MiFID implementation and MPBR
Transcription
MiFID implementation and MPBR
MiFID implementation and MPBR February 2007 Contents Page 1. Setting the scene 1 2. MiFID 1 3. Scope and non scope business 3 4. MiFID implementation in the UK 4 5. MPBR 8 6. Removal of specific requirements 8 7. Gold plating 10 8. Further regulatory changes 11 9. Implications of MPBR 12 10. The FSA’s approach, and TCF 14 Appendix 1 MiFID, the Implementing Directive and the Implementing Regulation Appendix 2 MiFID scope and non-scope business Appendix 3 Ongoing FSA work Appendix 4 Ongoing CESR Work Programme re MiFID 1. Setting the scene 1.1 It is important not only for lawyers and compliance people but also for senior managers and product development people to understand about MiFID implementation and the new FSA regulations for 2007 generally. I can sympathise with those who are finding it somewhat difficult to find logic in some of the new proposals. 1.2 This paper sets out some high level comments on the reasoning behind the current FSA proposals. It is intended to provide some of the context so as to enable readers then to consider some of the specific consequences of implementation of the new rules for their business. It covers principally the proposals which are most fully developed notably regarding conduct of business and systems and controls (leaving aside much of the market facing issues on which proposals are far from settled both at the EU level and in the UK, and non MiFID scope business issues on which FSA proposals are yet to be issued for consultation). 2. MiFID 2.1 When referring to “MiFID”, we are referring not just to one of the high level EU Directives. We now have three levels to consider: Level 1 – the MiFID Directive1 Level 2 – − the Implementing Directive2 concerning organisational requirements and operating conditions for investment firms and defined terms for the purposes of the MiFID Directive − the Implementing Regulation3 as regards record keeping obligations for investment firms, transaction reporting, market transparency, admission of financial instruments to trading, and defined terms for the purposes of the MiFID Directive. 1 Directive 2004/39/EC of 21 April 2004 on Markets in Financial Instruments (amending the Investment Services Directive) 2 Commission Directive 2006/73/EC of 10 August 2006 implementing the MiFID Directive as regards organisational requirements and operating conditions for investment firms and defined terms for the purpose of that Directive 3 Commission Regulation (EC) No 1287/2006 of 10th August 2006 implementing the MiFID Directive as regards record keeping obligations for investment firms, transaction reporting, market transparency, admission of financial instruments to trading, and defined terms for the purposes of that Directive. 1 The Regulation has direct and general application in each Member State and, if there is any conflict with national laws, the Regulation will prevail. A Directive, such as the Implementing Directive needs to be implemented in national legislation (in the UK mostly through the FSA rules). Level 3 – CESR’s work (to which I refer in greater detail later) is ongoing. 2.2 Appendix 1 to this paper sets out the MiFID Directive and the relevant text from the level 2 Implementing Directive and Implementing Regulation relating to particular articles is set out in italics following each of the main Directive provisions. I hope you will find the Appendix 1 annotated text helpful. Once all the relevant provisions for a particular topic are put together in this way, I think you will find it easier to see what the MiFID provisions are addressing and it becomes easier to see how the FSA draft rules follow through on implementing those provisions. 2.3 The MiFID Directive itself is not overly-specific. It sets out some high level aims. One aim underlying that regime is to ensure that a high level of investor protection is applied in a uniform manner through the introduction of clear standards and requirements governing the relationship between an investment firm and its clients. These should be designed so as to provide the necessary degree of harmonisation needed to offer investors a high level of protection4. Also there is a perceived need to introduce a comprehensive regulatory system governing the execution of transactions in financial instruments, irrespective of the trading methods used to conclude those transactions, so as to ensure a high quality of execution of investor transactions and to uphold the integrity and overall efficiency of the financial system5. 2.4 Flexibility and proportionate regulation is obviously contemplated. It is acknowledged that, in relation to the protection of investors by providing information or the seeking information from investors, the retail or professional nature of the client or potential client concerned should be taken into account – therefore the rules can vary depending on the type of client. Further, it is clear that that implementing provisions can be adjusted to the specificities of the particular market and the legal system in each member state. 2.5 However, what becomes particularly clear, once you see the consolidated version of all level 1 and 2 text, is that arguably additional provisions which are being introduced by way of Level 2 provisions, an issue which is likely to be amplified by level 3 CESR guidance. The MiFID Directive, the Implementing Directive and the Implementing Regulation together contain numerous various specific provisions which will need careful consideration if we are to comply with them in the UK. 4 5 Recital 2 of the MiFID Directive Recital 5 of the MiFID Directive 2 2.6 Further, MiFID is only part of the EU relevant context. MiFID has to be considered in the context of the range of EU Directives regarding financial services. For example, firms subject to MiFID are also subject to the Capital Requirements Directive (CRD) and both of these Directives deal with organisational and internal control requirements. For present purposes though, let us assume we are looking at the MiFID requirements together with their implementing provisions, as they are now summarised in Appendix 1. 3. Scope and non scope business 3.1 To understand how the MiFID requirements will impact in the UK, the first task is to understand the real scope of MiFID, and what is non-MiFID scope business. It is worth remembering that MiFID is the ISD replacement – it is not a replacement for all conduct of all financial business. Appendix 2 sets out a table which seeks to identify the scope and non-scope business. 3.2 As the replacement for the Investment Services Directive (ISD) the MiFID Directive essentially covers the same territory as the ISD but: regards investment advice as a core service within the scope of the Directive (it was previously an ancillary service); introduces a new regulated activity of operating a multilateral trading facility (“MTF”); and extends the instruments to which the services relate to include a wider range of derivatives including non-financial derivatives. 3.3 But the scope/non scope issues are more tricky than might therefore be supposed. There are essentially three issues to consider: whether the firm is within the MiFID scope. (It is important to note that in addition to the exempted businesses under Article 2, the UK is taking advantage of the Article 3 optional exemption. This should take out of scope much of the IFA community.); if the firm is within scope, then to look at the firm’s activities to see which services and activities are within MiFID services and activities; and as part of this second exercise, to consider whether any such services and activities relate to financial instruments as defined for MiFID purposes– and note that the definition now within the FSA’s Glossary encompasses not only the original list from Annex 1 of MiFID but this list as expanded by the MiFID Regulation. 3 3.4 But this is not the end of the exercise. Whilst it might be that a particular firm can, at first glance, view MiFID as being irrelevant, for example because that type of business is exempt, it is likely that MiFID will affect that business in some way. For example, for a CIS operator, MiFID may at first glance appear to be irrelevant because a CIS operator is outside scope but MiFID will be relevant in various ways; associated PEP and ISA managers will be in scope; associated investment management companies managing CIS funds and other segregated mandates will be in scope; CIS units are financial instruments for the purposes of MiFID and so distribution arrangements may well be affected. 3.5 Also, establishing that a certain type of business is MiFID or non-MiFID business may not actually mean that this determines whether or not MiFID provisions apply. The FSA themselves note that MiFID cuts an awkward line through a slice of the retail market. The FSA are conscious of the level playing field issues, competition concerns and possible consumer confusion which might result from this MiFID/non-MiFID scope divide. For example, consumers might be confused by different suitability requirements applying. The FSA is therefore taking the view that some of the MiFID provisions will be copied across in order to maintain a consistent approach. The most notable example of this (because it is such a fundamental matter which determines many consequential matters) is that the new client classification arrangements, which are MiFID driven, will apply to all types of business. 4. MiFID implementation in the UK 4.1 To look at it from the UK perspective, you might have thought that MiFID implementation could be relatively straightforward for a variety of reasons: The MiFID provisions set out measures to protect investors which should be adapted for the particularities of each category of client. We are used to this, so we might have hoped that we should just need to adapt to the new client categories. The EU now think we need to include investment advice as an investment service requiring authorisation. We already regulate investment advice. The EU now see a need for comprehensive regulatory regime governing the execution of transactions in financial instruments. We already have regulations in this area and so it should be a case of adapting/building on the system we already have. (Indeed best execution is a good example where possible changes were already proposed for the UK which transpire to be not dissimilar from the MiFID requirements.) The principles which are set out in the MiFID Directive are, to some extent, comparable with, and expand upon, our existing Principles of Business. Take Article 19 – It requires a firm “to act honestly, fairly and professionally in accordance with the best interest of its clients.” This 4 is comparable with Principles 1 and 2 of the FSA Principles for Business which require a firm “to conduct its business with integrity”, and “to conduct its business with due skill, care and diligence”. (The existing FSA Principles for Business are not expected to change. They will remain in place.) 4.2 However, the task of implementing MiFID in the UK has perhaps transpired to be more difficult than we might have wished – or expected. Given that the MiFID Directive itself is light on specifics, there should have been considerable scope to continue much of the UK regulatory regime we have already established. However, due, in large part, to the additional levels of the MiFID provisions from the EU, as mentioned above, the requirements have become more specific and it is now quite difficult to work through the detail. 4.3 The FSA have adopted a copy out approach for MiFID, and included this as part of an initiative to introduce a much simpler set of FSA rules. One aim is to offer more flexibility and make it easier to respond to new conditions in the markets and new types of financial instruments more quickly. 4.4 As ever, the devil is in the detail. The MiFID required approach looks familiar in many respects but the MiFID required provisions are very slightly different from those which currently apply in the UK in a great number of respects. The following paragraphs give a few examples. 4.5 Client classification is very similar but not quite. And the applicable provisions will change, particularly for professional investors. For existing clients, it might have appeared at first glance attractive simply to use the “easy mapping across” which is facilitated by the FSA provisions but, in practical terms, this may not be quite so attractive. 4.6 Outsourcing: The MiFID Implementing Directive defines “outsourcing” very simply, as an arrangement of any form between an investment firm and a service provider by which that service provider performs a process, a service or an activity which would otherwise be undertaken by the investment firm itself6. The MiFID requirements are not far off what one would expect to cover the usual commercial contract concerns for an outsourcing but they involve new formalised requirements which will need to be considered– for UK purposes, set out in the revised SYSC Chapter 8 Rules and Guidance. A further statement of the FSA’s policy in relation to the outsourcing of retail portfolio management to service providers located in third countries is awaited. CP06/19 sets 6 Article 2(6) (Implementing Directive) 5 out the FSA’s proposals to implement the conditions in Article 15 of the Implementing Directive for such an outsourcing. (The FSA have in fact indicated that they would prefer no restrictions on outsourcing to such third country providers but all interested parties have agreed that some provisions are needed in order to comply with MiFID.) A further difficulty on the horizon is that apparently CESR are proposing to base their further work on MiFID outsourcing arrangements on the CEBS Guidelines on Outsourcing7. It is acknowledged that there will be differences in some of the guidelines because of the different kinds of business involved, and because CEBS Standards are aimed at prudential supervision rather than conduct of business, which is MiFID’s focus. We will need to await the CESR formulation of the guidelines before concluding if it causes a major problem, for example, regarding notifications of outsourcings. 4.7 Conflicts of interest: We have long had provisions regarding management of conflicts of interest but note that disclosure will no longer be enough. Article 13.3 and Article 18 require an investment firm to maintain and operate effective organisational and administrative arrangements with a view to taking all reasonable steps designed to prevent conflicts of interest from adversely affecting the interests of the clients. These new requirements may require a slightly more active approach than has previously been taken. Firms will need to identify the types of conflict of interest whose existence may entail a material risk of damage to the interests of a client. MiFID places more emphasis on more active procedures and measures for managing a conflict which are designed to prevent the risk of material damage to the interests of clients. Disclosure is not simply one choice of various measures in managing a conflict. A firm has to have arrangements in place to manage conflicts such that it is reasonably confident that the material risks of damage to the client’s interests are prevented. If not so presented, a firm needs to consider disclosure in addition to the application of the procedures. Firms therefore need to prepare a new summary of their conflict policies which will be available to retail clients. 4.8 The slides include one which sets out some key issues arising from NEWCOB and principles based regulation and identifies in the last column whether or not there is a MiFID aspect. This table does not pretend to be comprehensive but simply to highlight the way in which NEWCOB has developed and the extent to which it is in fact derived from MiFID requirements. It is intended to be illustrative. As you will see, there are very few marked a clear “yes”, meaning a new MiFID point which is introduced as a new proposal for UK regulation. 7 CEBS Guidelines on Outsourcing 14 December 2006 (See also CEBS Consultation Paper: Standards on Outsourcing: 6 April 2006) 6 There are various aspects where we will need to adjust (as mentioned above). There are various points where we will need new procedures, such as making clear that financial promotions must be identifiable as such and adjusting to the new less prescriptive requirements, for example, for past disclosure. The new areas within MiFID are relatively limited, but are significant for us. 4.9 The most notable new provision concerns the notion of “appropriateness”. The main area of UK concern has been the attack on the area of execution only business and there has been a limited rescue of this. This is an important area for the UK given the extent of our execution only business models. Where applicable, the appropriateness rule will require the client to be asked to provide information regarding his knowledge and experience in the investment field relevant to the specific type of product or service offered or demanded so as to enable the firm to assess whether the service or product envisaged is appropriate for the client. As finalised in the MiFID Directive, the appropriateness test will be required for complex products and, where services are provided at the firm’s initiative, for noncomplex products. (And it is assumed that a professional client would meet the test. ) MiFID defines non-complex products as covering shares admitted to trading on a regulated market or equivalent non-EEA market; money market instruments; bonds/other forms of securitised debt (excluding those which embed a derivative); UCITS; and other non-complex MiFID instruments. The level 2 implementing Directive then provides criteria for “other non-complex” instruments that are not specifically mentioned in MiFID. These criteria are that the instrument must, in summary, be liquid, transparent in price, and not involve a contingent liability, and there must be adequately comprehensible information publicly available. Complex instruments include MiFID derivatives, warrants, some structured products and other financial contracts for differences – including financial spread betting contracts. We are assuming that, in addition to UCITS funds which are specifically named as non-complex products, other forms of investment funds may well meet the criteria for non-complex status. This should be the case with NURS funds but the borderline on the “less regulated” fund products will need to be assessed on a case-by-case basis. It will be interesting to see the effect, in practice, of the new appropriateness requirement. 4.10 The FSA seems conscious that, where it thinks that the MiFID required regulation is excessive or inappropriate, the adjustments should have limited applicability, i.e. only 7 apply to MiFID business. This however gives rise to another problem. One particular concern is that the appropriateness rule, or similarly the additional requirements for inducements, as a result of being limited by the FSA to applicability only to MiFID business for MiFID scope firms, will create an unnecessary advantage for insurance products as against MiFID instrument products – there is a level playing field issue which they have noted. The FSA is thankfully pursuing its own, wider agenda. MiFID is only one part of its work load. 5. MPBR 5.1 We should perhaps better express the FSA’s current initiatives as “incorporating MiFID within the FSA’s new regime”. 5.2 The FSA are implementing MiFID as part of a wider FSA initiative on improving its rules. The general banner from the FSA is “more principles based regulation” or “MPBR”. And its implications are not yet clear. 5.3 There is no straightforward copy out of MiFID which is the end of the story. And regrettably there is an unfinished story. We are still awaiting several chapters of the FSA’s MPBR book. (In part, I would also suggest that there is a re-run of an old story.) The following paragraphs seek to give a few illustrations of what I mean. 6. Removal of specific requirements 6.1 The FSA are simplifying their Rule Book and this involves the removal of various specific requirements. One good example of this is provided by the new rules relating to financial promotions, now to be called “FINPROM”. (FINPROM includes the MiFID “marketing communications” requirements.) 6.2 Under MiFID, as copied out in NEWCOB: “A firm must ensure that all information addressed by it to a client in relation to a relevant business is fair, clear and not misleading”. The order of the words “clear, fair and not misleading” may have become “fair, clear and not misleading” but we already have the “fair, clear and not misleading” wording clearly set out in our existing Conduct of Business Sourcebook. Indeed in the old familiar grey IMRO volume, the chapter on the issue and approval of investment advertisements started: “Where a firm issues or approves an investment advertisement it must: (i) apply appropriate expertise; and 8 (ii) be able to show that it believes on reasonable grounds that the advertisement is fair and not misleading.” We may now have grandiose terms like “real time communications” and “non-real time communications” and “financial promotions”, and “marketing communications,” rather than advertisements, but the basic idea of the regulation is unchanged. 6.3 One major concern is the removal of the “reasonable steps” wording which appears in the current COB 2.1. MiFID has an absolute requirement, but one hopes that “reasonable steps” might be implicit to some extent. 6.4 Generally there will be fewer specific requirements for financial promotions. This should avoid some “over compliance” of advertisements. Often there is a wish from compliance departments to have disclosures about all topics that may possibly be relevant. For example, to cover the risks of the eligible markets inserting a long paragraph where in fact the issue of investing in eligible markets is negligible – perhaps less than 1% of the relevant portfolio- and so stressing the eligible markets risks is disproportionate and could give the customer a rather misleading impression of the product. There has been an increasing risk of us adopting the US approach of including more and more risk warnings. This can have various unhelpful results. Lengthy risk warnings can, for example, mislead or otherwise bamboozle the reader, or simply be ignored. Hopefully, with fewer specific requirements, people will be encouraged to write a fair description of the product or service concerned and set out a short summary of the relevant risks. This should give better results. Often less is more. 6.5 Essentially the key messages (in COBS 4.3.2) will be that: 6.6 (a) the document must be accurate and sufficient for the purpose; (b) it must be presented in such a way that it can be understood. Common sense must be applied regarding the test for the “average person” for whom you need to ensure it is likely to be understood; (c) it needs to set out the relevant risks – give a fair and prominent indication of the relevant risks; and (d) there should be no disguising of anything. From the UK perspective, I would suggest that we are therefore, to a great extent, reverting to the previous approach regarding advertisements. Firms need to decide whether a particular piece of information is fair, clear and not misleading in the particular context. With luck, there will be less reliance upon simply complying with 9 the specifics of the FINPROM Rules in COBS. I think that this result provides the opportunity for a positive improvement. Hopefully more original thought will be given to particular issues. 7. Gold plating 7.1 In some cases the FSA obviously consider that the MiFID requirements are inadequate. One such area is disclosure of information. 7.2 Aside from provisions regarding marketing communications, MiFID does cover the information topic in various ways. Article 27 sets out the conditions with which information must comply in order to be fair, clear and not misleading (covering all information, including marketing communications). Article 28 concerns information concerning client categorisation. Article 29 is a general requirement for information to clients so that firms must in good time before a retail client or potential retail client is bound by any agreement for the provision of investment services or ancillary services or before the provision of those services (which I raise earlier) provide that a person with the terms of any such agreement and the Article 30 information relating to that agreement or to those investment or ancillary services. Article 30 relations to information about the investment firm and its services to the retail clients and potential retail clients. Article 31 concerns information about financial instruments. Article 32 concerns information requirements concerning safeguarding of client financial instruments or client funds. Article 33 concerns information about costs and associated charges. Article 34, which is relevant to CIS operators, concerns the simplified prospectus for a UCITS fund which is deemed to be sufficient information for Article 28(19)(3) of the MiFID Directive – though the second and fourth indents must be checked. 7.3 However, for the FSA, this is still insufficient. The FSA want to keep their existing materials and develop these for the initial disclosure document (IDD), the menu, the requirement to provide key features and to continue their work on depolarisation. 7.4 In order to keep these provisions and develop them, the Article 4 gold-plating procedures will need to be followed and these procedures have yet to be finalised. The 10 FSA have initiated them and certainly intend to use them though quite how the process will work is still not yet clear. 7.5 The FSA’s decision to exercise the gold-plating procedure in part follows from our history of regulation in the advisory area (particularly with polarisation and, more recently, de-polarisation). In part, it also derives from a view that work which has been started with a view to improving regulation of customer disclosure should be continued. The UK should not simply quit and go back to the first starting point (It is worth remembering that probably many other EU countries are starting from scratch in implementing some of the new disclosure provisions listed in the MiFID Directive. The FSA have the history of regulation of disclosure. Whilst they are now introducing the specific MiFID requirements as well, they still wish to build upon, and indeed continue, recent FSA work in this area. 8. Further regulatory changes 8.1 In view of the wider FSA agenda, I would recommend that you should read the Consultation Paper 06/19 version of NEWCOB, rather than the version of COBS issued in January with the FSA’s Policy Statement on MiFID implementation. You will see that this issued version for MiFID compliant COBS has many blanks! Although removing certain specific requirements, the FSA retain many provisions which are additional to pure MiFID implementation. 8.2 The NEWCOB Policy Statement in Quarter 2 should provide the next helpful summary statement of the ongoing process in the FSA’s move towards more principles based regulation of conduct of business. The independent consideration of new regulations by the FSA will provide a continuing story. The UK regulator is continuing its own independent work - and pursuing its own broad agenda. To take one example – the reform of the approved person regime (CP05/10 and PS 07/4) had three elements only one of which was MiFID related. 8.3 So we should be under no misapprehension. MiFID is a major relevant issue but not the main driver for the FSA. There will be further UK reform work to be done regarding depolarisation, the menu, the initial disclosure document and basic advice. There will be the deferred matters CP in Quarter 2, including a review of non-MiFID projections regime. There will be a financial promotions general review which will not start until post-November 2007. To give an idea as to the ongoing process, Appendix 3 outlines the ongoing FSA work. 8.4 And, indeed, the FSA is going to have to continue to accommodate EU initiatives. As mentioned at paragraph 2.1 above, the Level 3 work by CESR is continuing. Appendix 4 sets out a summary of the ongoing CESR work. As you will see, it is an extensive programme, with a lengthy time frame. 11 8.5 Whilst we may therefore have made further progress on some of the basic COBS work, much work is still in process. 9. Implications of MPBR 9.1 Leaving aside the inevitable further involvement of regulation driven by the FSA, and from the EU, we do now have a very clear view from the FSA that they regard more principles based regulation as being their general approach, and key to their approach to any detailed implementation requirements. This is now very clear from the January Policy Statement on MiFID implementation, and other recent FSA comments. 9.2 What general conclusions can we reach as to what MPBR generally may mean? The FSA are already expressing some strong views. A recent statement by Dan Walters of the FSA summarises the position quite succinctly: “For my part, I would rather take the path, which no doubt has risks, of seeking a proportionate regulatory regime that tries to build upon trust between the regulator and the regulated, rather than one where it relies upon the illusory certitude of detailed rules – which in reality is more likely to lead to escalating cycles of legalistic gamesmanship to evade them.”8 9.3 I have never subscribed to the clever technical interpretation school. I agree entirely with leaning towards a clear disincentive for others to take a technical path. 9.4 The hope with the more principles based approach is that: more flexibility is available; innovation is facilitated; and common sense can prevail. 9.5 There are of course risks. These include the following potential problems: Without comprehensive and specific rules, compliance departments will have a different, and more difficult, task. This may be no bad thing. The “tick box” mentality will no longer work. The FSA want us to focus on outcomes, not simply the (shorter) NEWCOB requirements. But note that fewer standards does not mean lower standards. It means giving thought as to how to ensure high standards. 8 Dan Waters, Director of Retail Policy Division at the FSA, speech 8th December 2006 12 More records will be required. Throughout the MiFID implementing provisions and the NEWCOBS provisions there is reference to keeping records. These obligations will be quite onerous and will take up immediate compliance, administration and systems resources whilst they are being devised and introduced as appropriate for each business. Indeed there may well need to be various new series of records generated, in addition to those set out in the record keeping rules, in order to provide appropriate evidence of a firm following its new procedures which are designed to compliance with a particular principle/rule. For example, something may be developed along the lines of verification notes for FINPROM documents rather than the tick-box sign-off forms. Uncertainty is certainly a risk. I share various commentators’ concern that the idea of using industry codes on FSA guidance may potentially lead to a muddle. The guidance will not have the force of law. The provisions will appear in various places. There is clear scope for confusion. Retrospective enforcement is a real concern. Perhaps this is, in reality, not a new concern. We already have the Principles for Business. If you look at the FSA statistics as to their enforcement actions in the past, many of these have relied on breach of Principle allegations in addition to, or in place of, breach of specific rules. Looking at any Principles breach, there is always a concern that the enforcers may take a retrospective review. (Those particularly concerned about this area will be interested to see the FSA’s Consultation Paper on review of the Enforcement and Decision Making Manuals which was issued in January.9 The review is designed not only to streamline and simplify these manuals but also to take account of the FSA’s strategic move to a more principles based approach to regulation.) 10. The FSA’s approach, and TCF 10.1 Balancing the advantages with the potential risks is not straightforward. Has the FSA got the balance right? 10.2 I would submit that those who are interested in the potential advantages are often less interested in the risks and vice versa. So, I suspect that whether you think that the balance is right will depend on your viewpoint. 9 CP 07/2 13 10.3 Overall, it would appear to me that the risks either exist and/or are probably worth running in order to have the chance of achieving the potential advantages. It should always be preferable to advocate a regulatory regime which is flexible and facilitates innovation. 10.4 The task for firms is to introduce new processes which are designed to secure the purpose of the principles based regulation – to take, to use a much overused phrase, a “purposive” approach. In this connection: (a) It is important that senior management play their part and take due responsibility. (b) It is vital that common sense prevails. The FSA have indicated that a common sense approach should apply regarding the provisions on financial promotions and this common sense approach should prevail generally. (c) Be aware that a real driver for the FSA is, in fact, treating customers fairly. 10.5 The FSA are now justifying MPBR by explaining that its aim is to further their TCF initiatives. The FSA expect senior managers to be able to explain to the FSA how adoption of the new Rules will enhance the firm’s ability to treat customers fairly. 10.6 Determining the processes to reach the necessary “outcomes” will be for a firm to decide. In order to demonstrate how one arrives at an outcome, there will be a need to be able to articulate (record) the firm’s thinking. The FSA, from the enforcement viewpoint, need to be able to ensure whether a reasonable firm, applying its mind to the issues and circumstances, could reasonably have predicted at the outset that a breach of rules/principles would result. The onus is clearly on the senior management of firms to make sure that they address their minds to the real issues behind the principles in order to achieve the outcomes. The task for compliance teams is to ensure that those issues have been addressed, and to devise processes which enable them to document how the outcomes have been reached. 10.7 There will be no one right answer in future. But in truth there never really has been. Specific regulation has always been illusory – a perception rather than a reality. 10.8 I would hope that MPBR will achieve a “back to basics” result. Those who embrace the new MPBR approach should have new scope to work out their own solutions to problems of how to comply with the principles as they apply to their own particular circumstances. Kirstene Baillie Field Fisher Waterhouse LLP 27 February 2007 14 Appendix 1 MiFID, the Implementing Directive and the Implementing Regulation MiFID Directive (with related Implementing Directive and Implementing Regulation provisions) The following sets out the text of the MiFID Directive in full. In respect of each of the articles, where applicable, there follows a) in italics in a grey box the corresponding provisions of the Implementing Directive expanding on the organisational requirements and operating conditions for investment firms and defined terms for the purposes of the MiFID Directive. b) in italics in a grey box the relevant provisions of the MiFID Regulation as regards record keeping obligations for investment firms, transaction reporting, market transparency, admission of financial instruments to trading, and defined terms for the purposes of the MiFID Directive (For the avoidance of confusion, Articles of the Regulation are, in this document, referred to as Regulations). The Regulation comes into force on 1st November 2007 (except in respect of Regulation 11 and Regulation 34(5) and (6) which come into force from 1st June 2007 because they relate to publication of certain matters by the regulators from July). Regulation 41 states that the Regulation shall be binding in its entirety and directly applicable in all member states must adopt and publish by 31 January must have adopted and published by 31 January 2007 at the latest the laws regulations and administrative revisions necessary to comply with the implementing directive. They must communicate to the Commission the text of those provisions and a correlation table between those provisions and the implementing directive. Member states shall apply those provisions from 1st November 2007. When member states adopt these provisions they shall contain a reference to the implementing directive or be accompanied by such reference on the occasion of their official publication (member states shall determine how such reference is to be made) Index Title I : Definitions and Scope Page Title I : Definitions and Scope ........................................................................................................ 9 Article 1 : Scope...............................................................................................................................9 Article 2 : Exemptions ...................................................................................................................10 Article 3 : Optional exemptions....................................................................................................11 Article 4 : Definitions .....................................................................................................................12 Title II...............................................................................................................................................20 AUTHORISATION AND OPERATING CONDITIONS FOR INVESTMENT FIRMS.......................20 Chapter I..........................................................................................................................................20 CONDITIONS AND PROCEDURES FOR AUTHORISATION .......................................................20 Article 5 : Requirement for authorisation....................................................................................20 Article 6 : Scope of authorisation ................................................................................................21 Article 7 : Procedures for granting and refusing requests for authorisation..........................21 Article 8 : Withdrawal of authorisations ......................................................................................22 Article 9 : Persons who effectively direct the business ............................................................22 Article 10 : Shareholders and members with qualifying holdings ..........................................23 Article 11 : Membership of an authorised Investor Compensation Scheme ..........................24 Article 12 : Initial capital endowment..........................................................................................24 Article 13 : Organisational requirements ....................................................................................24 Article 14 : Trading process and finalisation of transaction in an MTF ...................................39 Article 15 : Relations with third countries...................................................................................40 Chapter II : OPERATING CONDITIONS FOR INVESTMENT FIRMS...........................................41 Section 1 : General provisions .....................................................................................................41 Article 16 : Regular review of conditions for initial authorisation ............................................41 Article 17 - General obligation in respect of on-going supervision .........................................41 Article 18 : Conflicts of interest....................................................................................................41 Section 2 : Provisions to ensure investor protection ................................................................43 Article 19 : Conduct of business obligations when providing investment services to clients .........................................................................................................................................................43 Article 20 : Provision of services through the medium of another investment firm ..............59 Article 21 : Obligation to execute orders on terms most favourable to the client ..................59 Article 22 : Client order handling rules........................................................................................63 Article 23 : Obligations of investment firms when appointing tied agents .............................65 Article 24 : Transactions executed with eligible counterparties...............................................67 Section 3 : Market transparency and integrity..........................................................................68 Article 25 : Obligation to uphold integrity of markets, report transactions and maintain records ............................................................................................................................................68 Article 26 : Monitoring of compliance with the rules of the MTF and with other legal obligations......................................................................................................................................73 Article 27 : Obligation for investment firms to make public firm quotes.................................73 Article 28 : Post-trade disclosure by investment firms .............................................................81 Article 29 : Pre-trade transparency requirements for MTFs......................................................87 Article 30 : Post-trade transparency requirements for MTFs....................................................94 Chapter III : RIGHTS OF INVESTMENT FIRMS ............................................................................99 Article 31 : Freedom to provide investment services and activities ........................................99 Article 32 : Establishment of a branch ......................................................................................100 Article 33 : Access to regulated markets ..................................................................................102 Article 34 : Access to central counterparty, clearing and settlement facilities and right to designate settlement system......................................................................................................102 Article 35 : Provisions regarding central counterparty, clearing and settlement arrangements in respect of MTFs ..............................................................................................103 Title III : REGULATED MARKETS ...............................................................................................103 Article 36 : Authorisation and applicable law ...........................................................................103 Article 37 : Requirements for the management of the regulated market...............................104 Article 38 : Requirements relating to persons exercising significant influence over the management of the regulated market........................................................................................104 i Article 39 : Organisational requirements ..................................................................................105 Article 40 : Admission of financial instruments to trading......................................................105 Article 41 : Suspension and removal of instruments from trading ........................................107 Article 42 : Access to the regulated market ..............................................................................107 Article 43 : Monitoring of compliance with the rules of the regulated market and with other legal obligations...........................................................................................................................109 Article 44 : Pre-trade transparency requirements for regulated markets ..............................109 Article 45 : Post-trade transparency requirements for regulated markets ............................115 Article 46 : Provisions regarding central counterparty and clearing and settlement arrangements ...............................................................................................................................121 Article 47 : List of regulated markets.........................................................................................122 Title IV : COMPETENT AUTHORITIES........................................................................................122 Chapter 1 : DESIGNATION, POWERS AND REDRESS PROCEDURES ..................................122 Article 48 : Designation of competent authorities....................................................................122 Article 49 : Cooperation between authorities in the same Member State..............................122 Article 50 : Powers to be made available to competent authorities .......................................123 Article 51 : Administrative sanctions.........................................................................................124 Article 52 : Right of appeal..........................................................................................................124 Article 53 : Extra-judicial mechanism for investors’ complaints ............................................124 Article 54 : Professional secrecy ...............................................................................................124 Article 55 : Relations with auditors............................................................................................125 Chapter II : COOPERATION BETWEEN COMPETENT AUTHORITIES OF DIFFERENT MEMBER STATES........................................................................................................................126 Article 56 : Obligation to cooperate ...........................................................................................126 Article 57 : Cooperation in supervisory activities, on-the-spot verifications or in investigations...............................................................................................................................127 Article 58 : Exchange of information .........................................................................................127 Article 59 : Refusal to cooperate................................................................................................128 Chapter III : COOPERATION WITH THIRD COUNTRIES...........................................................131 Title V : FINAL PROVISIONS.......................................................................................................131 ANNEX 1 : LIST OF SERVICES AND ACTIVITIES AND FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS.............137 Section A : Investment services and activities.........................................................................137 Section B : Ancillary services ....................................................................................................137 Section C : Financial Instruments..............................................................................................138 ANNEX II : PROFESSIONAL CLIENTS FOR THE PURPOSE OF THIS DIRECTIVE ................141 I. Categories of client who are considered to be professionals........................................141 II. Clients who may be treated as professionals on request ..........................................142 ii DIRECTIVE 2004/39/EC OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL of 21 April 2004 on markets in financial instruments amending Council Directives 85/611/EEC and 93/6/EEC and Directive 2000/12/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council and repealing Council Directive 93/22/EEC THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION, Having regard to the Treaty establishing the European Community, and in particular Article 47(2) thereof, Having regard to the proposal from the Commission (1), Having regard to the Opinion of the European Economic and Social Committee (2), Having regard to the opinion of the European Central Bank (3), Acting in accordance with the procedure laid down in Article 251 of the Treaty (4), Whereas: (1) Council Directive 93/22/EEC of 10 May 1993 on investment services in the securities field (5) sought to establish the conditions under which authorised investment firms and banks could provide specified services or establish branches in other Member States on the basis of home country authorisation and supervision. To this end, that Directive aimed to harmonise the initial authorisation and operating requirements for investment firms including conduct of business rules. It also provided for the harmonisation of some conditions governing the operation of regulated markets. (2) In recent years more investors have become active in the financial markets and are offered an even more complex wide-ranging set of services and instruments. In view of these developments the legal framework of the Community should encompass the full range of investor-oriented activities. To this end, it is necessary to provide for the degree of harmonisation needed to offer investors a high level of protection and to allow investment firms to provide services throughout the Community, being a Single Market, on the basis of home country supervision. In view of the preceding, Directive 93/22/EEC should be replaced by a new Directive. (3) Due to the increasing dependence of investors on personal recommendations, it is appropriate to include the provision of investment advice as an investment service requiring authorisation. (4) It is appropriate to include in the list of financial instruments certain commodity derivatives and others which are constituted and traded in such a manner as to give rise to regulatory issues comparable to traditional financial instruments. (5) It is necessary to establish a comprehensive regulatory regime governing the execution of transactions in financial instruments irrespective of the trading methods used to conclude those transactions so as to ensure a high quality of execution of investor transactions and to uphold the integrity and overall efficiency of the financial system. A coherent and risksensitive framework for regulating the main types of order-execution arrangement currently active in the European financial marketplace should be provided for. It is necessary to recognise the emergence of a new generation of organised trading systems alongside regulated markets which should be subjected to obligations designed to preserve the efficient and orderly functioning of financial markets. With a view to establishing a proportionate regulatory framework provision should be made for the inclusion of a new investment service which relates to the operation of an MTF. 1 (6) Definitions of regulated market and MTF should be introduced and closely aligned with each other to reflect the fact that they represent the same organised trading functionality. The definitions should exclude bilateral systems where an investment firm enters into every trade on own account and not as a riskless counterparty interposed between the buyer and seller. The term ' system' encompasses all those markets that are composed of a set of rules and a trading platform as well as those that only function on the basis of a set of rules. Regulated markets and MTFs are not obliged to operate a 'technical' system for matching orders. A market which is only composed of a set of rules that governs aspects related to membership, admission of instruments to trading, trading between members, reporting and, where applicable, transparency obligations is a regulated market or an MTF within the meaning of this Directive and the transactions concluded under those rules are considered to be concluded under the systems of a regulated market or an MTF. The term 'buying and selling interests' is to be understood in a broad sense and includes orders, quotes and indications of interest. The requirement that the interests be brought together in the system by means of non-discretionary rules set by the system operator means that they are brought together under the system's rules or by means of the system's protocols or internal operating procedures (including procedures embodied in computer software). The term 'non-discretionary rules' means that these rules leave the investment firm operating an MTF with no discretion as to how interests may interact. The definitions require that interests be brought together in such a way as to result in a contract, meaning that execution takes place under the system's rules or by means of the system's protocols or internal operating procedures. (7) The purpose of this Directive is to cover undertakings the regular occupation or business of which is to provide investment services and/or perform investment activities on a professional basis. Its scope should not therefore cover any person with a different professional activity. (8) Persons administering their own assets and undertakings, who do not provide investment services and/or perform investment activities other than dealing on own account unless they are market makers or they deal on own account outside a regulated market or an MTF on an organised, frequent and systematic basis, by providing a system accessible to third parties in order to engage in dealings with them should not be covered by the scope of this Directive. (9) References in the text to persons should be understood as including both natural and legal persons. (10) Insurance or assurance undertakings the activities of which are subject to appropriate monitoring by the competent prudential-supervision authorities and which are subject to Council Directive 64/225/EEC of 25 February 1964 on the abolition of restrictions on freedom of establishment and freedom to provide services in respect of reinsurance and retrocession (6), First Council Directive 73/239/EEC of 24 July 1973 on the coordination of laws, regulations and administrative provisions relating to the taking up and pursuit of direct insurance other than life assurance (7) and Council Directive 2002/83/EC of 5 November 2002 concerning life assurance (8) should be excluded. (11) Persons who do not provide services for third parties but whose business consists in providing investment services solely for their parent undertakings, for their subsidiaries, or for other subsidiaries of their parent undertakings should not be covered by this Directive. (12) Persons who provide investment services only on an incidental basis in the course of professional activity should also be excluded from the scope of this Directive, provided that activity is regulated and the relevant rules do not prohibit the provision, on an incidental basis, of investment services. (13) Persons who provide investment services consisting exclusively in the administration of employee-participation schemes and who therefore do not provide investment services for third parties should not be covered by this Directive. 