AIMA paper highlights areas for deeper international coordination of OTC derivatives regulation |
Date: Tuesday, May 28, 2013
Author: AIMA Press Release
London – 28 May 2013: The Alternative Investment Management Association (AIMA),
the global hedge fund industry association, has produced a paper that highlights
the key areas where deeper coordination of over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives
regulation is required to achieve the G20 objective of maintaining global
markets.
The paper, ‘Addressing overlaps between EMIR and CFTC OTC derivatives
regulation’, provides examples of potential regulatory conflicts or unnecessary
overlap between the European Markets Infrastructure Regulation (EMIR) and the
CFTC’s derivatives rules in a number of key areas including clearing
obligations, reporting obligations, segregation rules, collateral rules and
margin requirements.
AIMA said in the paper that, if untreated, some of the conflicting rules may
prevent counterparties from complying with either regime, leading to market
fragmentation along geographical boundaries. AIMA said these effects could be
mitigated for cross-border transactions by firms being allowed to follow the
rules of the jurisdiction of one, rather than both counterparties to a
transaction under a concept known as ‘substituted compliance’ in the US or
‘equivalence’ in the EU.
In the US and Europe, the CFTC, the US Securities and Exchange Commission and
the European Commission, respectively, will soon determine the scope of their
derivatives regulatory regime with respect to cross-border transactions. These
decisions which will address the scope of substituted compliance and equivalence
recognition will have a significant impact on the nature of the global
derivatives market.
Andrew Baker, AIMA CEO, said: “AIMA strongly supports efforts to promote central
clearing of OTC derivatives and to reduce systemic risk, and we appreciate the
difficult task that regulators in each jurisdiction face in completing their
separate OTC derivatives regulations in a prompt and thorough manner, while also
ensuring that those regulations are, as far as possible, consistent with
regulations being finalised and implemented by other regulatory authorities.
“However, we are concerned that OTC derivatives transactions could be subject to
unnecessarily duplicative – or even conflicting – requirements as a result of
extra-territorial application of domestic rules. The good news is that the
regulatory authorities have the tools at their disposal to ensure we avoid
market fragmentation and they are mindful of some of the potential negative
consequences of uncoordinated action. We hope that, by highlighting the key
examples of potential problems, our paper contributes to the current intensive
international regulatory dialogue.”
The AIMA paper, ‘Addressing overlaps between EMIR and CFTC OTC derivatives
regulation’ can be downloaded here:
http://www.aima.org/en/document-summary/index.cfm/docid/64772F11-F066-414B-974E5CC984BEAE42
For media enquiries, please contact Dominic Tonner, AIMA’s Associate Director,
Communications. Tel: +44 (0)20 7822 8380; Email: dtonner@aima.org
About AIMA
As the global hedge fund association, the Alternative Investment Management
Association (AIMA) has over 1,300 corporate members (with over 6,000 individual
contacts) worldwide, based in over 50 countries.
Members include hedge fund managers, fund of hedge funds managers, prime
brokers, legal and accounting firms, investors, fund administrators and
independent fund directors. They all benefit from AIMA’s active influence in
policy development, its leadership in industry initiatives, including education
and sound practice manuals and its excellent reputation with regulators
worldwide.
AIMA is a dynamic organisation that reflects its members’ interests and provides
them with a vibrant global network. AIMA is committed to developing industry
skills and education standards and is a co-founder of the Chartered Alternative
Investment Analyst designation (CAIA) – the industry’s first and only
specialised educational standard for alternative investment specialists. For
further information, please visit AIMA’s website, www.aima.org.
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