Digital Assets Report

Newsletter

Like this article?

Sign up to our free newsletter

AFME calls for greater harmonisation of EU regulations on asset segregation

Related Topics

The Association for Financial Markets in Europe (AFME) has called for greater harmonisation of asset segregation across European regulation in a new report entitled “Principles of Asset Segregation, Due Diligence and Collateral Management”.

Segregation of client assets currently falls under various pieces of EU regulation (including AIFMD, EMIR, CSDR, UCITS V and MiFID/MiFIR), however, the report finds there is currently no consistency in the meaning of “account segregation” across the regulations nor in the level of segregation required.
 
The report calls for a harmonised approach to ensure a high standard of securities account holder protection whilst also acknowledging the consequences of differing insolvency regimes.
 
Werner Frey, managing director of the AFME post trade division, says: “EU regulations currently create a fragmented approach to account segregation. Given this patchwork of legislation, asset segregation lacks coherence and creates a level of uncertainty and confusion among industry participants. This is why we have developed a list of principles to provide a holistic view of asset segregation for European policymakers and financial institutions.”
 
The AFME report contains an analysis of existing and proposed regulations that impact client asset protection, focusing primarily on Europe, but with consideration of the broader global context, given the nature of the markets in question.
 
This is followed by a set of principles for segregation of client assets and client account holding structures, which are based on the conclusion of this analysis. These principles focus primarily on securities accounts, from a holistic operational, legal and compliance perspective, which simultaneously ensure adequate safety of client assets while minimising operational complexity and cost.

Like this article? Sign up to our free newsletter

Most Popular

Further Reading

Featured