2 (14) It is necessary to exclude from the scope of this Directive central banks and other bodies performing similar functions as well as public bodies charged with or intervening in the management of the public debt, which concept covers the investment thereof, with the exception of bodies that are partly or wholly State-owned the role of which is commercial or linked to the acquisition of holdings. (15) It is necessary to exclude from the scope of this Directive collective investment undertakings and pension funds whether or not coordinated at Community level, and the depositaries or managers of such undertakings, since they are subject to specific rules directly adapted to their activities. (16) In order to benefit from the exemptions from this Directive the person concerned should comply on a continuous basis with the conditions laid down for such exemptions. In particular, if a person provides investment services or performs investment activities and is exempted from this Directive because such services or activities are ancillary to his main business, when considered on a group basis, he should no longer be covered by the exemption related to ancillary services where the provision of those services or activities ceases to be ancillary to his main business. (17) Persons who provide the investment services and/or perform investment activities covered by this Directive should be subject to authorisation by their home Member States in order to protect investors and the stability of the financial system. (18) Credit institutions that are authorised under Directive 2000/12/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 20 March 2000 relating to the taking up and pursuit of the business of credit institutions (9) should not need another authorisation under this Directive in order to provide investment services or perform investment activities. When a credit institution decides to provide investment services or perform investment activities the competent authorities, before granting an authorisation, should verify that it complies with the relevant provisions of this Directive. (19) In cases where an investment firm provides one or more investment services not covered by its authorisation, or performs one or more investment activities not covered by its authorisation, on a non-regular basis it should not need an additional authorisation under this Directive. (20) For the purposes of this Directive, the business of the reception and transmission of orders should also include bringing together two or more investors thereby bringing about a transaction between those investors. (21) In the context of the forthcoming revision of the Capital Adequacy framework in Basel II, Member States recognise the need to re-examine whether or not investment firms who execute client orders on a matched principal basis are to be regarded as acting as principals, and thereby be subject to additional regulatory capital requirements. (22) The principles of mutual recognition and of home Member State supervision require that the Member States' competent authorities should not grant or should withdraw authorisation where factors such as the content of programmes of operations, the geographical distribution or the activities actually carried on indicate clearly that an investment firm has opted for the legal system of one Member State for the purpose of evading the stricter standards in force in another Member State within the territory of which it intends to carry on or does carry on the greater part of its activities. An investment firm which is a legal person should be authorised in the Member State in which it has its registered office. An investment firm which is not a legal person should be authorised in the Member State in which it has its head office. In addition, Member States should require that an investment firm's head office must always be situated in its home Member State and that it actually operates there. (23) An investment firm authorised in its home Member State should be entitled to provide investment services or perform investment activities throughout the Community without the 3 need to seek a separate authorisation from the competent authority in the Member State in which it wishes to provide such services or perform such activities. (24) Since certain investment firms are exempted from certain obligations imposed by Council Directive 93/6/EEC of 15 March 1993 on the capital adequacy of investment firms and credit institutions (10), they should be obliged to hold either a minimum amount of capital or professional indemnity insurance or a combination of both. The adjustments of the amounts of that insurance should take into account adjustments made in the framework of Directive 2002/92/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 9 December 2002 on insurance mediation (11). This particular treatment for the purposes of capital adequacy should be without prejudice to any decisions regarding the appropriate treatment of these firms under future changes to Community legislation on capital adequacy. (25) Since the scope of prudential regulation should be limited to those entities which, by virtue of running a trading book on a professional basis, represent a source of counterparty risk to other market participants, entities which deal on own account in financial instruments, including those commodity derivatives covered by this Directive, as well as those that provide investment services in commodity derivatives to the clients of their main business on an ancillary basis to their main business when considered on a group basis, provided that this main business is not the provision of investment services within the meaning of this Directive, should be excluded from the scope of this Directive. (26) In order to protect an investor's ownership and other similar rights in respect of securities and his rights in respect of funds entrusted to a firm those rights should in particular be kept distinct from those of the firm. This principle should not, however, prevent a firm from doing business in its name but on behalf of the investor, where that is required by the very nature of the transaction and the investor is in agreement, for example stock lending. (27) Where a client, in line with Community legislation and in particular Directive 2002/47/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 6 June 2002 on financial collateral arrangements (12), transfers full ownership of financial instruments or funds to an investment firm for the purpose of securing or otherwise covering present or future, actual or contingent or prospective obligations, such financial instruments or funds should likewise no longer be regarded as belonging to the client. (28) The procedures for the authorisation, within the Community, of branches of investment firms authorised in third countries should continue to apply to such firms. Those branches should not enjoy the freedom to provide services under the second paragraph of Article 49 of the Treaty or the right of establishment in Member States other than those in which they are established. In view of cases where the Community is not bound by any bilateral or multilateral obligations it is appropriate to provide for a procedure intended to ensure that Community investment firms receive reciprocal treatment in the third countries concerned. (29) The expanding range of activities that many investment firms undertake simultaneously has increased potential for conflicts of interest between those different activities and the interests of their clients. It is therefore necessary to provide for rules to ensure that such conflicts do not adversely affect the interests of their clients. (30) A service should be considered to be provided at the initiative of a client unless the client demands it in response to a personalised communication from or on behalf of the firm to that particular client, which contains an invitation or is intended to influence the client in respect of a specific financial instrument or specific transaction. A service can be considered to be provided at the initiative of the client notwithstanding that the client demands it on the basis of any communication containing a promotion or offer of financial instruments made by any means that by its very nature is general and addressed to the public or a larger group or category of clients or potential clients. (31) One of the objectives of this Directive is to protect investors. Measures to protect investors should be adapted to the particularities of each category of investors (retail, professional 4 and counterparties). (32) By way of derogation from the principle of home country authorisation, supervision and enforcement of obligations in respect of the operation of branches, it is appropriate for the competent authority of the host Member State to assume responsibility for enforcing certain obligations specified in this Directive in relation to business conducted through a branch within the territory where the branch is located, since that authority is closest to the branch, and is better placed to detect and intervene in respect of infringements of rules governing the operations of the branch. (33) It is necessary to impose an effective 'best execution' obligation to ensure that investment firms execute client orders on terms that are most favourable to the client. This obligation should apply to the firm which owes contractual or agency obligations to the client. (34) Fair competition requires that market participants and investors be able to compare the prices that trading venues (i.e. regulated markets, MTFs and intermediaries) are required to publish. To this end, it is recommended that Member States remove any obstacles which may prevent the consolidation at European level of the relevant information and its publication. (35) When establishing the business relationship with the client the investment firm might ask the client or potential client to consent at the same time to the execution policy as well as to the possibility that his orders may be executed outside a regulated market or an MTF. (36) Persons who provide investment services on behalf of more than one investment firm should not be considered as tied agents but as investment firms when they fall under the definition provided in this Directive, with the exception of certain persons who may be exempted. (37) This Directive should be without prejudice to the right of tied agents to undertake activities covered by other Directives and related activities in respect of financial services or products not covered by this Directive, including on behalf of parts of the same financial group. (38) The conditions for conducting activities outside the premises of the investment firm (doorto-door selling) should not be covered by this Directive. (39) Member States' competent authorities should not register or should withdraw the registration where the activities actually carried on indicate clearly that a tied agent has opted for the legal system of one Member State for the purpose of evading the stricter standards in force in another Member State within the territory of which it intends to carry on or does carry on the greater part of its activities. (40) For the purposes of this Directive eligible counterparties should be considered as acting as clients. (41) For the purposes of ensuring that conduct of business rules (including rules on best execution and handling of client orders) are enforced in respect of those investors most in need of these protections, and to reflect well-- established market practice throughout the Community, it is appropriate to clarify that conduct of business rules may be waived in the case of transactions entered into or brought about between eligible counterparties. (42) In respect of transactions executed between eligible counterparties, the obligation to disclose client limit orders should only apply where the counter party is explicitly sending a limit order to an investment firm for its execution. (43) Member States shall protect the right to privacy of natural persons with respect to the processing of personal data in accordance with Directive 95/46/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 24 October 1995 on the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data and of the free movement of such data. (13) 5 (44) With the two-fold aim of protecting investors and ensuring the smooth operation of securities markets, it is necessary to ensure that transparency of transactions is achieved and that the rules laid down for that purpose apply to investment firms when they operate on the markets. In order to enable investors or market participants to assess at any time the terms of a transaction in shares that they are considering and to verify afterwards the conditions in which it was carried out, common rules should be established for the publication of details of completed transactions in shares and for the disclosure of details of current opportunities to trade in shares. These rules are needed to ensure the effective integration of Member State equity markets, to promote the efficiency of the overall price formation process for equity instruments, and to assist the effective operation of 'best execution' obligations. These considerations require a comprehensive transparency regime applicable to all transactions in shares irrespective of their execution by an investment firm on a bilateral basis or through regulated markets or MTFs. The obligations for investment firms under this Directive to quote a bid and offer price and to execute an order at the quoted price do not relieve investment firms of the obligation to route an order to another execution venue when such internalisation could prevent the firm from complying with 'best execution' obligations. (45) Member States should be able to apply transaction reporting obligations of the Directive to financial instruments that are not admitted to trading on a regulated market. (46) A Member State may decide to apply the pre- and post-trade transparency requirements laid down in this Directive to financial instruments other than shares. In that case those requirements should apply to all investment firms for which that Member State is the home Member State for their operations within the territory of that Member State and those carried out cross-border through the freedom to provide services. They should also apply to the operations carried out within the territory of that Member State by the branches established in its territory of investment firms authorised in another Member State. (47) Investment firms should all have the same opportunities of joining or having access to regulated markets throughout the Community. Regardless of the manner in which transactions are at present organised in the Member States, it is important to abolish the technical and legal restrictions on access to regulated markets. (48) In order to facilitate the finalisation of cross-border transactions, it is appropriate to provide for access to clearing and settlement systems throughout the Community by investment firms, irrespective of whether transactions have been concluded through regulated markets in the Member State concerned. Investment firms which wish to participate directly in other Member States' settlement systems should comply with the relevant operational and commercial requirements for membership and the prudential measures to uphold the smooth and orderly functioning of the financial markets. (49) The authorisation to operate a regulated market should extend to all activities which are directly related to the display, processing, execution, confirmation and reporting of orders from the point at which such orders are received by the regulated market to the point at which they are transmitted for subsequent finalisation, and to activities related to the admission of financial instruments to trading. This should also include transactions concluded through the medium of designated market makers appointed by the regulated market which are undertaken under its systems and in accordance with the rules that govern those systems. Not all transactions concluded by members or participants of the regulated market or MTF are to be considered as concluded within the systems of a regulated market or MTF. Transactions which members or participants conclude on a bilateral basis and which do not comply with all the obligations established for a regulated market or an MTF under this Directive should be considered as transactions concluded outside a regulated market or an MTF for the purposes of the definition of systematic internaliser. In such a case the obligation for investment firms to make public firm quotes should apply if the conditions established by this Directive are met. (50) Systematic internalisers might decide to give access to their quotes only to retail clients, 6 only to professional clients, or to both. They should not be allowed to discriminate within those categories of clients. (51) Article 27 does not oblige systematic internalisers to publish firm quotes in relation to transactions above standard market size. (52) Where an investment firm is a systematic internaliser both in shares and in other financial instruments, the obligation to quote should only apply in respect of shares without prejudice to Recital 46. (53) It is not the intention of this Directive to require the application of pre-trade transparency rules to transactions carried out on an OTC basis, the characteristics of which include that they are ad-hoc and irregular and are carried out with wholesale counterparties and are part of a business relationship which is itself characterised by dealings above standard market size, and where the deals are carried out outside the systems usually used by the firm concerned for its business as a systematic internaliser. (54) The standard market size for any class of share should not be significantly disproportionate to any share included in that class. (55) Revision of Directive 93/6/EEC should fix the minimum capital requirements with which regulated markets should comply in order to be authorised, and in so doing should take into account the specific nature of the risks associated with such markets. (56) Operators of a regulated market should also be able to operate an MTF in accordance with the relevant provisions of this Directive. (57) The provisions of this Directive concerning the admission of instruments to trading under the rules enforced by the regulated market should be without prejudice to the application of Directive 2001/34/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 28 May 2001 on the admission of securities to official stock exchange listing and on information to be published on those securities (14). A regulated market should not be prevented from applying more demanding requirements in respect of the issuers of securities or instruments which it is considering for admission to trading than are imposed pursuant to this Directive. (58) Member States should be able to designate different competent authorities to enforce the wide-ranging obligations laid down in this Directive. Such authorities should be of a public nature guaranteeing their independence from economic actors and avoiding conflicts of interest. In accordance with national law, Member States should ensure appropriate financing of the competent authority. The designation of public authorities should not exclude delegation under the responsibility of the competent authority. (59) Any confidential information received by the contact point of one Member State through the contact point of another Member State should not be regarded as purely domestic. (60) It is necessary to enhance convergence of powers at the disposal of competent authorities so as to pave the way towards an equivalent intensity of enforcement across the integrated financial market. A common minimum set of powers coupled with adequate resources should guarantee supervisory effectiveness. (61) With a view to protecting clients and without prejudice to the right of customers to bring their action before the courts, it is appropriate that Member States encourage public or private bodies established with a view to settling disputes out-of-court, to cooperate in resolving cross-border disputes, taking into account Commission Recommendation 98/257/EC of 30 March 1998 on the principles applicable to the bodies responsible for out-of-court settlement of consumer disputes (15). When implementing provisions on complaints and redress procedures for out-of-court settlements, Member States should be encouraged to use existing cross-border cooperation mechanisms, notably the Financial Services Complaints Network (FIN-Net). 7 (62) Any exchange or transmission of information between competent authorities, other authorities, bodies or persons should be in accordance with the rules on transfer of personal data to third countries as laid down in Directive 95/46/EC. (63) It is necessary to reinforce provisions on exchange of information between national competent authorities and to strengthen the duties of assistance and cooperation which they owe to each other. Due to increasing cross--border activity, competent authorities should provide each other with the relevant information for the exercise of their functions, so as to ensure the effective enforcement of this Directive, including in situations where infringements or suspected infringements may be of concern to authorities in two or more Member States. In the exchange of information, strict professional secrecy is needed to ensure the smooth transmission of that information and the protection of particular rights. (64) At its meeting on 17 July 2000, the Council set up the Committee of Wise Men on the Regulation of European Securities Markets. In its final report, the Committee of Wise Men proposed the introduction of new legislative techniques based on a four-level approach, namely framework principles, implementing measures, cooperation and enforcement. Level 1, the Directive, should confine itself to broad general 'framework' principles while Level 2 should contain technical implementing measures to be adopted by the Commission with the assistance of a committee. (65) The Resolution adopted by the Stockholm European Council of 23 March 2001 endorsed the final report of the Committee of Wise Men and the proposed four-level approach to make the regulatory process for Community securities legislation more efficient and transparent. (66) According to the Stockholm European Council, Level 2 implementing measures should be used more frequently, to ensure that technical provisions can be kept up to date with market and supervisory developments, and deadlines should be set for all stages of Level 2 work. (67) The Resolution of the European Parliament of 5 February 2002 on the implementation of financial services legislation also endorsed the Committee of Wise Men's report, on the basis of the solemn declaration made before Parliament the same day by the Commission and the letter of 2 October 2001 addressed by the Internal Market Commissioner to the chairman of Parliament's Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs with regard to the safeguards for the European Parliament's role in this process. (68) The measures necessary for the implementation of this Directive should be adopted in accordance with Council Decision 1999/468/EC of 28 June 1999 laying down the procedures for the exercise of implementing powers conferred on the Commission (16). (69) The European Parliament should be given a period of three months from the first transmission of draft implementing measures to allow it to examine them and to give its opinion. However, in urgent and duly justified cases, this period could be shortened. If, within that period, a resolution is passed by the European Parliament, the Commission should re-examine the draft measures. (70) With a view to taking into account further developments in the financial markets the Commission should submit reports to the European Parliament and the Council on the application of the provisions concerning professional indemnity insurance, the scope of the transparency rules and the possible authorisation of specialised dealers in commodity derivatives as investment firms. (71) The objective of creating an integrated financial market, in which investors are effectively protected and the efficiency and integrity of the overall market are safeguarded, requires the establishment of common regulatory requirements relating to investment firms wherever they are authorised in the Community and governing the functioning of regulated markets and other trading systems so as to prevent opacity or disruption on one market 8 from undermining the efficient operation of the European financial system as a whole. Since this objective may be better achieved at Community level, the Community may adopt measures in accordance with the principle of subsidiary as set out in Article 5 of the Treaty. In accordance with the principle of proportionality, as set out in that Article, this Directive does not go beyond what is necessary in order to achieve this objective, HAVE ADOPTED THIS DIRECTIVE: Title I : Definitions and Scope Article 1 : Scope 1. This Directive shall apply to investment firms and regulated markets. 2. The following provisions shall also apply to credit institutions authorised under Directive 2000/12/EC, when providing one or more investment services and/or performing investment activities: - Articles 2(2), 11, 13 and 14, - Chapter II of Title II excluding Article 23(2) second subparagraph, - Chapter III of Title II excluding Articles 31(2) to 31(4) and 32(2) to 32(6), 32(8) and 32(9), - Articles 48 to 53, 57, 61 and 62, and - Article 71(1). Article 4 Additional requirements on investment firms in certain cases 1. Member States may retain or impose requirements additional to those in this Directive only in those exceptional cases where such requirements are objectively justified and proportionate so as to address specific risks to investor protection or to market integrity that are not adequately addressed by this Directive, and provided that one of the following conditions is met: (a) the specific risks addressed by the requirements are of particular importance in the circumstances of the market structure of that Member State; (b) the requirement addresses risks or issues that emerge or become evident after the date of application of this Directive and that are not otherwise regulated by or under Community measures. 2. Any requirements imposed under paragraph 1 shall not restrict or otherwise affect the rights of investment firms under Articles 31 and 32 of Directive 2004/39/EC. 3. Member States shall notify to the Commission: (a) any requirement which it intends to retain in accordance with paragraph 1 before the date of transposition of this Directive; and (b) any requirement which it intends to impose in accordance with paragraph 1 at least one month before the date appointed for that requirement to come into force. 9 In each case, the notification shall include a justification for that requirement. The Commission shall communicate to Member States and make public on its website the notifications it receives in accordance with this paragraph. 4. By 31 December 2009 the Commission shall report to the European Parliament and the Council on the application of this Article. Article 2 : Exemptions 1. This Directive shall not apply to: (a) insurance undertakings as defined in Article 1 of Directive 73/239/EEC or assurance undertakings as defined in Article 1 of Directive 2002/83/EC or undertakings carrying on the reinsurance and retrocession activities referred to in Directive 64/225/EEC; (b) persons which provide investment services exclusively for their parent undertakings, for their subsidiaries or for other subsidiaries of their parent undertakings; (c) persons providing an investment service where that service is provided in an incidental manner in the course of a professional activity and that activity is regulated by legal or regulatory provisions or a code of ethics governing the profession which do not exclude the provision of that service; (d) persons who do not provide any investment services or activities other than dealing on own account unless they are market makers or deal on own account outside a regulated market or an MTF on an organised, frequent and systematic basis by providing a system accessible to third parties in order to engage in dealings with them; (e) persons which provide investment services consisting exclusively in the administration of employee-participation schemes; (f) persons which provide investment services which only involve both administration of employee-participation schemes and the provision of investment services exclusively for their parent undertakings, for their subsidiaries or for other subsidiaries of their parent undertakings; (g) the members of the European System of Central Banks and other national bodies performing similar functions and other public bodies charged with or intervening in the management of the public debt; (h) collective investment undertakings and pension funds whether coordinated at Community level or not and the depositaries and managers of such undertakings; (i) persons dealing on own account in financial instruments, or providing investment services in commodity derivatives or derivative contracts included in Annex I, Section C 10 to the clients of their main business, provided this is an ancillary activity to their main business, when considered on a group basis, and that main business is not the provision of investment services within the meaning of this Directive or banking services under Directive 2000/12/EC; 10 (j) persons providing investment advice in the course of providing another professional activity not covered by this Directive provided that the provision of such advice is not specifically remunerated; (k) persons whose main business consists of dealing on own account in commodities and/or commodity derivatives. This exception shall not apply where the persons that deal on own account in commodities and/or commodity derivatives are part of a group the main business of which is the provision of other investment services within the meaning of this Directive or banking services under Directive 2000/12/EC; (l) firms which provide investment services and/or perform investment activities consisting exclusively in dealing on own account on markets in financial futures or options or other derivatives and on cash markets for the sole purpose of hedging positions on derivatives markets or which deal for the accounts of other members of those markets or make prices for them and which are guaranteed by clearing members of the same markets, where responsibility for ensuring the performance of contracts entered into by such firms is assumed by clearing members of the same markets; (m) associations set up by Danish and Finnish pension funds with the sole aim of managing the assets of pension funds that are members of those associations; (n) 'agenti di cambio' whose activities and functions are governed by Article 201 of Italian Legislative Decree No 58 of 24 February 1998. 2. The rights conferred by this Directive shall not extend to the provision of services as counterparty in transactions carried out by public bodies dealing with public debt or by members of the European System of Central Banks performing their tasks as provided for by the Treaty and the Statute of the European System of Central Banks and of the European Central Bank or performing equivalent functions under national provisions. 3. In order to take account of developments on financial markets, and to ensure the uniform application of this Directive, the Commission, acting in accordance with the procedure referred to in Article 64(2), may, in respect of exemptions (c) (i), and (k) define the criteria for determining when an activity is to be considered as ancillary to the main business on a group level as well as for determining when an activity is provided in an incidental manner. Article 3 : Optional exemptions 1. Member States may choose1 not to apply this Directive to any persons for which they are the home Member State that: - are not allowed to hold clients' funds or securities and which for that reason are not allowed at any time to place themselves in debit with their clients, and - are not allowed to provide any investment service except the reception and transmission of orders in transferable securities and units in collective investment undertakings and the provision of investment advice in relation to such financial instruments, and 1 The UK has chosen to exercise this optional exemption and so this should be of assistance to many financial advisers 11 - in the course of providing that service, are allowed to transmit orders only to: (i) investment firms authorised in accordance with this Directive; (ii) credit institutions authorised in accordance with Directive 2000/12/EC; (iii) branches of investment firms or of credit institutions which are authorised in a third country and which are subject to and comply with prudential rules considered by the competent authorities to be at least as stringent as those laid down in this Directive, in Directive 2000/12/EC or in Directive 93/6/EEC; (iv) collective investment undertakings authorised under the law of a Member State to market units to the public and to the managers of such undertakings; (v) investment companies with fixed capital, as defined in Article 15(4) of Second Council Directive 77/91/EEC of 13 December 1976 on coordination of safeguards which, for the protection of the interests of members and others, are required by Member States of companies within the meaning of the second paragraph of Article 58 of the Treaty, in respect of the formation of public limited liability companies and the maintenance and alteration of their capital, with a view to making such safeguards equivalent (17), the securities of which are listed or dealt in on a regulated market in a Member State; provided that the activities of those persons are regulated at national level. 2. Persons excluded from the scope of this Directive according to paragraph 1 cannot benefit from the freedom to provide services and/or activities or to establish branches as provided for in Articles 31 and 32 respectively. Article 4 : Definitions 1. For the purposes of this Directive, the following definitions shall apply: 1) 'Investment firm' means any legal person whose regular occupation or business is the provision of one or more investment services to third parties and/or the performance of one or more investment activities on a professional basis; Member States may include in the definition of investment firms undertakings which are not legal persons, provided that: (a) their legal status ensures a level of protection for third parties' interests equivalent to that afforded by legal persons, and (b) they are subject to equivalent prudential supervision appropriate to their legal form. However, where a natural person provides services involving the holding of third parties' funds or transferable securities, he may be considered as an investment firm for the purposes of this Directive only if, without prejudice to the other requirements imposed in this Directive and in Directive 93/6/EEC, he complies with the following conditions: 12 2) (a) the ownership rights of third parties in instruments and funds must be safeguarded, especially in the event of the insolvency of the firm or of its proprietors, seizure, set-off or any other action by creditors of the firm or of its proprietors; (b) the firm must be subject to rules designed to monitor the firm's solvency and that of its proprietors; (c) the firm's annual accounts must be audited by one or more persons empowered, under national law, to audit accounts; (d) where the firm has only one proprietor, he must make provision for the protection of investors in the event of the firm's cessation of business following his death, his incapacity or any other such event; 'Investment services and activities' means any of the services and activities listed in Section A of Annex I relating to any of the instruments listed in Section C of Annex I; The Commission shall determine, acting in accordance with the procedure referred to in Article 64(2): - the derivative contracts mentioned in Section C 7 of Annex I that have the characteristics of other derivative financial instruments, having regard to whether, inter alia, they are cleared and settled through recognised clearing houses or are subject to regular margin calls - the derivative contracts mentioned in Section C 10 of Annex I that have the characteristics of other derivative financial instruments, having regard to whether, inter alia, they are traded on a regulated market or an MTF, are cleared and settled through recognised clearing houses or are subject to regular margin calls; Regulations 38 and 39 provide details of characteristics of other derivative financial instruments and derivatives within Section C10 of Annex 1 to the Directive respectively – see Annex 1. 3) 'Ancillary service' means any of the services listed in Section B of Annex I; 4) 'Investment advice' means the provision of personal recommendations to a client, either upon its request or at the initiative of the investment firm, in respect of one or more transactions relating to financial instruments; Defined terms for the purposes of Directive 2004/39/EC Article 52 (Article 4(1)(4) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Investment advice For the purposes of the definition of 'investment advice' in Article 4(1)(4) of Directive 2004/39/EC, a personal recommendation is a recommendation that is made to a person in his capacity as an investor or potential investor, or in his capacity as an agent for an investor or potential investor. That recommendation must be presented as suitable for that person, or must be based on a consideration of the circumstances of that person, and must constitute a recommendation to take one of the following sets of steps: 13 (a) to buy, sell, subscribe for, exchange, redeem, hold or underwrite a particular financial instrument; (b) to exercise or not to exercise any right conferred by a particular financial instrument to buy, sell, subscribe for, exchange, or redeem a financial instrument. A recommendation is not a personal recommendation if it is issued exclusively through distribution channels or to the public. 5) 'Execution of orders on behalf of clients' means acting to conclude agreements to buy or sell one or more financial instruments on behalf of clients; 6) 'Dealing on own account' means trading against proprietary capital resulting in the conclusion of transactions in one or more financial instruments; 7) 'Systematic internaliser' means an investment firm which, on an organised, frequent and systematic basis, deals on own account by executing client orders outside a regulated market or an MTF; Pre-trade transparency for systematic internalisers Regulation 21 (Article 4(1)(7) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Criteria for determining whether an investment firm is a systematic internaliser 1. Where an investment firm deals on own account by executing client orders outside a regulated market or an MTF, it shall be treated as a systematic internaliser if it meets the following criteria indicating that it performs that activity on an organised, frequent and systematic basis: (a) the activity has a material commercial role for the firm, and is carried on in accordance with non-discretionary rules and procedures; (b) the activity is carried on by personnel, or by means of an automated technical system, assigned to that purpose, irrespective of whether those personnel or that system are used exclusively for that purpose; (c) the activity is available to clients on a regular or continuous basis. 2. An investment firm shall cease to be a systematic internaliser in one or more shares if it ceases to carry on the activity specified in paragraph 1 in respect of those shares, provided that it has announced in advance that it intends to cease that activity using the same publication channels for that announcement as it uses to publish its quotes or, where that is not possible, using a channel which is equally accessible to its clients and other market participants. 3. The activity of dealing on own account by executing client orders shall not be treated as performed on an organised, frequent and systematic basis where the following conditions apply: (a) the activity is performed on an ad hoc and irregular bilateral basis with wholesale counterparties as part of business relationships which are themselves characterised by dealings above standard market size; (b) the transactions are carried out outside the systems habitually used by the firm concerned for any business that it carries out in the capacity of a systematic internaliser. 14 4. Each competent authority shall ensure the maintenance and publication of a list of all systematic internalisers, in respect of shares admitted to trading on a regulated market, which it has authorised as investment firms. It shall ensure that the list is current by reviewing it at least annually. The list shall be made available to the Committee of European Securities Regulators. It shall be considered as published when it is published by the Committee of European Securities Regulators in accordance with Article 34(5). 8) 'Market maker' means a person who holds himself out on the financial markets on a continuous basis as being willing to deal on own account by buying and selling financial instruments against his proprietary capital at prices defined by him; 9) 'Portfolio management' means managing portfolios in accordance with mandates given by clients on a discretionary client-by-client basis where such portfolios include one or more financial instruments; 10) 'Client' means any natural or legal person to whom an investment firm provides investment and/or ancillary services; 11) 'Professional client' means a client meeting the criteria laid down in Annex II; 12) 'Retail client' means a client who is not a professional client; 13) 'Market operator' means a person or persons who manages and/or operates the business of a regulated market. The market operator may be the regulated market itself; 14) 'Regulated market' means a multilateral system operated and/or managed by a market operator, which brings together or facilitates the bringing together of multiple third-party buying and selling interests in financial instruments - in the system and in accordance with its nondiscretionary rules - in a way that results in a contract, in respect of the financial instruments admitted to trading under its rules and/or systems, and which is authorised and functions regularly and in accordance with the provisions of Title III; 15) 'Multilateral trading facility (MTF)' means a multilateral system, operated by an investment firm or a market operator, which brings together multiple third-party buying and selling interests in financial instruments - in the system and in accordance with non-discretionary rules - in a way that results in a contract in accordance with the provisions of Title II; 16) 'Limit order' means an order to buy or sell a financial instrument at its specified price limit or better and for a specified size; 17) 'Financial instrument' means those instruments specified in Section C of Annex I; 18) 'Transferable securities' means those classes of securities which are negotiable on the capital market, with the exception of instruments of payment, such as: (a) shares in companies and other securities equivalent to shares in companies, partnerships or other entities, and depositary receipts in respect of shares; (b) bonds or other forms of securitised debt, including depositary receipts in respect of such securities; 15 (c) any other securities giving the right to acquire or sell any such transferable securities or giving rise to a cash settlement determined by reference to transferable securities, currencies, interest rates or yields, commodities or other indices or measures; 19) 'Money-market instruments' means those classes of instruments which are normally dealt in on the money market, such as treasury bills, certificates of deposit and commercial papers and excluding instruments of payment; 20) 'Home Member State' means: (a) (b) in the case of investment firms: (i) if the investment firm is a natural person, the Member State in which its head office is situated; (ii) if the investment firm is a legal person, the Member State in which its registered office is situated; (iii) if the investment firm has, under its national law, no registered office, the Member State in which its head office is situated; in the case of a regulated market, the Member State in which the regulated market is registered or, if under the law of that Member State it has no registered office, the Member State in which the head office of the regulated market is situated; 21) 'Host Member State' means the Member State, other than the home Member State, in which an investment firm has a branch or performs services and/or activities or the Member State in which a regulated market provides appropriate arrangements so as to facilitate access to trading on its system by remote members or participants established in that same Member State; 22) 'Competent authority' means the authority, designated by each Member State in accordance with Article 48, unless otherwise specified in this Directive; 23) 'Credit institutions' means credit institutions as defined under Directive 2000/12/EC; 24) 'UCITS management company' means a management company as defined in Council Directive 85/611/EEC of 20 December 1985, on the coordination of laws, regulations and administrative provisions relating to undertakings for collective investment in transferable securities (UCITS) (18); 25) 'Tied agent' means a natural or legal person who, under the full and unconditional responsibility of only one investment firm on whose behalf it acts, promotes investment and/or ancillary services to clients or prospective clients, receives and transmits instructions or orders from the client in respect of investment services or financial instruments, places financial instruments and/or provides advice to clients or prospective clients in respect of those financial instruments or services; 26) 'Branch' means a place of business other than the head office which is a part of an investment firm, which has no legal personality and which provides investment services and/or activities and which may also perform ancillary services for which the investment firm has been authorised; all the places of business set up in the same Member State by an investment firm with headquarters in another Member State shall be regarded as a single branch; 16 27) 'Qualifying holding' means any direct or indirect holding in an investment firm which represents 10% or more of the capital or of the voting rights, as set out in Article 92 of Directive 2001/34/EC, or which makes it possible to exercise a significant influence over the management of the investment firm in which that holding subsists; 28) 'Parent undertaking' means a parent undertaking as defined in Articles 1 and 2 of Seventh Council Directive 83/349/EEC of 13 June 1983 on consolidated accounts (19); 29) 'Subsidiary' means a subsidiary undertaking as defined in Articles 1 and 2 of Directive 83/349/EEC, including any subsidiary of a subsidiary undertaking of an ultimate parent undertaking; 30) 'Control' means control as defined in Article 1 of Directive 83/349/EEC; 31) 'Close links' means a situation in which two or more natural or legal persons are linked by: (a) participation which means the ownership, direct or by way of control, of 20% or more of the voting rights or capital of an undertaking, (b) control which means the relationship between a parent undertaking and a subsidiary, in all the cases referred to in Article 1(1) and (2) of Directive 83/349/EEC, or a similar relationship between any natural or legal person and an undertaking, any subsidiary undertaking of a subsidiary undertaking also being considered a subsidiary of the parent undertaking which is at the head of those undertakings. A situation in which two or more natural or legal persons are permanently linked to one and the same person by a control relationship shall also be regarded as constituting a close link between such persons. 2. In order to take account of developments on financial markets, and to ensure the uniform application of this Directive, the Commission, acting in accordance with the procedure referred to in Article 64(2), may clarify the definitions laid down in paragraph 1 of this Article. Article 2 Definitions For the purposes of the Implementing Directive, the following definitions shall apply: (1) 'distribution channels' means distribution channels within the meaning of Article 1(7) of Commission Directive 2003/125/EC; (2) 'durable medium' means any instrument which enables a client to store information addressed personally to that client in a way accessible for future reference for a period of time adequate for the purposes of the information and which allows the unchanged reproduction of the information stored; (3) 'relevant person' in relation to an investment firm, means any of the following: (a) a director, partner or equivalent, manager or tied agent of the firm; (b) a director, partner or equivalent, or manager of any tied agent of the firm; (c) an employee of the firm or of a tied agent of the firm, as well as any other natural person whose services are placed at the disposal and under the control of the firm or a tied agent of 17 the firm and who is involved in the provision by the firm of investment services and activities; (d) a natural person who is directly involved in the provision of services to the investment firm or to its tied agent under an outsourcing arrangement for the purpose of the provision by the firm of investment services and activities; (4) 'financial analyst' means a relevant person who produces the substance of investment research; (5) 'group', in relation to an investment firm, means the group of which that firm forms a part, consisting of a parent undertaking, its subsidiaries and the entities in which the parent undertaking or its subsidiaries hold a participation, as well as undertakings linked to each other by a relationship within the meaning of Article 12(1) of Council Directive 83/349/EEC on consolidated accounts; (6) 'outsourcing' means an arrangement of any form between an investment firm and a service provider by which that service provider performs a process, a service or an activity which would otherwise be undertaken by the investment firm itself; (7) 'person with whom a relevant person has a family relationship' means any of the following: (a) the spouse of the relevant person or any partner of that person considered by national law as equivalent to a spouse; (b) a dependent child or stepchild of the relevant person; (c) any other relative of the relevant person who has shared the same household as that person for at least one year on the date of the personal transaction concerned; (8) 'securities financing transaction' has the meaning given in Commission Regulation (EC) No 1287/2006; (9) 'senior management' means the person or persons who effectively direct the business of the investment firm as referred to in Article 9(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC. Regulation 2 For the purposes of this Regulation, the following definitions shall apply2: (1) 'commodity' means any goods of a fungible nature that are capable of being delivered, including metals and their ores and alloys, agricultural products, and energy such as electricity; (2) 'issuer' means an entity which issues transferable securities and, where appropriate, other financial instruments; (3) 'Community issuer' means an issuer which has its registered office in the Community; (4) 'third country issuer' means an issuer which is not a Community issuer; 2 Regulation 40 Re-examinations 1. At least once every two years, and after consulting the Committee of European Securities Regulators, the Commission shall re-examine the definition of 'transaction' for the purposes of this Regulation, the Tables included in Annex II, as well as the criteria for determination of liquid shares contained in Regulation 22. 18 (5) 'normal trading hours' for a trading venue or an investment firm means those hours which the trading venue or investment firm establishes in advance and makes public as its trading hours; (6) 'portfolio trade' means a transaction in more than one security where those securities are grouped and traded as a single lot against a specific reference price; (7) 'relevant competent authority' for a financial instrument means the competent authority of the most relevant market in terms of liquidity for that financial instrument; (8) 'trading venue' means a regulated market, MTF or systematic internaliser acting in its capacity as such, and, where appropriate, a system outside the Community with similar functions to a regulated market or MTF; (9) 'turnover', in relation to a financial instrument, means the sum of the results of multiplying the number of units of that instrument exchanged between buyers and sellers in a defined period of time, pursuant to transactions taking place on a trading venue or otherwise, by the unit price applicable to each such transaction; (10) 'securities financing transaction' means an instance of stock lending or stock borrowing or the lending or borrowing of other financial instruments, a repurchase or reverse repurchase transaction, or a buy-sell back or sell-buy back transaction. Regulation 3 Transactions related to an individual share in a portfolio trade and volume weighted average price transactions 1. A transaction related to an individual share in a portfolio trade shall be considered, for the purposes of Regulation 18(1)(b)(ii), as a transaction subject to conditions other than the current market price. It shall also be considered, for the purposes of Regulation 27(1)(b), as a transaction where the exchange of shares is determined by factors other than the current market valuation of the share. 2. A volume weighted average price transaction shall be considered, for the purposes of Regulation 18(1)(b)(ii), as a transaction subject to conditions other than the current market price and, for the purposes of Regulation 25, as an order subject to conditions other than the current market price. It shall also be considered, for the purposes of Regulation 27(1)(b), as a transaction where the exchange of shares is determined by factors other than the current market valuation of the share. Regulation 4 References to trading day 1. A reference to a trading day in relation to a trading venue, or in relation to post-trade information to be made public under Article 30 or 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC in relation to a share, shall be a reference to any day during which the trading venue concerned is open for trading. A reference to the opening of the trading day shall be a reference to the commencement of the normal trading hours of the trading venue. A reference to noon on the trading day shall be a reference to noon in the time zone where the trading venue is established. A reference to the end of the trading day shall be a reference to the end of its normal trading hours. 19 2. A reference to a trading day in relation to the most relevant market in terms of liquidity for a share, or in relation to post-trade information to be made public under Article 28 of Directive 2004/39/EC in relation to a share, shall be a reference to any day of normal trading on trading venues in that market. A reference to the opening of the trading day shall be a reference to the earliest commencement of normal trading in that share on trading venues in that market. A reference to noon on the trading day shall be a reference to noon in the time zone of that market. A reference to the end of the trading day shall be a reference to the latest cessation of normal trading in that share on trading venues in that market. 3. A reference to a trading day in relation to a spot contract, within the meaning of Regulation 38(2), shall be a reference to any day of normal trading of that contract on trading venues. Article 5 References to transaction For the purposes of this Regulation, a reference to a transaction is a reference only to the purchase and sale of a financial instrument. For the purposes of this Regulation, other than Chapter II, the purchase and sale of a financial instrument does not include any of the following: (a) securities financing transactions; (b) the exercise of options or of covered warrants; (c) primary market transactions (such as issuance, allotment or subscription) in financial instruments falling within Article 4(1)(18)(a) and (b) of Directive 2004/39/EC. Title II AUTHORISATION AND OPERATING CONDITIONS FOR INVESTMENT FIRMS Chapter I CONDITIONS AND PROCEDURES FOR AUTHORISATION Article 5 : Requirement for authorisation 1. Each Member State shall require that the performance of investment services or activities as a regular occupation or business on a professional basis be subject to prior authorisation in accordance with the provisions of this Chapter. Such authorisation shall be granted by the home Member State competent authority designated in accordance with Article 48. 2. By way of derogation from paragraph 1, Member States shall allow any market operator to operate an MTF, subject to the prior verification of their compliance with the provisions of this Chapter, excluding Articles 11 and 15. 3. Member States shall establish a register of all investment firms. This register shall be publicly accessible and shall contain information on the services and/or activities for which the investment firm is authorised. It shall be updated on a regular basis. 20 4. 5. Each Member State shall require that: - any investment firm which is a legal person have its head office in the same Member State as its registered office, - any investment firm which is not a legal person or any investment firm which is a legal person but under its national law has no registered office have its head office in the Member State in which it actually carries on its business. In the case of investment firms which provide only investment advice or the service of reception and transmission of orders under the conditions established in Article 3, Member States may allow the competent authority to delegate administrative, preparatory or ancillary tasks related to the granting of an authorisation, in accordance with the conditions laid down in Article 48(2). Article 6 : Scope of authorisation 1. The home Member State shall ensure that the authorisation specifies the investment services or activities which the investment firm is authorised to provide. The authorisation may cover one or more of the ancillary services set out in Section B of Annex I. Authorisation shall in no case be granted solely for the provision of ancillary services. 2. An investment firm seeking authorisation to extend its business to additional investment services or activities or ancillary services not foreseen at the time of initial authorisation shall submit a request for extension of its authorisation. 3. The authorisation shall be valid for the entire Community and shall allow an investment firm to provide the services or perform the activities, for which it has been authorised, throughout the Community, either through the establishment of a branch or the free provision of services. Article 7 : Procedures for granting and refusing requests for authorisation 1. The competent authority shall not grant authorisation unless and until such time as it is fully satisfied that the applicant complies with all requirements under the provisions adopted pursuant to this Directive. 2. The investment firm shall provide all information, including a programme of operations setting out inter alia the types of business envisaged and the organisational structure, necessary to enable the competent authority to satisfy itself that the investment firm has established, at the time of initial authorisation, all the necessary arrangements to meet its obligations under the provisions of this Chapter. 3. An applicant shall be informed, within six months of the submission of a complete application, whether or not authorisation has been granted. 21 Article 8 : Withdrawal of authorisations The competent authority may withdraw the authorisation issued to an investment firm where such an investment firm: (a) does not make use of the authorisation within 12 months, expressly renounces the authorisation or has provided no investment services or performed no investment activity for the preceding six months, unless the Member State concerned has provided for authorisation to lapse in such cases; (b) has obtained the authorisation by making false statements or by any other irregular means; (c) no longer meets the conditions under which authorisation was granted, such as compliance with the conditions set out in Directive 93/6/EEC; (d) has seriously and systematically infringed the provisions adopted pursuant to this Directive governing the operating conditions for investment firms; (e) falls within any of the cases where national law, in respect of matters outside the scope of this Directive, provides for withdrawal. Article 9 : Persons who effectively direct the business 1. Member States shall require the persons who effectively direct the business of an investment firm to be of sufficiently good repute and sufficiently experienced as to ensure the sound and prudent management of the investment firm. Where the market operator that seeks authorisation to operate an MTF and the persons that effectively direct the business of the MTF are the same as those that effectively direct the business of the regulated market, those persons are deemed to comply with the requirements laid down in the first subparagraph. 2. Member States shall require the investment firm to notify the competent authority of any changes to its management, along with all information needed to assess whether the new staff appointed to manage the firm are of sufficiently good repute and sufficiently experienced. 3. The competent authority shall refuse authorisation if it is not satisfied that the persons who will effectively direct the business of the investment firm are of sufficiently good repute or sufficiently experienced, or if there are objective and demonstrable grounds for believing that proposed changes to the management of the firm pose a threat to its sound and prudent management. 4. Member States shall require that the management of investment firms is undertaken by at least two persons meeting the requirements laid down in paragraph 1. By way of derogation from the first subparagraph, Member States may grant authorisation to investment firms that are natural persons or to investment firms that are legal persons managed by a single natural person in accordance with their constitutive rules and national laws. Member States shall nevertheless require that alternative arrangements be in place which ensure the sound and prudent management of such investment firms. 22 Article 10 : Shareholders and members with qualifying holdings 1. The competent authorities shall not authorise the performance of investment services or activities by an investment firm until they have been informed of the identities of the shareholders or members, whether direct or indirect, natural or legal persons, that have qualifying holdings and the amounts of those holdings. The competent authorities shall refuse authorisation if, taking into account the need to ensure the sound and prudent management of an investment firm, they are not satisfied as to the suitability of the shareholders or members that have qualifying holdings. Where close links exist between the investment firm and other natural or legal persons, the competent authority shall grant authorisation only if those links do not prevent the effective exercise of the supervisory functions of the competent authority. 2. The competent authority shall refuse authorisation if the laws, regulations or administrative provisions of a third country governing one or more natural or legal persons with which the undertaking has close links, or difficulties involved in their enforcement, prevent the effective exercise of its supervisory functions. 3. Member States shall require any natural or legal person that proposes to acquire or sell, directly or indirectly, a qualifying holding in an investment firm, first to notify, in accordance with the second subparagraph, the competent authority of the size of the resulting holding. Such persons shall likewise be required to notify the competent authority if they propose to increase or reduce their qualifying holding, if in consequence the proportion of the voting rights or of the capital that they hold would reach or fall below or exceed 20%, 33% or 50% or the investment firm would become or cease to be their subsidiary. Without prejudice to paragraph 4, the competent authority shall have up to three months from the date of the notification of a proposed acquisition provided for in the first subparagraph to oppose such a plan if, in view of the need to ensure sound and prudent management of the investment firm, it is not satisfied as to the suitability of the persons referred to in the first subparagraph. If the competent authority does not oppose the plan, it may fix a deadline for its implementation. 4. If the acquirer of any holding referred to in paragraph 3 is an investment firm, a credit institution, an insurance undertaking or a UCITS management company authorised in another Member State, or the parent undertaking of an investment firm, credit institution, insurance undertaking or a UCITS management company authorised in another Member State, or a person controlling an investment firm, credit institution, insurance undertaking or a UCITS management company authorised in another Member State, and if, as a result of that acquisition, the undertaking would become the acquirer's subsidiary or come under his control, the assessment of the acquisition shall be subject to the prior consultation provided for in Article 60. 5. Member States shall require that, if an investment firm becomes aware of any acquisitions or disposals of holdings in its capital that cause holdings to exceed or fall below any of the thresholds referred to in the first subparagraph of paragraph 3, that investment firm is to inform the competent authority without delay. At least once a year, investment firms shall also inform the competent authority of the names of shareholders and members possessing qualifying holdings and the sizes of such holdings as shown, for example, by the information received at annual general meetings of shareholders and members or as a result of compliance with the regulations applicable to companies whose transferable securities are admitted to trading on a regulated market. 