster the City of London following Brexit.
A draft law before parliament setting out many regulatory changes also
gives the BoE and Financial Conduct Authority a new secondary objective
of aiding the economy and financial sector's global competitiveness and
growth.
Saporta said the best way to maintain competitiveness is by having a
regulatory regime that is open, predictable, transparent and aligned
with international standards.
"One thing I want to make clear is that I don't believe regulators
should engage in risky compromises such as regulatory races to the
bottom to win business," Saporta told a City & Financial conference.
Britain's finance minister Kwasi Kwarteng is due next month to outline
what he has called an ambitious deregulatory agenda by tearing up some
of the financial rules inherited from the EU, starting last week with
scrapping the cap on banker bonuses, and which will include easing
capital rules for insurers.
[to top of second column] |
A commuter walks past the Bank of
England, in London, Britain, September 26, 2022. REUTERS/Peter
Nicholls
Saporta said alignment with international standards makes it easier
for international firms to conduct business in the UK.
"It avoids inefficiencies that would arise from international firms
having to comply with a different set of rules when they operate
here," she said.
Financial centres are more competitive when their regulators have a
good reputation for being independent, Saporta said.
Nick Collier, the City of London's representative in Brussels, said
the UK wholesale capital market does not want a lowering of
standards.
"Rhetoric" about Brexit dividends, deregulation and a Big Bang 2.0
means the City won't get access to the EU financial market in the
forseeable future, Collier said.
"But in Brussels... they are quite nervous about what the UK is
doing. If we get it right, we should be a very vibrant and deep
capital market," Collier said.
Conor Lawlor, managing director at UK Finance, which represent UK
banks, said it was important to make the most of the appetite for
reform, as it won't be around forever.
(Reporting by Huw Jones; Editing by Alex Richardson, Ed Osmond and
Jan Harvey)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |