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Britain, EU edge forward with financial services forum plan

Published 02/23/2021, 08:07 AM
Updated 02/23/2021, 08:10 AM
© Reuters. EU Commission President von der Leyen and British PM Johnson meet in Brussels

By Huw Jones

LONDON (Reuters) - Plans by Britain and the European Union to set up a new financial cooperation forum by the end of March have made some progress but this will not automatically lead to market access, senior officials said on Tuesday.

Britain's trade deal with the EU that came into effect when it left the single market on Dec. 31 does not cover financial services, leaving the City of London largely adrift from its biggest export market. Trading in euro denominated shares and swaps has already left London for the EU and New York.

A forum for financial regulators from Britain and the EU to exchange views would help to improve relations. There is already a forum set up for EU and U.S. market watchdogs.

"We are in the process of exchanging texts and looking at that, and in due course we will come to a resolution," John Glen, Britain's financial services minister, told an insurance conference on Tuesday.

Separately, Mairead McGuinness, the EU's financial services commissioner, said "informal engagements" regarding a memorandum of understanding on regulatory cooperation were now taking place.

"Once we agree on our working arrangements, we can turn our attention to resuming our unilateral equivalence assessments," McGuinness, speaking at an online event at the European Parliament, said.

Glen said the EU's equivalence assessments would not be part of the MoU. "That is a process we can't control," he said.

The EU can grant direct market access for foreign financial services companies if it deems their home market rules to be equivalent or aligned closely enough to the bloc's own regulations.

The EU has only granted two temporary equivalence decisions for clearing and settling trades for Britain.

© Reuters. EU Commission President von der Leyen and British PM Johnson meet in Brussels

"We consider our interests and will only take equivalence decisions that are in the EU's interests. There cannot be equivalence and wide divergence," McGuinness said.

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