23 6. Member States shall require that, where the influence exercised by the persons referred to in the first subparagraph of paragraph 1 is likely to be prejudicial to the sound and prudent management of an investment firm, the competent authority take appropriate measures to put an end to that situation. Such measures may consist in applications for judicial orders and/or the imposition of sanctions against directors and those responsible for management, or suspension of the exercise of the voting rights attaching to the shares held by the shareholders or members in question. Similar measures shall be taken in respect of persons who fail to comply with the obligation to provide prior information in relation to the acquisition or increase of a qualifying holding. If a holding is acquired despite the opposition of the competent authorities, the Member States shall, regardless of any other sanctions to be adopted, provide either for exercise of the corresponding voting rights to be suspended, for the nullity of the votes cast or for the possibility of their annulment. Article 11 : Membership of an authorised Investor Compensation Scheme The competent authority shall verify that any entity seeking authorisation as an investment firm meets its obligations under Directive 97/9/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 3 March 1997 on investor-compensation schemes (20) at the time of authorisation. Article 12 : Initial capital endowment Member States shall ensure that the competent authorities do not grant authorisation unless the investment firm has sufficient initial capital in accordance with the requirements of Directive 93/6/EEC having regard to the nature of the investment service or activity in question. Pending the revision of Directive 93/6/EEC, the investment firms provided for in Article 67 shall be subject to the capital requirements laid down in that Article. Article 13 : Organisational requirements 1. The home Member State shall require that investment firms comply with the organisational requirements set out in paragraphs 2 to 8. Article 5 (Article 13(2) to (8) of Directive 2004/39/EC) General organisational requirements 1. Member States shall require investment firms to comply with the following requirements: (a) to establish, implement and maintain decision-making procedures and an organisational structure which clearly and in documented manner specifies reporting lines and allocates functions and responsibilities; (b) to ensure that their relevant persons are aware of the procedures which must be followed for the proper discharge of their responsibilities; (c) to establish, implement and maintain adequate internal control mechanisms designed to 24 secure compliance with decisions and procedures at all levels of the investment firm; (d) to employ personnel with the skills, knowledge and expertise necessary for the discharge of the responsibilities allocated to them; (e) to establish, implement and maintain effective internal reporting and communication of information at all relevant levels of the investment firm; (f) to maintain adequate and orderly records of their business and internal organisation; (g) to ensure that the performance of multiple functions by their relevant persons does not and is not likely to prevent those persons from discharging any particular function soundly, honestly, and professionally. Member States shall ensure that, for those purposes, investment firms take into account the nature, scale and complexity of the business of the firm, and the nature and range of investment services and activities undertaken in the course of that business. 2. Member States shall require investment firms to establish, implement and maintain systems and procedures that are adequate to safeguard the security, integrity and confidentiality of information, taking into account the nature of the information in question. 3. Member States shall require investment firms to establish, implement and maintain an adequate business continuity policy aimed at ensuring, in the case of an interruption to their systems and procedures, the preservation of essential data and functions, and the maintenance of investment services and activities, or, where that is not possible, the timely recovery of such data and functions and the timely resumption of their investment services and activities. 4. Member States shall require investment firms to establish, implement and maintain accounting policies and procedures that enable them, at the request of the competent authority, to deliver in a timely manner to the competent authority financial reports which reflect a true and fair view of their financial position and which comply with all applicable accounting standards and rules. 5. Member States shall require investment firms to monitor and, on a regular basis, to evaluate the adequacy and effectiveness of their systems, internal control mechanisms and arrangements established in accordance with paragraphs 1 to 4, and to take appropriate measures to address any deficiencies. 2. An investment firm shall establish adequate policies and procedures sufficient to ensure compliance of the firm including its managers, employees and tied agents with its obligations under the provisions of this Directive as well as appropriate rules governing personal transactions by such persons. Article 6 (Article 13(2) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Compliance 1. Member States shall ensure that investment firms establish, implement and maintain adequate policies and procedures designed to detect any risk of failure by the firm to comply with its obligations under Directive 2004/39/EC, as well as the associated risks, and put in place adequate measures and procedures designed to minimise such risk and to enable the competent authorities to exercise their powers effectively under that Directive. Member States shall ensure that, for those purposes, investment firms take into account the nature, scale and complexity of the business of the firm, and the nature and range of investment services and activities undertaken in the course of that business. 25 2. Member States shall require investment firms to establish and maintain a permanent and effective compliance function which operates independently and which has the following responsibilities: (a) to monitor and, on a regular basis, to assess the adequacy and effectiveness of the measures and procedures put in place in accordance with the first subparagraph of paragraph 1, and the actions taken to address any deficiencies in the firm's compliance with its obligations; (b) to advise and assist the relevant persons responsible for carrying out investment services and activities to comply with the firm's obligations under Directive 2004/39/EC. 3. In order to enable the compliance function to discharge its responsibilities properly and independently, Member States shall require investment firms to ensure that the following conditions are satisfied: (a) the compliance function must have the necessary authority, resources, expertise and access to all relevant information; (b) a compliance officer must be appointed and must be responsible for the compliance function and for any reporting as to compliance required by Article 9(2); (c) the relevant persons involved in the compliance function must not be involved in the performance of services or activities they monitor; (d) the method of determining the remuneration of the relevant persons involved in the compliance function must not compromise their objectivity and must not be likely to do so. However, an investment firm shall not be required to comply with point (c) or point (d) if it is able to demonstrate that in view of the nature, scale and complexity of its business, and the nature and range of investment services and activities, the requirement under that point is not proportionate and that its compliance function continues to be effective. Article 9 (Article 13(2) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Responsibility of senior management 1. Member States shall require investment firms, when allocating functions internally, to ensure that senior management, and, where appropriate, the supervisory function, are responsible for ensuring that the firm complies with its obligations under Directive 2004/39/EC. In particular, senior management and, where appropriate, the supervisory function shall be required to assess and periodically to review the effectiveness of the policies, arrangements and procedures put in place to comply with the obligations under Directive 2004/39/EC and to take appropriate measures to address any deficiencies. 2. Member States shall require investment firms to ensure that their senior management receive on a frequent basis, and at least annually, written reports on the matters covered by Articles 6, 7 and 8 indicating in particular whether the appropriate remedial measures have been taken in the event of any deficiencies. 3. Member States shall require investment firms to ensure that the supervisory function, if any, receives on a regular basis written reports on the same matters. 4. For the purposes of this Article, 'supervisory function' means the function within an investment firm responsible for the supervision of its senior management. 26 Article 10 (Article 13(2) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Complaints handling Member States shall require investment firms to establish, implement and maintain effective and transparent procedures for the reasonable and prompt handling of complaints received from retail clients or potential retail clients, and to keep a record of each complaint and the measures taken for its resolution. Article 11 (Article 13(2) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Meaning of personal transaction For the purposes of Article 12 and Article 25, personal transaction means a trade in a financial instrument effected by or on behalf of a relevant person, where at least one of the following criteria are met: (a) that relevant person is acting outside the scope of the activities he carries out in that capacity; (b) the trade is carried out for the account of any of the following persons: (i) the relevant person; (ii) any person with whom he has a family relationship, or with whom he has close links; (iii) a person whose relationship with the relevant person is such that the relevant person has a direct or indirect material interest in the outcome of the trade, other than a fee or commission for the execution of the trade. Article 12 (Article 13(2) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Personal transactions 1. Member States shall require investment firms to establish, implement and maintain adequate arrangements aimed at preventing the following activities in the case of any relevant person who is involved in activities that may give rise to a conflict of interest, or who has access to inside information within the meaning of Article 1(1) of Directive 2003/6/EC or to other confidential information relating to clients or transactions with or for clients by virtue of an activity carried out by him on behalf of the firm: (a) entering into a personal transaction which meets at least one of the following criteria: (i) that person is prohibited from entering into it under Directive 2003/6/EC; (ii) it involves the misuse or improper disclosure of that confidential information; (iii) it conflicts or is likely to conflict with an obligation of the investment firm under Directive 2004/39/EC; (b) advising or procuring, other than in the proper course of his employment or contract for 27 services, any other person to enter into a transaction in financial instruments which, if a personal transaction of the relevant person, would be covered by point (a) or Article 25(2)(a) or (b) or Article 47(3); (c) without prejudice to Article 3(a) of Directive 2003/6/EC, disclosing, other than in the normal course of his employment or contract for services, any information or opinion to any other person if the relevant person knows, or reasonably ought to know, that as a result of that disclosure that other person will or would be likely to take either of the following steps: (i) to enter into a transaction in financial instruments which, if a personal transaction of the relevant person, would be covered by point (a) or Article 25(2)(a) or (b) or Article 47(3); (ii) to advise or procure another person to enter into such a transaction. 2. The arrangements required under paragraph 1 must in particular be designed to ensure that: (a) each relevant person covered by paragraph 1 is aware of the restrictions on personal transactions, and of the measures established by the investment firm in connection with personal transactions and disclosure, in accordance with paragraph 1; (b) the firm is informed promptly of any personal transaction entered into by a relevant person, either by notification of that transaction or by other procedures enabling the firm to identify such transactions; In the case of outsourcing arrangements the investment firm must ensure that the firm to which the activity is outsourced maintains a record of personal transactions entered into by any relevant person and provides that information to the investment firm promptly on request. (c) a record is kept of the personal transaction notified to the firm or identified by it, including any authorisation or prohibition in connection with such a transaction. 3. Paragraphs 1 and 2 shall not apply to the following kinds of personal transaction: (a) personal transactions effected under a discretionary portfolio management service where there is no prior communication in connection with the transaction between the portfolio manager and the relevant person or other person for whose account the transaction is executed; (b) personal transactions in units in collective undertakings that comply with the conditions necessary to enjoy the rights conferred by Directive 85/611/EEC or are subject to supervision under the law of a Member State which requires an equivalent level of risk spreading in their assets, where the relevant person and any other person for whose account the transactions are effected are not involved in the management of that undertaking. 3. An investment firm shall maintain and operate effective organisational and administrative arrangements with a view to taking all reasonable steps designed to prevent conflicts of interest as defined in Article 18 from adversely affecting the interests of its clients. Article 25 (Article 13(3) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Additional organisational requirements where a firm produces and disseminates investment research 1. Member States shall require investment firms which produce, or arrange for the production of, investment research that is intended or likely to be subsequently disseminated to clients of the 28 firm or to the public, under their own responsibility or that of a member of their group, to ensure the implementation of all the measures set out in Article 22(3) in relation to the financial analysts involved in the production of the investment research and other relevant persons whose responsibilities or business interests may conflict with the interests of the persons to whom the investment research is disseminated. 2. Member States shall require investment firms covered by paragraph 1 to have in place arrangements designed to ensure that the following conditions are satisfied: (a) financial analysts and other relevant persons must not undertake personal transactions or trade, other than as market makers acting in good faith and in the ordinary course of market making or in the execution of an unsolicited client order, on behalf of any other person, including the investment firm, in financial instruments to which investment research relates, or in any related financial instruments, with knowledge of the likely timing or content of that investment research which is not publicly available or available to clients and cannot readily be inferred from information that is so available, until the recipients of the investment research have had a reasonable opportunity to act on it; (b) in circumstances not covered by point (a), financial analysts and any other relevant persons involved in the production of investment research must not undertake personal transactions in financial instruments to which the investment research relates, or in any related financial instruments, contrary to current recommendations, except in exceptional circumstances and with the prior approval of a member of the firm's legal or compliance function; (c) the investment firms themselves, financial analysts, and other relevant persons involved in the production of the investment research must not accept inducements from those with a material interest in the subject-matter of the investment research; (d) the investment firms themselves, financial analysts, and other relevant persons involved in the production of the investment research must not promise issuers favourable research coverage; (e) issuers, relevant persons other than financial analysts, and any other persons must not before the dissemination of investment research be permitted to review a draft of the investment research for the purpose of verifying the accuracy of factual statements made in that research, or for any other purpose other than verifying compliance with the firm's legal obligations, if the draft includes a recommendation or a target price. For the purposes of this paragraph, 'related financial instrument' means a financial instrument the price of which is closely affected by price movements in another financial instrument which is the subject of investment research, and includes a derivative on that other financial instrument. 3. Member States shall exempt investment firms which disseminate investment research produced by another person to the public or to clients from complying with paragraph 1 if the following criteria are met: (a) the person that produces the investment research is not a member of the group to which the investment firm belongs; (b) the investment firm does not substantially alter the recommendations within the investment research; (c) the investment firm does not present the investment research as having been produced by it; (d) the investment firm verifies that the producer of the research is subject to requirements equivalent to the requirements under this Directive in relation to the production of that research, or has established a policy setting such requirements. 29 4. An investment firm shall take reasonable steps to ensure continuity and regularity in the performance of investment services and activities. To this end the investment firm shall employ appropriate and proportionate systems, resources and procedures. 5. An investment firm shall ensure, when relying on a third party for the performance of operational functions which are critical for the provision of continuous and satisfactory service to clients and the performance of investment activities on a continuous and satisfactory basis, that it takes reasonable steps to avoid undue additional operational risk. Outsourcing of important operational functions may not be undertaken in such a way as to impair materially the quality of its internal control and the ability of the supervisor to monitor the firm's compliance with all obligations. Outsourcing Article 13 (Article 13(2) and first subparagraph of Article 13(5) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Meaning of critical and important operational functions 1. For the purposes of the first subparagraph of Article 13(5) of Directive 2004/39/EC, an operational function shall be regarded as critical or important if a defect or failure in its performance would materially impair the continuing compliance of an investment firm with the conditions and obligations of its authorisation or its other obligations under Directive 2004/39/EC, or its financial performance, or the soundness or the continuity of its investment services and activities. 2. Without prejudice to the status of any other function, the following functions shall not be considered as critical or important for the purposes of paragraph 1: (a) the provision to the firm of advisory services, and other services which do not form part of the investment business of the firm, including the provision of legal advice to the firm, the training of personnel of the firm, billing services and the security of the firm's premises and personnel; (b) the purchase of standardised services, including market information services and the provision of price feeds. Article 14 (Article 13(2) and first subparagraph of Article 13(5) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Conditions for outsourcing critical or important operational functions or investment services or activities 1. Member States shall ensure that, when investment firms outsource critical or important operational functions or any investment services or activities, the firms remain fully responsible for discharging all of their obligations under Directive 2004/39/EC and comply, in particular, with the following conditions: (a) the outsourcing must not result in the delegation by senior management of its responsibility; (b) the relationship and obligations of the investment firm towards its clients under the terms of Directive 2004/39/EC must not be altered; (c) the conditions with which the investment firm must comply in order to be authorised in accordance with Article 5 of Directive 2004/39/EC, and to remain so, must not be 30 undermined; (d) none of the other conditions subject to which the firm's authorisation was granted must be removed or modified. 2. Member States shall require investment firms to exercise due skill, care and diligence when entering into, managing or terminating any arrangement for the outsourcing to a service provider of critical or important operational functions or of any investment services or activities. Investment firms shall in particular take the necessary steps to ensure that the following conditions are satisfied: (a) the service provider must have the ability, capacity, and any authorisation required by law to perform the outsourced functions, services or activities reliably and professionally; (b) the service provider must carry out the outsourced services effectively, and to this end the firm must establish methods for assessing the standard of performance of the service provider; (c) the service provider must properly supervise the carrying out of the outsourced functions, and adequately manage the risks associated with the outsourcing; (d) appropriate action must be taken if it appears that the service provider may not be carrying out the functions effectively and in compliance with applicable laws and regulatory requirements; (e) the investment firm must retain the necessary expertise to supervise the outsourced functions effectively and manage the risks associated with the outsourcing and must supervise those functions and manage those risks; (f) the service provider must disclose to the investment firm any development that may have a material impact on its ability to carry out the outsourced functions effectively and in compliance with applicable laws and regulatory requirements; (g) the investment firm must be able to terminate the arrangement for outsourcing where necessary without detriment to the continuity and quality of its provision of services to clients; (h) the service provider must cooperate with the competent authorities of the investment firm in connection with the outsourced activities; (i) the investment firm, its auditors and the relevant competent authorities must have effective access to data related to the outsourced activities, as well as to the business premises of the service provider; and the competent authorities must be able to exercise those rights of access; (j) the service provider must protect any confidential information relating to the investment firm and its clients; (k) the investment firm and the service provider must establish, implement and maintain a contingency plan for disaster recovery and periodic testing of backup facilities, where that is necessary having regard to the function, service or activity that has been outsourced. 3. Member States shall require the respective rights and obligations of the investment firms and of the service provider to be clearly allocated and set out in a written agreement. 4. Member States shall provide that, where the investment firm and the service provider are members of the same group, the investment firm may, for the purposes of complying with this Article and Article 15, take into account the extent to which the firm controls the service provider or has the ability to influence its actions. 31 5. Member States shall require investment firms to make available on request to the competent authority all information necessary to enable the authority to supervise the compliance of the performance of the outsourced activities with the requirements of this Directive. Article 15 (Article 13(2) and first subparagraph of Article 13(5) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Service providers located in third countries 1. In addition to the requirements set out in Article 14, Member States shall require that, where an investment firm outsources the investment service of portfolio management provided to retail clients to a service provider located in a third country, that investment firm ensures that the following conditions are satisfied: (a) the service provider must be authorised or registered in its home country to provide that service and must be subject to prudential supervision; (b) there must be an appropriate cooperation agreement between the competent authority of the investment firm and the supervisory authority of the service provider. 2. Where one or both of those conditions mentioned in paragraph 1 are not satisfied, an investment firm may outsource investment services to a service provider located in a third country only if the firm gives prior notification to its competent authority about the outsourcing arrangement and the competent authority does not object to that arrangement within a reasonable time following receipt of that notification. 3. Without prejudice to paragraph 2, Member States shall publish or require competent authorities to publish a statement of policy in relation to outsourcing covered by paragraph 2. That statement shall set out examples of cases where the competent authority would not, or would be likely not to, object to an outsourcing under paragraph 2 where one or both of the conditions in points (a) and (b) of paragraph 1 are not met. It shall include a clear explanation as to why the competent authority considers that in such cases outsourcing would not impair the ability of investment firms to fulfil their obligations under Article 14. 4. Nothing in this article limits the obligations on investment firms to comply with the requirements in Article 14. 5. Competent authorities shall publish a list of the supervisory authorities in third countries with which they have cooperation agreements that are appropriate for the purposes of point (b) of paragraph 1. Article 7 (second subparagraph of Article 13(5) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Risk management 1. Member States shall require investment firms to take the following actions: (a) to establish, implement and maintain adequate risk management policies and procedures which identify the risks relating to the firm's activities, processes and systems, and where appropriate, set the level of risk tolerated by the firm; (b) to adopt effective arrangements, processes and mechanisms to manage the risks relating to the firm's activities, processes and systems, in light of that level of risk tolerance; (c) to monitor the following: 32 (i) the adequacy and effectiveness of the investment firm's risk management policies and procedures; (ii) the level of compliance by the investment firm and its relevant persons with the arrangements, processes and mechanisms adopted in accordance with point (b); (iii) the adequacy and effectiveness of measures taken to address any deficiencies in those policies, procedures, arrangements, processes and mechanisms, including failures by the relevant persons to comply with such arrangements, processes and mechanisms or follow such policies and procedures. 2. Member States shall require investment firms, where appropriate and proportionate in view of the nature, scale and complexity of their business and the nature and range of the investment services and activities undertaken in the course of that business, to establish and maintain a risk management function that operates independently and carries out the following tasks: (a) implementation of the policy and procedures referred to in paragraph 1; (b) provision of reports and advice to senior management in accordance with Article 9(2). Where an investment firm is not required under the first subparagraph to establish and maintain a risk management function that functions independently, it must nevertheless be able to demonstrate that the policies and procedures which it is has adopted in accordance with paragraph 1 satisfy the requirements of that paragraph and are consistently effective. Article 8 (second subparagraph of Article 13(5) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Internal audit Member States shall require investment firms, where appropriate and proportionate in view of the nature, scale and complexity of their business and the nature and range of investment services and activities undertaken in the course of that business, to establish and maintain an internal audit function which is separate and independent from the other functions and activities of the investment firm and which has the following responsibilities: (a) to establish, implement and maintain an audit plan to examine and evaluate the adequacy and effectiveness of the investment firm's systems, internal control mechanisms and arrangements; (b) to issue recommendations based on the result of work carried out in accordance with point (a); (c) to verify compliance with those recommendations; (d) to report in relation to internal audit matters in accordance with Article 9(2). 6. An investment firm shall arrange for records to be kept of all services and transactions undertaken by it which shall be sufficient to enable the competent authority to monitor compliance with the requirements under this Directive, and in particular to ascertain that the investment firm has complied with all obligations with respect to clients or potential clients. Record-keeping Article 51 (Article 13(6) of Directive 2004/39(EC) 33 Retention of records 1. Member States shall require investment firms to retain all the records required under Directive 2004/39/EC and its implementing measures for a period of at least five years. Additionally, records which set out the respective rights and obligations of the investment firm and the client under an agreement to provide services, or the terms on which the firm provides services to the client, shall be retained for at least the duration of the relationship with the client. However, competent authorities may, in exceptional circumstances, require investment firms to retain any or all of those records for such longer period as is justified by the nature of the instrument or transaction, if that is necessary to enable the authority to exercise its supervisory functions under Directive 2004/39/EC. Following the termination of the authorisation of an investment firm, Member States or competent authorities may require the firm to retain records for the outstanding term of the five year period required under the first subparagraph. 2. The records shall be retained in a medium that allows the storage of information in a way accessible for future reference by the competent authority, and in such a form and manner that the following conditions are met: (a) the competent authority must be able to access them readily and to reconstitute each key stage of the processing of each transaction; (b) it must be possible for any corrections or other amendments, and the contents of the records prior to such corrections or amendments, to be easily ascertained; (c) it must not be possible for the records otherwise to be manipulated or altered. 3. The competent authority of each Member State shall draw up and maintain a list of the minimum records investment firms are required to keep under Directive 2004/39/EC and its implementing measures. 4. Record-keeping obligations under Directive 2004/39/EC and in this Directive are without prejudice to the right of Member States to impose obligations on investment firms relating to the recording of telephone conversations or electronic communications involving client orders. 5. Before 31 December 2009 the Commission shall, in the light of discussions with the Committee of European Securities Regulators, report to the European Parliament and the Council on the continued appropriateness of the provisions of paragraph 4. Article 23 (Article 13(6) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Record of services or activities giving rise to detrimental conflict of interest Member States shall require investment firms to keep and regularly to update a record of the kinds of investment or ancillary service or investment activity carried out by or on behalf of the firm in which a conflict of interest entailing a material risk of damage to the interests of one or more clients has arisen or, in the case of an ongoing service or activity, may arise. Regulation 7 (Article 13(6) of Directive 2004/39/EC) 34 Record-keeping of client orders and decisions to deal An investment firm shall, in relation to every order received from a client, and in relation to every decision to deal taken in providing the service of portfolio management, immediately make a record of the following details, to the extent they are applicable to the order or decision to deal in question: (a) the name or other designation of the client; (b) the name or other designation of any relevant person acting on behalf of the client; (c) the details specified in points 4, 6 and 16 to 19, of Table 1 of Annex I; (d) the nature of the order if other than buy or sell; (e) the type of the order; (f) any other details, conditions and particular instructions from the client that specify how the order must be carried out; (g) the date and exact time of the receipt of the order, or of the decision to deal, by the investment firm. Regulation 8 (Article 13(6) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Record-keeping of transactions 1. Immediately after executing a client order, or, in the case of investment firms that transmit orders to another person for execution, immediately after receiving confirmation that an order has been executed, investment firms shall record the following details of the transaction in question: (a) the name or other designation of the client; (b) the details specified in points 2, 3, 4, 6 and 16 to 21, of Table 1 of Annex I; (c) the total price, being the product of the unit price and the quantity; (d) the nature of the transaction if other than buy or sell; (e) the natural person who executed the transaction or who is responsible for the execution. 2. If an investment firm transmits an order to another person for execution, the investment firm shall immediately record the following details after making the transmission: (a) the name or other designation of the client whose order has been transmitted; (b) the name or other designation of the person to whom the order was transmitted; (c) the terms of the order transmitted; (d) the date and exact time of transmission. 7. An investment firm shall, when holding financial instruments belonging to clients, make adequate arrangements so as to safeguard clients' ownership rights, especially in the event of the investment firm's insolvency, and to prevent the use of a client's instruments 35 on own account except with the client's express consent. 8. An investment firm shall, when holding funds belonging to clients, make adequate arrangements to safeguard the clients' rights and, except in the case of credit institutions, prevent the use of client funds for its own account. Safeguarding of client assets Article 16 (Article 13(7) and (8) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Safeguarding of client financial instruments and funds 1. Member States shall require that, for the purposes of safeguarding clients' rights in relation to financial instruments and funds belonging to them, investment firms comply with the following requirements: (a) they must keep such records and accounts as are necessary to enable them at any time and without delay to distinguish assets held for one client from assets held for any other client, and from their own assets; (b) they must maintain their records and accounts in a way that ensures their accuracy, and in particular their correspondence to the financial instruments and funds held for clients; (c) they must conduct, on a regular basis, reconciliations between their internal accounts and records and those of any third parties by whom those assets are held; (d) they must take the necessary steps to ensure that any client financial instruments deposited with a third party, in accordance with Article 17, are identifiable separately from the financial instruments belonging to the investment firm and from financial instruments belonging to that third party, by means of differently titled accounts on the books of the third party or other equivalent measures that achieve the same level of protection; (e) they must take the necessary steps to ensure that client funds deposited, in accordance with Article 18, in a central bank, a credit institution or a bank authorised in a third country or a qualifying money market fund are held in an account or accounts identified separately from any accounts used to hold funds belonging to the investment firm; (f) they must introduce adequate organisational arrangements to minimise the risk of the loss or diminution of client assets, or of rights in connection with those assets, as a result of misuse of the assets, fraud, poor administration, inadequate record-keeping or negligence. 2. If, for reasons of the applicable law, including in particular the law relating to property or insolvency, the arrangements made by investment firms in compliance with paragraph 1 to safeguard clients' rights are not sufficient to satisfy the requirements of Article 13(7) and (8) of Directive 2004/39/EC, Member States shall prescribe the measures that investment firms must take in order to comply with those obligations. 3. If the applicable law of the jurisdiction in which the client funds or financial instruments are held prevents investment firms from complying with points (d) or (e) of paragraph 1, Member States shall prescribe requirements which have an equivalent effect in terms of safeguarding clients' rights. Article 17 (Article 13(7) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Depositing client financial instruments 36 1. Member States shall permit investment firms to deposit financial instruments held by them on behalf of their clients into an account or accounts opened with a third party provided that the firms exercise all due skill, care and diligence in the selection, appointment and periodic review of the third party and of the arrangements for the holding and safekeeping of those financial instruments. In particular, Member States shall require investment firms to take into account the expertise and market reputation of the third party as well as any legal requirements or market practices related to the holding of those financial instruments that could adversely affect clients' rights. 2. Member States shall ensure that, if the safekeeping of financial instruments for the account of another person is subject to specific regulation and supervision in a jurisdiction where an investment firm proposes to deposit client financial instruments with a third party, the investment firm does not deposit those financial instruments in that jurisdiction with a third party which is not subject to such regulation and supervision. 3. Member States shall ensure that investment firms do not deposit financial instruments held on behalf of clients with a third party in a third country that does not regulate the holding and safekeeping of financial instruments for the account of another person unless one of the following conditions is met: (a) the nature of the financial instruments or of the investment services connected with those instruments requires them to be deposited with a third party in that third country; (b) where the financial instruments are held on behalf of a professional client, that client requests the firm in writing to deposit them with a third party in that third country. Article 18 (Article 13(8) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Depositing client funds 1. Member States shall require investment firms, on receiving any client funds, promptly to place those funds into one or more accounts opened with any of the following: (a) a central bank; (b) a credit institution authorised in accordance with Directive 2000/12/EC; (c) a bank authorised in a third country; (d) a qualifying money market fund. The first subparagraph shall not apply to a credit institution authorised under Directive 2006/48/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 14 June 2006 relating to the taking up and pursuit of the business of credit institutions (recast) (10) 0 in relation to deposits within the meaning of that Directive held by that institution. 2. For the purposes of point (d) of paragraph 1, and of Article 16(1)(e), a 'qualifying money market fund' means a collective investment undertaking authorised under Directive 85/611/EEC, or which is subject to supervision and, if applicable, authorised by an authority under the national law of a Member State, and which satisfies the following conditions: (a) its primary investment objective must be to maintain the net asset value of the undertaking either constant at par (net of earnings), or at the value of the investors' initial capital plus earnings; (b) it must, with a view to achieving that primary investment objective, invest exclusively in high quality money market instruments with a maturity or residual maturity of no more than 397 days, or 37 regular yield adjustments consistent with such a maturity, and with a weighted average maturity of 60 days. It may also achieve this objective by investing on an ancillary basis in deposits with credit institutions; (c) it must provide liquidity through same day or next day settlement. For the purposes of point (b), a money market instrument shall be considered to be of high quality if it has been awarded the highest available credit rating by each competent rating agency which has rated that instrument. An instrument that is not rated by any competent rating agency shall not be considered to be of high quality. For the purposes of the second subparagraph, a rating agency shall be considered to be competent if it issues credit ratings in respect of money market funds regularly and on a professional basis and is an eligible ECAI within the meaning of Article 81(1) of Directive 2006/48/EC. 3. Member States shall require that, where investment firms do not deposit client funds with a central bank, they exercise all due skill, care and diligence in the selection, appointment and periodic review of the credit institution, bank or money market fund where the funds are placed and the arrangements for the holding of those funds. Member States shall ensure, in particular, that investment firms take into account the expertise and market reputation of such institutions or money market funds with a view to ensuring the protection of clients' rights, as well as any legal or regulatory requirements or market practices related to the holding of client funds that could adversely affect clients' rights. Member States shall ensure that clients have the right to oppose the placement of their funds in a qualifying money market fund. Article 19 (Article 13(7) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Use of client financial instruments 1. Member States shall not allow investment firms to enter into arrangements for securities financing transactions in respect of financial instruments held by them on behalf of a client, or otherwise use such financial instruments for their own account or the account of another client of the firm, unless the following conditions are met: (a) the client must have given his prior express consent to the use of the instruments on specified terms, as evidenced, in the case of a retail client, by his signature or equivalent alternative mechanism; (b) the use of that client's financial instruments must be restricted to the specified terms to which the client consents. 2. Member States may not allow investment firms to enter into arrangements for securities financing transactions in respect of financial instruments which are held on behalf of a client in an omnibus account maintained by a third party, or otherwise use financial instruments held in such an account for their own account or for the account of another client unless, in addition to the conditions set out in paragraph 1, at least one of the following conditions is met: (a) each client whose financial instruments are held together in an omnibus account must have given prior express consent in accordance with point (a) of paragraph 1; (b) the investment firm must have in place systems and controls which ensure that only financial instruments belonging to clients who have given prior express consent in accordance with point (a) of paragraph 1 are so used. 38 The records of the investment firm shall include details of the client on whose instructions the use of the financial instruments has been effected, as well as the number of financial instruments used belonging to each client who has given his consent, so as to enable the correct allocation of any loss. Article 20 (Article 13(7) and (8) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Reports by external auditors Member States shall require investment firms to ensure that their external auditors report at least annually to the competent authority of the home Member State of the firm on the adequacy of the firm's arrangements under Articles 13(7) and (8) of Directive 2004/39/EC and this Section. 9. In the case of branches of investment firms, the competent authority of the Member State in which the branch is located shall, without prejudice to the possibility of the competent authority of the home Member State of the investment firm to have direct access to those records, enforce the obligation laid down in paragraph 6 with regard to transactions undertaken by the branch. 10. In order to take account of technical developments on financial markets and to ensure the uniform application of paragraphs 2 to 9, the Commission shall adopt, in accordance with the procedure referred to in Article 64(2), implementing measures which specify the concrete organisational requirements to be imposed on investment firms performing different investment services and/or activities and ancillary services or combinations thereof. Article 14 : Trading process and finalisation of transaction in an MTF 1. Member States shall require that investment firms or market operators operating an MTF, in addition to meeting the requirements laid down in Article 13, establish transparent and non-discretionary rules and procedures for fair and orderly trading and establish objective criteria for the efficient execution of orders. 2. Member States shall require that investment firms or market operators operating an MTF establish transparent rules regarding the criteria for determining the financial instruments that can be traded under its systems. Member States shall require that, where applicable, investment firms or market operators operating an MTF provide, or are satisfied that there is access to, sufficient publicly available information to enable its users to form an investment judgement, taking into account both the nature of the users and the types of instruments traded. 3. Member States shall ensure that Articles 19, 21 and 22 are not applicable to the transactions concluded under the rules governing an MTF between its members or participants or between the MTF and its members or participants in relation to the use of the MTF. However, the members of or participants in the MTF shall comply with the obligations provided for in Articles 19, 21 and 22 with respect to their clients when, acting on behalf of their clients, they execute their orders through the systems of an MTF. 4. Member States shall require that investment firms or market operators operating an MTF establish and maintain transparent rules, based on objective criteria, governing access to its facility. These rules shall comply with the conditions established in Article 42(3). 5. Member States shall require that investment firms or market operators operating an MTF clearly inform its users of their respective responsibilities for the settlement of the transactions executed in that facility. Member States shall require that investment firms or 39 market operators operating an MTF have put in place the necessary arrangements to facilitate the efficient settlement of the transactions concluded under the systems of the MTF. 6. Where a transferable security, which has been admitted to trading on a regulated market, is also traded on an MTF without the consent of the issuer, the issuer shall not be subject to any obligation relating to initial, ongoing or ad hoc financial disclosure with regard to that MTF. 7. Member States shall require that any investment firm or market operator operating an MTF comply immediately with any instruction from its competent authority pursuant to Article 50(1) to suspend or remove a financial instrument from trading. Article 15 : Relations with third countries 1. Member States shall inform the Commission of any general difficulties which their investment firms encounter in establishing themselves or providing investment services and/or performing investment activities in any third country. 2. Whenever it appears to the Commission, on the basis of information submitted to it under paragraph 1, that a third country does not grant Community investment firms effective market access comparable to that granted by the Community to investment firms from that third country, the Commission may submit proposals to the Council for an appropriate mandate for negotiation with a view to obtaining comparable competitive opportunities for Community investment firms. The Council shall act by a qualified majority. 3. Whenever it appears to the Commission, on the basis of information submitted to it under paragraph 1, that Community investment firms in a third country are not granted national treatment affording the same competitive opportunities as are available to domestic investment firms and that the conditions of effective market access are not fulfilled, the Commission may initiate negotiations in order to remedy the situation. In the circumstances referred to in the first subparagraph, the Commission may decide, in accordance with the procedure referred to in Article 64(2), at any time and in addition to the initiation of negotiations, that the competent authorities of the Member States must limit or suspend their decisions regarding requests pending or future requests for authorisation and the acquisition of holdings by direct or indirect parent undertakings governed by the law of the third country in question. Such limitations or suspensions may not be applied to the setting-up of subsidiaries by investment firms duly authorised in the Community or by their subsidiaries, or to the acquisition of holdings in Community investment firms by such firms or subsidiaries. The duration of such measures may not exceed three months. Before the end of the three-month period referred to in the second subparagraph and in the light of the results of the negotiations, the Commission may decide, in accordance with the procedure referred to in Article 64(2), to extend these measures. 4. Whenever it appears to the Commission that one of the situations referred to in paragraphs 2 and 3 obtains, the Member States shall inform it at its request: (a) of any application for the authorisation of any firm which is the direct or indirect subsidiary of a parent undertaking governed by the law of the third country in question; (b) whenever they are informed in accordance with Article 10(3) that such a parent undertaking proposes to acquire a holding in a Community investment firm, in consequence of which the latter would become its subsidiary. 40 That obligation to provide information shall lapse whenever agreement is reached with the third country concerned or when the measures referred to in the second and third subparagraphs of paragraph 3 cease to apply. 5. Measures taken under this Article shall comply with the Community's obligations under any international agreements, bilateral or multilateral, governing the taking-up or pursuit of the business of investment firms. Chapter II : OPERATING CONDITIONS FOR INVESTMENT FIRMS Section 1 : General provisions Article 16 : Regular review of conditions for initial authorisation 1. Member States shall require that an investment firm authorised in their territory comply at all times with the conditions for initial authorisation established in Chapter I of this Title. 2. Member States shall require competent authorities to establish the appropriate methods to monitor that investment firms comply with their obligation under paragraph 1. They shall require investment firms to notify the competent authorities of any material changes to the conditions for initial authorisation. 3. In the case of investment firms which provide only investment advice, Member States may allow the competent authority to delegate administrative, preparatory or ancillary tasks related to the review of the conditions for initial authorisation, in accordance with the conditions laid down in Article 48(2). Article 17 - General obligation in respect of on-going supervision 1. Member States shall ensure that the competent authorities monitor the activities of investment firms so as to assess compliance with the operating conditions provided for in this Directive. Member States shall ensure that the appropriate measures are in place to enable the competent authorities to obtain the information needed to assess the compliance of investment firms with those obligations. 2. In the case of investment firms which provide only investment advice, Member States may allow the competent authority to delegate administrative, preparatory or ancillary tasks related to the regular monitoring of operational requirements, in accordance with the conditions laid down in Article 48(2). Article 18 : Conflicts of interest 1. Member States shall require investment firms to take all reasonable steps to identify conflicts of interest between themselves, including their managers, employees and tied agents, or any person directly or indirectly linked to them by control and their clients or between one client and another that arise in the course of providing any investment and ancillary services, or combinations thereof. 2. Where organisational or administrative arrangements made by the investment firm in accordance with Article 13(3) to manage conflicts of interest are not sufficient to ensure, with reasonable confidence, that risks of damage to client interests will be prevented, the investment firm shall clearly disclose the general nature and/or sources of conflicts of interest to the client before undertaking business on its behalf. 41 3. In order to take account of technical developments on financial markets and to ensure uniform application of paragraphs 1 and 2, the Commission shall adopt, in accordance with the procedure referred to in Article 64(2), implementing measures to: (a) define the steps that investment firms might reasonably be expected to take to identify, prevent, manage and/or disclose conflicts of interest when providing various investment and ancillary services and combinations thereof; (b) establish appropriate criteria for determining the types of conflict of interest whose existence may damage the interests of the clients or potential clients of the investment firm. Conflicts of interest Article 21 (Articles 13(3) and 18 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Conflicts of interest potentially detrimental to a client Member States shall ensure that, for the purposes of identifying the types of conflict of interest that arise in the course of providing investment and ancillary services or a combination thereof and whose existence may damage the interests of a client, investment firms take into account, by way of minimum criteria, the question of whether the investment firm or a relevant person, or a person directly or indirectly linked by control to the firm, is in any of the following situations, whether as a result of providing investment or ancillary services or investment activities or otherwise: (a) the firm or that person is likely to make a financial gain, or avoid a financial loss, at the expense of the client; (b) the firm or that person has an interest in the outcome of a service provided to the client or of a transaction carried out on behalf of the client, which is distinct from the client's interest in that outcome; (c) the firm or that person has a financial or other incentive to favour the interest of another client or group of clients over the interests of the client; (d) the firm or that person carries on the same business as the client; (e) the firm or that person receives or will receive from a person other than the client an inducement in relation to a service provided to the client, in the form of monies, goods or services, other than the standard commission or fee for that service. Article 22 (Articles 13(3) and 18(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Conflicts of interest policy 1. Member States shall require investment firms to establish, implement and maintain an effective conflicts of interest policy set out in writing and appropriate to the size and organisation of the firm and the nature, scale and complexity of its business. Where the firm is a member of a group, the policy must also take into account any circumstances, of which the firm is or should be aware, which may give rise to a conflict of interest arising as a result of the structure and business activities of other members of the group. 2. The conflicts of interest policy established in accordance with paragraph 1 shall include the 42 following content: (a) it must identify, with reference to the specific investment services and activities and ancillary services carried out by or on behalf of the investment firm, the circumstances which constitute or may give rise to a conflict of interest entailing a material risk of damage to the interests of one or more clients; (b) it must specify procedures to be followed and measures to be adopted in order to manage such conflicts. 3. Member States shall ensure that the procedures and measures provided for in paragraph 2(b) are designed to ensure that relevant persons engaged in different business activities involving a conflict of interest of the kind specified in paragraph 2(a) carry on those activities at a level of independence appropriate to the size and activities of the investment firm and of the group to which it belongs, and to the materiality of the risk of damage to the interests of clients. For the purposes of paragraph 2(b), the procedures to be followed and measures to be adopted shall include such of the following as are necessary and appropriate for the firm to ensure the requisite degree of independence: (a) effective procedures to prevent or control the exchange of information between relevant persons engaged in activities involving a risk of a conflict of interest where the exchange of that information may harm the interests of one or more clients; (b) the separate supervision of relevant persons whose principal functions involve carrying out activities on behalf of, or providing services to, clients whose interests may conflict, or who otherwise represent different interests that may conflict, including those of the firm; (c) the removal of any direct link between the remuneration of relevant persons principally engaged in one activity and the remuneration of, or revenues generated by, different relevant persons principally engaged in another activity, where a conflict of interest may arise in relation to those activities; (d) measures to prevent or limit any person from exercising inappropriate influence over the way in which a relevant person carries out investment or ancillary services or activities; (e) measures to prevent or control the simultaneous or sequential involvement of a relevant person in separate investment or ancillary services or activities where such involvement may impair the proper management of conflicts of interest. If the adoption or the practice of one or more of those measures and procedures does not ensure the requisite degree of independence, Member States shall require investment firms to adopt such alternative or additional measures and procedures as are necessary and appropriate for those purposes. 4. Member States shall ensure that disclosure to clients, pursuant to Article 18(2) of Directive 2004/39/EC, is made in a durable medium and includes sufficient detail, taking into account the nature of the client, to enable that client to take an informed decision with respect to the investment or ancillary service in the context of which the conflict of interest arises. Section 2 : Provisions to ensure investor protection Article 19 : Conduct of business obligations when providing investment services to clients 1. Member States shall require that, when providing investment services and/or, where appropriate, ancillary services to clients, an investment firm act honestly, fairly and professionally in accordance with the best interests of its clients and comply, in particular, 43 with the principles set out in paragraphs 2 to 8. Inducements Article 26 (Article 19(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Inducements Member States shall ensure that investment firms are not regarded as acting honestly, fairly and professionally in accordance with the best interests of a client if, in relation to the provision of an investment or ancillary service to the client, they pay or are paid any fee or commission, or provide or are provided with any non-monetary benefit, other than the following: (a) a fee, commission or non-monetary benefit paid or provided to or by the client or a person on behalf of the client; (b) a fee, commission or non-monetary benefit paid or provided to or by a third party or a person acting on behalf of a third party, where the following conditions are satisfied: (i) the existence, nature and amount of the fee, commission or benefit, or, where the amount cannot be ascertained, the method of calculating that amount, must be clearly disclosed to the client, in a manner that is comprehensive, accurate and understandable, prior to the provision of the relevant investment or ancillary service; (ii) the payment of the fee or commission, or the provision of the non-monetary benefit must be designed to enhance the quality of the relevant service to the client and not impair compliance with the firm's duty to act in the best interests of the client; (c) proper fees which enable or are necessary for the provision of investment services, such as custody costs, settlement and exchange fees, regulatory levies or legal fees, and which, by their nature, cannot give rise to conflicts with the firm's duties to act honestly, fairly and professionally in accordance with the best interests of its clients. Member States shall permit an investment firm, for the purposes of point (b)(i), to disclose the essential terms of the arrangements relating to the fee, commission or non-monetary benefit in summary form, provided that it undertakes to disclose further details at the request of the client and provided that it honours that undertaking. 2. All information, including marketing communications, addressed by the investment firm to clients or potential clients shall be fair, clear and not misleading. Marketing communications shall be clearly identifiable as such. Article 24 (Article 19(2) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Investment research 1. For the purposes of Article 25, 'investment research' means research or other information recommending or suggesting an investment strategy, explicitly or implicitly, concerning one or several financial instruments or the issuers of financial instruments, including any opinion as to the present or future value or price of such instruments, intended for distribution channels or for the public, and in relation to which the following conditions are met: (a) it is labelled or described as investment research or in similar terms, or is otherwise presented as an objective or independent explanation of the matters contained in the recommendation; (b) if the recommendation in question were made by an investment firm to a client, it would not 44 constitute the provision of investment advice for the purposes of Directive 2004/39/EC. 2. A recommendation of the type covered by Article 1(3) of Directive 2003/125/EC but relating to financial instruments as defined in Directive 2004/39/EC that does not meet the conditions set out in paragraph 1 shall be treated as a marketing communication for the purposes of Directive 2004/39/EC and Member States shall require any investment firm that produces or disseminates the recommendation to ensure that it is clearly identified as such. Additionally, Member States shall require those firms to ensure that any such recommendation contains a clear and prominent statement that (or, in the case of an oral recommendation, to the effect that) it has not been prepared in accordance with legal requirements designed to promote the independence of investment research, and that it is not subject to any prohibition on dealing ahead of the dissemination of investment research. Information to clients and potential clients Article 27 (Article 19(2) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Conditions with which information must comply in order to be fair, clear and not misleading 1. Member States shall require investment firms to ensure that all information they address to, or disseminate in such a way that it is likely to be received by, retail clients or potential retail clients, including marketing communications, satisfies the conditions laid down in paragraphs 2 to 8. 2. The information referred to in paragraph 1 shall include the name of the investment firm. It shall be accurate and in particular shall not emphasise any potential benefits of an investment service or financial instrument without also giving a fair and prominent indication of any relevant risks. It shall be sufficient for, and presented in a way that is likely to be understood by, the average member of the group to whom it is directed, or by whom it is likely to be received. It shall not disguise, diminish or obscure important items, statements or warnings. 3. Where the information compares investment or ancillary services, financial instruments, or persons providing investment or ancillary services, the following conditions shall be satisfied: (a) the comparison must be meaningful and presented in a fair and balanced way; (b) the sources of the information used for the comparison must be specified; (c) the key facts and assumptions used to make the comparison must be included. 4. Where the information contains an indication of past performance of a financial instrument, a financial index or an investment service, the following conditions shall be satisfied: (a) that indication must not be the most prominent feature of the communication; (b) the information must include appropriate performance information which covers the immediately preceding 5 years, or the whole period for which the financial instrument has been offered, the financial index has been established, or the investment service has been provided if less than five years, or such longer period as the firm may decide, and in every case that performance information must be based on complete 12-month periods; (c) the reference period and the source of information must be clearly stated; 45 (d) the information must contain a prominent warning that the figures refer to the past and that past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results; (e) where the indication relies on figures denominated in a currency other than that of the Member State in which the retail client or potential retail client is resident, the currency must be clearly stated, together with a warning that the return may increase or decrease as a result of currency fluctuations; (f) where the indication is based on gross performance, the effect of commissions, fees or other charges must be disclosed. 5. Where the information includes or refers to simulated past performance, it must relate to a financial instrument or a financial index, and the following conditions shall be satisfied: (a) the simulated past performance must be based on the actual past performance of one or more financial instruments or financial indices which are the same as, or underlie, the financial instrument concerned; (b) in respect of the actual past performance referred to in point (a), the conditions set out in points (a) to (c), (e) and (f) of paragraph 4 must be complied with; (c) the information must contain a prominent warning that the figures refer to simulated past performance and that past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance. 6. Where the information contains information on future performance, the following conditions shall be satisfied: (a) the information must not be based on or refer to simulated past performance; (b) it must be based on reasonable assumptions supported by objective data; (c) where the information is based on gross performance, the effect of commissions, fees or other charges must be disclosed; (d) it must contain a prominent warning that such forecasts are not a reliable indicator of future performance. 7. Where the information refers to a particular tax treatment, it shall prominently state that the tax treatment depends on the individual circumstances of each client and may be subject to change in the future. 8. The information shall not use the name of any competent authority in such a way that would indicate or suggest endorsement or approval by that authority of the products or services of the investment firm. 3. Appropriate information shall be provided in a comprehensible form to clients or potential clients about: - the investment firm and its services, Article 30 (first indent of Article 19(3) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Information about the investment firm and its services for retail clients and potential retail clients 1. Member States shall require investment firms to provide retail clients or potential retail clients with the following general information, where relevant: 46 (a) the name and address of the investment firm, and the contact details necessary to enable clients to communicate effectively with the firm; (b) the languages in which the client may communicate with the investment firm, and receive documents and other information from the firm; (c) the methods of communication to be used between the investment firm and the client including, where relevant, those for the sending and reception of orders; (d) a statement of the fact that the investment firm is authorised and the name and contact address of the competent authority that has authorised it; (e) where the investment firm is acting through a tied agent, a statement of this fact specifying the Member State in which that agent is registered; (f) the nature, frequency and timing of the reports on the performance of the service to be provided by the investment firm to the client in accordance with Article 19(8) of Directive 2004/39/EC; (g) if the investment firm holds client financial instruments or client funds, a summary description of the steps which it takes to ensure their protection, including summary details of any relevant investor compensation or deposit guarantee scheme which applies to the firm by virtue of its activities in a Member State; (h) a description, which may be provided in summary form, of the conflicts of interest policy maintained by the firm in accordance with Article 22; (i) at any time that the client requests it, further details of that conflicts of interest policy in a durable medium or by means of a website (where that does not constitute a durable medium) provided that the conditions specified in Article 3(2) are satisfied. 2. Member States shall ensure that, when providing the service of portfolio management, investment firms establish an appropriate method of evaluation and comparison such as a meaningful benchmark, based on the investment objectives of the client and the types of financial instruments included in the client portfolio, so as to enable the client for whom the service is provided to assess the firm's performance. 3. Member States shall require that where investment firms propose to provide portfolio management services to a retail client or potential retail client, they provide the client, in addition to the information required under paragraph 1, with such of the following information as is applicable: (a) information on the method and frequency of valuation of the financial instruments in the client portfolio; (b) details of any delegation of the discretionary management of all or part of the financial instruments or funds in the client portfolio; (c) a specification of any benchmark against which the performance of the client portfolio will be compared; (d) the types of financial instrument that may be included in the client portfolio and types of transaction that may be carried out in such instruments, including any limits; (e) the management objectives, the level of risk to be reflected in the manager's exercise of discretion, and any specific constraints on that discretion. Article 32 (first indent of Article 19(3) of Directive 2004/39/EC) 47 Information requirements concerning safeguarding of client financial instruments or client funds 1. Member States shall ensure that, where investment firms hold financial instruments or funds belonging to retail clients, they provide those retail clients or potential retail clients with such of the information specified in paragraphs 2 to 7 as is relevant. 2. The investment firm shall inform the retail client or potential retail client where the financial instruments or funds of that client may be held by a third party on behalf of the investment firm and of the responsibility of the investment firm under the applicable national law for any acts or omissions of the third party and the consequences for the client of the insolvency of the third party. 3. Where financial instruments of the retail client or potential retail client may, if permitted by national law, be held in an omnibus account by a third party, the investment firm shall inform the client of this fact and shall provide a prominent warning of the resulting risks. 4. The investment firm shall inform the retail client or potential retail client where it is not possible under national law for client financial instruments held with a third party to be separately identifiable from the proprietary financial instruments of that third party or of the investment firm and shall provide a prominent warning of the resulting risks. 5. The investment firm shall inform the client or potential client where accounts that contain financial instruments or funds belonging to that client or potential client are or will be subject to the law of a jurisdiction other than that of a Member State and shall indicate that the rights of the client or potential client relating to those financial instruments or funds may differ accordingly. 6. An investment firm shall inform the client about the existence and the terms of any security interest or lien which the firm has or may have over the client's financial instruments or funds, or any right of set-off it holds in relation to those instruments or funds. Where applicable, it shall also inform the client of the fact that a depository may have a security interest or lien over, or right of set-off in relation to those instruments or funds. 7. An investment firm, before entering into securities financing transactions in relation to financial instruments held by it on behalf of a retail client, or before otherwise using such financial instruments for its own account or the account of another client, shall in good time before the use of those instruments provide the retail client, in a durable medium, with clear, full and accurate information on the obligations and responsibilities of the investment firm with respect to the use of those financial instruments, including the terms for their restitution, and on the risks involved. - financial instruments and proposed investment strategies; this should include appropriate guidance on and warnings of the risks associated with investments in those instruments or in respect of particular investment strategies, Article 31 (second indent of Article 19(3) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Information about financial instruments 1. Member States shall require investment firms to provide clients or potential clients with a general description of the nature and risks of financial instruments, taking into account, in particular, the client's categorisation as either a retail client or a professional client. That description must explain the nature of the specific type of instrument concerned, as well as the risks particular to that specific type of instrument in sufficient detail to enable the client to take investment decisions on an informed basis. 2. The description of risks shall include, where relevant to the specific type of instrument concerned and the status and level of knowledge of the client, the following elements: 48 (a) the risks associated with that type of financial instrument including an explanation of leverage and its effects and the risk of losing the entire investment; (b) the volatility of the price of such instruments and any limitations on the available market for such instruments; (c) the fact that an investor might assume, as a result of transactions in such instruments, financial commitments and other additional obligations, including contingent liabilities, additional to the cost of acquiring the instruments; (d) any margin requirements or similar obligations, applicable to instruments of that type. Member States may specify the precise terms, or the contents, of the description of risks required under this paragraph. 3. If an investment firm provides a retail client or potential retail client with information about a financial instrument that is the subject of a current offer to the public and a prospectus has been published in connection with that offer in accordance with Directive 2003/71/EC, that firm shall inform the client or potential client where that prospectus is made available to the public. 4. Where the risks associated with a financial instrument composed of two or more different financial instruments or services are likely to be greater than the risks associated with any of the components, the investment firm shall provide an adequate description of the components of that instrument and the way in which its interaction increases the risks. 5. In the case of financial instruments that incorporate a guarantee by a third party, the information about the guarantee shall include sufficient detail about the guarantor and the guarantee to enable the retail client or potential retail client to make a fair assessment of the guarantee. - execution venues, and - costs and associated charges Article 33 (fourth indent of Article 19(3) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Information about costs and associated charges Member States shall require investment firms to provide their retail clients and potential retail clients with information on costs and associated charges that includes such of the following elements as are relevant: (a) the total price to be paid by the client in connection with the financial instrument or the investment service or ancillary service, including all related fees, commissions, charges and expenses, and all taxes payable via the investment firm or, if an exact price cannot be indicated, the basis for the calculation of the total price so that the client can verify it; (b) where any part of the total price referred to in point (a) is to be paid in or represents an amount of foreign currency, an indication of the currency involved and the applicable currency conversion rates and costs; (c) notice of the possibility that other costs, including taxes, related to transactions in connection with the financial instrument or the investment service may arise for the client that are not paid via the investment firm or imposed by it; (d) the arrangements for payment or other performance. 49 For the purposes of point (a), the commissions charged by the firm shall be itemised separately in every case. Article 34 (second and fourth indent of Article 19(3) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Information drawn up in accordance with Directive 85/611/EEC 1. Member States shall ensure that in respect of units in a collective investment undertaking covered by Directive 85/611/EEC, a simplified prospectus complying with Article 28 of that Directive is regarded as appropriate information for the purposes of the second indent of Article 19(3) of Directive 2004/39/EC. 2. Member States shall ensure that in respect of units in a collective investment undertaking covered by Directive 85/611/EEC, a simplified prospectus complying with Article 28 of that Directive is regarded as appropriate information for the purposes of the fourth indent of Article 19(3) of Directive 2004/39/EC with respect to the costs and associated charges related to the UCITS itself, including the exit and entry commissions. so that they are reasonably able to understand the nature and risks of the investment service and of the specific type of financial instrument that is being offered and, consequently, to take investment decisions on an informed basis. This information may be provided in a standardised format. Article 28 (Article 19(3) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Information concerning client categorisation 1. Member States shall ensure that investment firms notify new clients, and existing clients that the investment firm has newly categorised as required by Directive 2004/39/EC, of their categorisation as a retail client, a professional client or an eligible counterparty in accordance with that Directive. 2. Member States shall ensure that investment firms inform clients in a durable medium about any right that client has to request a different categorisation and about any limitations to the level of client protection that it would entail. 3. Member States shall permit investment firms, either on their own initiative or at the request of the client concerned: (a) to treat as a professional or retail client a client that might otherwise be classified as an eligible counterparty pursuant to Article 24(2) of Directive 2004/39/EC; (b) to treat as a retail client a client that is considered as a professional client pursuant to Section I of Annex II to Directive 2004/39/EC. Article 29 (Article 19(3) of Directive 2004/39/EC) General requirements for information to clients 1. Member States shall require investment firms, in good time before a retail client or potential retail client is bound by any agreement for the provision of investment services or ancillary services or before the provision of those services, whichever is the earlier, to provide that client or potential client with the following information: 50 (a) the terms of any such agreement; (b) the information required by Article 30 relating to that agreement or to those investment or ancillary services. 2. Member States shall require investment firms, in good time before the provision of investment services or ancillary services to retail clients or potential retail clients, to provide the information required under Articles 30 to 33. 3. Member States shall require investment firms to provide professional clients with the information referred to in Article 32 (5) and (6) in good time before the provision of the service concerned. 4. The information referred to in paragraphs 1 to 3 shall be provided in a durable medium or by means of a website (where that does not constitute a durable medium) provided that the conditions specified in Article 3(2) are satisfied. 5. By way of exception to paragraphs 1 and 2, Member States shall permit investment firms, in the following circumstances, to provide the information required under paragraph 1 to a retail client immediately after that client is bound by any agreement for the provision of investment services or ancillary services, and the information required under paragraph 2 immediately after starting to provide the service: (a) the firm was unable to comply with the time limits specified in paragraphs 1 and 2 because, at the request of the client, the agreement was concluded using a means of distance communication which prevents the firm from providing the information in accordance with paragraph 1 or 2; (b) in any case where Article 3(3) of Directive 2002/65/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 23 September 2002 concerning the distance marketing of consumer financial services and amending Council Directive 90/619/EEC and Directives 97/7/EC and 98/27/EC (11) does not otherwise apply, the investment firm complies with the requirements of that Article in relation to the retail client or potential retail client, as if that client or potential client were a 'consumer' and the investment firm were a 'supplier' within the meaning of that Directive. 6. Member State shall ensure that investment firms notify a client in good time about any material change to the information provided under Articles 30 to 33 which is relevant to a service that the firm is providing to that client. That notification shall be given in a durable medium if the information to which it relates is given in a durable medium. 7. Member States shall require investment firms to ensure that information contained in a marketing communication is consistent with any information the firm provides to clients in the course of carrying on investment and ancillary services. 8. Member States shall ensure that, where a marketing communication contains an offer or invitation of the following nature and specifies the manner of response or includes a form by which any response may be made, it includes such of the information referred to in Articles 30 to 33 as is relevant to that offer or invitation: (a) an offer to enter into an agreement in relation to a financial instrument or investment service or ancillary service with any person who responds to the communication; (b) an invitation to any person who responds to the communication to make an offer to enter into an agreement in relation to a financial instrument or investment service or ancillary service. However, the first subparagraph shall not apply if, in order to respond to an offer or invitation contained in the marketing communication, the potential retail client must refer to another document or documents, which, alone or in combination, contain that information. 4. When providing investment advice or portfolio management the investment firm shall obtain the necessary information regarding the client's or potential client's knowledge and 51 experience in the investment field relevant to the specific type of product or service, his financial situation and his investment objectives so as to enable the firm to recommend to the client or potential client the investment services and financial instruments that are suitable for him. Assessment of suitability and appropriateness Article 35 (Article 19(4) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Assessment of suitability 1. Member States shall ensure that investment firms obtain from clients or potential clients such information as is necessary for the firm to understand the essential facts about the client and to have a reasonable basis for believing, giving due consideration to the nature and extent of the service provided, that the specific transaction to be recommended, or entered into in the course of providing a portfolio management service, satisfies the following criteria: (a) it meets the investment objectives of the client in question; (b) it is such that the client is able financially to bear any related investment risks consistent with his investment objectives; (c) it is such that the client has the necessary experience and knowledge in order to understand the risks involved in the transaction or in the management of his portfolio. 2. Where an investment firm provides an investment service to a professional client it shall be entitled to assume that, in relation to the products, transactions and services for which it is so classified, the client has the necessary level of experience and knowledge for the purposes of paragraph 1(c). Where that investment service consists in the provision of investment advice to a professional client covered by Section 1 of Annex II to Directive 2004/39/EC, the investment firm shall be entitled to assume for the purposes of paragraph 1(b) that the client is able financially to bear any related investment risks consistent with the investment objectives of that client. 3. The information regarding the financial situation of the client or potential client shall include, where relevant, information on the source and extent of his regular income, his assets, including liquid assets, investments and real property, and his regular financial commitments. 4. The information regarding the investment objectives of the client or potential client shall include, where relevant, information on the length of time for which the client wishes to hold the investment, his preferences regarding risk taking, his risk profile, and the purposes of the investment. 5. Where, when providing the investment service of investment advice or portfolio management, an investment firm does not obtain the information required under Article 19(4) of Directive 2004/39/EC, the firm shall not recommend investment services or financial instruments to the client or potential client. 5. Member States shall ensure that investment firms, when providing investment services other than those referred to in paragraph 4, ask the client or potential client to provide information regarding his knowledge and experience in the investment field relevant to the specific type of product or service offered or demanded so as to enable the investment firm to assess whether the investment service or product envisaged is appropriate for the client. In case the investment firm considers, on the basis of the information received under the previous subparagraph, that the product or service is not appropriate to the client or potential client, the investment firm shall warn the client or potential client. This warning 52 may be provided in a standardised format. In cases where the client or potential client elects not to provide the information referred to under the first subparagraph, or where he provides insufficient information regarding his knowledge and experience, the investment firm shall warn the client or potential client that such a decision will not allow the firm to determine whether the service or product envisaged is appropriate for him. This warning may be provided in a standardised format. Article 36 (Article 19(5) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Assessment of appropriateness Member States shall require investment firms, when assessing whether an investment service as referred to in Article 19(5) of Directive 2004/39/EC is appropriate for a client, to determine whether that client has the necessary experience and knowledge in order to understand the risks involved in relation to the product or investment service offered or demanded. For those purposes, an investment firm shall be entitled to assume that a professional client has the necessary experience and knowledge in order to understand the risks involved in relation to those particular investment services or transactions, or types of transaction or product, for which the client is classified as a professional client. Article 37 (Article 19(4) and (5) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Provisions common to the assessment of suitability or appropriateness 1. Member States shall ensure that the information regarding a client's or potential client's knowledge and experience in the investment field includes the following, to the extent appropriate to the nature of the client, the nature and extent of the service to be provided and the type of product or transaction envisaged, including their complexity and the risks involved: (a) the types of service, transaction and financial instrument with which the client is familiar; (b) the nature, volume, and frequency of the client's transactions in financial instruments and the period over which they have been carried out; (c) the level of education, and profession or relevant former profession of the client or potential client. 2. An investment firm shall not encourage a client or potential client not to provide information required for the purposes of Article 19(4) and (5) of Directive 2004/39/EC. 3. An investment firm shall be entitled to rely on the information provided by its clients or potential clients unless it is aware or ought to be aware that the information is manifestly out of date, inaccurate or incomplete. 6. Member States shall allow investment firms when providing investment services that only consist of execution and/or the reception and transmission of client orders with or without ancillary services to provide those investment services to their clients without the need to obtain the information or make the determination provided for in paragraph 5 where all the following conditions are met: - the above services relate to shares admitted to trading on a regulated market or in an equivalent third country market, money market instruments, bonds or other forms of securitised debt (excluding those bonds or securitised debt that embed a derivative), 53 UCITS and other non-complex financial instruments. A third country market shall be considered as equivalent to a regulated market if it complies with equivalent requirements to those established under Title III. The Commission shall publish a list of those markets that are to be considered as equivalent. This list shall be updated periodically, Article 38 (first indent of Article 19(6) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Provision of services in non-complex instruments A financial instrument which is not specified in the first indent of Article 19(6) of Directive 2004/39/EC shall be considered as non-complex if it satisfies the following criteria: (a) it does not fall within Article 4(1)(18)(c) of, or points (4) to (10) of Section C of Annex I to, Directive 2004/39/EC; (b) there are frequent opportunities to dispose of, redeem, or otherwise realise that instrument at prices that are publicly available to market participants and that are either market prices or prices made available, or validated, by valuation systems independent of the issuer; (c) it does not involve any actual or potential liability for the client that exceeds the cost of acquiring the instrument; (d) adequately comprehensive information on its characteristics is publicly available and is likely to be readily understood so as to enable the average retail client to make an informed judgment as to whether to enter into a transaction in that instrument. 7. - the service is provided at the initiative of the client or potential client, - the client or potential client has been clearly informed that in the provision of this service the investment firm is not required to assess the suitability of the instrument or service provided or offered and that therefore he does not benefit from the corresponding protection of the relevant conduct of business rules; this warning may be provided in a standardised format, - the investment firm complies with its obligations under Article 18. The investment firm shall establish a record that includes the document or documents agreed between the firm and the client that set out the rights and obligations of the parties, and the other terms on which the firm will provide services to the client. The rights and duties of the parties to the contract may be incorporated by reference to other documents or legal texts. Article 39 (Article 19(1) and 19(7) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Retail client agreement Member States shall require an investment firm that provides an investment service other than investment advice to a new retail client for the first time after the date of application of this Directive to enter into a written basic agreement, in paper or another durable medium, with the client setting out the essential rights and obligations of the firm and the client. The rights and duties of the parties to the agreement may be incorporated by reference to other documents or legal texts. 54 8. The client must receive from the investment firm adequate reports on the service provided to its clients. These reports shall include, where applicable, the costs associated with the transactions and services undertaken on behalf of the client. Reporting to clients Article 40 (Article 19(8) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Reporting obligations in respect of execution of orders other than for portfolio management 1. Member States shall ensure that where investment firms have carried out an order, other than for portfolio management, on behalf of a client, they take the following action in respect of that order: (a) the investment firm must promptly provide the client, in a durable medium, with the essential information concerning the execution of that order; (b) in the case of a retail client, the investment firm must send the client a notice in a durable medium confirming execution of the order as soon as possible and no later than the first business day following execution or, if the confirmation is received by the investment firm from a third party, no later than the first business day following receipt of the confirmation from the third party. Point (b) shall not apply where the confirmation would contain the same information as a confirmation that is to be promptly dispatched to the retail client by another person. Points (a) and (b) shall not apply where orders executed on behalf of clients relate to bonds funding mortgage loan agreements with the said clients, in which case the report on the transaction shall be made at the same time as the terms of the mortgage loan are communicated, but no later than one month after the execution of the order. 2. In addition to the requirements under paragraph 1, Member States shall require investment firms to supply the client, on request, with information about the status of his order. 3. Member States shall ensure that, in the case of orders for a retail clients relating to units or shares in a collective investment undertaking which are executed periodically, investment firms either take the action specified in point (b) of paragraph 1 or provide the retail client, at least once every six months, with the information listed in paragraph 4 in respect of those transactions. 4. The notice referred to in point (b) of paragraph 1 shall include such of the following information as is applicable and, where relevant, in accordance with Table 1 of Annex I to Regulation (EC) No 1287/2006: (a) the reporting firm identification; (b) the name or other designation of the client; (c) the trading day; (d) the trading time; (e) the type of the order; (f) the venue identification; (g) the instrument identification; (h) the buy/sell indicator; 55 (i) the nature of the order if other than buy/sell; (j) the quantity; (k) the unit price; (l) the total consideration; (m) a total sum of the commissions and expenses charged and, where the retail client so requests, an itemised breakdown; (n) the client's responsibilities in relation to the settlement of the transaction, including the time limit for payment or delivery as well as the appropriate account details where these details and responsibilities have not previously been notified to the client; (o) if the client's counterparty was the investment firm itself or any person in the investment firm's group or another client of the investment firm, the fact that this was the case unless the order was executed through a trading system that facilitates anonymous trading. For the purposes of point (k), where the order is executed in tranches, the investment firm may supply the client with information about the price of each tranche or the average price. Where the average price is provided, the investment firm shall supply the retail client with information about the price of each tranche upon request. 5. The investment firm may provide the client with the information referred to in paragraph 4 using standard codes if it also provides an explanation of the codes used. Article 41 (Article 19(8) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Reporting obligations in respect of portfolio management 1. Member States shall require investments firms which provide the service of portfolio management to clients to provide each such client with a periodic statement in a durable medium of the portfolio management activities carried out on behalf of that client unless such a statement is provided by another person. 2. In the case of retail clients, the periodic statement required under paragraph 1 shall include, where relevant, the following information: (a) the name of the investment firm; (b) the name or other designation of the retail client's account; (c) a statement of the contents and the valuation of the portfolio, including details of each financial instrument held, its market value, or fair value if market value is unavailable and the cash balance at the beginning and at the end of the reporting period, and the performance of the portfolio during the reporting period; (d) the total amount of fees and charges incurred during the reporting period, itemising at least total management fees and total costs associated with execution, and including, where relevant, a statement that a more detailed breakdown will be provided on request; (e) a comparison of performance during the period covered by the statement with the investment performance benchmark (if any) agreed between the investment firm and the client; (f) the total amount of dividends, interest and other payments received during the reporting period 56 in relation to the client's portfolio; (g) information about other corporate actions giving rights in relation to financial instruments held in the portfolio; (h) for each transaction executed during the period, the information referred to in Article 40(4)(c) to (l) where relevant, unless the client elects to receive information about executed transactions on a transaction-by-transaction basis, in which case paragraph 4 of this Article shall apply. 3. In the case of retail clients, the periodic statement referred to in paragraph 1 shall be provided once every six months, except in the following cases: (a) where the client so requests, the periodic statement must be provided every three months; (b) in cases where paragraph 4 applies, the periodic statement must be provided at least once every 12 months; (c) where the agreement between an investment firm and a retail client for a portfolio management service authorises a leveraged portfolio, the periodic statement must be provided at least once a month. Investment firms shall inform retail clients that they have the right to make requests for the purposes of point (a). However, the exception provided for in point (b) shall not apply in the case of transactions in financial instruments covered by Article 4(1)(18)(c) of, or any of points 4 to 10 of Section C in Annex I to, Directive 2004/39/EC. 4. Member States shall require investment firms, in cases where the client elects to receive information about executed transactions on a transaction-by-transaction basis, to provide promptly to the client, on the execution of a transaction by the portfolio manager, the essential information concerning that transaction in a durable medium. Where the client concerned is a retail client, the investment firm must send him a notice confirming the transaction and containing the information referred to in Article 40(4) no later than the first business day following that execution or, if the confirmation is received by the investment firm from a third party, no later than the first business day following receipt of the confirmation from the third party. The second subparagraph shall not apply where the confirmation would contain the same information as a confirmation that is to be promptly dispatched to the retail client by another person. Article 42 (Article 19(8) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Additional reporting obligations for portfolio management or contingent liability transactions Member States shall ensure that where investment firms provide portfolio management transactions for retail clients or operate retail client accounts that include an uncovered open position in a contingent liability transaction, they also report to the retail client any losses exceeding any predetermined threshold, agreed between the firm and the client, no later than the end of the business day in which the threshold is exceeded or, in a case where the threshold is exceeded on a non-business day, the close of the next business day. Article 43 57 (Article 19(8) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Statements of client financial instruments or client funds 1. Member States shall require investment firms that hold client financial instruments or client funds to send at least once a year, to each client for whom they hold financial instruments or funds, a statement in a durable medium of those financial instruments or funds unless such a statement has been provided in any other periodic statement. The first subparagraph shall not apply to a credit institution authorised under Directive 2000/12/EC in respect of deposits within the meaning of that Directive held by that institution. 2. The statement of client assets referred to in paragraph 1 shall include the following information: (a) details of all the financial instruments or funds held by the investment firm for the client at the end of the period covered by the statement; (b) the extent to which any client financial instruments or client funds have been the subject of securities financing transactions; (c) the extent of any benefit that has accrued to the client by virtue of participation in any securities financing transactions, and the basis on which that benefit has accrued. In cases where the portfolio of a client includes the proceeds of one or more unsettled transactions, the information referred to in point (a) may be based either on the trade date or the settlement date, provided that the same basis is applied consistently to all such information in the statement. 3. Member States shall permit investment firms which hold financial instruments or funds and which carry out the service of portfolio management for a client to include the statement of client assets referred to in paragraph 1 in the periodic statement it provides to that client pursuant to Article 41(1). 9. In cases where an investment service is offered as part of a financial product which is already subject to other provisions of Community legislation or common European standards related to credit institutions and consumer credits with respect to risk assessment of clients and/or information requirements, this service shall not be additionally subject to the obligations set out in this Article. 10. In order to ensure the necessary protection of investors and the uniform application of paragraphs 1 to 8, the Commission shall adopt, in accordance with the procedure referred to in Article 64(2), implementing measures to ensure that investment firms comply with the principles set out therein when providing investment or ancillary services to their clients. Those implementing measures shall take into account: (a) the nature of the service(s) offered or provided to the client or potential client, taking into account the type, object, size and frequency of the transactions; (b) the nature of the financial instruments being offered or considered; (c) the retail or professional nature of the client or potential clients. Article 3 Conditions applying to the provision of information 1. Where, for the purposes of this Directive, information is required to be provided in a durable medium, Member States shall permit investment firms to provide that information in a durable medium other than on paper only if: 58 (a) the provision of that information in that medium is appropriate to the context in which the business between the firm and the client is, or is to be, carried on; and (b) the person to whom the information is to be provided, when offered the choice between information on paper or in that other durable medium, specifically chooses the provision of the information in that other medium. 2. Where, pursuant to Article 29, 30, 31, 32, 33 or 46(2) of this Directive, an investment firm provides information to a client by means of a website and that information is not addressed personally to the client, Member States shall ensure that the following conditions are satisfied: (a) the provision of that information in that medium is appropriate to the context in which the business between the firm and the client is, or is to be, carried on; (b) the client must specifically consent to the provision of that information in that form; (c) the client must be notified electronically of the address of the website, and the place on the website where the information may be accessed; (d) the information must be up to date; (e) the information must be accessible continuously by means of that website for such period of time as the client may reasonably need to inspect it. 3. For the purposes of this Article, the provision of information by means of electronic communications shall be treated as appropriate to the context in which the business between the firm and the client is, or is to be, carried on if there is evidence that the client has regular access to the internet. The provision by the client of an e-mail address for the purposes of the carrying on of that business shall be treated as such evidence. Article 20 : Provision of services through the medium of another investment firm Member States shall allow an investment firm receiving an instruction to perform investment or ancillary services on behalf of a client through the medium of another investment firm to rely on client information transmitted by the latter firm. The investment firm which mediates the instructions will remain responsible for the completeness and accuracy of the information transmitted. The investment firm which receives an instruction to undertake services on behalf of a client in this way shall also be able to rely on any recommendations in respect of the service or transaction that have been provided to the client by another investment firm. The investment firm which mediates the instructions will remain responsible for the appropriateness for the client of the recommendations or advice provided. The investment firm which receives client instructions or orders through the medium of another investment firm shall remain responsible for concluding the service or transaction, based on any such information or recommendations, in accordance with the relevant provisions of this Title. Article 21 : Obligation to execute orders on terms most favourable to the client 1. Member States shall require that investment firms take all reasonable steps to obtain, when executing orders, the best possible result for their clients taking into account price, costs, speed, likelihood of execution and settlement, size, nature or any other consideration relevant to the execution of the order. Nevertheless, whenever there is a specific instruction from the client the investment firm shall execute the order following the 59 specific instruction3. Best execution Article 44 (Articles 21(1) and 19(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Best execution criteria 1. Member States shall ensure that, when executing client orders, investment firms take into account the following criteria for determining the relative importance of the factors referred to in Article 21(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC: (a) the characteristics of the client including the categorisation of the client as retail or professional; (b) the characteristics of the client order; (c) the characteristics of financial instruments that are the subject of that order; (d) the characteristics of the execution venues to which that order can be directed. For the purposes of this Article and Article 46, 'execution venue' means a regulated market, an MTF, a systematic internaliser, or a market maker or other liquidity provider or an entity that performs a similar function in a third country to the functions performed by any of the foregoing. 2. An investment firm satisfies its obligation under Article 21(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC to take all reasonable steps to obtain the best possible result for a client to the extent that it executes an order or a specific aspect of an order following specific instructions from the client relating to the order or the specific aspect of the order. 3. Where an investment firm executes an order on behalf of a retail client, the best possible result shall be determined in terms of the total consideration, representing the price of the financial instrument and the costs related to execution, which shall include all expenses incurred by the client which are directly related to the execution of the order, including execution venue fees, clearing and settlement fees and any other fees paid to third parties involved in the execution of the order. For the purposes of delivering best execution where there is more than one competing venue to execute an order for a financial instrument, in order to assess and compare the results for the client that would be achieved by executing the order on each of the execution venues listed in the firm's order execution policy that is capable of executing that order, the firm's own commissions and costs for executing the order on each of the eligible execution venues shall be taken into account in that assessment. 4. Member States shall require that investment firms do not structure or charge their commissions in such a way as to discriminate unfairly between execution venues. 3 The provisions of the Directive and the Implementing Directive regarding best execution are usefully described in CESR’s public consultation document entitled “Best Execution Under MiFID” published in February 2007. It endeavours to set out selected key areas in which firms and regulators need clarity in order to proceed: contents of execution policy and arrangements; disclosure to clients; client consent; relationships between firms in chains of execution; review and monitoring; execution quality data. The consultation period will close on 16 March 2007. The paper sets out CESR members’ agreed views on this range of issues. The purpose of the consultation is to seek comments by those in the financial services industry and of other stakeholders, with a view to CESR performing its role in promoting supervisory convergence in respect of best execution consistent with its level 3 responsibilities. 60 5. Before 1 November 2008 the Commission shall present a report to the European Parliament and to the Council on the availability, comparability and consolidation of information concerning the quality of execution of various execution venues. Article 45 (Article 19(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Duty of investment firms carrying out portfolio management and reception and transmission of orders to act in the best interests of the client 1. Member States shall require investment firms, when providing the service of portfolio management, to comply with the obligation under Article 19(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC to act in accordance with the best interests of their clients when placing orders with other entities for execution that result from decisions by the investment firm to deal in financial instruments on behalf of its client. 2. Member States shall require investment firms, when providing the service of reception and transmission of orders, to comply with the obligation under Article 19(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC to act in accordance with the best interests of their clients when transmitting client orders to other entities for execution. 3. Member States shall ensure that, in order to comply with paragraphs 1 or 2, investment firms take the actions mentioned in paragraphs 4 to 6. 4. Investment firms shall take all reasonable steps to obtain the best possible result for their clients taking into account the factors referred to in Article 21(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC. The relative importance of these factors shall be determined by reference to the criteria set out in Article 44(1)and, for retail clients, to the requirement under Article 44(3). An investment firm satisfies its obligations under paragraph 1 or 2, and is not required to take the steps mentioned in this paragraph, to the extent that it follows specific instructions from its client when placing an order with, or transmitting an order to, another entity for execution. 5. Investment firms shall establish and implement a policy to enable them to comply with the obligation in paragraph 4. The policy shall identify, in respect of each class of instruments, the entities with which the orders are placed or to which the investment firm transmits orders for execution. The entities identified must have execution arrangements that enable the investment firm to comply with its obligations under this Article when it places or transmits orders to that entity for execution. Investment firms shall provide appropriate information to their clients on the policy established in accordance with this paragraph. 6. Investment firms shall monitor on a regular basis the effectiveness of the policy established in accordance with paragraph 5 and, in particular, the execution quality of the entities identified in that policy and, where appropriate, correct any deficiencies. In addition, investment firms shall review the policy annually. Such a review shall also be carried out whenever a material change occurs that affects the firm's ability to continue to obtain the best possible result for their clients. 7. This Article shall not apply when the investment firm that provides the service of portfolio management and/or reception and transmission of orders also executes the orders received or the decisions to deal on behalf of its client's portfolio. In those cases Article 21 of Directive 2004/39/EC applies. 2. Member States shall require investment firms to establish and implement effective arrangements for complying with paragraph 1. In particular Member States shall require 61 investment firms to establish and implement an order execution policy to allow them to obtain, for their client orders, the best possible result in accordance with paragraph 1. 3. The order execution policy shall include, in respect of each class of instruments, information on the different venues where the investment firm executes its client orders and the factors affecting the choice of execution venue. It shall at least include those venues that enable the investment firm to obtain on a consistent basis the best possible result for the execution of client orders. Member States shall require that investment firms provide appropriate information to their clients on their order execution policy. Member States shall require that investment firms obtain the prior consent of their clients to the execution policy. Member States shall require that, where the order execution policy provides for the possibility that client orders may be executed outside a regulated market or an MTF, the investment firm shall, in particular, inform its clients about this possibility. Member States shall require that investment firms obtain the prior express consent of their clients before proceeding to execute their orders outside a regulated market or an MTF. Investment firms may obtain this consent either in the form of a general agreement or in respect of individual transactions. 4. Member States shall require investment firms to monitor the effectiveness of their order execution arrangements and execution policy in order to identify and, where appropriate, correct any deficiencies. In particular, they shall assess, on a regular basis, whether the execution venues included in the order execution policy provide for the best possible result for the client or whether they need to make changes to their execution arrangements. Member States shall require investment firms to notify clients of any material changes to their order execution arrangements or execution policy. Article 46 (Article 21(3) and (4) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Execution policy 1. Member States shall ensure that investment firms review annually the execution policy established pursuant to Article 21(2) of Directive 2004/39/EC, as well as their order execution arrangements. Such a review shall also be carried out whenever a material change occurs that affects the firm's ability to continue to obtain the best possible result for the execution of its client orders on a consistent basis using the venues included in its execution policy. 2. Investment firms shall provide retail clients with the following details on their execution policy in good time prior to the provision of the service: (a) an account of the relative importance the investment firm assigns, in accordance with the criteria specified in Article 44(1), to the factors referred to in Article 21(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC, or the process by which the firm determines the relative importance of those factors; (b) a list of the execution venues on which the firm places significant reliance in meeting its obligation to take all reasonable steps to obtain on a consistent basis the best possible result for the execution of client orders; (c) a clear and prominent warning that any specific instructions from a client may prevent the firm from taking the steps that it has designed and implemented in its execution policy to obtain the best possible result for the execution of those orders in respect of the elements covered by those instructions. 62 That information shall be provided in a durable medium, or by means of a website (where that does not constitute a durable medium) provided that the conditions specified in Article 3(2) are satisfied. 5. Member States shall require investment firms to be able to demonstrate to their clients, at their request, that they have executed their orders in accordance with the firm's execution policy. 6. In order to ensure the protection necessary for investors, the fair and orderly functioning of markets, and to ensure the uniform application of paragraphs 1, 3 and 4, the Commission shall, in accordance with the procedure referred to in Article 64(2), adopt implementing measures concerning: (a) the criteria for determining the relative importance of the different factors that, pursuant to paragraph 1, may be taken into account for determining the best possible result taking into account the size and type of order and the retail or professional nature of the client; (b) factors that may be taken into account by an investment firm when reviewing its execution arrangements and the circumstances under which changes to such arrangements may be appropriate. In particular, the factors for determining which venues enable investment firms to obtain on a consistent basis the best possible result for executing the client orders; (c) the nature and extent of the information to be provided to clients on their execution policies, pursuant to paragraph 3. Article 22 : Client order handling rules 1. Member States shall require that investment firms authorised to execute orders on behalf of clients implement procedures and arrangements which provide for the prompt, fair and expeditious execution of client orders, relative to other client orders or the trading interests of the investment firm. Client order handling Article 47 (Articles 22(1) and 19(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC) General principles 1. Member States shall require investment firms to satisfy the following conditions when carrying out client orders: (a) they must ensure that orders executed on behalf of clients are promptly and accurately recorded and allocated; (b) they must carry out otherwise comparable client orders sequentially and promptly unless the characteristics of the order or prevailing market conditions make this impracticable, or the interests of the client require otherwise; (c) they must inform a retail client about any material difficulty relevant to the proper carrying out of orders promptly upon becoming aware of the difficulty. 2. Where an investment firm is responsible for overseeing or arranging the settlement of an executed order, it shall take all reasonable steps to ensure that any client financial instruments or client funds received in settlement of that executed order are promptly and correctly delivered to the account of the appropriate client. 63 3. An investment firm shall not misuse information relating to pending client orders, and shall take all reasonable steps to prevent the misuse of such information by any of its relevant persons. Article 48 (Articles 22(1) and 19(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Aggregation and allocation of orders 1. Member States shall not permit investment firms to carry out a client order or a transaction for own account in aggregation with another client order unless the following conditions are met: (a) it must be unlikely that the aggregation of orders and transactions will work overall to the disadvantage of any client whose order is to be aggregated; (b) it must be disclosed to each client whose order is to be aggregated that the effect of aggregation may work to its disadvantage in relation to a particular order; (c) an order allocation policy must be established and effectively implemented, providing in sufficiently precise terms for the fair allocation of aggregated orders and transactions, including how the volume and price of orders determines allocations and the treatment of partial executions. 2. Member States shall ensure that where an investment firm aggregates an order with one or more other client orders and the aggregated order is partially executed, it allocates the related trades in accordance with its order allocation policy. Article 49 (Articles 22(1) and 19(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Aggregation and allocation of transactions for own account 1. Member States shall ensure that investment firms which have aggregated transactions for own account with one or more client orders do not allocate the related trades in a way that is detrimental to a client. 2. Member States shall require that, where an investment firm aggregates a client order with a transaction for own account and the aggregated order is partially executed, it allocates the related trades to the client in priority to the firm. However, if the firm is able to demonstrate on reasonable grounds that without the combination it would not have been able to carry out the order on such advantageous terms, or at all, it may allocate the transaction for own account proportionally, in accordance with its order allocation policy referred to in Article 48(1)(c). 3. Member States shall require investment firms, as part of the order allocation policy referred to in Article 48(1)(c), to put in place procedures designed to prevent the reallocation, in a way that is detrimental to the client, of transactions for own account which are executed in combination with client orders. These procedures or arrangements shall allow for the execution of otherwise comparable client orders in accordance with the time of their reception by the investment firm. 2. Member States shall require that, in the case of a client limit order in respect of shares admitted to trading on a regulated market which are not immediately executed under prevailing market conditions, investment firms are, unless the client expressly instructs 64 otherwise, to take measures to facilitate the earliest possible execution of that order by making public immediately that client limit order in a manner which is easily accessible to other market participants. Member States may decide that investment firms comply with this obligation by transmitting the client limit order to a regulated market and/or MTF. Member States shall provide that the competent authorities may waive the obligation to make public a limit order that is large in scale compared with normal market size as determined under Article 44(2). Regulation 31 (Article 22(2) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Disclosure of client limit orders An investment firm shall be considered to disclose client limit orders that are not immediately executable if it transmits the order to a regulated market or MTF that operates an order book trading system, or ensures that the order is made public and can be easily executed as soon as market conditions allow. Regulation 32 (Article 22(2), 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Arrangements for making information public Any arrangement to make information public, adopted for the purposes of Regulations 30 and 31, shall satisfy the following conditions: (a) it must include all reasonable steps necessary to ensure that the information to be published is reliable, monitored continuously for errors, and corrected as soon as errors are detected; (b) it must facilitate the consolidation of the data with similar data from other sources; (c) it must make the information available to the public on a non-discriminatory commercial basis at a reasonable cost. 3. In order to ensure that measures for the protection of investors and fair and orderly functioning of markets take account of technical developments in financial markets, and to ensure the uniform application of paragraphs 1 and 2, the Commission shall adopt, in accordance with the procedure referred to in Article 64(2), implementing measures which define: (a) the conditions and nature of the procedures and arrangements which result in the prompt, fair and expeditious execution of client orders and the situations in which or types of transaction for which investment firms may reasonably deviate from prompt execution so as to obtain more favourable terms for clients; (b) the different methods through which an investment firm can be deemed to have met its obligation to disclose not immediately executable client limit orders to the market. Article 23 : Obligations of investment firms when appointing tied agents 1. Member States may decide to allow an investment firm to appoint tied agents for the purposes of promoting the services of the investment firm, soliciting business or receiving orders from clients or potential clients and transmitting them, placing financial instruments and providing advice in respect of such financial instruments and services offered by that 65 investment firm. 2. Member States shall require that where an investment firm decides to appoint a tied agent it remains fully and unconditionally responsible for any action or omission on the part of the tied agent when acting on behalf of the firm. Member States shall require the investment firm to ensure that a tied agent discloses the capacity in which he is acting and the firm which he is representing when contacting or before dealing with any client or potential client. Member States may allow, in accordance with Article 13(6), (7) and (8), tied agents registered in their territory to handle clients' money and/or financial instruments on behalf and under the full responsibility of the investment firm for which they are acting within their territory or, in the case of a cross-border operation, in the territory of a Member State which allows a tied agent to handle clients' money. Member States shall require the investment firms to monitor the activities of their tied agents so as to ensure that they continue to comply with this Directive when acting through tied agents. 3. Member States that decide to allow investment firms to appoint tied agents shall establish a public register. Tied agents shall be registered in the public register in the Member State where they are established. Where the Member State in which the tied agent is established has decided, in accordance with paragraph 1, not to allow the investment firms authorised by their competent authorities to appoint tied agents, those tied agents shall be registered with the competent authority of the home Member State of the investment firm on whose behalf it acts. Member States shall ensure that tied agents are only admitted to the public register if it has been established that they are of sufficiently good repute and that they possess appropriate general, commercial and professional knowledge so as to be able to communicate accurately all relevant information regarding the proposed service to the client or potential client. Member States may decide that investment firms can verify whether the tied agents which they have appointed are of sufficiently good repute and possess the knowledge as referred to in the third subparagraph. The register shall be updated on a regular basis. It shall be publicly available for consultation. 4. Member States shall require that investment firms appointing tied agents take adequate measures in order to avoid any negative impact that the activities of the tied agent not covered by the scope of this Directive could have on the activities carried out by the tied agent on behalf of the investment firm. Member States may allow competent authorities to collaborate with investment firms and credit institutions, their associations and other entities in registering tied agents and in monitoring compliance of tied agents with the requirements of paragraph 3. In particular, tied agents may be registered by an investment firm, credit institution or their associations and other entities under the supervision of the competent authority. 5. Member States shall require that investment firms appoint only tied agents entered in the public registers referred to in paragraph 3. 6. Member States may reinforce the requirements set out in this Article or add other requirements for tied agents registered within their jurisdiction. 66 Article 24 : Transactions executed with eligible counterparties 1. Member States shall ensure that investment firms authorised to execute orders on behalf of clients and/or to deal on own account and/or to receive and transmit orders, may bring about or enter into transactions with eligible counterparties without being obliged to comply with the obligations under Articles 19, 21 and 22(1) in respect of those transactions or in respect of any ancillary service directly related to those transactions. 2. Member States shall recognise as eligible counterparties for the purposes of this Article investment firms, credit institutions, insurance companies, UCITS and their management companies, pension funds and their management companies, other financial institutions authorised or regulated under Community legislation or the national law of a Member State, undertakings exempted from the application of this Directive under Article 2(1)(k) and (l), national governments and their corresponding offices including public bodies that deal with public debt, central banks and supranational organisations. Classification as an eligible counterparty under the first subparagraph shall be without prejudice to the right of such entities to request, either on a general form or on a trade-bytrade basis, treatment as clients whose business with the investment firm is subject to Articles 19, 21 and 22. 3. Member States may also recognise as eligible counterparties other undertakings meeting pre-determined proportionate requirements, including quantitative thresholds. In the event of a transaction where the prospective counterparties are located in different jurisdictions, the investment firm shall defer to the status of the other undertaking as determined by the law or measures of the Member State in which that undertaking is established. Member States shall ensure that the investment firm, when it enters into transactions in accordance with paragraph 1 with such undertakings, obtains the express confirmation from the prospective counterparty that it agrees to be treated as an eligible counterparty. Member States shall allow the investment firm to obtain this confirmation either in the form of a general agreement or in respect of each individual transaction. Eligible counterparties Article 50 (Article 24(3) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Eligible counterparties 1. Member States may recognise an undertaking as an eligible counterparty if that undertaking falls within a category of clients who are to be considered professional clients in accordance with paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 of Section I of Annex II to Directive 2004/39/EC, excluding any category which is explicitly mentioned in Article 24(2) of that Directive. On request, Member States may also recognise as eligible counterparties undertakings which fall within a category of clients who are to be considered professional clients in accordance with Section II of Annex II to Directive 2004/39/EC. In such cases, however, the undertaking concerned shall be recognised as an eligible counterparty only in respect of the services or transactions for which it could be treated as a professional client. 2. Where, pursuant to the second subparagraph of Article 24 (2) of Directive 2004/39/EC, an eligible counterparty requests treatment as a client whose business with an investment firm is subject to Articles 19, 21 and 22 of that Directive, but does not expressly request treatment as a retail client, and the investment firm agrees to that request, the firm shall treat that eligible counterparty as a professional client. However, where that eligible counterparty expressly requests treatment as a retail client, the provisions in respect of requests of non-professional treatment specified in the second, third and 67 fourth sub-paragraphs of Section I of Annex II to Directive 2004/39/EC shall apply. 4. Member States may recognise as eligible counterparties third country entities equivalent to those categories of entities mentioned in paragraph 2. Member States may also recognise as eligible counterparties third country undertakings such as those mentioned in paragraph 3 on the same conditions and subject to the same requirements as those laid down at paragraph 3. 5. In order to ensure the uniform application of paragraphs 2, 3 and 4 in the light of changing market practice and to facilitate the effective operation of the single market, the Commission may adopt, in accordance with the procedure referred to in Article 64(2), implementing measures which define: (a) the procedures for requesting treatment as clients under paragraph 2; (b) the procedures for obtaining the express confirmation from prospective counterparties under paragraph 3; (c) the predetermined proportionate requirements, including quantitative thresholds that would allow an undertaking to be considered as an eligible counterparty under paragraph 3. Section 3 : Market transparency and integrity Article 25 : Obligation to uphold integrity of markets, report transactions and maintain records 1. Without prejudice to the allocation of responsibilities for enforcing the provisions of Directive 2003/6/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 28 January 2003 on insider dealing and market manipulation (market abuse) (21), Member States shall ensure that appropriate measures are in place to enable the competent authority to monitor the activities of investment firms to ensure that they act honestly, fairly and professionally and in a manner which promotes the integrity of the market. 2. Member States shall require investment firms to keep at the disposal of the competent authority, for at least five years, the relevant data relating to all transactions in financial instruments which they have carried out, whether on own account or on behalf of a client. In the case of transactions carried out on behalf of clients, the records shall contain all the information and details of the identity of the client, and the information required under Council Directive 91/308/EEC of 10 June 1991 on prevention of the use of the financial system for the purpose of money laundering (22). 3. Member States shall require investment firms which execute transactions in any financial instruments admitted to trading on a regulated market to report details of such transactions to the competent authority as quickly as possible, and no later than the close of the following working day. This obligation shall apply whether or not such transactions were carried out on a regulated market. The competent authorities shall, in accordance with Article 58, establish the necessary arrangements in order to ensure that the competent authority of the most relevant market in terms of liquidity for those financial instruments also receives this information. Chapter III TRANSACTION REPORTING 68 Regulation 9 (Second subparagraph of Article 25(3) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Determination of the most relevant market in terms of liquidity 1. The most relevant market in terms of liquidity for a financial instrument which is admitted to trading on a regulated market, hereinafter 'the most relevant market', shall be determined in accordance with paragraphs 2 to 8. 2. In the case of a share or other transferable security covered by Article 4(1)(18)(a) of Directive 2004/39/EC or of a unit in a collective investment undertaking, the most relevant market shall be the Member State where the share or the unit was first admitted to trading on a regulated market. 3. In the case of a bond or other transferable security covered by Article 4(1)(18)(b) of Directive 2004/39/EC or of a money market instrument which, in either case, is issued by a subsidiary, within the meaning of Seventh Council Directive 83/349/EEC of 13 June 1983 on consolidated accounts (5), of an entity which has its registered office in a Member State, the most relevant market shall be the Member State where the registered office of the parent entity is situated. 4. In the case of a bond or other transferable security covered by Article 4(1)(18)(b) of Directive 2004/39/EC or of a money market instrument which, in either case, is issued by a Community issuer and which is not covered by paragraph 3 of this Article, the most relevant market shall be the Member State where the registered office of the issuer is situated. 5. In the case of a bond or other transferable security covered by Article 4(1)(18)(b) of Directive 2004/39/EC or a money market instrument which, in either case, is issued by a third country issuer and which is not covered by paragraph 3 of this Article, the most relevant market shall be the Member State where that security was first admitted to trading on a regulated market. 6. In the case of a derivative contract or a financial contract for differences or a transferable security covered by Article 4(1)(18) (c) of Directive 2004/39/EC, the most relevant market shall be: (a) where the underlying security is a share or other transferable security covered by Article 4(1)(18)(a) of Directive 2004/39/EC which is admitted to trading on a regulated market, the Member State deemed to be the most relevant market in terms of liquidity for the underlying security, in accordance with paragraph 2; (b) where the underlying security is a bond or other transferable security covered by Article 4(1)(18)(b) of Directive 2004/39/EC or a money market instrument which is admitted to trading on a regulated market, the Member State deemed to be the most relevant market in terms of liquidity for that underlying security, in accordance with paragraphs 3, 4 or 5; (c) where the underlying is an index composed of shares all of which are traded on a particular regulated market, the Member State where that regulated market is situated. 7. In any case not covered by paragraphs 2 to 6, the most relevant market shall be the Member State where the regulated market that first admitted the transferable security or derivative contract or financial contract for differences to trading is located. 8. Where a financial instrument covered by paragraphs 2, 5 or 7, or the underlying financial instrument of a financial instrument covered by paragraph 6 to which one of paragraphs 2, 5 or 7 is relevant, was first admitted to trading on more than one regulated market simultaneously, and all those regulated markets share the same home Member State, that Member State shall be the most relevant market. Where the regulated markets concerned do not share the same home Member State, the most relevant market in terms of liquidity for that instrument shall be the market where the turnover of that instrument is highest. 69 For the purposes of determining the most relevant market where the turnover of the instrument is highest, each competent authority that has authorised one of the regulated markets concerned shall calculate the turnover for that instrument in its respective market for the previous calendar year, provided that the instrument was admitted to trading at the beginning of that year. Where the turnover for the relevant financial instrument cannot be calculated by reason of insufficient or non-existent data and the issuer has its registered office in a Member State, the most relevant market shall be the market of the Member State where the registered office of the issuer is situated. However, where issuer does not have its registered office in a Member State, the most relevant market for that instrument shall be the market where the turnover of the relevant instrument class is the highest. For the purposes of determining that market, each competent authority that has authorised one of the regulated markets concerned shall calculate the turnover for the instruments of the same class in its respective market for the preceding calendar year. The relevant classes of financial instrument are the following: (a) shares; (b) bonds or other forms of securitised debt; (c) any other financial instruments. Regulation 10 (Second subparagraph of Article 25(3) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Alternative determination of most relevant market in terms of liquidity 1. A competent authority may, in January every year, notify the relevant competent authority for a particular financial instrument that it intends to contest the determination, made in accordance with Regulation 9, of the most relevant market for that instrument. 2. Within four weeks of the sending of the notification, both authorities shall calculate the turnover for that financial instrument in their respective markets over the period of the previous calendar year. If the results of that calculation indicate that the turnover is higher in the market of the contesting competent authority, that market shall be the most relevant market for that financial instrument. Where that financial instrument is of a type specified in Regulation 9(6)(a) or (b), that market shall also be the most relevant market for any derivative contract or financial contract for differences or transferable security which is covered by Article 4(1)(18)(c) of Directive 2004/39/EC and in respect of which that financial instrument is the underlying. Regulation 11 (Article 25(3) of Directive 2004/39/EC) List of financial instruments The relevant competent authority for one or more financial instruments shall ensure that there is established and maintained an updated list of those financial instruments. That list shall be made available to the single competent authority designated as a contact point by each Member State in accordance with Article 56 of Directive 2004/39/EC. That list shall be made available for the first time on the first trading day in June 2007. In order to assist competent authorities to comply with the first subparagraph, each regulated 70 market shall submit identifying reference data on each financial instrument admitted to trading in an electronic and standardised format to its home competent authority. This information shall be submitted for each financial instrument before trading commences in that particular instrument. The home competent authority shall ensure the data is transmitted to the relevant competent authority for the financial instrument concerned. The reference data shall be updated whenever there are changes to the data with respect to an instrument. The requirements in this subparagraph may be waived if the relevant competent authority for that financial instrument obtains the relevant reference data by other means. 4. The reports shall, in particular, include details of the names and numbers of the instruments bought or sold, the quantity, the dates and times of execution and the transaction prices and means of identifying the investment firms concerned. 5. Member States shall provide for the reports to be made to the competent authority either by the investment firm itself, a third party acting on its behalf or by a trade-matching or reporting system approved by the competent authority or by the regulated market or MTF through whose systems the transaction was completed. In cases where transactions are reported directly to the competent authority by a regulated market, an MTF, or a tradematching or reporting system approved by the competent authority, the obligation on the investment firm laid down in paragraph 3 may be waived. Regulation 12 (Article 25(5) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Reporting channels 1. The reports of transactions in financial instruments shall be made in an electronic form except under exceptional circumstances, when they may be made in a medium which allows for the storing of the information in a way accessible for future reference by the competent authorities other than an electronic form, and the methods by which those reports are made shall satisfy the following conditions: (a) they ensure the security and confidentiality of the data reported; (b) they incorporate mechanisms for identifying and correcting errors in a transaction report; (c) they incorporate mechanisms for authenticating the source of the transaction report; (d) they include appropriate precautionary measures to enable the timely resumption of reporting in the case of system failure; (e) they are capable of reporting the information required under Article 13 in the format required by the competent authority and in accordance with this paragraph, within the time limits set out in Article 25(3) of Directive 2004/39/EC. 2. A trade-matching or reporting system shall be approved by the competent authority for the purposes of Article 25(5) of Directive 2004/39/EC if the arrangements for reporting transactions established by that system comply with paragraph 1 of this Article and are subject to monitoring by a competent authority in respect of their continuing compliance. Regulation 13 (Article 25(3) and (5) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Content of the transaction report 1. The reports of transactions referred to in Article 25(3) and (5) of Directive 2004/39/EC shall 71 contain the information specified in Table 1 of Annex I to this Regulation which is relevant to the type of financial instrument in question and which the competent authority declares is not already in its possession or is not available to it by other means. 2. For the purposes of the identification of a counterparty to the transaction which is a regulated market, an MTF or other central counterparty, as specified in Table 1 of Annex I, each competent authority shall make publicly available a list of identification codes of the regulated markets and MTFs for which, in each case, it is the competent authority of the home Member State, and of any entities which act as central counterparties for such regulated markets and MTFs. 3. Member States may require reports made in accordance with Article 25(3) and (5) of Directive 2004/39/EC to contain information related to the transactions in question which is additional to that specified in Table 1 of Annex I where that information is necessary to enable the competent authority to monitor the activities of investment firms to ensure that they act honestly, fairly and professionally and in a manner that promotes the integrity of the market, and provided that one of the following criteria is met: (a) the financial instrument which is the subject of the report has characteristics which are specific to an instrument of that kind and which are not covered by the information items specified in that table; (b) trading methods which are specific to the trading venue where the transaction took place involve features which are not covered by the information items specified in that table. 4. Member States may also require a report of a transaction made in accordance with Article 25(3) and (5) of Directive 2004/39/EC to identify the clients on whose behalf the investment firm has executed that transaction. Regulation 14 (Article 25(3) and (5) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Exchange of information on transactions 1. The competent authorities shall establish arrangements designed to ensure that the information received in accordance with Article 25(3) and (5) of Directive 2004/39/EC is made available to the following: (a) the relevant competent authority for the financial instrument in question; (b) in the case of branches, the competent authority that has authorised the investment firm providing the information, without prejudice to its right not to receive this information in accordance with Article 25(6) of Directive 2004/39/EC; (c) any other competent authority that requests the information for the proper discharge of its supervisory duties under Article 25(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC. 2. The information to be made available in accordance with paragraph 1 shall contain the information items described in Tables 1 and 2 of Annex I. 3. The information referred to in paragraph 1 shall be made available as soon as possible. With effect from 1 November 2008 that information shall be made available no later than the close of the next working day of the competent authority that received the information or the request following the day on which the competent authority has received the information or the request. 4. The competent authorities shall coordinate the following: (a) the design and establishment of arrangements for the exchange of transaction information 72 between the competent authorities as required by Directive 2004/39/EC and this Regulation; (b) any future upgrading of the arrangements. 5. Before 1 February 2007, the competent authorities shall report to the Commission, which shall inform the European Securities Committee, on the design of the arrangements to be established in accordance with paragraph 1. They shall also report to the Commission, which shall inform the European Securities Committee, whenever significant changes to those arrangements are proposed. 6. When, in accordance with Article 32(7), reports provided for under this Article are transmitted to the competent authority of the host Member State, it shall transmit this information to the competent authorities of the home Member State of the investment firm, unless they decide that they do not want to receive this information. 7. In order to ensure that measures for the protection of market integrity are modified to take account of technical developments in financial markets, and to ensure the uniform application of paragraphs 1 to 5, the Commission may adopt, in accordance with the procedure referred to in Article 64(2), implementing measures which define the methods and arrangements for reporting financial transactions, the form and content of these reports and the criteria for defining a relevant market in accordance with paragraph 3. Article 26 : Monitoring of compliance with the rules of the MTF and with other legal obligations 1. Member States shall require that investment firms and market operators operating an MTF establish and maintain effective arrangements and procedures, relevant to the MTF, for the regular monitoring of the compliance by its users with its rules. Investment firms and market operators operating an MTF shall monitor the transactions undertaken by their users under their systems in order to identify breaches of those rules, disorderly trading conditions or conduct that may involve market abuse. 2. Member States shall require investment firms and market operators operating an MTF to report significant breaches of its rules or disorderly trading conditions or conduct that may involve market abuse to the competent authority. Member States shall also require investment firms and market operators operating an MTF to supply the relevant information without delay to the authority competent for the investigation and prosecution of market abuse and to provide full assistance to the latter in investigating and prosecuting market abuse occurring on or through its systems. Article 27 : Obligation for investment firms to make public firm quotes 1. Member States shall require systematic internalisers in shares to publish a firm quote in those shares admitted to trading on a regulated market for which they are systematic internalisers and for which there is a liquid market. In the case of shares for which there is not a liquid market, systematic internalisers shall disclose quotes to their clients on request. The provisions of this Article shall be applicable to systematic internalisers when dealing for sizes up to standard market size. Systematic internalisers that only deal in sizes above standard market size shall not be subject to the provisions of this Article. Systematic internalisers may decide the size or sizes at which they will quote. For a particular share each quote shall include a firm bid and/or offer price or prices for a size or sizes which could be up to standard market size for the class of shares to which the share 73 belongs. The price or prices shall also reflect the prevailing market conditions for that share. Shares shall be grouped in classes on the basis of the arithmetic average value of the orders executed in the market for that share. The standard market size for each class of shares shall be a size representative of the arithmetic average value of the orders executed in the market for the shares included in each class of shares. Regulation 23 (Fourth subparagraph of Article 27(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Standard market size In order to determine the standard market size for liquid shares, those shares shall be grouped into classes in terms of the average value of orders executed in accordance with Table 3 in Annex II. The market for each share shall be comprised of all orders executed in the European Union in respect of that share excluding those large in scale compared to normal market size for that share. Regulation 24 (Article 27(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Quotes reflecting prevailing market conditions A systematic internaliser shall, for each liquid share for which it is a systematic internaliser, maintain the following: (a) a quote or quotes which are close in price to comparable quotes for the same share in other trading venues; (b) a record of its quoted prices, which it shall retain for a period of 12 months or such longer period as it considers appropriate. The obligation laid down in point (b) is without prejudice to the obligation of the investment firm under Article 25(2) of Directive 2004/39/EC to keep at the disposal of the competent authority for at least five years the relevant data relating to all transactions it has carried out. 2. The competent authority of the most relevant market in terms of liquidity as defined in Article 25 for each share shall determine at least annually, on the basis of the arithmetic average value of the orders executed in the market in respect of that share, the class of shares to which it belongs. This information shall be made public to all market participants. 3. Systematic internalisers shall make public their quotes on a regular and continuous basis during normal trading hours. They shall be entitled to update their quotes at any time. They shall also be allowed, under exceptional market conditions, to withdraw their quotes. The quote shall be made public in a manner which is easily accessible to other market participants on a reasonable commercial basis. Systematic internalisers shall, while complying with the provisions set down in Article 21, execute the orders they receive from their retail clients in relation to the shares for which they are systematic internalisers at the quoted prices at the time of reception of the order. Systematic internalisers shall execute the orders they receive from their professional clients in relation to the shares for which they are systematic internalisers at the quoted price at the time of reception of the order. However, they may execute those orders at a better price in justified cases provided that this price falls within a public range close to market conditions and provided that the orders are of a size bigger than the size 74 customarily undertaken by a retail investor. Regulation 26 (Fourth subparagraph Article 27(3) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Retail size For the purposes of the fourth subparagraph of Article 27(3) of Directive 2004/39/EC, an order shall be regarded as being of a size bigger than the size customarily undertaken by a retail investor if it exceeds EUR 7 500. Provisions common to pre- and post-trade transparency Regulation 29 (Articles 27(3), 28(1), 29(1), 44(1) and 45(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Publication and availability of pre- and post-trade transparency data 1. A regulated market, MTF or systematic internaliser shall be considered to publish pre-trade information on a continuous basis during normal trading hours if that information is published as soon as it becomes available during the normal trading hours of the regulated market, MTF or systematic internaliser concerned, and remains available until it is updated. 2. Pre-trade information, and post-trade information relating to transactions taking place on trading venues and within normal trading hours, shall be made available as close to real time as possible. Post-trade information relating to such transactions shall be made available in any case within three minutes of the relevant transaction. 3. Information relating to a portfolio trade shall be made available with respect to each constituent transaction as close to real time as possible, having regard to the need to allocate prices to particular shares. Each constituent transaction shall be assessed separately for the purposes of determining whether deferred publication in respect of that transaction is available under Regulation 28. 4. Post-trade information relating to transactions taking place on a trading venue but outside its normal trading hours shall be made public before the opening of the next trading day of the trading venue on which the transaction took place. 5. For transactions that take place outside a trading venue, post-trade information shall be made public: (a) if the transaction takes place during a trading day of the most relevant market for the share concerned, or during the investment firm's normal trading hours, as close to real time as possible. Post-trade information relating to such transactions shall be made available in any case within three minutes of the relevant transaction; (b) in a case not covered by point (a), immediately upon the commencement of the investment firm's normal trading hours or at the latest before the opening of the next trading day in the most relevant market for that share. Furthermore, systematic internalisers may execute orders they receive from their professional clients at prices different than their quoted ones without having to comply with 75 the conditions established in the fourth subparagraph, in respect of transactions where execution in several securities is part of one transaction or in respect of orders that are subject to conditions other than the current market price. Regulation 25 (Fifth subparagraph of Article 27(3) and Article 27(6) of Directive) Execution of orders by systematic internalisers 1. For the purposes of the fifth subparagraph of Article 27(3) of Directive 2004/39/EC, execution in several securities shall be regarded as part of one transaction if that one transaction is a portfolio trade that involves 10 or more securities. For the same purposes, an order subject to conditions other than the current market price means any order which is neither an order for the execution of a transaction in shares at the prevailing market price, nor a limit order. Where a systematic internaliser who quotes only one quote or whose highest quote is lower than the standard market size receives an order from a client of a size bigger than its quotation size, but lower than the standard market size, it may decide to execute that part of the order which exceeds its quotation size, provided that it is executed at the quoted price, except where otherwise permitted under the conditions of the previous two subparagraphs. Where the systematic internaliser is quoting in different sizes and receives an order between those sizes, which it chooses to execute, it shall execute the order at one of the quoted prices in compliance with the provisions of Article 22, except where otherwise permitted under the conditions of the previous two subparagraphs. 4. The competent authorities shall check: (a) that investment firms regularly update bid and/or offer prices published in accordance with paragraph 1 and maintain prices which reflect the prevailing market conditions; (b) that investment firms comply with the conditions for price improvement laid down in the fourth subparagraph of paragraph 3. 5. Systematic internalisers shall be allowed to decide, on the basis of their commercial policy and in an objective nondiscriminatory way, the investors to whom they give access to their quotes. To that end there shall be clear standards for governing access to their quotes. Systematic internalisers may refuse to enter into or discontinue business relationships with investors on the basis of commercial considerations such as the investor credit status, the counterparty risk and the final settlement of the transaction. 6. In order to limit the risk of being exposed to multiple transactions from the same client systematic internalisers shall be allowed to limit in a non-discriminatory way the number of transactions from the same client which they undertake to enter at the published conditions. They shall also be allowed, in a non-discriminatory way and in accordance with the provisions of Article 22, to limit the total number of transactions from different clients at the same time provided that this is allowable only where the number and/or volume of orders sought by clients considerably exceeds the norm. Regulation 25 2. For the purposes of Article 27(6) of Directive 2004/39/EC, the number or volume of orders shall be regarded as considerably exceeding the norm if a systematic internaliser cannot execute those orders without exposing itself to undue risk. 76 In order to identify the number and volume of orders that it can execute without exposing itself to undue risk, a systematic internaliser shall maintain and implement as part of its risk management policy under Article 7 of Commission Directive 2006/73/EC (6) a non-discriminatory policy which takes into account the volume of the transactions, the capital that the firm has available to cover the risk for that type of trade, and the prevailing conditions in the market in which the firm is operating. 3. Where, in accordance with Article 27(6) of Directive 2004/39/EC, an investment firm limits the number or volume of orders it undertakes to execute, it shall set out in writing, and make available to clients and potential clients, the arrangements designed to ensure that such a limitation does not result in the discriminatory treatment of clients. 7. In order to ensure the uniform application of paragraphs 1 to 6, in a manner which supports the efficient valuation of shares and maximises the possibility of investment firms of obtaining the best deal for their clients, the Commission shall, in accordance with the procedure referred to in Article 64(2), adopt implementing measures which: (a) specify the criteria for application of paragraphs 1 and 2; (b) specify the criteria determining when a quote is published on a regular and continuous basis and is easily accessible as well as the means by which investment firms may comply with their obligation to make public their quotes, which shall include the following possibilities: (i) through the facilities of any regulated market which has admitted the instrument in question to trading; (ii) through the offices of a third party; (iii) through proprietary arrangements; (c) specify the general criteria for determining those transactions where execution in several securities is part of one transaction or orders that are subject to conditions other than current market price; (d) specify the general criteria for determining what can be considered as exceptional market circumstances that allow for the withdrawal of quotes as well as conditions for updating quotes; (e) specify the criteria for determining what is a size customarily undertaken by a retail investor. (f) specify the criteria for determining what constitutes considerably exceeding the norm as set down in paragraph 6; (g) specify the criteria for determining when prices fall within a public range close to market conditions. Regulation 22 (Article 27 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Determination of liquid shares4 4 Regulation 40 Re-examinations 77 1. A share admitted to trading on a regulated market shall be considered to have a liquid market if the share is traded daily, with a free float not less than EUR 500 million, and one of the following conditions is satisfied: (a) the average daily number of transactions in the share is not less than 500; (b) the average daily turnover for the share is not less than EUR 2 million. However, a Member State may, in respect of shares for which it is the most relevant market, specify by notice that both of those conditions are to apply. That notice shall be made public. 2. A Member State may specify the minimum number of liquid shares for that Member State. The minimum number shall be no greater than five. The specification shall be made public. 3. Where, pursuant to paragraph 1, a Member State would be the most relevant market for fewer liquid shares than the minimum number specified in accordance with paragraph 2, the competent authority for that Member State may designate one or more additional liquid shares, provided that the total number of shares which are considered in consequence to be liquid shares for which that Member State is the most relevant market does not exceed the minimum number specified by that Member State. The competent authority shall designate the additional liquid shares successively in decreasing order of average daily turnover from among the shares for which it is the relevant competent authority that are admitted to trading on a regulated market and are traded daily. 4. For the purposes of the first subparagraph of paragraph 1, the calculation of the free float of a share shall exclude holdings exceeding 5 % of the total voting rights of the issuer, unless such a holding is held by a collective investment undertaking or a pension fund. Voting rights shall be calculated on the basis of all the shares to which voting rights are attached, even if the exercise of such a right is suspended. 5. A share shall not be considered to have a liquid market for the purposes of Article 27 of Directive 2004/39/EC until six weeks after its first admission to trading on a regulated market, if the estimate of the total market capitalisation for that share at the start of the first day's trading after that admission, provided in accordance with Article 33(3), is less than EUR 500 million. 6. Each competent authority shall ensure the maintenance and publication of a list of all liquid shares for which it is the relevant competent authority. It shall ensure that the list is current by reviewing it at least annually. The list shall be made available to the Committee of European Securities Regulators. It shall be considered as published when it is published by the Committee of European Securities Regulators in accordance with Regulation 34(5). 1. At least once every two years, and after consulting the Committee of European Securities Regulators, the Commission shall re-examine the definition of 'transaction' for the purposes of this Regulation, the Tables included in Annex II, as well as the criteria for determination of liquid shares contained in Article 22. 78 Regulation 30 (Articles 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Public availability of pre- and post-trade information For the purposes of Articles 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC and of this Regulation, pre- and post-trade information shall be considered to be made public or available to the public if it is made available generally through one of the following to investors located in the Community: (a) the facilities of a regulated market or an MTF; (b) the facilities of a third party; (c) proprietary arrangements. Regulation 32 (Article 22(2), 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Arrangements for making information public Any arrangement to make information public, adopted for the purposes of Regulations 30 and 31, shall satisfy the following conditions: (a) it must include all reasonable steps necessary to ensure that the information to be published is reliable, monitored continuously for errors, and corrected as soon as errors are detected; (b) it must facilitate the consolidation of the data with similar data from other sources; (c) it must make the information available to the public on a non-discriminatory commercial basis at a reasonable cost. Regulation 33 (Articles 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Calculations and estimates for shares admitted to trading on a regulated market 1. In respect of each share that is admitted to trading on a regulated market, the relevant competent authority for that share shall ensure that the following calculations are made in respect of that share promptly after the end of each calendar year: (a) the average daily turnover; (b) the average daily number of transactions; (c) for those shares which satisfy the conditions laid down in Regulation 22(1)(a) or (b) (as applicable), the free float as at 31 December; (d) if the share is a liquid share, the average value of the orders executed. This paragraph and paragraph 2 shall not apply to a share which is first admitted to trading on a regulated market four weeks or less before the end of the calendar year. 2. The calculation of the average daily turnover, average value of the orders executed and average daily number of transactions shall take into account all the orders executed in the 79 Community in respect of the share in question between 1 January and 31 December of the preceding year, or, where applicable, that part of the year during which the share was admitted to trading on a regulated market and was not suspended from trading on a regulated market. In the calculations of the average daily turnover, average value of the orders executed and average daily number of transactions of a share, non-trading days in the Member State of the relevant competent authority for that share shall be excluded. 3. Before the first admission of a share to trading on a regulated market, the relevant competent authority for that share shall ensure that estimates are provided, in respect of that share, of the average daily turnover, the market capitalisation as it will stand at the start of the first day of trading and, where the estimate of the market capitalisation is EUR 500 million or more: (a) the average daily number of transactions and, for those shares which satisfy the conditions laid down in Regulation 22 (1)(a) or (b) (as applicable), the free float; (b) in the case of a share that is estimated to be a liquid share, the average value of the orders executed. The estimates shall relate to the six-week period following admission to trading, or the end of that period, as applicable, and shall take account of any previous trading history of the share, as well as that of shares that are considered to have similar characteristics. 4. After the first admission of a share to trading on a regulated market, the relevant competent authority for that share shall ensure that, in respect of that share, the figures referred to in points (a) to (d) of paragraph 1 are calculated, using data relating to the first four weeks' trading, as if a reference in point (c) of paragraph 1 to 31 December were a reference to the end of the first four weeks' trading, as soon as practicable after those data are available, and in any case before the end of the six-week period referred to in Regulation 22(5). 5. During the course of a calendar year, the relevant competent authorities shall ensure the review and where necessary the recalculation of the average daily turnover, average value of the orders executed, average daily number of transactions executed and the free float whenever there is a change in relation to the share or the issuer which significantly affects the previous calculations on an ongoing basis. 6. The calculations referred to in paragraphs 1 to 5 which are to be published on or before the first trading day in March 2009 shall be made on the basis of the data relating to the regulated market or markets of the Member State which is the most relevant market in terms of liquidity for the share in question. For those purposes, negotiated transactions within the meaning of Regulation 19 shall be excluded from the calculations. Regulation 34 (Articles 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Publication and effect of results of required calculations and estimates 1. On the first trading day of March of each year, each competent authority shall, in relation to each share for which it is the relevant competent authority that was admitted to trading on a regulated market at the end of the preceding calendar year, ensure the publication of the following information: (a) the average daily turnover and average daily number of transactions, as calculated in accordance with Regulation 33(1) and (2); (b) the free float and average value of the orders executed, where calculated in accordance with Regulation 33(1) and (2). 80 This paragraph shall not apply to shares to which the second subparagraph of Regulation 33(1) applies. 2. The results of the estimates and calculations required under Regulation 33(3), (4) or (5) shall be published as soon as practicable after the calculation or estimate is completed. 3. The information referred to in paragraphs 1 or 2 shall be considered as published when it is published by the Committee of European Securities Regulators in accordance with paragraph 5. 4. For the purposes of this Regulation, the following shall apply: (a) the classification based on the publication referred to in paragraph 1 shall apply for the 12month period starting on 1 April following publication and ending on the following 31 March; (b) the classification based on the estimates provided for in Regulation 33(3) shall apply from the relevant first admission to trading until the end of the six-week period referred to in Regulation 22(5); (c) the classification based on the calculations specified in Regulation 33(4) shall apply from the end of the six-week period referred to in Regulation 22(5), until: (i) where the end of that six-week period falls between 15 January and 31 March (both inclusive) in a given year, 31 March of the following year; (ii) otherwise, the following 31 March after the end of that period. However, the classification based on the recalculations specified in Regulation 33(5) shall apply from the date of publication and, unless further recalculated under Regulation 33(5), until the following 31 March. 5. The Committee of European Securities Regulators shall, on the basis of data supplied to it by or on behalf of competent authorities, publish on its website consolidated and regularly updated lists of: (a) every systematic internaliser in respect of a share admitted to trading on a regulated market; (b) every share admitted to trading on a regulated market, specifying: (i) the average daily turnover, average daily number of transactions and, for those shares which satisfy the conditions laid down in Regulation 22(1)(a) or (b) (as applicable), the free float; (ii) in the case of a liquid share, the average value of the orders executed and the standard market size for that share; (iii) in the case of a liquid share which has been designated as an additional liquid share in accordance with Regulation 22(3), the name of the competent authority that so designated it; and (iv) the relevant competent authority. 6. Each competent authority shall ensure the first publication of the details referred to in points (a) and (b) of paragraph 1 on the first trading day in July 2007, based on the reference period 1 April 2006 to 31 March 2007. By way of derogation from paragraph 4, the classification based on that publication shall apply for the five-month period starting on 1 November 2007 and ending on 31 March 2008. Article 28 : Post-trade disclosure by investment firms 81 1. Member States shall, at least, require investment firms which, either on own account or on behalf of clients, conclude transactions in shares admitted to trading on a regulated market outside a regulated market or MTF, to make public the volume and price of those transactions and the time at which they were concluded. This information shall be made public as close to real-time as possible, on a reasonable commercial basis, and in a manner which is easily accessible to other market participants. Provisions common to pre- and post-trade transparency Regulation 29 (Articles 27(3), 28(1), 29(1), 44(1) and 45(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Publication and availability of pre- and post-trade transparency data 1. A regulated market, MTF or systematic internaliser shall be considered to publish pre-trade information on a continuous basis during normal trading hours if that information is published as soon as it becomes available during the normal trading hours of the regulated market, MTF or systematic internaliser concerned, and remains available until it is updated. 2. Pre-trade information, and post-trade information relating to transactions taking place on trading venues and within normal trading hours, shall be made available as close to real time as possible. Post-trade information relating to such transactions shall be made available in any case within three minutes of the relevant transaction. 3. Information relating to a portfolio trade shall be made available with respect to each constituent transaction as close to real time as possible, having regard to the need to allocate prices to particular shares. Each constituent transaction shall be assessed separately for the purposes of determining whether deferred publication in respect of that transaction is available under Article 28. 4. Post-trade information relating to transactions taking place on a trading venue but outside its normal trading hours shall be made public before the opening of the next trading day of the trading venue on which the transaction took place. 5. For transactions that take place outside a trading venue, post-trade information shall be made public: (a) if the transaction takes place during a trading day of the most relevant market for the share concerned, or during the investment firm's normal trading hours, as close to real time as possible. Post-trade information relating to such transactions shall be made available in any case within three minutes of the relevant transaction; (b) in a case not covered by point (a), immediately upon the commencement of the investment firm's normal trading hours or at the latest before the opening of the next trading day in the most relevant market for that share. 2. Member States shall require that the information which is made public in accordance with paragraph 1 and the time--limits within which it is published comply with the requirements adopted pursuant to Article 45. Where the measures adopted pursuant to Article 45 provide for deferred reporting for certain categories of transaction in shares, this possibility shall apply mutatis mutandis to those transactions when undertaken outside regulated markets or MTFs. 3. In order to ensure the transparent and orderly functioning of markets and the uniform application of paragraph 1, the Commission shall adopt, in accordance with the procedure referred to in Article 64(2), implementing measures which: 82 (a) (b) specify the means by which investment firms may comply with their obligations under paragraph 1 including the following possibilities: (i) through the facilities of any regulated market which has admitted the instrument in question to trading or through the facilities of an MTF in which the share in question is traded; (ii) through the offices of a third party; (iii) through proprietary arrangements; clarify the application of the obligation under paragraph 1 to transactions involving the use of shares for collateral, lending or other purposes where the exchange of shares is determined by factors other than the current market valuation of the share. Regulation 27 (Articles 28, 30 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Post-trade transparency obligation 1. Investment firms, regulated markets, and investment firms and market operators operating an MTF shall, with regard to transactions in respect of shares admitted to trading on regulated markets concluded by them or, in the case of regulated markets or MTFs, within their systems, make public the following details: (a) the details specified in points 2, 3, 6, 16, 17, 18, and 21 of Table 1 in Annex I; (b) an indication that the exchange of shares is determined by factors other than the current market valuation of the share, where applicable; (c) an indication that the trade was a negotiated trade, where applicable; (d) any amendments to previously disclosed information, where applicable. Those details shall be made public either by reference to each transaction or in a form aggregating the volume and price of all transactions in the same share taking place at the same price at the same time. 2. By way of exception, a systematic internaliser shall be entitled to use the acronym 'SI' instead of the venue identification referred to in paragraph 1(a) in respect of a transaction in a share that is executed in its capacity as a systematic internaliser in respect of that share. The systematic internaliser may exercise that right only as long as it makes available to the public aggregate quarterly data as to the transactions executed in its capacity as a systematic internaliser in respect of that share relating to the most recent calendar quarter, or part of a calendar quarter, during which the firm acted as a systematic internaliser in respect of that share. That data shall be made available no later than one month after the end of each calendar quarter. It may also exercise that right during the period between the date specified in Article 41(2), or the date on which the firm commences to be a systematic internaliser in relation to a share, whichever is the later, and the date that aggregate quarterly data in relation to a share is first due to be published. 3. The aggregated quarterly data referred to in the second subparagraph of paragraph 2 shall contain the following information for the share in respect of each trading day of the calendar quarter concerned: 83 (a) the highest price; (b) the lowest price; (c) the average price; (d) the total number of shares traded; (e) the total number of transactions; (f) such other information as the systematic internaliser decides to make available. 4. Where the transaction is executed outside the rules of a regulated market or an MTF, one of the following investment firms shall, by agreement between the parties, arrange to make the information public: (a) the investment firm that sells the share concerned; (b) the investment firm that acts on behalf of or arranges the transaction for the seller; (c) the investment firm that acts on behalf of or arranges the transaction for the buyer; (d) the investment firm that buys the share concerned. In the absence of such an agreement, the information shall be made public by the investment firm determined by proceeding sequentially from point (a) to point (d) until the first point that applies to the case in question. The parties shall take all reasonable steps to ensure that the transaction is made public as a single transaction. For those purposes two matching trades entered at the same time and price with a single party interposed shall be considered to be a single transaction. Article 28 (Articles 28, 30 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Deferred publication of large transactions The deferred publication of information in respect of transactions may be authorised, for a period no longer than the period specified in Table 4 in Annex II for the class of share and transaction concerned, provided that the following criteria are satisfied: (a) the transaction is between an investment firm dealing on own account and a client of that firm; (b) the size of the transaction is equal to or exceeds the relevant minimum qualifying size, as specified in Table 4 in Annex II. In order to determine the relevant minimum qualifying size for the purposes of point (b), all shares admitted to trading on a regulated market shall be classified in accordance with their average daily turnover to be calculated in accordance with Article 33. Regulation 30 (Articles 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Public availability of pre- and post-trade information 84 For the purposes of Articles 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC and of this Regulation, pre- and post-trade information shall be considered to be made public or available to the public if it is made available generally through one of the following to investors located in the Community: (a) the facilities of a regulated market or an MTF; (b) the facilities of a third party; (c) proprietary arrangements. Regulation 32 (Article 22(2), 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Arrangements for making information public Any arrangement to make information public, adopted for the purposes of Regulations 30 and 31, shall satisfy the following conditions: (a) it must include all reasonable steps necessary to ensure that the information to be published is reliable, monitored continuously for errors, and corrected as soon as errors are detected; (b) it must facilitate the consolidation of the data with similar data from other sources; (c) it must make the information available to the public on a non-discriminatory commercial basis at a reasonable cost. Regulation 33 (Articles 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Calculations and estimates for shares admitted to trading on a regulated market 1. In respect of each share that is admitted to trading on a regulated market, the relevant competent authority for that share shall ensure that the following calculations are made in respect of that share promptly after the end of each calendar year: (a) the average daily turnover; (b) the average daily number of transactions; (c) for those shares which satisfy the conditions laid down in Regulation 22(1)(a) or (b) (as applicable), the free float as at 31 December; (d) if the share is a liquid share, the average value of the orders executed. This paragraph and paragraph 2 shall not apply to a share which is first admitted to trading on a regulated market four weeks or less before the end of the calendar year. 2. The calculation of the average daily turnover, average value of the orders executed and average daily number of transactions shall take into account all the orders executed in the Community in respect of the share in question between 1 January and 31 December of the preceding year, or, where applicable, that part of the year during which the share was admitted to trading on a regulated market and was not suspended from trading on a regulated market. 85 In the calculations of the average daily turnover, average value of the orders executed and average daily number of transactions of a share, non-trading days in the Member State of the relevant competent authority for that share shall be excluded. 3. Before the first admission of a share to trading on a regulated market, the relevant competent authority for that share shall ensure that estimates are provided, in respect of that share, of the average daily turnover, the market capitalisation as it will stand at the start of the first day of trading and, where the estimate of the market capitalisation is EUR 500 million or more: (a) the average daily number of transactions and, for those shares which satisfy the conditions laid down in Regulation 22 (1)(a) or (b) (as applicable), the free float; (b) in the case of a share that is estimated to be a liquid share, the average value of the orders executed. The estimates shall relate to the six-week period following admission to trading, or the end of that period, as applicable, and shall take account of any previous trading history of the share, as well as that of shares that are considered to have similar characteristics. 4. After the first admission of a share to trading on a regulated market, the relevant competent authority for that share shall ensure that, in respect of that share, the figures referred to in points (a) to (d) of paragraph 1 are calculated, using data relating to the first four weeks' trading, as if a reference in point (c) of paragraph 1 to 31 December were a reference to the end of the first four weeks' trading, as soon as practicable after those data are available, and in any case before the end of the six-week period referred to in Regulation 22(5). 5. During the course of a calendar year, the relevant competent authorities shall ensure the review and where necessary the recalculation of the average daily turnover, average value of the orders executed, average daily number of transactions executed and the free float whenever there is a change in relation to the share or the issuer which significantly affects the previous calculations on an ongoing basis. 6. The calculations referred to in paragraphs 1 to 5 which are to be published on or before the first trading day in March 2009 shall be made on the basis of the data relating to the regulated market or markets of the Member State which is the most relevant market in terms of liquidity for the share in question. For those purposes, negotiated transactions within the meaning of Article 19 shall be excluded from the calculations. Regulation 34 (Articles 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Publication and effect of results of required calculations and estimates 1. On the first trading day of March of each year, each competent authority shall, in relation to each share for which it is the relevant competent authority that was admitted to trading on a regulated market at the end of the preceding calendar year, ensure the publication of the following information: (a) the average daily turnover and average daily number of transactions, as calculated in accordance with Regulation 33(1) and (2); (b) the free float and average value of the orders executed, where calculated in accordance with Regulation 33(1) and (2). This paragraph shall not apply to shares to which the second subparagraph of Regulation 33(1) applies. 86 2. The results of the estimates and calculations required under Regulation 33(3), (4) or (5) shall be published as soon as practicable after the calculation or estimate is completed. 3. The information referred to in paragraphs 1 or 2 shall be considered as published when it is published by the Committee of European Securities Regulators in accordance with paragraph 5. 4. For the purposes of this Regulation, the following shall apply: (a) the classification based on the publication referred to in paragraph 1 shall apply for the 12month period starting on 1 April following publication and ending on the following 31 March; (b) the classification based on the estimates provided for in Regulation 33(3) shall apply from the relevant first admission to trading until the end of the six-week period referred to in Regulation 22(5); (c) the classification based on the calculations specified in Regulation 33(4) shall apply from the end of the six-week period referred to in Regulation 22(5), until: (i) where the end of that six-week period falls between 15 January and 31 March (both inclusive) in a given year, 31 March of the following year; (ii) otherwise, the following 31 March after the end of that period. However, the classification based on the recalculations specified in Regulation 33(5) shall apply from the date of publication and, unless further recalculated under Regulation 33(5), until the following 31 March. 5. The Committee of European Securities Regulators shall, on the basis of data supplied to it by or on behalf of competent authorities, publish on its website consolidated and regularly updated lists of: (a) every systematic internaliser in respect of a share admitted to trading on a regulated market; (b) every share admitted to trading on a regulated market, specifying: (i) the average daily turnover, average daily number of transactions and, for those shares which satisfy the conditions laid down in Regulation 22(1)(a) or (b) (as applicable), the free float; (ii) in the case of a liquid share, the average value of the orders executed and the standard market size for that share; (iii) in the case of a liquid share which has been designated as an additional liquid share in accordance with Regulation 22(3), the name of the competent authority that so designated it; and (iv) the relevant competent authority. 6. Each competent authority shall ensure the first publication of the details referred to in points (a) and (b) of paragraph 1 on the first trading day in July 2007, based on the reference period 1 April 2006 to 31 March 2007. By way of derogation from paragraph 4, the classification based on that publication shall apply for the five-month period starting on 1 November 2007 and ending on 31 March 2008. Article 29 : Pre-trade transparency requirements for MTFs 1. Member States shall, at least, require that investment firms and market operators operating an MTF make public current bid and offer prices and the depth of trading 87 interests at these prices which are advertised through their systems in respect of shares admitted to trading on a regulated market. Member States shall provide for this information to be made available to the public on reasonable commercial terms and on a continuous basis during normal trading hours. Provisions common to pre- and post-trade transparency Regulation 29 (Articles 27(3), 28(1), 29(1), 44(1) and 45(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Publication and availability of pre- and post-trade transparency data 1. A regulated market, MTF or systematic internaliser shall be considered to publish pre-trade information on a continuous basis during normal trading hours if that information is published as soon as it becomes available during the normal trading hours of the regulated market, MTF or systematic internaliser concerned, and remains available until it is updated. 2. Pre-trade information, and post-trade information relating to transactions taking place on trading venues and within normal trading hours, shall be made available as close to real time as possible. Post-trade information relating to such transactions shall be made available in any case within three minutes of the relevant transaction. 3. Information relating to a portfolio trade shall be made available with respect to each constituent transaction as close to real time as possible, having regard to the need to allocate prices to particular shares. Each constituent transaction shall be assessed separately for the purposes of determining whether deferred publication in respect of that transaction is available under Article 28. 4. Post-trade information relating to transactions taking place on a trading venue but outside its normal trading hours shall be made public before the opening of the next trading day of the trading venue on which the transaction took place. 5. For transactions that take place outside a trading venue, post-trade information shall be made public: (a) if the transaction takes place during a trading day of the most relevant market for the share concerned, or during the investment firm's normal trading hours, as close to real time as possible. Post-trade information relating to such transactions shall be made available in any case within three minutes of the relevant transaction; (b) in a case not covered by point (a), immediately upon the commencement of the investment firm's normal trading hours or at the latest before the opening of the next trading day in the most relevant market for that share. 2. Member States shall provide for the competent authorities to be able to waive the obligation for investment firms or market operators operating an MTF to make public the information referred to in paragraph 1 based on the market model or the type and size of orders in the cases defined in accordance with paragraph 3. In particular, the competent authorities shall be able to waive the obligation in respect of transactions that are large in scale compared with normal market size for the share or type of share in question. Regulation 18 (Articles 29(2) and 44(2) of Directive 2004/39/EC) 88 Waivers based on market model and type of order or transaction 1. Waivers in accordance with Article 29(2) and 44(2) of Directive 2004/39/EC may be granted by the competent authorities for systems operated by an MTF or a regulated market, if those systems satisfy one of the following criteria: (a) they must be based on a trading methodology by which the price is determined in accordance with a reference price generated by another system, where that reference price is widely published and is regarded generally by market participants as a reliable reference price; (b) they formalise negotiated transactions, each of which meets one of the following criteria: (i) it is made at or within the current volume weighted spread reflected on the order book or the quotes of the market makers of the regulated market or MTF operating that system or, where the share is not traded continuously, within a percentage of a suitable reference price, being a percentage and a reference price set in advance by the system operator; (ii) it is subject to conditions other than the current market price of the share. For the purposes of point (b), the other conditions specified in the rules of the regulated market or MTF for a transaction of this kind must also have been fulfilled. In the case of systems having functionality other than as described in points (a) or (b), the waiver shall not apply to that other functionality. 2. Waivers in accordance with Articles 29(2) and 44(2) of Directive 2004/39/EC based on the type of orders may be granted only in relation to orders held in an order management facility maintained by the regulated market or the MTF pending their being disclosed to the market. Regulation 19 (Articles 29(2) and 44(2) of Directive 2004/39/EC) References to negotiated transaction For the purpose of Regulation 18(1)(b) a negotiated transaction shall mean a transaction involving members or participants of a regulated market or an MTF which is negotiated privately but executed within the regulated market or MTF and where that member or participant in doing so undertakes one of the following tasks: (a) dealing on own account with another member or participant who acts for the account of a client; (b) dealing with another member or participant, where both are executing orders on own account; (c) acting for the account of both the buyer and seller; (d) acting for the account of the buyer, where another member or participant acts for the account of the seller; (e) trading for own account against a client order. Article 20 (Articles 29(2) and 44(2), and fifth subparagraph of Article 27(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Waivers in relation to transactions which are large in scale 89 An order shall be considered to be large in scale compared with normal market size if it is equal to or larger than the minimum size of order specified in Table 2 in Annex II. For the purposes of determining whether an order is large in scale compared to normal market size, all shares admitted to trading on a regulated market shall be classified in accordance with their average daily turnover, which shall be calculated in accordance with the procedure set out in Regulation 33. 3. In order to ensure the uniform application of paragraphs 1 and 2, the Commission shall, in accordance with the procedure referred to in Article 64(2) adopt implementing measures as regards: (a) the range of bid and offers or designated market-maker quotes, and the depth of trading interest at those prices, to be made public; (b) the size or type of orders for which pre-trade disclosure may be waived under paragraph 2; (c) the market model for which pre-trade disclosure may be waived under paragraph 2 and in particular, the applicability of the obligation to trading methods operated by an MTF which conclude transactions under their rules by reference to prices established outside the systems of the MTF or by periodic auction. Except where justified by the specific nature of the MTF, the content of these implementing measures shall be equal to that of the implementing measures provided for in Article 44 for regulated markets. Chapter IV MARKET TRANSPARENCY Section 1 Pre-trade transparency for regulated markets and MTFs Regulation 17 (Articles 29 and 44 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Pre-trade transparency obligations 1. An investment firm or market operator operating an MTF or a regulated market shall, in respect of each share admitted to trading on a regulated market that is traded within a system operated by it and specified in Table 1 of Annex II, make public the information set out in paragraphs 2 to 6. 2. Where one of the entities referred to in paragraph 1 operates a continuous auction order book trading system, it shall, for each share as specified in paragraph 1, make public continuously throughout its normal trading hours the aggregate number of orders and of the shares those orders represent at each price level, for the five best bid and offer price levels. 3. Where one of the entities referred to in paragraph 1 operates a quote-driven trading system, it shall, for each share as specified in paragraph 1, make public continuously throughout its normal trading hours the best bid and offer by price of each market maker in that share, together with the volumes attaching to those prices. The quotes made public shall be those that represent binding commitments to buy and sell the shares and which indicate the price and volume of shares in which the registered market makers are prepared to buy or sell. 90 In exceptional market conditions, however, indicative or one-way prices may be allowed for a limited time. 4. Where one of the entities referred to in paragraph 1 operates a periodic auction trading system, it shall, for each share specified in paragraph 1, make public continuously throughout its normal trading hours the price that would best satisfy the system's trading algorithm and the volume that would potentially be executable at that price by participants in that system. 5. Where one of the entities referred to in paragraph 1 operates a trading system which is not wholly covered by paragraph 2 or 3 or 4, either because it is a hybrid system falling under more than one of those paragraphs or because the price determination process is of a different nature, it shall maintain a standard of pre-trade transparency that ensures that adequate information is made public as to the price level of orders or quotes for each share specified in paragraph 1, as well as the level of trading interest in that share. In particular, the five best bid and offer price levels and/or two-way quotes of each market maker in that share shall be made public, if the characteristics of the price discovery mechanism permit it. 6. A summary of the information to be made public in accordance with paragraphs 2 to 5 is specified in Table 1 of Annex II. Regulation 30 (Articles 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Public availability of pre- and post-trade information For the purposes of Articles 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC and of this Regulation, pre- and post-trade information shall be considered to be made public or available to the public if it is made available generally through one of the following to investors located in the Community: (a) the facilities of a regulated market or an MTF; (b) the facilities of a third party; (c) proprietary arrangements. Regulation 32 (Article 22(2), 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Arrangements for making information public Any arrangement to make information public, adopted for the purposes of Regulations 30 and 31, shall satisfy the following conditions: (a) it must include all reasonable steps necessary to ensure that the information to be published is reliable, monitored continuously for errors, and corrected as soon as errors are detected; (b) it must facilitate the consolidation of the data with similar data from other sources; (c) it must make the information available to the public on a non-discriminatory commercial basis at a reasonable cost. 91 Regulation 33 (Articles 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Calculations and estimates for shares admitted to trading on a regulated market 1. In respect of each share that is admitted to trading on a regulated market, the relevant competent authority for that share shall ensure that the following calculations are made in respect of that share promptly after the end of each calendar year: (a) the average daily turnover; (b) the average daily number of transactions; (c) for those shares which satisfy the conditions laid down in Regulation 22(1)(a) or (b) (as applicable), the free float as at 31 December; (d) if the share is a liquid share, the average value of the orders executed. This paragraph and paragraph 2 shall not apply to a share which is first admitted to trading on a regulated market four weeks or less before the end of the calendar year. 2. The calculation of the average daily turnover, average value of the orders executed and average daily number of transactions shall take into account all the orders executed in the Community in respect of the share in question between 1 January and 31 December of the preceding year, or, where applicable, that part of the year during which the share was admitted to trading on a regulated market and was not suspended from trading on a regulated market. In the calculations of the average daily turnover, average value of the orders executed and average daily number of transactions of a share, non-trading days in the Member State of the relevant competent authority for that share shall be excluded. 3. Before the first admission of a share to trading on a regulated market, the relevant competent authority for that share shall ensure that estimates are provided, in respect of that share, of the average daily turnover, the market capitalisation as it will stand at the start of the first day of trading and, where the estimate of the market capitalisation is EUR 500 million or more: (a) the average daily number of transactions and, for those shares which satisfy the conditions laid down in Regulation 22 (1)(a) or (b) (as applicable), the free float; (b) in the case of a share that is estimated to be a liquid share, the average value of the orders executed. The estimates shall relate to the six-week period following admission to trading, or the end of that period, as applicable, and shall take account of any previous trading history of the share, as well as that of shares that are considered to have similar characteristics. 4. After the first admission of a share to trading on a regulated market, the relevant competent authority for that share shall ensure that, in respect of that share, the figures referred to in points (a) to (d) of paragraph 1 are calculated, using data relating to the first four weeks' trading, as if a reference in point (c) of paragraph 1 to 31 December were a reference to the end of the first four weeks' trading, as soon as practicable after those data are available, and in any case before the end of the six-week period referred to in Regulation 22(5). 5. During the course of a calendar year, the relevant competent authorities shall ensure the review and where necessary the recalculation of the average daily turnover, average value of the orders executed, average daily number of transactions executed and the free float whenever there is a 92 change in relation to the share or the issuer which significantly affects the previous calculations on an ongoing basis. 6. The calculations referred to in paragraphs 1 to 5 which are to be published on or before the first trading day in March 2009 shall be made on the basis of the data relating to the regulated market or markets of the Member State which is the most relevant market in terms of liquidity for the share in question. For those purposes, negotiated transactions within the meaning of Regulation 19 shall be excluded from the calculations. Regulation 34 (Articles 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Publication and effect of results of required calculations and estimates 1. On the first trading day of March of each year, each competent authority shall, in relation to each share for which it is the relevant competent authority that was admitted to trading on a regulated market at the end of the preceding calendar year, ensure the publication of the following information: (a) the average daily turnover and average daily number of transactions, as calculated in accordance with Regulation 33(1) and (2); (b) the free float and average value of the orders executed, where calculated in accordance with Regulation 33(1) and (2). This paragraph shall not apply to shares to which the second subparagraph of Regulation 33(1) applies. 2. The results of the estimates and calculations required under Regulation 33(3), (4) or (5) shall be published as soon as practicable after the calculation or estimate is completed. 3. The information referred to in paragraphs 1 or 2 shall be considered as published when it is published by the Committee of European Securities Regulators in accordance with paragraph 5. 4. For the purposes of this Regulation, the following shall apply: (a) the classification based on the publication referred to in paragraph 1 shall apply for the 12month period starting on 1 April following publication and ending on the following 31 March; (b) the classification based on the estimates provided for in Regulation 33(3) shall apply from the relevant first admission to trading until the end of the six-week period referred to in Regulation 22(5); (c) the classification based on the calculations specified in Regulation 33(4) shall apply from the end of the six-week period referred to in Regulation 22(5), until: (i) where the end of that six-week period falls between 15 January and 31 March (both inclusive) in a given year, 31 March of the following year; (ii) otherwise, the following 31 March after the end of that period. However, the classification based on the recalculations specified in Regulation 33(5) shall apply from the date of publication and, unless further recalculated under Regulation 33(5), until the following 31 March. 5. The Committee of European Securities Regulators shall, on the basis of data supplied to it by or on behalf of competent authorities, publish on its website consolidated and regularly updated lists of: 93 (a) every systematic internaliser in respect of a share admitted to trading on a regulated market; (b) every share admitted to trading on a regulated market, specifying: (i) the average daily turnover, average daily number of transactions and, for those shares which satisfy the conditions laid down in Regulation 22(1)(a) or (b) (as applicable), the free float; (ii) in the case of a liquid share, the average value of the orders executed and the standard market size for that share; (iii) in the case of a liquid share which has been designated as an additional liquid share in accordance with Regulation 22(3), the name of the competent authority that so designated it; and (iv) the relevant competent authority. 6. Each competent authority shall ensure the first publication of the details referred to in points (a) and (b) of paragraph 1 on the first trading day in July 2007, based on the reference period 1 April 2006 to 31 March 2007. By way of derogation from paragraph 4, the classification based on that publication shall apply for the five-month period starting on 1 November 2007 and ending on 31 March 2008. Article 30 : Post-trade transparency requirements for MTFs 1. Member States shall, at least, require that investment firms and market operators operating an MTF make public the price, volume and time of the transactions executed under its systems in respect of shares which are admitted to trading on a regulated market. Member States shall require that details of all such transactions be made public, on a reasonable commercial basis, as close to real-time as possible. This requirement shall not apply to details of trades executed on an MTF that are made public under the systems of a regulated market. 2. Member States shall provide that the competent authority may authorise investment firms or market operators operating an MTF to provide for deferred publication of the details of transactions based on their type or size. In particular, the competent authorities may authorise the deferred publication in respect of transactions that are large in scale compared with the normal market size for that share or that class of shares. Member States shall require MTFs to obtain the competent authority's prior approval to proposed arrangements for deferred trade-publication, and shall require that these arrangements be clearly disclosed to market participants and the investing public. 3. In order to provide for the efficient and orderly functioning of financial markets, and to ensure the uniform application of paragraphs 1 and 2, the Commission shall, in accordance with the procedure referred to in Article 64(2) adopt implementing measures in respect of: (a) the scope and content of the information to be made available to the public; (b) the conditions under which investment firms or market operators operating an MTF may provide for deferred publication of trades and the criteria to be applied when deciding the transactions for which, due to their size or the type of share involved, deferred publication is allowed. Except where justified by the specific nature of the MTF, the content of these implementing measures shall be equal to that of the implementing measures provided for in Article 45 for regulated markets. 94 Regulation 27 (Articles 28, 30 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Post-trade transparency obligation 1. Investment firms, regulated markets, and investment firms and market operators operating an MTF shall, with regard to transactions in respect of shares admitted to trading on regulated markets concluded by them or, in the case of regulated markets or MTFs, within their systems, make public the following details: (a) the details specified in points 2, 3, 6, 16, 17, 18, and 21 of Table 1 in Annex I; (b) an indication that the exchange of shares is determined by factors other than the current market valuation of the share, where applicable; (c) an indication that the trade was a negotiated trade, where applicable; (d) any amendments to previously disclosed information, where applicable. Those details shall be made public either by reference to each transaction or in a form aggregating the volume and price of all transactions in the same share taking place at the same price at the same time. 2. By way of exception, a systematic internaliser shall be entitled to use the acronym 'SI' instead of the venue identification referred to in paragraph 1(a) in respect of a transaction in a share that is executed in its capacity as a systematic internaliser in respect of that share. The systematic internaliser may exercise that right only as long as it makes available to the public aggregate quarterly data as to the transactions executed in its capacity as a systematic internaliser in respect of that share relating to the most recent calendar quarter, or part of a calendar quarter, during which the firm acted as a systematic internaliser in respect of that share. That data shall be made available no later than one month after the end of each calendar quarter. It may also exercise that right during the period between the date specified in Regulation 41(2), or the date on which the firm commences to be a systematic internaliser in relation to a share, whichever is the later, and the date that aggregate quarterly data in relation to a share is first due to be published. 3. The aggregated quarterly data referred to in the second subparagraph of paragraph 2 shall contain the following information for the share in respect of each trading day of the calendar quarter concerned: (a) the highest price; (b) the lowest price; (c) the average price; (d) the total number of shares traded; (e) the total number of transactions; (f) such other information as the systematic internaliser decides to make available. 4. Where the transaction is executed outside the rules of a regulated market or an MTF, one of the following investment firms shall, by agreement between the parties, arrange to make the information public: (a) the investment firm that sells the share concerned; 95 (b) the investment firm that acts on behalf of or arranges the transaction for the seller; (c) the investment firm that acts on behalf of or arranges the transaction for the buyer; (d) the investment firm that buys the share concerned. In the absence of such an agreement, the information shall be made public by the investment firm determined by proceeding sequentially from point (a) to point (d) until the first point that applies to the case in question. The parties shall take all reasonable steps to ensure that the transaction is made public as a single transaction. For those purposes two matching trades entered at the same time and price with a single party interposed shall be considered to be a single transaction. Article 28 (Articles 28, 30 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Deferred publication of large transactions The deferred publication of information in respect of transactions may be authorised, for a period no longer than the period specified in Table 4 in Annex II for the class of share and transaction concerned, provided that the following criteria are satisfied: (a) the transaction is between an investment firm dealing on own account and a client of that firm; (b) the size of the transaction is equal to or exceeds the relevant minimum qualifying size, as specified in Table 4 in Annex II. In order to determine the relevant minimum qualifying size for the purposes of point (b), all shares admitted to trading on a regulated market shall be classified in accordance with their average daily turnover to be calculated in accordance with Article 33. Regulation 30 (Articles 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Public availability of pre- and post-trade information For the purposes of Articles 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC and of this Regulation, pre- and post-trade information shall be considered to be made public or available to the public if it is made available generally through one of the following to investors located in the Community: (a) the facilities of a regulated market or an MTF; (b) the facilities of a third party; (c) proprietary arrangements. 96 Regulation 32 (Article 22(2), 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Arrangements for making information public Any arrangement to make information public, adopted for the purposes of Regulations 30 and 31, shall satisfy the following conditions: (a) it must include all reasonable steps necessary to ensure that the information to be published is reliable, monitored continuously for errors, and corrected as soon as errors are detected; (b) it must facilitate the consolidation of the data with similar data from other sources; (c) it must make the information available to the public on a non-discriminatory commercial basis at a reasonable cost. Regulation 33 (Articles 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Calculations and estimates for shares admitted to trading on a regulated market 1. In respect of each share that is admitted to trading on a regulated market, the relevant competent authority for that share shall ensure that the following calculations are made in respect of that share promptly after the end of each calendar year: (a) the average daily turnover; (b) the average daily number of transactions; (c) for those shares which satisfy the conditions laid down in Regulation 22(1)(a) or (b) (as applicable), the free float as at 31 December; (d) if the share is a liquid share, the average value of the orders executed. This paragraph and paragraph 2 shall not apply to a share which is first admitted to trading on a regulated market four weeks or less before the end of the calendar year. 2. The calculation of the average daily turnover, average value of the orders executed and average daily number of transactions shall take into account all the orders executed in the Community in respect of the share in question between 1 January and 31 December of the preceding year, or, where applicable, that part of the year during which the share was admitted to trading on a regulated market and was not suspended from trading on a regulated market. In the calculations of the average daily turnover, average value of the orders executed and average daily number of transactions of a share, non-trading days in the Member State of the relevant competent authority for that share shall be excluded. 3. Before the first admission of a share to trading on a regulated market, the relevant competent authority for that share shall ensure that estimates are provided, in respect of that share, of the average daily turnover, the market capitalisation as it will stand at the start of the first day of trading and, where the estimate of the market capitalisation is EUR 500 million or more: (a) the average daily number of transactions and, for those shares which satisfy the conditions laid down in Regulation 22 (1)(a) or (b) (as applicable), the free float; (b) in the case of a share that is estimated to be a liquid share, the average value of the orders 97 executed. The estimates shall relate to the six-week period following admission to trading, or the end of that period, as applicable, and shall take account of any previous trading history of the share, as well as that of shares that are considered to have similar characteristics. 4. After the first admission of a share to trading on a regulated market, the relevant competent authority for that share shall ensure that, in respect of that share, the figures referred to in points (a) to (d) of paragraph 1 are calculated, using data relating to the first four weeks' trading, as if a reference in point (c) of paragraph 1 to 31 December were a reference to the end of the first four weeks' trading, as soon as practicable after those data are available, and in any case before the end of the six-week period referred to in Regulation 22(5). 5. During the course of a calendar year, the relevant competent authorities shall ensure the review and where necessary the recalculation of the average daily turnover, average value of the orders executed, average daily number of transactions executed and the free float whenever there is a change in relation to the share or the issuer which significantly affects the previous calculations on an ongoing basis. 6. The calculations referred to in paragraphs 1 to 5 which are to be published on or before the first trading day in March 2009 shall be made on the basis of the data relating to the regulated market or markets of the Member State which is the most relevant market in terms of liquidity for the share in question. For those purposes, negotiated transactions within the meaning of Regulation 19 shall be excluded from the calculations. Regulation 34 (Articles 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Publication and effect of results of required calculations and estimates 1. On the first trading day of March of each year, each competent authority shall, in relation to each share for which it is the relevant competent authority that was admitted to trading on a regulated market at the end of the preceding calendar year, ensure the publication of the following information: (a) the average daily turnover and average daily number of transactions, as calculated in accordance with Regulation 33(1) and (2); (b) the free float and average value of the orders executed, where calculated in accordance with Regulation 33(1) and (2). This paragraph shall not apply to shares to which the second subparagraph of Regulation 33(1) applies. 2. The results of the estimates and calculations required under Regulation 33(3), (4) or (5) shall be published as soon as practicable after the calculation or estimate is completed. 3. The information referred to in paragraphs 1 or 2 shall be considered as published when it is published by the Committee of European Securities Regulators in accordance with paragraph 5. 4. For the purposes of this Regulation, the following shall apply: (a) the classification based on the publication referred to in paragraph 1 shall apply for the 12month period starting on 1 April following publication and ending on the following 31 March; (b) the classification based on the estimates provided for in Regulation 33(3) shall apply from the relevant first admission to trading until the end of the six-week period referred to in Regulation 22(5); 98 (c) the classification based on the calculations specified in Regulation 33(4) shall apply from the end of the six-week period referred to in Regulation 22(5), until: (i) where the end of that six-week period falls between 15 January and 31 March (both inclusive) in a given year, 31 March of the following year; (ii) otherwise, the following 31 March after the end of that period. However, the classification based on the recalculations specified in Regulation 33(5) shall apply from the date of publication and, unless further recalculated under Regulation 33(5), until the following 31 March. 5. The Committee of European Securities Regulators shall, on the basis of data supplied to it by or on behalf of competent authorities, publish on its website consolidated and regularly updated lists of: (a) every systematic internaliser in respect of a share admitted to trading on a regulated market; (b) every share admitted to trading on a regulated market, specifying: (i) the average daily turnover, average daily number of transactions and, for those shares which satisfy the conditions laid down in Regulation 22(1)(a) or (b) (as applicable), the free float; (ii) in the case of a liquid share, the average value of the orders executed and the standard market size for that share; (iii) in the case of a liquid share which has been designated as an additional liquid share in accordance with Regulation 22(3), the name of the competent authority that so designated it; and (iv) the relevant competent authority. 6. Each competent authority shall ensure the first publication of the details referred to in points (a) and (b) of paragraph 1 on the first trading day in July 2007, based on the reference period 1 April 2006 to 31 March 2007. By way of derogation from paragraph 4, the classification based on that publication shall apply for the five-month period starting on 1 November 2007 and ending on 31 March 2008. Chapter III : RIGHTS OF INVESTMENT FIRMS Article 31 : Freedom to provide investment services and activities 1. Member States shall ensure that any investment firm authorised and supervised by the competent authorities of another Member State in accordance with this Directive, and in respect of credit institutions in accordance with Directive 2000/12/EC, may freely perform investment services and/or activities as well as ancillary services within their territories, provided that such services and activities are covered by its authorisation. Ancillary services may only be provided together with an investment service and/or activity. Member States shall not impose any additional requirements on such an investment firm or credit institution in respect of the matters covered by this Directive. 2. Any investment firm wishing to provide services or activities within the territory of another Member State for the first time, or which wishes to change the range of services or activities so provided, shall communicate the following information to the competent 99 authorities of its home Member State: (a) the Member State in which it intends to operate; (b) a programme of operations stating in particular the investment services and/or activities as well as ancillary services which it intends to perform and whether it intends to use tied agents in the territory of the Member States in which it intends to provide services. In cases where the investment firm intends to use tied agents, the competent authority of the home Member State of the investment firm shall, at the request of the competent authority of the host Member State and within a reasonable time, communicate the identity of the tied agents that the investment firm intends to use in that Member State. The host Member State may make public such information. 3. The competent authority of the home Member State shall, within one month of receiving the information, forward it to the competent authority of the host Member State designated as contact point in accordance with Article 56(1). The investment firm may then start to provide the investment service or services concerned in the host Member State. 4. In the event of a change in any of the particulars communicated in accordance with paragraph 2, an investment firm shall give written notice of that change to the competent authority of the home Member State at least one month before implementing the change. The competent authority of the home Member State shall inform the competent authority of the host Member State of those changes. 5. Member States shall, without further legal or administrative requirement, allow investment firms and market operators operating MTFs from other Member States to provide appropriate arrangements on their territory so as to facilitate access to and use of their systems by remote users or participants established in their territory. 6. The investment firm or the market operator that operates an MTF shall communicate to the competent authority of its home Member State the Member State in which it intends to provide such arrangements. The competent authority of the home Member State of the MTF shall communicate, within one month, this information to the Member State in which the MTF intends to provide such arrangements. The competent authority of the home Member State of the MTF shall, on the request of the competent authority of the host Member State of the MTF and within a reasonable delay, communicate the identity of the members or participants of the MTF established in that Member State. Article 32 : Establishment of a branch 1. Member States shall ensure that investment services and/or activities as well as ancillary services may be provided within their territories in accordance with this Directive and Directive 2000/12/EC through the establishment of a branch provided that those services and activities are covered by the authorisation granted to the investment firm or the credit institution in the home Member State. Ancillary services may only be provided together with an investment service and/or activity. Member States shall not impose any additional requirements save those allowed under paragraph 7, on the organisation and operation of the branch in respect of the matters covered by this Directive. 2. Member States shall require any investment firm wishing to establish a branch within the territory of another Member State first to notify the competent authority of its home Member State and to provide it with the following information: 100 (a) the Member States within the territory of which it plans to establish a branch; (b) a programme of operations setting out inter alia the investment services and/or activities as well as the ancillary services to be offered and the organisational structure of the branch and indicating whether the branch intends to use tied agents; (c) the address in the host Member State from which documents may be obtained; (d) the names of those responsible for the management of the branch. In cases where an investment firm uses a tied agent established in a Member State outside its home Member State, such tied agent shall be assimilated to the branch and shall be subject to the provisions of this Directive relating to branches. 3. Unless the competent authority of the home Member State has reason to doubt the adequacy of the administrative structure or the financial situation of an investment firm, taking into account the activities envisaged, it shall, within three months of receiving all the information, communicate that information to the competent authority of the host Member State designated as contact point in accordance with Article 56(1) and inform the investment firm concerned accordingly. 4. In addition to the information referred to in paragraph 2, the competent authority of the home Member State shall communicate details of the accredited compensation scheme of which the investment firm is a member in accordance with Directive 97/9/EC to the competent authority of the host Member State. In the event of a change in the particulars, the competent authority of the home Member State shall inform the competent authority of the host Member State accordingly. 5. Where the competent authority of the home Member State refuses to communicate the information to the competent authority of the host Member State, it shall give reasons for its refusal to the investment firm concerned within three months of receiving all the information. 6. On receipt of a communication from the competent authority of the host Member State, or failing such communication from the latter at the latest after two months from the date of transmission of the communication by the competent authority of the home Member State, the branch may be established and commence business. 7. The competent authority of the Member State in which the branch is located shall assume responsibility for ensuring that the services provided by the branch within its territory comply with the obligations laid down in Articles 19, 21, 22, 25, 27 and 28 and in measures adopted pursuant thereto. The competent authority of the Member State in which the branch is located shall have the right to examine branch arrangements and to request such changes as are strictly needed to enable the competent authority to enforce the obligations under Articles 19, 21, 22, 25, 27 and 28 and measures adopted pursuant thereto with respect to the services and/or activities provided by the branch within its territory. 8. Each Member State shall provide that, where an investment firm authorised in another Member State has established a branch within its territory, the competent authority of the home Member State of the investment firm, in the exercise of its responsibilities and after informing the competent authority of the host Member State, may carry out on-site inspections in that branch. 9. In the event of a change in any of the information communicated in accordance with paragraph 2, an investment firm shall give written notice of that change to the competent authority of the home Member State at least one month before implementing the change. The competent authority of the host Member State shall also be informed of that change 101 by the competent authority of the home Member State. Article 33 : Access to regulated markets 1. 2. Member States shall require that investment firms from other Member States which are authorised to execute client orders or to deal on own account have the right of membership or have access to regulated markets established in their territory by means of any of the following arrangements: (a) directly, by setting up branches in the host Member States; (b) by becoming remote members of or having remote access to the regulated market without having to be established in the home Member State of the regulated market, where the trading procedures and systems of the market in question do not require a physical presence for conclusion of transactions on the market. Member States shall not impose any additional regulatory or administrative requirements, in respect of matters covered by this Directive, on investment firms exercising the right conferred by paragraph 1. Article 34 : Access to central counterparty, clearing and settlement facilities and right to designate settlement system 1. Member States shall require that investment firms from other Member States have the right of access to central counterparty, clearing and settlement systems in their territory for the purposes of finalising or arranging the finalisation of transactions in financial instruments. Member States shall require that access of those investment firms to such facilities be subject to the same non-discriminatory, transparent and objective criteria as apply to local participants. Member States shall not restrict the use of those facilities to the clearing and settlement of transactions in financial instruments undertaken on a regulated market or MTF in their territory. 2. Member States shall require that regulated markets in their territory offer all their members or participants the right to designate the system for the settlement of transactions in financial instruments undertaken on that regulated market, subject to: (a) such links and arrangements between the designated settlement system and any other system or facility as are necessary to ensure the efficient and economic settlement of the transaction in question; and (b) agreement by the competent authority responsible for the supervision of the regulated market that technical conditions for settlement of transactions concluded on the regulated market through a settlement system other than that designated by the regulated market are such as to allow the smooth and orderly functioning of financial markets. This assessment of the competent authority of the regulated market shall be without prejudice to the competencies of the national central banks as overseers of settlement systems or other supervisory authorities on such systems. The competent authority shall take into account the oversight/supervision already exercised by those institutions in order to avoid undue duplication of control. 3. The rights of investment firms under paragraphs 1 and 2 shall be without prejudice to the right of operators of central counterparty, clearing or securities settlement systems to refuse on legitimate commercial grounds to make the requested services available. 102 Article 35 : Provisions regarding arrangements in respect of MTFs central counterparty, clearing and settlement 1. Member States shall not prevent investment firms and market operators operating an MTF from entering into appropriate arrangements with a central counterparty or clearing house and a settlement system of another Member State with a view to providing for the clearing and/or settlement of some or all trades concluded by market participants under their systems. 2. The competent authority of investment firms and market operators operating an MTF may not oppose the use of central counterparty, clearing houses and/or settlement systems in another Member State except where this is demonstrably necessary in order to maintain the orderly functioning of that MTF and taking into account the conditions for settlement systems established in Article 34(2). In order to avoid undue duplication of control, the competent authority shall take into account the oversight/supervision of the clearing and settlement system already exercised by the national central banks as overseers of clearing and settlement systems or by other supervisory authorities with a competence in such systems. Title III : REGULATED MARKETS Article 36 : Authorisation and applicable law 1. Member States shall reserve authorisation as a regulated market to those systems which comply with the provisions of this Title. Authorisation as a regulated market shall be granted only where the competent authority is satisfied that both the market operator and the systems of the regulated market comply at least with the requirements laid down in this Title. In the case of a regulated market that is a legal person and that is managed or operated by a market operator other than the regulated market itself, Member States shall establish how the different obligations imposed on the market operator under this Directive are to be allocated between the regulated market and the market operator. The operator of the regulated market shall provide all information, including a programme of operations setting out inter alia the types of business envisaged and the organisational structure, necessary to enable the competent authority to satisfy itself that the regulated market has established, at the time of initial authorisation, all the necessary arrangements to meet its obligations under the provisions of this Title. 2. Member States shall require the operator of the regulated market to perform tasks relating to the organisation and operation of the regulated market under the supervision of the competent authority. Member States shall ensure that competent authorities keep under regular review the compliance of regulated markets with the provisions of this Title. They shall also ensure that competent authorities monitor that regulated markets comply at all times with the conditions for initial authorisation established under this Title. 3. Member States shall ensure that the market operator is responsible for ensuring that the regulated market that he manages complies with all requirements under this Title. Member States shall also ensure that the market operator is entitled to exercise the rights that correspond to the regulated market that he manages by virtue of this Directive. 4. Without prejudice to any relevant provisions of Directive 2003/6/EC, the public law governing the trading conducted under the systems of the regulated market shall be that of 103 the home Member State of the regulated market. 5. The competent authority may withdraw the authorisation issued to a regulated market where it: (a) does not make use of the authorisation within 12 months, expressly renounces the authorisation or has not operated for the preceding six months, unless the Member State concerned has provided for authorisation to lapse in such cases; (b) has obtained the authorisation by making false statements or by any other irregular means; (c) no longer meets the conditions under which authorisation was granted; (d) has seriously and systematically infringed the provisions adopted pursuant to this Directive; (e) falls within any of the cases where national law provides for withdrawal. Article 37 : Requirements for the management of the regulated market 1. Member States shall require the persons who effectively direct the business and the operations of the regulated market to be of sufficiently good repute and sufficiently experienced as to ensure the sound and prudent management and operation of the regulated market. Member States shall also require the operator of the regulated market to inform the competent authority of the identity and any other subsequent changes of the persons who effectively direct the business and the operations of the regulated market. The competent authority shall refuse to approve proposed changes where there are objective and demonstrable grounds for believing that they pose a material threat to the sound and prudent management and operation of the regulated market. 2. Member States shall ensure that, in the process of authorisation of a regulated market, the person or persons who effectively direct the business and the operations of an already authorised regulated market in accordance with the conditions of this Directive are deemed to comply with the requirements laid down in paragraph 1. Article 38 : Requirements relating to persons exercising significant influence over the management of the regulated market 1. Member States shall require the persons who are in a position to exercise, directly or indirectly, significant influence over the management of the regulated market to be suitable. 2. Member States shall require the operator of the regulated market: 3. (a) to provide the competent authority with, and to make public, information regarding the ownership of the regulated market and/or the market operator, and in particular, the identity and scale of interests of any parties in a position to exercise significant influence over the management; (b) to inform the competent authority of and to make public any transfer of ownership which gives rise to a change in the identity of the persons exercising significant influence over the operation of the regulated market. The competent authority shall refuse to approve proposed changes to the controlling interests of the regulated market and/or the market operator where there are objective and demonstrable grounds for believing that they would pose a threat to the sound and 104 prudent management of the regulated market. Article 39 : Organisational requirements Member States shall require the regulated market: (a) to have arrangements to identify clearly and manage the potential adverse consequences, for the operation of the regulated market or for its participants, of any conflict of interest between the interest of the regulated market, its owners or its operator and the sound functioning of the regulated market, and in particular where such conflicts of interest might prove prejudicial to the accomplishment of any functions delegated to the regulated market by the competent authority; (b) to be adequately equipped to manage the risks to which it is exposed, to implement appropriate arrangements and systems to identify all significant risks to its operation, and to put in place effective measures to mitigate those risks; (c) to have arrangements for the sound management of the technical operations of the system, including the establishment of effective contingency arrangements to cope with risks of systems disruptions; (d) to have transparent and non-discretionary rules and procedures that provide for fair and orderly trading and establish objective criteria for the efficient execution of orders; (e) to have effective arrangements to facilitate the efficient and timely finalisation of the transactions executed under its systems; (f) to have available, at the time of authorisation and on an ongoing basis, sufficient financial resources to facilitate its orderly functioning, having regard to the nature and extent of the transactions concluded on the market and the range and degree of the risks to which it is exposed. Article 40 : Admission of financial instruments to trading 1. Member States shall require that regulated markets have clear and transparent rules regarding the admission of financial instruments to trading. Those rules shall ensure that any financial instruments admitted to trading in a regulated market are capable of being traded in a fair, orderly and efficient manner and, in the case of transferable securities, are freely negotiable. 2. In the case of derivatives, the rules shall ensure in particular that the design of the derivative contract allows for its orderly pricing as well as for the existence of effective settlement conditions. Regulation 37 (Article 40(1) and (2) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Derivatives 1. When admitting to trading a financial instrument of a kind listed in points of Sections C(4) to (10) of Annex I to Directive 2004/39/EC, regulated markets shall verify that the following conditions are satisfied: (a) the terms of the contract establishing the financial instrument must be clear and unambiguous, and enable a correlation between the price of the financial instrument and the price or other value measure of the underlying; 105 (b) the price or other value measure of the underlying must be reliable and publicly available; (c) sufficient information of a kind needed to value the derivative must be publicly available; (d) the arrangements for determining the settlement price of the contract must be such that the price properly reflects the price or other value measure of the underlying; (e) where the settlement of the derivative requires or provides for the possibility of the delivery of an underlying security or asset rather than cash settlement, there must be adequate arrangements to enable market participants to obtain relevant information about that underlying as well as adequate settlement and delivery procedures for the underlying. 2. Where the financial instruments concerned are of a kind listed in Sections C (5), (6), (7) or (10) of Annex I to Directive 2004/39/EC, point (b) of paragraph 1 shall not apply if the following conditions are satisfied: (a) the contract establishing that instrument must be likely to provide a means of disclosing to the market, or enabling the market to assess, the price or other value measure of the underlying, where the price or value measure is not otherwise publicly available; (b) the regulated market must ensure that appropriate supervisory arrangements are in place to monitor trading and settlement in such financial instruments; (c) the regulated market must ensure that settlement and delivery, whether physical delivery or by cash settlement, can be effected in accordance with the contract terms and conditions of those financial instruments. 3. In addition to the obligations set out in paragraphs 1 and 2, Member States shall require the regulated market to establish and maintain effective arrangements to verify that issuers of transferable securities that are admitted to trading on the regulated market comply with their obligations under Community law in respect of initial, ongoing or ad hoc disclosure obligations. Member States shall ensure that the regulated market establishes arrangements which facilitate its members or participants in obtaining access to information which has been made public under Community law. 4. Member States shall ensure that regulated markets have established the necessary arrangements to review regularly the compliance with the admission requirements of the financial instruments which they admit to trading. 5. A transferable security that has been admitted to trading on a regulated market can subsequently be admitted to trading on other regulated markets, even without the consent of the issuer and in compliance with the relevant provisions of Directive 2003/71/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of..... on the prospectus to be published when securities are offered to the public or admitted to trading and amending Directive 2001/34/EC (23). The issuer shall be informed by the regulated market of the fact that its securities are traded on that regulated market. The issuer shall not be subject to any obligation to provide information required under paragraph 3 directly to any regulated market which has admitted the issuer's securities to trading without its consent. 6. In order to ensure the uniform application of paragraphs 1 to 5, the Commission shall, in accordance with the procedure referred to in Article 64(2) adopt implementing measures which: (a) specify the characteristics of different classes of instruments to be taken into account by the regulated market when assessing whether an instrument is issued 106 in a manner consistent with the conditions laid down in the second subparagraph of paragraph 1 for admission to trading on the different market segments which it operates; (b) clarify the arrangements that the regulated market is to implement so as to be considered to have fulfilled its obligation to verify that the issuer of a transferable security complies with its obligations under Community law in respect of initial, ongoing or ad hoc disclosure obligations; (c) clarify the arrangements that the regulated market has to establish pursuant to paragraph 3 in order to facilitate its members or participants in obtaining access to information which has been made public under the conditions established by Community law. Regulation 6 First admission to trading of a share on a regulated market For the purposes of this Regulation, the first admission to trading of a share on a regulated market referred to in Article 40 of Directive 2004/39/EC shall be considered to take place at a time when one of the following conditions applies: (a) the share has not previously been admitted to trading on a regulated market; (b) the share has previously been admitted to trading on a regulated market but the share is removed from trading on every regulated market which has so admitted it. Article 41 : Suspension and removal of instruments from trading 1. Without prejudice to the right of the competent authority under Article 50(2)(j) and (k) to demand suspension or removal of an instrument from trading, the operator of the regulated market may suspend or remove from trading a financial instrument which no longer complies with the rules of the regulated market unless such a step would be likely to cause significant damage to the investors' interests or the orderly functioning of the market. Notwithstanding the possibility for the operators of regulated markets to inform directly the operators of other regulated markets, Member States shall require that an operator of a regulated market that suspends or removes from trading a financial instrument make public this decision and communicates relevant information to the competent authority. The competent authority shall inform the competent authorities of the other Member States. 2. A competent authority which demands the suspension or removal of a financial instrument from trading on one or more regulated markets shall immediately make public its decision and inform the competent authorities of the other Member States. Except where it could cause significant damage to the investors' interests or the orderly functioning of the market the competent authorities of the other Member States shall demand the suspension or removal of that financial instrument from trading on the regulated markets and MTFs that operate under their authority. Article 42 : Access to the regulated market 1. Member States shall require the regulated market to establish and maintain transparent and non-discriminatory rules, based on objective criteria, governing access to or membership of the regulated market. 107 2. 3. Those rules shall specify any obligations for the members or participants arising from: (a) the constitution and administration of the regulated market; (b) rules relating to transactions on the market; (c) professional standards imposed on the staff of the investment firms or credit institutions that are operating on the market; (d) the conditions established, for members or participants other than investment firms and credit institutions, under paragraph 3; (e) the rules and procedures for the clearing and settlement of transactions concluded on the regulated market. Regulated markets may admit as members or participants investment firms, credit institutions authorised under Directive 2000/12/EC and other persons who: (a) are fit and proper; (b) have a sufficient level of trading ability and competence; (c) have, where applicable, adequate organisational arrangements; (d) have sufficient resources for the role they are to perform, taking into account the different financial arrangements that the regulated market may have established in order to guarantee the adequate settlement of transactions. 4. Member States shall ensure that, for the transactions concluded on a regulated market, members and participants are not obliged to apply to each other the obligations laid down in Articles 19, 21 and 22. However, the members or participants of the regulated market shall apply the obligations provided for in Articles 19, 21 and 22 with respect to their clients when they, acting on behalf of their clients, execute their orders on a regulated market. 5. Member States shall ensure that the rules on access to or membership of the regulated market provide for the direct or remote participation of investment firms and credit institutions. 6. Member States shall, without further legal or administrative requirements, allow regulated markets from other Member States to provide appropriate arrangements on their territory so as to facilitate access to and trading on those markets by remote members or participants established in their territory. The regulated market shall communicate to the competent authority of its home Member State the Member State in which it intends to provide such arrangements. The competent authority of the home Member State shall communicate, within one month, this information to the Member State in which the regulated market intends to provide such arrangements. The competent authority of the home Member State of the regulated market shall, on the request of the competent authority of the host Member State and within a reasonable time, communicate the identity of the members or participants of the regulated market established in that Member State. 7. Member States shall require the operator of the regulated market to communicate, on a regular basis, the list of the members and participants of the regulated market to the competent authority of the regulated market. 108 Article 43 : Monitoring of compliance with the rules of the regulated market and with other legal obligations 1. Member States shall require that regulated markets establish and maintain effective arrangements and procedures for the regular monitoring of the compliance by their members or participants with their rules. Regulated markets shall monitor the transactions undertaken by their members or participants under their systems in order to identify breaches of those rules, disorderly trading conditions or conduct that may involve market abuse. 2. Member States shall require the operators of the regulated markets to report significant breaches of their rules or disorderly trading conditions or conduct that may involve market abuse to the competent authority of the regulated market. Member States shall also require the operator of the regulated market to supply the relevant information without delay to the authority competent for the investigation and prosecution of market abuse on the regulated market and to provide full assistance to the latter in investigating and prosecuting market abuse occurring on or through the systems of the regulated market. Article 44 : Pre-trade transparency requirements for regulated markets 1. Member States shall, at least, require regulated markets to make public current bid and offer prices and the depth of trading interests at those prices which are advertised through their systems for shares admitted to trading. Member States shall require this information to be made available to the public on reasonable commercial terms and on a continuous basis during normal trading hours. Regulated markets may give access, on reasonable commercial terms and on a nondiscriminatory basis, to the arrangements they employ for making public the information under the first subparagraph to investment firms which are obliged to publish their quotes in shares pursuant to Article 27. Provisions common to pre- and post-trade transparency Regulation 29 (Articles 27(3), 28(1), 29(1), 44(1) and 45(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Publication and availability of pre- and post-trade transparency data 1. A regulated market, MTF or systematic internaliser shall be considered to publish pre-trade information on a continuous basis during normal trading hours if that information is published as soon as it becomes available during the normal trading hours of the regulated market, MTF or systematic internaliser concerned, and remains available until it is updated. 2. Pre-trade information, and post-trade information relating to transactions taking place on trading venues and within normal trading hours, shall be made available as close to real time as possible. Post-trade information relating to such transactions shall be made available in any case within three minutes of the relevant transaction. 3. Information relating to a portfolio trade shall be made available with respect to each constituent transaction as close to real time as possible, having regard to the need to allocate prices to particular shares. Each constituent transaction shall be assessed separately for the purposes of determining whether deferred publication in respect of that transaction is available under Regulation 28. 4. Post-trade information relating to transactions taking place on a trading venue but outside its normal trading hours shall be made public before the opening of the next trading day of the trading 109 venue on which the transaction took place. 5. For transactions that take place outside a trading venue, post-trade information shall be made public: (a) if the transaction takes place during a trading day of the most relevant market for the share concerned, or during the investment firm's normal trading hours, as close to real time as possible. Post-trade information relating to such transactions shall be made available in any case within three minutes of the relevant transaction; (b) in a case not covered by point (a), immediately upon the commencement of the investment firm's normal trading hours or at the latest before the opening of the next trading day in the most relevant market for that share. 2. Member States shall provide that the competent authorities are to be able to waive the obligation for regulated markets to make public the information referred to in paragraph 1 based on the market model or the type and size of orders in the cases defined in accordance with paragraph 3. In particular, the competent authorities shall be able to waive the obligation in respect of transactions that are large in scale compared with normal market size for the share or type of share in question. 3. In order to ensure the uniform application of paragraphs 1 and 2, the Commission shall, in accordance with the procedure referred to in Article 64(2) adopt implementing measures as regards: Regulation 18 (Articles 29(2) and 44(2) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Waivers based on market model and type of order or transaction 1. Waivers in accordance with Article 29(2) and 44(2) of Directive 2004/39/EC may be granted by the competent authorities for systems operated by an MTF or a regulated market, if those systems satisfy one of the following criteria: (a) they must be based on a trading methodology by which the price is determined in accordance with a reference price generated by another system, where that reference price is widely published and is regarded generally by market participants as a reliable reference price; (b) they formalise negotiated transactions, each of which meets one of the following criteria: (i) (ii) it is made at or within the current volume weighted spread reflected on the order book or the quotes of the market makers of the regulated market or MTF operating that system or, where the share is not traded continuously, within a percentage of a suitable reference price, being a percentage and a reference price set in advance by the system operator; it is subject to conditions other than the current market price of the share. For the purposes of point (b), the other conditions specified in the rules of the regulated market or MTF for a transaction of this kind must also have been fulfilled. In the case of systems having functionality other than as described in points (a) or (b), the waiver shall not apply to that other functionality. 2. Waivers in accordance with Articles 29(2) and 44(2) of Directive 2004/39/EC based on the type of orders may be granted only in relation to orders held in an order management facility maintained by the regulated market or the MTF pending their being disclosed to the market. 110 Regulation 19 (Articles 29(2) and 44(2) of Directive 2004/39/EC) References to negotiated transaction For the purpose of Article 18(1)(b) a negotiated transaction shall mean a transaction involving members or participants of a regulated market or an MTF which is negotiated privately but executed within the regulated market or MTF and where that member or participant in doing so undertakes one of the following tasks: (a) dealing on own account with another member or participant who acts for the account of a client; (b) dealing with another member or participant, where both are executing orders on own account; (c) acting for the account of both the buyer and seller; (d) acting for the account of the buyer, where another member or participant acts for the account of the seller; (e) trading for own account against a client order. Article 20 (Articles 29(2) and 44(2), and fifth subparagraph of Article 27(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Waivers in relation to transactions which are large in scale An order shall be considered to be large in scale compared with normal market size if it is equal to or larger than the minimum size of order specified in Table 2 in Annex II. For the purposes of determining whether an order is large in scale compared to normal market size, all shares admitted to trading on a regulated market shall be classified in accordance with their average daily turnover, which shall be calculated in accordance with the procedure set out in Article 33. (a) the range of bid and offers or designated market-maker quotes, and the depth of trading interest at those prices, to be made public; (b) the size or type of orders for which pre-trade disclosure may be waived under paragraph 2; (c) the market model for which pre-trade disclosure may be waived under paragraph 2, and in particular, the applicability of the obligation to trading methods operated by regulated markets which conclude transactions under their rules by reference to prices established outside the regulated market or by periodic auction. Chapter IV MARKET TRANSPARENCY Section 1 Pre-trade transparency for regulated markets and MTFs 111 Regulation 17 (Articles 29 and 44 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Pre-trade transparency obligations 1. An investment firm or market operator operating an MTF or a regulated market shall, in respect of each share admitted to trading on a regulated market that is traded within a system operated by it and specified in Table 1 of Annex II, make public the information set out in paragraphs 2 to 6. 2. Where one of the entities referred to in paragraph 1 operates a continuous auction order book trading system, it shall, for each share as specified in paragraph 1, make public continuously throughout its normal trading hours the aggregate number of orders and of the shares those orders represent at each price level, for the five best bid and offer price levels. 3. Where one of the entities referred to in paragraph 1 operates a quote-driven trading system, it shall, for each share as specified in paragraph 1, make public continuously throughout its normal trading hours the best bid and offer by price of each market maker in that share, together with the volumes attaching to those prices. The quotes made public shall be those that represent binding commitments to buy and sell the shares and which indicate the price and volume of shares in which the registered market makers are prepared to buy or sell. In exceptional market conditions, however, indicative or one-way prices may be allowed for a limited time. 4. Where one of the entities referred to in paragraph 1 operates a periodic auction trading system, it shall, for each share specified in paragraph 1, make public continuously throughout its normal trading hours the price that would best satisfy the system's trading algorithm and the volume that would potentially be executable at that price by participants in that system. 5. Where one of the entities referred to in paragraph 1 operates a trading system which is not wholly covered by paragraph 2 or 3 or 4, either because it is a hybrid system falling under more than one of those paragraphs or because the price determination process is of a different nature, it shall maintain a standard of pre-trade transparency that ensures that adequate information is made public as to the price level of orders or quotes for each share specified in paragraph 1, as well as the level of trading interest in that share. In particular, the five best bid and offer price levels and/or two-way quotes of each market maker in that share shall be made public, if the characteristics of the price discovery mechanism permit it. 6. A summary of the information to be made public in accordance with paragraphs 2 to 5 is specified in Table 1 of Annex II. Regulation 30 (Articles 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Public availability of pre- and post-trade information For the purposes of Articles 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC and of this Regulation, pre- and post-trade information shall be considered to be made public or available to the public if it is made available generally through one of the following to investors located in the Community: (a) the facilities of a regulated market or an MTF; 112 (b) the facilities of a third party; (c) proprietary arrangements. Regulation 32 (Article 22(2), 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Arrangements for making information public Any arrangement to make information public, adopted for the purposes of Regulations 30 and 31, shall satisfy the following conditions: (a) it must include all reasonable steps necessary to ensure that the information to be published is reliable, monitored continuously for errors, and corrected as soon as errors are detected; (b) it must facilitate the consolidation of the data with similar data from other sources; (c) it must make the information available to the public on a non-discriminatory commercial basis at a reasonable cost. Regulation 33 (Articles 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Calculations and estimates for shares admitted to trading on a regulated market 1. In respect of each share that is admitted to trading on a regulated market, the relevant competent authority for that share shall ensure that the following calculations are made in respect of that share promptly after the end of each calendar year: (a) the average daily turnover; (b) the average daily number of transactions; (c) for those shares which satisfy the conditions laid down in Regulation 22(1)(a) or (b) (as applicable), the free float as at 31 December; (d) if the share is a liquid share, the average value of the orders executed. This paragraph and paragraph 2 shall not apply to a share which is first admitted to trading on a regulated market four weeks or less before the end of the calendar year. 2. The calculation of the average daily turnover, average value of the orders executed and average daily number of transactions shall take into account all the orders executed in the Community in respect of the share in question between 1 January and 31 December of the preceding year, or, where applicable, that part of the year during which the share was admitted to trading on a regulated market and was not suspended from trading on a regulated market. In the calculations of the average daily turnover, average value of the orders executed and average daily number of transactions of a share, non-trading days in the Member State of the relevant competent authority for that share shall be excluded. 3. Before the first admission of a share to trading on a regulated market, the relevant competent authority for that share shall ensure that estimates are provided, in respect of that share, of the 113 average daily turnover, the market capitalisation as it will stand at the start of the first day of trading and, where the estimate of the market capitalisation is EUR 500 million or more: (a) the average daily number of transactions and, for those shares which satisfy the conditions laid down in Regulation 22 (1)(a) or (b) (as applicable), the free float; (b) in the case of a share that is estimated to be a liquid share, the average value of the orders executed. The estimates shall relate to the six-week period following admission to trading, or the end of that period, as applicable, and shall take account of any previous trading history of the share, as well as that of shares that are considered to have similar characteristics. 4. After the first admission of a share to trading on a regulated market, the relevant competent authority for that share shall ensure that, in respect of that share, the figures referred to in points (a) to (d) of paragraph 1 are calculated, using data relating to the first four weeks' trading, as if a reference in point (c) of paragraph 1 to 31 December were a reference to the end of the first four weeks' trading, as soon as practicable after those data are available, and in any case before the end of the six-week period referred to in Regulation 22(5). 5. During the course of a calendar year, the relevant competent authorities shall ensure the review and where necessary the recalculation of the average daily turnover, average value of the orders executed, average daily number of transactions executed and the free float whenever there is a change in relation to the share or the issuer which significantly affects the previous calculations on an ongoing basis. 6. The calculations referred to in paragraphs 1 to 5 which are to be published on or before the first trading day in March 2009 shall be made on the basis of the data relating to the regulated market or markets of the Member State which is the most relevant market in terms of liquidity for the share in question. For those purposes, negotiated transactions within the meaning of Regulation 19 shall be excluded from the calculations. Regulation 34 (Articles 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Publication and effect of results of required calculations and estimates 1. On the first trading day of March of each year, each competent authority shall, in relation to each share for which it is the relevant competent authority that was admitted to trading on a regulated market at the end of the preceding calendar year, ensure the publication of the following information: (a) the average daily turnover and average daily number of transactions, as calculated in accordance with Regulation 33(1) and (2); (b) the free float and average value of the orders executed, where calculated in accordance with Regulation 33(1) and (2). This paragraph shall not apply to shares to which the second subparagraph of Regulation 33(1) applies. 2. The results of the estimates and calculations required under Regulation 33(3), (4) or (5) shall be published as soon as practicable after the calculation or estimate is completed. 3. The information referred to in paragraphs 1 or 2 shall be considered as published when it is published by the Committee of European Securities Regulators in accordance with paragraph 5. 4. For the purposes of this Regulation, the following shall apply: 114 (a) the classification based on the publication referred to in paragraph 1 shall apply for the 12month period starting on 1 April following publication and ending on the following 31 March; (b) the classification based on the estimates provided for in Regulation 33(3) shall apply from the relevant first admission to trading until the end of the six-week period referred to in Regulation 22(5); (c) the classification based on the calculations specified in Regulation 33(4) shall apply from the end of the six-week period referred to in Regulation 22(5), until: (i) where the end of that six-week period falls between 15 January and 31 March (both inclusive) in a given year, 31 March of the following year; (ii) otherwise, the following 31 March after the end of that period. However, the classification based on the recalculations specified in Regulation 33(5) shall apply from the date of publication and, unless further recalculated under Article 33(5), until the following 31 March. 5. The Committee of European Securities Regulators shall, on the basis of data supplied to it by or on behalf of competent authorities, publish on its website consolidated and regularly updated lists of: (a) every systematic internaliser in respect of a share admitted to trading on a regulated market; (b) every share admitted to trading on a regulated market, specifying: (i) the average daily turnover, average daily number of transactions and, for those shares which satisfy the conditions laid down in Regulation 22(1)(a) or (b) (as applicable), the free float; (ii) in the case of a liquid share, the average value of the orders executed and the standard market size for that share; (iii) in the case of a liquid share which has been designated as an additional liquid share in accordance with Regulation 22(3), the name of the competent authority that so designated it; and (iv) the relevant competent authority. 6. Each competent authority shall ensure the first publication of the details referred to in points (a) and (b) of paragraph 1 on the first trading day in July 2007, based on the reference period 1 April 2006 to 31 March 2007. By way of derogation from paragraph 4, the classification based on that publication shall apply for the five-month period starting on 1 November 2007 and ending on 31 March 2008. Article 45 : Post-trade transparency requirements for regulated markets 1. Member States shall, at least, require regulated markets to make public the price, volume and time of the transactions executed in respect of shares admitted to trading. Member States shall require details of all such transactions to be made public, on a reasonable commercial basis and as close to real-time as possible. Regulated markets may give access, on reasonable commercial terms and on a nondiscriminatory basis, to the arrangements they employ for making public the information under the first subparagraph to investment firms which are obliged to publish the details of their transactions in shares pursuant to Article 28. 115 Provisions common to pre- and post-trade transparency Regulation 29 (Articles 27(3), 28(1), 29(1), 44(1) and 45(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Publication and availability of pre- and post-trade transparency data 1. A regulated market, MTF or systematic internaliser shall be considered to publish pre-trade information on a continuous basis during normal trading hours if that information is published as soon as it becomes available during the normal trading hours of the regulated market, MTF or systematic internaliser concerned, and remains available until it is updated. 2. Pre-trade information, and post-trade information relating to transactions taking place on trading venues and within normal trading hours, shall be made available as close to real time as possible. Post-trade information relating to such transactions shall be made available in any case within three minutes of the relevant transaction. 3. Information relating to a portfolio trade shall be made available with respect to each constituent transaction as close to real time as possible, having regard to the need to allocate prices to particular shares. Each constituent transaction shall be assessed separately for the purposes of determining whether deferred publication in respect of that transaction is available under Regulation 28. 4. Post-trade information relating to transactions taking place on a trading venue but outside its normal trading hours shall be made public before the opening of the next trading day of the trading venue on which the transaction took place. 5. For transactions that take place outside a trading venue, post-trade information shall be made public: (a) if the transaction takes place during a trading day of the most relevant market for the share concerned, or during the investment firm's normal trading hours, as close to real time as possible. Post-trade information relating to such transactions shall be made available in any case within three minutes of the relevant transaction; (b) in a case not covered by point (a), immediately upon the commencement of the investment firm's normal trading hours or at the latest before the opening of the next trading day in the most relevant market for that share. 2. Member States shall provide that the competent authority may authorise regulated markets to provide for deferred publication of the details of transactions based on their type or size. In particular, the competent authorities may authorise the deferred publication in respect of transactions that are large in scale compared with the normal market size for that share or that class of shares. Member States shall require regulated markets to obtain the competent authority's prior approval of proposed arrangements for deferred tradepublication, and shall require that these arrangements be clearly disclosed to market participants and the investing public. 3. In order to provide for the efficient and orderly functioning of financial markets, and to ensure the uniform application of paragraphs 1 and 2, the Commission shall, in accordance with the procedure referred to in Article 64(2) adopt implementing measures in respect of: (a) the scope and content of the information to be made available to the public; (b) the conditions under which a regulated market may provide for deferred 116 publication of trades and the criteria to be applied when deciding the transactions for which, due to their size or the type of share involved, deferred publication is allowed. Regulation 27 (Articles 28, 30 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Post-trade transparency obligation 1. Investment firms, regulated markets, and investment firms and market operators operating an MTF shall, with regard to transactions in respect of shares admitted to trading on regulated markets concluded by them or, in the case of regulated markets or MTFs, within their systems, make public the following details: (a) the details specified in points 2, 3, 6, 16, 17, 18, and 21 of Table 1 in Annex I; (b) an indication that the exchange of shares is determined by factors other than the current market valuation of the share, where applicable; (c) an indication that the trade was a negotiated trade, where applicable; (d) any amendments to previously disclosed information, where applicable. Those details shall be made public either by reference to each transaction or in a form aggregating the volume and price of all transactions in the same share taking place at the same price at the same time. 2. By way of exception, a systematic internaliser shall be entitled to use the acronym 'SI' instead of the venue identification referred to in paragraph 1(a) in respect of a transaction in a share that is executed in its capacity as a systematic internaliser in respect of that share. The systematic internaliser may exercise that right only as long as it makes available to the public aggregate quarterly data as to the transactions executed in its capacity as a systematic internaliser in respect of that share relating to the most recent calendar quarter, or part of a calendar quarter, during which the firm acted as a systematic internaliser in respect of that share. That data shall be made available no later than one month after the end of each calendar quarter. It may also exercise that right during the period between the date specified in Regulation 41(2), or the date on which the firm commences to be a systematic internaliser in relation to a share, whichever is the later, and the date that aggregate quarterly data in relation to a share is first due to be published. 3. The aggregated quarterly data referred to in the second subparagraph of paragraph 2 shall contain the following information for the share in respect of each trading day of the calendar quarter concerned: (a) the highest price; (b) the lowest price; (c) the average price; (d) the total number of shares traded; (e) the total number of transactions; (f) such other information as the systematic internaliser decides to make available. 117 4. Where the transaction is executed outside the rules of a regulated market or an MTF, one of the following investment firms shall, by agreement between the parties, arrange to make the information public: (a) the investment firm that sells the share concerned; (b) the investment firm that acts on behalf of or arranges the transaction for the seller; (c) the investment firm that acts on behalf of or arranges the transaction for the buyer; (d) the investment firm that buys the share concerned. In the absence of such an agreement, the information shall be made public by the investment firm determined by proceeding sequentially from point (a) to point (d) until the first point that applies to the case in question. The parties shall take all reasonable steps to ensure that the transaction is made public as a single transaction. For those purposes two matching trades entered at the same time and price with a single party interposed shall be considered to be a single transaction. Article 28 (Articles 28, 30 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Deferred publication of large transactions The deferred publication of information in respect of transactions may be authorised, for a period no longer than the period specified in Table 4 in Annex II for the class of share and transaction concerned, provided that the following criteria are satisfied: (a) the transaction is between an investment firm dealing on own account and a client of that firm; (b) the size of the transaction is equal to or exceeds the relevant minimum qualifying size, as specified in Table 4 in Annex II. In order to determine the relevant minimum qualifying size for the purposes of point (b), all shares admitted to trading on a regulated market shall be classified in accordance with their average daily turnover to be calculated in accordance with Article 33. Regulation 30 (Articles 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Public availability of pre- and post-trade information For the purposes of Regulations 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC and of this Regulation, pre- and post-trade information shall be considered to be made public or available to the public if it is made available generally through one of the following to investors located in the Community: (a) the facilities of a regulated market or an MTF; (b) the facilities of a third party; (c) proprietary arrangements. 118 Regulation 32 (Article 22(2), 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Arrangements for making information public Any arrangement to make information public, adopted for the purposes of Regulations 30 and 31, shall satisfy the following conditions: (a) it must include all reasonable steps necessary to ensure that the information to be published is reliable, monitored continuously for errors, and corrected as soon as errors are detected; (b) it must facilitate the consolidation of the data with similar data from other sources; (c) it must make the information available to the public on a non-discriminatory commercial basis at a reasonable cost. Regulation 33 (Articles 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Calculations and estimates for shares admitted to trading on a regulated market 1. In respect of each share that is admitted to trading on a regulated market, the relevant competent authority for that share shall ensure that the following calculations are made in respect of that share promptly after the end of each calendar year: (a) the average daily turnover; (b) the average daily number of transactions; (c) for those shares which satisfy the conditions laid down in Regulation 22(1)(a) or (b) (as applicable), the free float as at 31 December; (d) if the share is a liquid share, the average value of the orders executed. This paragraph and paragraph 2 shall not apply to a share which is first admitted to trading on a regulated market four weeks or less before the end of the calendar year. 2. The calculation of the average daily turnover, average value of the orders executed and average daily number of transactions shall take into account all the orders executed in the Community in respect of the share in question between 1 January and 31 December of the preceding year, or, where applicable, that part of the year during which the share was admitted to trading on a regulated market and was not suspended from trading on a regulated market. In the calculations of the average daily turnover, average value of the orders executed and average daily number of transactions of a share, non-trading days in the Member State of the relevant competent authority for that share shall be excluded. 3. Before the first admission of a share to trading on a regulated market, the relevant competent authority for that share shall ensure that estimates are provided, in respect of that share, of the average daily turnover, the market capitalisation as it will stand at the start of the first day of trading and, where the estimate of the market capitalisation is EUR 500 million or more: (a) the average daily number of transactions and, for those shares which satisfy the conditions laid down in Regulation 22 (1)(a) or (b) (as applicable), the free float; 119 (b) in the case of a share that is estimated to be a liquid share, the average value of the orders executed. The estimates shall relate to the six-week period following admission to trading, or the end of that period, as applicable, and shall take account of any previous trading history of the share, as well as that of shares that are considered to have similar characteristics. 4. After the first admission of a share to trading on a regulated market, the relevant competent authority for that share shall ensure that, in respect of that share, the figures referred to in points (a) to (d) of paragraph 1 are calculated, using data relating to the first four weeks' trading, as if a reference in point (c) of paragraph 1 to 31 December were a reference to the end of the first four weeks' trading, as soon as practicable after those data are available, and in any case before the end of the six-week period referred to in Regulation 22(5). 5. During the course of a calendar year, the relevant competent authorities shall ensure the review and where necessary the recalculation of the average daily turnover, average value of the orders executed, average daily number of transactions executed and the free float whenever there is a change in relation to the share or the issuer which significantly affects the previous calculations on an ongoing basis. 6. The calculations referred to in paragraphs 1 to 5 which are to be published on or before the first trading day in March 2009 shall be made on the basis of the data relating to the regulated market or markets of the Member State which is the most relevant market in terms of liquidity for the share in question. For those purposes, negotiated transactions within the meaning of Regulation 19 shall be excluded from the calculations. Regulation 34 (Articles 27, 28, 29, 30, 44 and 45 of Directive 2004/39/EC) Publication and effect of results of required calculations and estimates 1. On the first trading day of March of each year, each competent authority shall, in relation to each share for which it is the relevant competent authority that was admitted to trading on a regulated market at the end of the preceding calendar year, ensure the publication of the following information: (a) the average daily turnover and average daily number of transactions, as calculated in accordance with Regulation 33(1) and (2); (b) the free float and average value of the orders executed, where calculated in accordance with Regulation 33(1) and (2). This paragraph shall not apply to shares to which the second subparagraph of Regulation 33(1) applies. 2. The results of the estimates and calculations required under Regulation 33(3), (4) or (5) shall be published as soon as practicable after the calculation or estimate is completed. 3. The information referred to in paragraphs 1 or 2 shall be considered as published when it is published by the Committee of European Securities Regulators in accordance with paragraph 5. 4. For the purposes of this Regulation, the following shall apply: (a) the classification based on the publication referred to in paragraph 1 shall apply for the 12month period starting on 1 April following publication and ending on the following 31 March; (b) the classification based on the estimates provided for in Regulation 33(3) shall apply from the 120 relevant first admission to trading until the end of the six-week period referred to in Regulation 22(5); (c) the classification based on the calculations specified in Regulation 33(4) shall apply from the end of the six-week period referred to in Regulation 22(5), until: (i) where the end of that six-week period falls between 15 January and 31 March (both inclusive) in a given year, 31 March of the following year; (ii) otherwise, the following 31 March after the end of that period. However, the classification based on the recalculations specified in Regulation 33(5) shall apply from the date of publication and, unless further recalculated under Regulation 33(5), until the following 31 March. 5. The Committee of European Securities Regulators shall, on the basis of data supplied to it by or on behalf of competent authorities, publish on its website consolidated and regularly updated lists of: (a) every systematic internaliser in respect of a share admitted to trading on a regulated market; (b) every share admitted to trading on a regulated market, specifying: (i) the average daily turnover, average daily number of transactions and, for those shares which satisfy the conditions laid down in Regulation 22(1)(a) or (b) (as applicable), the free float; (ii) in the case of a liquid share, the average value of the orders executed and the standard market size for that share; (iii) in the case of a liquid share which has been designated as an additional liquid share in accordance with Regulation 22(3), the name of the competent authority that so designated it; and (iv) the relevant competent authority. 6. Each competent authority shall ensure the first publication of the details referred to in points (a) and (b) of paragraph 1 on the first trading day in July 2007, based on the reference period 1 April 2006 to 31 March 2007. By way of derogation from paragraph 4, the classification based on that publication shall apply for the five-month period starting on 1 November 2007 and ending on 31 March 2008. Article 46 : Provisions regarding central counterparty and clearing and settlement arrangements 1. Member States shall not prevent regulated markets from entering into appropriate arrangements with a central counterparty or clearing house and a settlement system of another Member State with a view to providing for the clearing and/or settlement of some or all trades concluded by market participants under their systems. 2. The competent authority of a regulated market may not oppose the use of central counterparty, clearing houses and/or settlement systems in another Member State except where this is demonstrably necessary in order to maintain the orderly functioning of that regulated market and taking into account the conditions for settlement systems established in Article 34(2). In order to avoid undue duplication of control, the competent authority shall take into account the oversight/supervision of the clearing and settlement system already exercised 121 by the national central banks as overseers of clearing and settlement systems or by other supervisory authorities with competence in relation to such systems. Article 47 : List of regulated markets Each Member State shall draw up a list of the regulated markets for which it is the home Member State and shall forward that list to the other Member States and the Commission. A similar communication shall be effected in respect of each change to that list. The Commission shall publish a list of all regulated markets in the Official Journal of the European Union and update it at least once a year. The Commission shall also publish and update the list at its website, each time the Member States communicate changes to their lists. Title IV : COMPETENT AUTHORITIES Chapter 1 : DESIGNATION, POWERS AND REDRESS PROCEDURES Article 48 : Designation of competent authorities 1. Each Member State shall designate the competent authorities which are to carry out each of the duties provided for under the different provisions of this Directive. Member States shall inform the Commission and the competent authorities of other Member States of the identity of the competent authorities responsible for enforcement of each of those duties, and of any division of those duties. 2. The competent authorities referred to in paragraph 1 shall be public authorities, without prejudice to the possibility of delegating tasks to other entities where that is expressly provided for in Articles 5(5), 16(3), 17(2) and 23(4). Any delegation of tasks to entities other than the authorities referred to in paragraph 1 may not involve either the exercise of public authority or the use of discretionary powers of judgement. Member States shall require that, prior to delegation, competent authorities take all reasonable steps to ensure that the entity to which tasks are to be delegated has the capacity and resources to effectively execute all tasks and that the delegation takes place only if a clearly defined and documented framework for the exercise of any delegated tasks has been established stating the tasks to be undertaken and the conditions under which they are to be carried out. These conditions shall include a clause obliging the entity in question to act and be organised in such a manner as to avoid conflict of interest and so that information obtained from carrying out the delegated tasks is not used unfairly or to prevent competition. In any case, the final responsibility for supervising compliance with this Directive and with its implementing measures shall lie with the competent authority or authorities designated in accordance with paragraph 1. Member States shall inform the Commission and the competent authorities of other Member States of any arrangements entered into with regard to delegation of tasks, including the precise conditions regulating such delegation. 3. The Commission shall publish a list of the competent authorities referred to in paragraphs 1 and 2 in the Official Journal of the European Union at least once a year and update it continuously on its website. Article 49 : Cooperation between authorities in the same Member State If a Member State designates more than one competent authority to enforce a provision of this Directive, their respective roles shall be clearly defined and they shall cooperate closely. Each Member State shall require that such cooperation also take place between the competent 122 authorities for the purposes of this Directive and the competent authorities responsible in that Member State for the supervision of credit and other financial institutions, pension funds, UCITS, insurance and reinsurance intermediaries and insurance undertakings. Member States shall require that competent authorities exchange any information which is essential or relevant to the exercise of their functions and duties. Article 50 : Powers to be made available to competent authorities 1. 2. Competent authorities shall be given all supervisory and investigatory powers that are necessary for the exercise of their functions. Within the limits provided for in their national legal frameworks they shall exercise such powers: (a) directly; or (b) in collaboration with other authorities; or (c) under their responsibility by delegation to entities to which tasks have been delegated according to Article 48(2); or (d) by application to the competent judicial authorities. The powers referred to in paragraph 1 shall be exercised in conformity with national law and shall include, at least, the rights to: (a) have access to any document in any form whatsoever and to receive a copy of it; (b) demand information from any person and if necessary to summon and question a person with a view to obtaining information; (c) carry out on-site inspections; (d) require existing telephone and existing data traffic records; (e) require the cessation of any practice that is contrary to the provisions adopted in the implementation of this Directive; (f) request the freezing and/or the sequestration of assets; (g) request temporary prohibition of professional activity; (h) require authorised investment firms and regulated markets' auditors to provide information; (i) adopt any type of measure to ensure that investment firms and regulated markets continue to comply with legal requirements; (j) require the suspension of trading in a financial instrument; (k) require the removal of a financial instrument from trading, whether on a regulated market or under other trading arrangements; (l) refer matters for criminal prosecution; (m) allow auditors or experts to carry out verifications or investigations. 123 Article 51 : Administrative sanctions 1. Without prejudice to the procedures for the withdrawal of authorisation or to the right of Member States to impose criminal sanctions, Member States shall ensure, in conformity with their national law, that the appropriate administrative measures can be taken or administrative sanctions be imposed against the persons responsible where the provisions adopted in the implementation of this Directive have not been complied with. Member States shall ensure that these measures are effective, proportionate and dissuasive. 2. Member States shall determine the sanctions to be applied for failure to cooperate in an investigation covered by Article 50. 3. Member States shall provide that the competent authority may disclose to the public any measure or sanction that will be imposed for infringement of the provisions adopted in the implementation of this Directive, unless such disclosure would seriously jeopardise the financial markets or cause disproportionate damage to the parties involved. Article 52 : Right of appeal 1. Member States shall ensure that any decision taken under laws, regulations or administrative provisions adopted in accordance with this Directive is properly reasoned and is subject to the right to apply to the courts. The right to apply to the courts shall also apply where, in respect of an application for authorisation which provides all the information required, no decision is taken within six months of its submission. 2. Member States shall provide that one or more of the following bodies, as determined by national law, may, in the interests of consumers and in accordance with national law, take action before the courts or competent administrative bodies to ensure that the national provisions for the implementation of this Directive are applied: (a) public bodies or their representatives; (b) consumer organisations having a legitimate interest in protecting consumers; (c) professional organisations having a legitimate interest in acting to protect their members. Article 53 : Extra-judicial mechanism for investors’ complaints 1. Member States shall encourage the setting-up of efficient and effective complaints and redress procedures for the out-of-court settlement of consumer disputes concerning the provision of investment and ancillary services provided by investment firms, using existing bodies where appropriate. 2. Member States shall ensure that those bodies are not prevented by legal or regulatory provisions from cooperating effectively in the resolution of cross-border disputes. Article 54 : Professional secrecy 1. Member States shall ensure that competent authorities, all persons who work or who have worked for the competent authorities or entities to whom tasks are delegated pursuant to Article 48(2), as well as auditors and experts instructed by the competent authorities, are bound by the obligation of professional secrecy. No confidential information which they may receive in the course of their duties may be divulged to any person or authority whatsoever, save in summary or aggregate form such that individual investment firms, market operators, regulated markets or any other person cannot be identified, without prejudice to cases covered by criminal law or the other provisions of this Directive. 124 2. Where an investment firm, market operator or regulated market has been declared bankrupt or is being compulsorily wound up, confidential information which does not concern third parties may be divulged in civil or commercial proceedings if necessary for carrying out the proceeding. 3. Without prejudice to cases covered by criminal law, the competent authorities, bodies or natural or legal persons other than competent authorities which receive confidential information pursuant to this Directive may use it only in the performance of their duties and for the exercise of their functions, in the case of the competent authorities, within the scope of this Directive or, in the case of other authorities, bodies or natural or legal persons, for the purpose for which such information was provided to them and/or in the context of administrative or judicial proceedings specifically related to the exercise of those functions. However, where the competent authority or other authority, body or person communicating information consents thereto, the authority receiving the information may use it for other purposes. 4. Any confidential information received, exchanged or transmitted pursuant to this Directive shall be subject to the conditions of professional secrecy laid down in this Article. Nevertheless, this Article shall not prevent the competent authorities from exchanging or transmitting confidential information in accordance with this Directive and with other Directives applicable to investment firms, credit institutions, pension funds, UCITS, insurance and reinsurance intermediaries, insurance undertakings regulated markets or market operators or otherwise with the consent of the competent authority or other authority or body or natural or legal person that communicated the information. 5. This Article shall not prevent the competent authorities from exchanging or transmitting in accordance with national law, confidential information that has not been received from a competent authority of another Member State. Article 55 : Relations with auditors 1. Member States shall provide, at least, that any person authorised within the meaning of Eighth Council Directive 84/253/EEC of 10 April 1984 on the approval of persons responsible for carrying out the statutory audits of accounting documents (24), performing in an investment firm the task described in Article 51 of Fourth Council Directive 78/660/EEC of 25 July 1978 on the annual accounts of certain types of companies (25), Article 37 of Directive 83/349/EEC or Article 31 of Directive 85/611/EEC or any other task prescribed by law, shall have a duty to report promptly to the competent authorities any fact or decision concerning that undertaking of which that person has become aware while carrying out that task and which is liable to: (a) constitute a material breach of the laws, regulations or administrative provisions which lay down the conditions governing authorisation or which specifically govern pursuit of the activities of investment firms; (b) affect the continuous functioning of the investment firm; (c) lead to refusal to certify the accounts or to the expression of reservations. That person shall also have a duty to report any facts and decisions of which the person becomes aware in the course of carrying out one of the tasks referred to in the first subparagraph in an undertaking having close links with the investment firm within which he is carrying out that task. 2. The disclosure in good faith to the competent authorities, by persons authorised within the meaning of Directive 84/253/EEC, of any fact or decision referred to in paragraph 1 shall not constitute a breach of any contractual or legal restriction on disclosure of information and shall not involve such persons in liability of any kind. 125 Chapter II : COOPERATION BETWEEN COMPETENT AUTHORITIES OF DIFFERENT MEMBER STATES Article 56 : Obligation to cooperate 1. Competent authorities of different Member States shall cooperate with each other whenever necessary for the purpose of carrying out their duties under this Directive, making use of their powers whether set out in this Directive or in national law. Competent authorities shall render assistance to competent authorities of the other Member States. In particular, they shall exchange information and cooperate in any investigation or supervisory activities. In order to facilitate and accelerate cooperation, and more particularly exchange of information, Member States shall designate one single competent authority as a contact point for the purposes of this Directive. Member States shall communicate to the Commission and to the other Member States the names of the authorities which are designated to receive requests for exchange of information or cooperation pursuant to this paragraph. 2. When, taking into account the situation of the securities markets in the host Member State, the operations of a regulated market that has established arrangements in a host Member State have become of substantial importance for the functioning of the securities markets and the protection of the investors in that host Member State, the home and host competent authorities of the regulated market shall establish proportionate cooperation arrangements. Regulation 16 (Article 56(2) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Determination of the substantial importance of a regulated market's operations in a host Member State The operations of a regulated market in a host Member State shall be considered to be of substantial importance for the functioning of the securities markets and the protection of investors in that host State where one of the following criteria is met: (a) the host Member State has formerly been the home Member State of the regulated market in question; (b) the regulated market in question has acquired through merger, takeover, or any other form of transfer the business of a regulated market which had its registered office or head office in the host Member State. 3. Member States shall take the necessary administrative and organisational measures to facilitate the assistance provided for in paragraph 1. Competent authorities may use their powers for the purpose of cooperation, even in cases where the conduct under investigation does not constitute an infringement of any regulation in force in that Member State. 4. Where a competent authority has good reasons to suspect that acts contrary to the provisions of this Directive, carried out by entities not subject to its supervision, are being or have been carried out on the territory of another Member State, it shall notify this in as specific a manner as possible to the competent authority of the other Member State. The latter authority shall take appropriate action. It shall inform the notifying competent authority of the outcome of the action and, to the extent possible, of significant interim 126 developments. This paragraph shall be without prejudice to the competences of the competent authority that has forwarded the information. 5. In order to ensure the uniform application of paragraph 2 the Commission may adopt, in accordance with the procedure referred to in Article 64(2), implementing measures to establish the criteria under which the operations of a regulated market in a host Member State could be considered as of substantial importance for the functioning of the securities markets and the protection of the investors in that host Member State. Article 57 : Cooperation in supervisory activities, on-the-spot verifications or in investigations A competent authority of one Member State may request the cooperation of the competent authority of another Member State in a supervisory activity or for an on-the-spot verification or in an investigation. In the case of investment firms that are remote members of a regulated market the competent authority of the regulated market may choose to address them directly, in which case it shall inform the competent authority of the home Member State of the remote member accordingly. Where a competent authority receives a request with respect to an on-the-spot verification or an investigation, it shall, within the framework of its powers: (a) carry out the verifications or investigations itself; or (b) allow the requesting authority to carry out the verification or investigation; or (c) allow auditors or experts to carry out the verification or investigation. Article 58 : Exchange of information 1. Competent authorities of Member States having been designated as contact points for the purposes of this Directive in accordance with Article 56(1) shall immediately supply one another with the information required for the purposes of carrying out the duties of the competent authorities, designated in accordance to Article 48(1), set out in the provisions adopted pursuant to this Directive. Competent authorities exchanging information with other competent authorities under this Directive may indicate at the time of communication that such information must not be disclosed without their express agreement, in which case such information may be exchanged solely for the purposes for which those authorities gave their agreement. Regulation 15 (Article 58(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Request for cooperation and exchange of information 1. Where a competent authority wishes another competent authority to supply or exchange information in accordance with Article 58(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC, it shall submit a written request to that competent authority containing sufficient detail to enable it to provide the information requested. However, in a case of urgency, the request may be transmitted orally provided that it is confirmed in writing. The competent authority which receives a request shall acknowledge receipt as soon as practicable. 127 2. Where the information requested under paragraph 1 is internally available to the competent authority that receives the request, that authority shall transmit the requested information without delay to the competent authority which made the request. However, if the competent authority that receives the request does not possess or control the information requested, it shall immediately take the necessary steps to obtain that information and to comply fully with the request. That competent authority shall also inform the competent authority that made the request of the reasons for not sending immediately the information requested. 2. The competent authority having been designated as the contact point may transmit the information received under paragraph 1 and Articles 55 and 63 to the authorities referred to in Article 49. They shall not transmit it to other bodies or natural or legal persons without the express agreement of the competent authorities which disclosed it and solely for the purposes for which those authorities gave their agreement, except in duly justified circumstances. In this last case, the contact point shall immediately inform the contact point that sent the information. 3. Authorities as referred to in Article 49 as well as other bodies or natural and legal persons receiving confidential information under paragraph 1 of this Article or under Articles 55 and 63 may use it only in the course of their duties, in particular: (a) to check that the conditions governing the taking-up of the business of investment firms are met and to facilitate the monitoring, on a non-consolidated or consolidated basis, of the conduct of that business, especially with regard to the capital adequacy requirements imposed by Directive 93/6/EEC, administrative and accounting procedures and internal-control mechanisms; (b) to monitor the proper functioning of trading venues; (c) to impose sanctions; (d) in administrative appeals against decisions by the competent authorities; (e) in court proceedings initiated under Article 52; or (f) in the extra-judicial mechanism for investors' complaints provided for in Article 53. 4. The Commission may adopt, in accordance with the procedure referred to in Article 64(2), implementing measures concerning procedures for the exchange of information between competent authorities. 5. Articles 54, 58 and 63 shall not prevent a competent authority from transmitting to central banks, the European System of Central Banks and the European Central Bank, in their capacity as monetary authorities, and, where appropriate, to other public authorities responsible for overseeing payment and settlement systems, confidential information intended for the performance of their tasks; likewise such authorities or bodies shall not be prevented from communicating to the competent authorities such information as they may need for the purpose of performing their functions provided for in this Directive. Article 59 : Refusal to cooperate A competent authority may refuse to act on a request for cooperation in carrying out an investigation, on-the-spot verification or supervisory activity as provided for in Article 57 or to exchange information as provided for in Article 58 only where: (a) such an investigation, on-the-spot verification, supervisory activity or exchange of 128 information might adversely affect the sovereignty, security or public policy of the State addressed; (b) judicial proceedings have already been initiated in respect of the same actions and the same persons before the authorities of the Member State addressed; (c) final judgment has already been delivered in the Member State addressed in respect of the same persons and the same actions. In the case of such a refusal, the competent authority shall notify the requesting competent authority accordingly, providing as detailed information as possible. Article 60 : Inter-authority consultation prior to authorisation 1. 2. 3. The competent authorities of the other Member State involved shall be consulted prior to granting authorisation to an investment firm which is: (a) a subsidiary of an investment firm or credit institution authorised in another Member State; or (b) a subsidiary of the parent undertaking of an investment firm or credit institution authorised in another Member State; or (c) controlled by the same natural or legal persons as control an investment firm or credit institution authorised in another Member State. The competent authority of the Member State responsible for the supervision of credit institutions or insurance undertakings shall be consulted prior to granting an authorisation to an investment firm which is: (a) a subsidiary of a credit institution or insurance undertaking authorised in the Community; or (b) a subsidiary of the parent undertaking of a credit institution or insurance undertaking authorised in the Community; or (c) controlled by the same person, whether natural or legal, who controls a credit institution or insurance undertaking authorised in the Community. The relevant competent authorities referred to in paragraphs 1 and 2 shall in particular consult each other when assessing the suitability of the shareholders or members and the reputation and experience of persons who effectively direct the business involved in the management of another entity of the same group. They shall exchange all information regarding the suitability of shareholders or members and the reputation and experience of persons who effectively direct the business that is of relevance to the other competent authorities involved, for the granting of an authorisation as well as for the ongoing assessment of compliance with operating conditions. Article 61 : Powers for host Member States 1. Host Member States may, for statistical purposes, require all investment firms with branches within their territories to report to them periodically on the activities of those branches. 2. In discharging their responsibilities under this Directive, host Member States may require branches of investment firms to provide the information necessary for the monitoring of their compliance with the standards set by the host Member State that apply to them for the cases provided for in Article 32(7). Those requirements may not be more stringent 129 than those which the same Member State imposes on established firms for the monitoring of their compliance with the same standards. Article 62 : Precautionary measures to be taken by host Member States 1. Where the competent authority of the host Member State has clear and demonstrable grounds for believing that an investment firm acting within its territory under the freedom to provide services is in breach of the obligations arising from the provisions adopted pursuant to this Directive or that an investment firm that has a branch within its territory is in breach of the obligations arising from the provisions adopted pursuant to this Directive which do not confer powers on the competent authority of the host Member State, it shall refer those findings to the competent authority of the home Member State. If, despite the measures taken by the competent authority of the home Member State or because such measures prove inadequate, the investment firm persists in acting in a manner that is clearly prejudicial to the interests of host Member State investors or the orderly functioning of markets, the competent authority of the host Member State, after informing the competent authority of the home Member State shall take all the appropriate measures needed in order to protect investors and the proper functioning of the markets. This shall include the possibility of preventing offending investment firms from initiating any further transactions within their territories. The Commission shall be informed of such measures without delay. 2. Where the competent authorities of a host Member State ascertain that an investment firm that has a branch within its territory is in breach of the legal or regulatory provisions adopted in that State pursuant to those provisions of this Directive which confer powers on the host Member State's competent authorities, those authorities shall require the investment firm concerned to put an end to its irregular situation. If the investment firm concerned fails to take the necessary steps, the competent authorities of the host Member State shall take all appropriate measures to ensure that the investment firm concerned puts an end to its irregular situation. The nature of those measures shall be communicated to the competent authorities of the home Member State. If, despite the measures taken by the host Member State, the investment firm persists in breaching the legal or regulatory provisions referred to in the first subparagraph in force in the host Member State, the latter may, after informing the competent authorities of the home Member State, take appropriate measures to prevent or to penalise further irregularities and, in so far as necessary, to prevent that investment firm from initiating any further transactions within its territory. The Commission shall be informed of such measures without delay. 3. Where the competent authority of the host Member State of a regulated market or an MTF has clear and demonstrable grounds for believing that such regulated market or MTF is in breach of the obligations arising from the provisions adopted pursuant to this Directive, it shall refer those findings to the competent authority of the home Member State of the regulated market or the MTF. If, despite the measures taken by the competent authority of the home Member State or because such measures prove inadequate, the said regulated market or the MTF persists in acting in a manner that is clearly prejudicial to the interests of host Member State investors or the orderly functioning of markets, the competent authority of the host Member State, after informing the competent authority of the home Member State, shall take all the appropriate measures needed in order to protect investors and the proper functioning of the markets. This shall include the possibility of preventing the said regulated market or the MTF from making their arrangements available to remote members or participants established in the host Member State. The Commission shall be informed of such measures without delay. 130 4. Any measure adopted pursuant to paragraphs 1, 2 or 3 involving sanctions or restrictions on the activities of an investment firm or of a regulated market shall be properly justified and communicated to the investment firm or to the regulated market concerned. Chapter III : COOPERATION WITH THIRD COUNTRIES Article 63 : Exchange of information with third countries 1. Member States may conclude cooperation agreements providing for the exchange of information with the competent authorities of third countries only if the information disclosed is subject to guarantees of professional secrecy at least equivalent to those required under Article 54. Such exchange of information must be intended for the performance of the tasks of those competent authorities. Member States may transfer personal data to a third country in accordance to Chapter IV of Directive 95/46/EC. Member States may also conclude cooperation agreements providing for the exchange of information with third country authorities, bodies and natural or legal persons responsible for: (i) the supervision of credit institutions, other financial organisations, insurance undertakings and the supervision of financial markets; (ii) the liquidation and bankruptcy of investment firms and other similar procedures; (iii) carrying out statutory audits of the accounts of investment firms and other financial institutions, credit institutions and insurance undertakings, in the performance of their supervisory functions, or which administer compensation schemes, in the performance of their functions; (iv) overseeing the bodies involved in the liquidation and bankruptcy of investment firms and other similar procedures; (v) overseeing persons charged with carrying out statutory audits of the accounts of insurance undertakings, credit institutions, investment firms and other financial institutions, only if the information disclosed is subject to guarantees of professional secrecy at least equivalent to those required under Article 54. Such exchange of information must be intended for the performance of the tasks of those authorities or bodies or natural or legal persons. 2. Where the information originates in another Member State, it may not be disclosed without the express agreement of the competent authorities which have transmitted it and, where appropriate, solely for the purposes for which those authorities gave their agreement. The same provision applies to information provided by third country competent authorities. Title V : FINAL PROVISIONS Article 64 : Committee procedure 1. The Commission shall be assisted by the European Securities Committee established by Commission Decision 2001/528/EC (26) (hereinafter referred to as 'the Committee'). 2. Where reference is made to this paragraph, Articles 5 and 7 of Decision 1999/468/EC 131 shall apply, having regard to the provisions of Article 8 thereof, provided that the implementing measures adopted in accordance with that procedure do not modify the essential provisions of this Directive. The period laid down in Article 5(6) of Decision 1999/468/EC shall be set at three months. 3. Without prejudice to the implementing measures already adopted, on the expiry of a fouryear period following the entry into force of this Directive, the application of its provisions requiring the adoption of technical rules and decisions in accordance with paragraph 2 shall be suspended. On a proposal from the Commission, the European Parliament and the Council may renew the provisions concerned in accordance with the procedure laid down in Article 251 of the Treaty and, to that end, they shall review them prior to the expiry of that period. Article 65 : Reports and review 1. Before [30 April 2006] (*), the Commission shall, on the basis of public consultation and in the light of discussions with competent authorities, report to the European Parliament and Council on the possible extension of the scope of the provisions of the Directive concerning pre and post-trade transparency obligations to transactions in classes of financial instrument other than shares. 2. Before [30 April 2007] (**), the Commission shall present a report to the European Parliament and to the Council on the application of Article 27. 3. Before [30 October 2006] (***), the Commission shall, on the basis of public consultations and in the light of discussions with competent authorities, report to the European Parliament and Council on: (a) the continued appropriateness of the exemption under Article 2(1)(k) for undertakings whose main business is dealing on own account in commodity derivatives; (b) the content and form of proportionate requirements for the authorisation and supervision of such undertakings as investment firms within the meaning of this Directive; (c) the appropriateness of rules concerning the appointment of tied agents in performing investment services and/or activities, in particular with respect to the supervision on them; (d) the continued appropriateness of the exemption under of Article 2(1)(i). 4. Before [30 October 2006] (***), the Commission shall present a report to the European Parliament and the Council on the state of the removal of the obstacles which may prevent the consolidation at the European level of the information that trading venues are required to publish. 5. On the basis of the reports referred to in paragraphs 1 to 4, the Commission may submit proposals for related amendments to this Directive. 6. Before [30 April 2005] (****), the Commission shall, in the light of discussions with competent authorities, report to the European Parliament and Council on the continued appropriateness of the requirements for professional indemnity insurance imposed on intermediaries under Community law. (1) OJ L 191, 13.7.2001, p. 45. (*) 2 years after the entry into force of this Directive. (**) 3 years after the entry into force of this Directive. 132 (***) 30 months after the entry into force of this Directive. (****) 1 year after the entry into force of this Directive. Article 66 : Amendment of Directive 85/611/EEC In Article 5 of Directive 85/611/EEC, paragraph 4 shall be replaced by the following: '4. Articles 2(2), 12, 13 and 19 of Directive 2004/39/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 21 April 2004 on markets in financial instruments , shall apply to the provision of the services referred to in paragraph 3 of this Article by management companies (*) OJ L'. Article 67 : Amendment of Directive 93/6/EEC Directive 93/6/EEC shall be amended as follows: 1) Article 2(2) shall be replaced by the following: '2. Investment firms shall mean all institutions that satisfy the definition in Article 4(1) of Directive 2004/39/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 21 April 2004 on markets in financial instruments, which are subject to the requirements imposed by the same Directive, excluding: (a) credit institutions, (b) local firms as defined in 20, and (c) firms which are only authorised to provide the service of investment advice and/or receive and transmit orders from investors without in both cases holding money or securities belonging to their clients and which for that reason may not at any time place themselves in debit with their clients. (*) OJ L' 2) Article 3(4) shall be replaced by the following: '4. The firms referred to in point (b) of Article 2(2) shall have initial capital of EUR 50 000 in so far as they benefit from the freedom of establishment or to provide services under Articles 31 or 32 of Directive 2004/39/EC.'; 3) In Article 3 the following paragraphs shall be inserted: '(4a) Pending revision of Directive 93/6/EC, the firms referred to in point (c) of Article 2(2) shall have: (a) initial capital of EUR 50 000; or (b) professional indemnity insurance covering the whole territory of the Community or some other comparable guarantee against liability arising from professional negligence, representing at least EUR 1 000 000 applying to each claim and in aggregate EUR 1 500 000 per year for all claims; or (c) a combination of initial capital and professional indemnity insurance in a form resulting in a level of coverage equivalent to points (a) or (b). The amounts referred to in this paragraph shall be periodically reviewed by the Commission in order to take account of changes in the European Index of 133 Consumer Prices as published by Eurostat, in line with and at the same time as the adjustments made under Article 4(7) of Directive 2002/92/EC of the European Parliament and the Council of 9 December 2002 on insurance mediation (*). (4b) When an investment firm referred to in Article 2(2)(c), is also registered under Directive 2002/92/EC it has to comply with the requirement established by Article 4(3), of that Directive and in addition it has to have: (a) initial capital of EUR 25 000; or (b) professional indemnity insurance covering the whole territory of the Community or some other comparable guarantee against liability arising from professional negligence, representing at least EUR 500 000 applying to each claim and in aggregate EUR 750 000 per year for all claims; or (c) a combination of initial capital and professional indemnity insurance in a form resulting in a level of coverage equivalent to points (a) or (b). (*) OJ L 9, 15.1.2003, p. 3.' Article 68 : Amendment of Directive 2000/12/EC Annex I of Directive 2000/12/EC shall be amended as follows: At the end of the Annex I the following sentence is added: 'The services and activities provided for in Section A and B of Annex I of Directive 2004/39/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 21 April 2004 on markets in financial instruments (*) when referring to the financial instruments provided for in Section C of Annex I of that Directive are subject to mutual recognition according to this Directive. (*) OJ L' Article 69 : Repeal of Directive 93/22/EEC Directive 93/22/EEC shall be repealed with effect from [30 April 2006]. References to Directive 93/22/EEC shall be construed as references to this Directive. References to terms defined in, or Articles of, Directive 93/22/EEC shall be construed as references to the equivalent term defined in, or Article of, this Directive. (*) 24 months after the entry into force of this Directive. Article 70 : Transportation Member States shall adopt the laws, regulations and administrative provisions necessary to comply with this Directive by [30 April 2006] at the latest. They shall forthwith inform the Commission thereof. When Member States adopt these measures, they shall contain a reference to this Directive or shall be accompanied by such reference on the occasion of their official publication. The methods of making such reference shall be laid down by the Member States. Article 71 : Transitional provisions 1. Investment firms already authorised in their home Member State to provide investment services before the [30 April 2006], shall be deemed to be so authorised for the purpose of this Directive, if the laws of those Member States provide that to take up such activities 134 they must comply with conditions comparable to those imposed in Articles 9 to 14. 2. A regulated market or a market operator already authorised in its home Member State before the [30 April 2006], shall be deemed to be so authorised for the purposes of this Directive, if the laws of such Member State provide that the regulated market or market operator (as the case may be) must comply with conditions comparable to those imposed in Title III. 3. Tied agents already entered in a public register before the [30 April 2006] shall be deemed to be so registered for the purposes of this Directive, if the laws of those Member States provide that tied agents must comply with conditions comparable to those imposed in Article 23. 4. Information communicated before the [30 April 2006], for the purposes of Articles 17, 18 or 30 of Directive 93/22/EEC shall be deemed to have been communicated for the purposes of Articles 31 and 32 of this Directive. 5. Any existing system falling under the definition of an MTF operated by a market operator of a regulated market, shall be authorised as an MTF at the request of the market operator of the regulated market provided it complies with rules equivalent to those required by this Directive for the authorisation and operation of MTFs, and provided that the request concerned is made within 18 months of the date referred to in Article 70. 6. Investment firms shall be authorised to continue considering existing professional clients as such provided that this categorisation has been granted by the investment firm on the basis of an adequate assessment of the expertise, experience and knowledge of the client which gives reasonable assurance, in light of the nature of the transactions or services envisaged, that the client is capable of making his own investment decisions and understands the risks involved. Those investment firms shall inform their clients about the conditions established in the Directive for the categorisation of clients. Article 72 : Entry into force This Directive shall enter into force on the day of its publication in the Official Journal of the European Union. Article 73 : Addressees This Directive is addressed to the Member States. Done at Strasbourg, 21 April 2004 For the European Parliament The President P. COX For the Council The President D. ROCHE (*) 2 years after the entry into force of this Directive. (**) 3 years after the entry into force of this Directive. 135 (***) 30 months after the entry into force of this Directive. (****) 1 year after the entry into force of this Directive. (*****) 24 months after the entry into force of this Directive. 136 ANNEX 1 : LIST OF SERVICES AND ACTIVITIES AND FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS Section A : Investment services and activities (1) Reception and transmission of orders in relation to one or more financial instruments. (2) Execution of orders on behalf of clients. (3) Dealing on own account. (4) Portfolio management. (5) Investment advice. (6) Underwriting of financial instruments and/or placing of financial instruments on a firm commitment basis. (7) Placing of financial instruments without a firm commitment basis (8) Operation of Multilateral Trading Facilities. Section B : Ancillary services (1) Safekeeping and administration of financial instruments for the account of clients, including custodianship and related services such as cash/collateral management; (2) Granting credits or loans to an investor to allow him to carry out a transaction in one or more financial instruments, where the firm granting the credit or loan is involved in the transaction; (3) Advice to undertakings on capital structure, industrial strategy and related matters and advice and services relating to mergers and the purchase of undertakings; (4) Foreign exchange services where these are connected to the provision of investment services; (5) Investment research and financial analysis or other forms of general recommendation relating to transactions in financial instruments; (6) Services related to underwriting. (7) Investment services and activities as well as ancillary services of the type included under Section A or B of Annex 1 related to the underlying of the derivatives included under Section C - 5, 6, 7 and 10 - where these are connected to the provision of investment or ancillary services. 137 Section C : Financial Instruments (1) Transferable securities; (2) Money-market instruments; (3) Units in collective investment undertakings; (4) Options, futures, swaps, forward rate agreements and any other derivative contracts relating to securities, currencies, interest rates or yields, or other derivatives instruments, financial indices or financial measures which may be settled physically or in cash; (5) Options, futures, swaps, forward rate agreements and any other derivative contracts relating to commodities that must be settled in cash or may be settled in cash at the option of one of the parties (otherwise than by reason of a default or other termination event); (6) Options, futures, swaps, and any other derivative contract relating to commodities that can be physically settled provided that they are traded on a regulated market and/or an MTF; (7) Options, futures, swaps, forwards and any other derivative contracts relating to commodities, that can be physically settled not otherwise mentioned in C.6 and not being for commercial purposes, which have the characteristics of other derivative financial instruments, having regard to whether, inter alia, they are cleared and settled through recognised clearing houses or are subject to regular margin calls; Regulation 385 (Article 4(1)(2) of Directive 2004/39/EC) Characteristics of other derivative financial instruments 1. For the purposes of Section C(7) of Annex I to Directive 2004/39/EC, a contract which is not a spot contract within the meaning of paragraph 2 of this Regulation and which is not covered by paragraph 4 shall be considered as having the characteristics of other derivative financial instruments and not being for commercial purposes if it satisfies the following conditions: (a) it meets one of the following sets of criteria: 5 (i) it is traded on a third country trading facility that performs a similar function to a regulated market or an MTF; (ii) it is expressly stated to be traded on, or is subject to the rules of, a regulated market, an MTF or such a third country trading facility; (iii) it is expressly stated to be equivalent to a contract traded on a regulated market, MTF or Regulation 40 Re-examinations 2. The Commission shall, after consulting the Committee of European Securities Regulators, reexamine the provisions of Articles 38 and 39 relating to criteria for determining which instruments are to be treated as having the characteristics of other derivative financial instruments, or as being for commercial purposes, or which fall within Section C(10) of Annex I to Directive 2004/39/EC if the other criteria set out in that Section are satisfied in relation to them. The Commission shall report to the European Parliament and to the Council at the same time that it makes its reports under article 65(a) and (d) of Directive 2004/39/EC. 138 such a third country trading facility; (b) it is cleared by a clearing house or other entity carrying out the same functions as a central counterparty, or there are arrangements for the payment or provision of margin in relation to the contract; (c) it is standardised so that, in particular, the price, the lot, the delivery date or other terms are determined principally by reference to regularly published prices, standard lots or standard delivery dates. 2. A spot contract for the purposes of paragraph 1 means a contract for the sale of a commodity, asset or right, under the terms of which delivery is scheduled to be made within the longer of the following periods: (a) two trading days; (b) the period generally accepted in the market for that commodity, asset or right as the standard delivery period. However, a contract is not a spot contract if, irrespective of its explicit terms, there is an understanding between the parties to the contract that delivery of the underlying is to be postponed and not to be performed within the period mentioned in the first subparagraph. 3. For the purposes of Section C(10) of Annex I to Directive 2004/39/EC, a derivative contract relating to an underlying referred to in that Section or in Regulation 39 shall be considered to have the characteristics of other derivative financial instruments if one of the following conditions is satisfied: (a) that contract is settled in cash or may be settled in cash at the option of one or more of the parties, otherwise than by reason of a default or other termination event; (b) that contract is traded on a regulated market or an MTF; (c) the conditions laid down in paragraph 1 are satisfied in relation to that contract. 4. A contract shall be considered to be for commercial purposes for the purposes of Section C(7) of Annex I to Directive 2004/39/EC, and as not having the characteristics of other derivative financial instruments for the purposes of Sections C(7) and (10) of that Annex, if it is entered into with or by an operator or administrator of an energy transmission grid, energy balancing mechanism or pipeline network, and it is necessary to keep in balance the supplies and uses of energy at a given time. (8) Derivative instruments for the transfer of credit risk; (9) Financial contracts for differences. (10) Options, futures, swaps, forward rate agreements and any other derivative contracts relating to climatic variables, freight rates, emission allowances or inflation rates or other official economic statistics that must be settled in cash or may be settled in cash at the option of one of the parties (otherwise than by reason of a default or other termination event), as well as any other derivative contracts relating to assets, rights, obligations, indices and measures not otherwise mentioned in this Section, which have the characteristics of other derivative financial instruments, having regard to whether, inter alia, they are traded on a regulated market or an MTF, are cleared and settled through recognised clearing houses or are subject to regular margin calls. Regulation 39 (Article 4(1)(2) of Directive 2004/39/EC) 139 Derivatives within Section C(10) of Annex I to Directive 2004/39/EC In addition to derivative contracts of a kind referred to in Section C(10) of Annex I to Directive 2004/39/EC, a derivative contract relating to any of the following shall fall within that Section if it meets the criteria set out in that Section and in Regulation 38(3): (a) telecommunications bandwidth; (b) commodity storage capacity; (c) transmission or transportation capacity relating to commodities, whether cable, pipeline or other means; (d) an allowance, credit, permit, right or similar asset which is directly linked to the supply, distribution or consumption of energy derived from renewable resources; (e) a geological, environmental or other physical variable; (f) any other asset or right of a fungible nature, other than a right to receive a service, that is capable of being transferred; (g) an index or measure related to the price or value of, or volume of transactions in any asset, right, service or obligation. 140 ANNEX II : PROFESSIONAL CLIENTS FOR THE PURPOSE OF THIS DIRECTIVE Professional client is a client who possesses the experience, knowledge and expertise to make its own investment decisions and properly assess the risks that it incurs. In order to be considered a professional client, the client must comply with the following criteria: I. Categories of client who are considered to be professionals The following should all be regarded as professionals in all investment services and activities and financial instruments for the purposes of the Directive. (1) (2) Entities which are required to be authorised or regulated to operate in the financial markets. The list below should be understood as including all authorised entities carrying out the characteristic activities of the entities mentioned: entities authorised by a Member State under a Directive, entities authorised or regulated by a Member State without reference to a Directive, and entities authorised or regulated by a non-Member State: (a) Credit institutions (b) Investment firms (c) Other authorised or regulated financial institutions (d) Insurance companies (e) Collective investment schemes and management companies of such schemes (f) Pension funds and management companies of such funds (g) Commodity and commodity derivatives dealers (h) Locals (i) Other institutional investors Large undertakings meeting two of the following size requirements on a company basis: - balance sheet total: EUR 20 000 000, - net turnover: EUR 40 000 000, - own funds: EUR 2 000 000. (3) National and regional governments, public bodies that manage public debt, Central Banks, international and supranational institutions such as the World Bank, the IMF, the ECB, the EIB and other similar international organisations. (4) Other institutional investors whose main activity is to invest in financial instruments, including entities dedicated to the securitisation of assets or other financing transactions. The entities mentioned above are considered to be professionals. They must however be allowed to request nonprofessional treatment and investment firms may agree to provide a higher level of protection. Where the client of an investment firm is an undertaking referred to above, the investment firm must inform it prior to any provision of services that, on the basis of the information available to the firm, the client is deemed to be a professional client, and will be treated as such unless the firm and the client agree otherwise. The firm must also inform the customer that he can request a variation of the terms of the agreement in order to secure a higher degree of protection. 141 It is the responsibility of the client, considered to be a professional client, to ask for a higher level of protection when it deems it is unable to properly assess or manage the risks involved. This higher level of protection will be provided when a client who is considered to be a professional enters into a written agreement with the investment firm to the effect that it shall not be treated as a professional for the purposes of the applicable conduct of business regime. Such agreement should specify whether this applies to one or more particular services or transactions, or to one or more types of product or transaction. II. Clients who may be treated as professionals on request II.1. Identification criteria Clients other than those mentioned in section I, including public sector bodies and private individual investors, may also be allowed to waive some of the protections afforded by the conduct of business rules. Investment firms should therefore be allowed to treat any of the above clients as professionals provided the relevant criteria and procedure mentioned below are fulfilled. These clients should not, however, be presumed to possess market knowledge and experience comparable to that of the categories listed in section I. Any such waiver of the protection afforded by the standard conduct of business regime shall be considered valid only if an adequate assessment of the expertise, experience and knowledge of the client, undertaken by the investment firm, gives reasonable assurance, in light of the nature of the transactions or services envisaged, that the client is capable of making his own investment decisions and understanding the risks involved. The fitness test applied to managers and directors of entities licensed under Directives in the financial field could be regarded as an example of the assessment of expertise and knowledge. In the case of small entities, the person subject to the above assessment should be the person authorised to carry out transactions on behalf of the entity. In the course of the above assessment, as a minimum, two of the following criteria should be satisfied: - the client has carried out transactions, in significant size, on the relevant market at an average frequency of 10 per quarter over the previous four quarters, - the size of the client's financial instrument portfolio, defined as including cash deposits and financial instruments exceeds EUR 500 000, - the client works or has worked in the financial sector for at least one year in a professional position, which requires knowledge of the transactions or services envisaged. II.2. Procedure The clients defined above may waive the benefit of the detailed rules of conduct only where the following procedure is followed: - they must state in writing to the investment firm that they wish to be treated as a professional client, either generally or in respect of a particular investment service or transaction, or type of transaction or product, - the investment firm must give them a clear written warning of the protections and investor compensation rights they may lose, - they must state in writing, in a separate document from the contract, that they are aware of the consequences of losing such protections. 142 Before deciding to accept any request for waiver, investment firms must be required to take all reasonable steps to ensure that the client requesting to be treated as a professional client meets the relevant requirements stated in Section II.1 above. However, if clients have already been categorised as professionals under parameters and procedures similar to those above, it is not intended that their relationships with investment firms should be affected by any new rules adopted pursuant to this Annex. Firms must implement appropriate written internal policies and procedures to categorise clients. Professional clients are responsible for keeping the firm informed about any change, which could affect their current categorisation. Should the investment firm become aware however that the client no longer fulfils the initial conditions, which made him eligible for a professional treatment, the investment firm must take appropriate action. 143 ANNEX 1 to the Regulation 6 Table 1 List of fields for reporting purposes Field Identifier Description 1. Reporting firm identification A unique code to identify the firm which executed the transaction. 2. Trading day The trading day on which the transaction was executed. 3. Trading time The time at which the transaction was executed, reported in the local time of the competent authority to which the transaction will be reported, and the basis in which the transaction is reported expressed as Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) +/- hours. 4. Buy/sell indicator Identifies whether the transaction was a buy or sell from the perspective of the reporting investment firm or, in the case of a report to a client, of the client. 5. Trading capacity Identifies whether the firm executed the transaction: 6 — on its own account (either on its own behalf or on behalf of a client), — for the account, and on behalf, of a client. Regulation 40 Re-examinations 1. At least once every two years, and after consulting the Committee of European Securities Regulators, the Commission shall re-examine the definition of 'transaction' for the purposes of this Regulation, the Tables included in Annex II, as well as the criteria for determination of liquid shares contained in Article 22. … 3. The Commission shall, no later than two years after the date of application of this Regulation, after consulting the Committee of European Securities Regulators, re-examine Table 4 of Annex II and report on the results of this re-examination to the European Parliament and the Council. 144 6. Instrument identification This shall consist of: — a unique code, to be decided by the competent authority (if any) to which the report is made identifying the financial instrument which is the subject of the transaction, — if the financial instrument in question does not have a unique identification code, the report must include the name of the instrument or, in the case of a derivative contract, the characteristics of the contract. 7. Instrument code type The code type used to report the instrument. 8. Underlying instrument identification The instrument identification applicable to the security that is the underlying asset in a derivative contract as well as the transferable security falling within Article 4(1)(18)(c) of Directive 2004/39/EC. 9. Underlying instrument identification code type The code type used to report the underlying instrument. 10. Instrument type The harmonised classification of the financial instrument that is the subject of the transaction. The description must at least indicate whether the instrument belongs to one of the top level categories as provided by a uniform internationally accepted standard for financial instrument classification. 11. Maturity date The maturity date of a bond or other form of securitised debt, or the exercise date/maturity date of a derivative contract. 12. Derivative type The harmonised description of the derivative type should be done according to one of the top level categories as provided by a uniform internationally accepted standard for financial instrument classification. 13. Put/call Specification whether an option or any other financial instrument is a put or a call. 14. Strike price The strike price of an option or other financial instrument. 15. Price multiplier The number of units of the financial instrument in question which are contained in a trading lot; for example, the number of derivatives or securities represented by one contract. 16. Unit price The price per security or derivative contract excluding commission and (where relevant) accrued interest. In the 145 case of a debt instrument, the price may be expressed either in terms of currency or as a percentage. 17. Price notation The currency in which the price is expressed. If, in the case of a bond or other form of securitised debt, the price is expressed as a percentage, that percentage shall be included. 18. Quantity The number of units of the financial instruments, the nominal value of bonds, or the number of derivative contracts included in the transaction. 19. Quantity notation An indication as to whether the quantity is the number of units of financial instruments, the nominal value of bonds or the number of derivative contracts. 20. Counterparty Identification of the counterparty to the transaction. That identification shall consist of: 21. Venue identification — where the counterparty is an investment firm, a unique code for that firm, to be determined by the competent authority (if any) to which the report is made, — where the counterparty is a regulated market or MTF or an entity acting as its central counterparty, the unique harmonised identification code for that market, MTF or entity acting as central counterparty, as specified in the list published by the competent authority of the home Member State of that entity in accordance with Article 13(2), — where the counterparty is not an investment firm, a regulated market, an MTF or an entity acting as central counterparty, it should be identified as ‘customer/client’ of the investment firm which executed the transaction. Identification of the venue where the transaction was executed. That identification shall consist in: — where the venue is a trading venue: its unique harmonised identification code, — otherwise: the code ‘OTC’. 22. Transaction reference number A unique identification number for the transaction provided by the investment firm or a third party reporting on its behalf. 23. Cancellation flag An indication as to whether the transaction was cancelled. 146 Table 2 Further details for use of competent authorities Field Identifier Description 1. Reporting firm identification If a unique code as referred to in Table 1 of Annex I is not sufficient to identify the counterparty, competent authorities should develop adequate measures that ensure the identification of the counterparty. 6. Instrument identification The unique code, agreed between all the competent authorities, applicable to the financial instrument in question shall be used. 20. Counterparty If a unique code, or unique harmonised identification code as referred to in Table 1 of Annex 1 is not sufficient to identify the counterparty, competent authorities should develop adequate measures that ensure the identification of the counterparty. ANNEX II to the Regulation Table 1 Information to be made public in accordance with Article 17 Type of system Description of system Summary of information to be made public, in accordance with Article 17 Continuous auction order book trading system A system that by means of an order book and a trading algorithm operated without human intervention matches sell orders with matching buy orders on the basis of the best available price on a continuous basis. The aggregate number of orders and the shares they represent at each price level, for at least the five best bid and offer price levels. Quote-driven trading system A system where transactions are concluded on the basis of firm quotes that are continuously made available to participants, which requires the market makers to maintain quotes in a size that The best bid and offer by price of each market maker in that share, together with the volumes attaching to those prices. 147 balances the needs of members and participants to deal in a commercial size and the risk to which the market maker exposes itself. Periodic auction trading system A system that matches orders on the basis of a periodic auction and a trading algorithm operated without human intervention. The price at which the auction trading system would best satisfy its trading algorithm and the volume that would potentially be executable at that price. Trading system not covered by first three rows A hybrid system falling into two or more of the first three rows or a system where the price determination process is of a different nature than that applicable to the types of system covered by first three rows. Adequate information as to the level of orders or quotes and of trading interest; in particular, the five best bid and offer price levels and/or two-way quotes of each market maker in the share, if the characteristics of the price discovery mechanism so permit. Table 2 Orders large in scale compared with normal market size (in EUR) Class in terms of average daily turnover (ADT) Minimum size of order qualifying as large in scale compared with normal market size ADT < 500,000 50 000 500,000 ≤ ADT < 1,000,000 100 000 1,000,000 ≤ ADT < 25,000,000 25,000,000 ≤ ADT < 50,000,000 250 000 400 000 ADT ≥ 50,000,000 500 000 148 Table 3 Standard market sizes (in EUR) Class in terms of average value of transactions (AVT) Standard market size AVT < 10,000 7,500 10,000 ≤ AVT < 20,000 15,000 20,000 ≤ AVT < 30,000 25,000 30,000 ≤ AVT < 40,000 35,000 40,000 ≤ AVT < 50,000 45,000 50,000 ≤ AVT < 70,000 60,000 70,000 ≤ AVT < 90,000 80,000 Etc. Etc. Table 4 Deferred publication thresholds and delays The table below shows, for each permitted delay for publication and each class of shares in terms of average daily turnover (ADT), the minimum qualifying size of transaction that will qualify for that delay in respect of a share of that type. Class of shares in terms of average daily turnover (ADT) ADT < EUR 100,000 EUR 100 000 ≤ ADT < EUR 1,000,000 EUR 1,000,000 ≤ ADT < EUR 50,000,000 ADT ≥ EUR 50,000,000 Minimum qualifying size of transaction for permitted delay Permitted delay for publication 60 minutes EUR 10,000 Greater of 5% of ADT and EUR 25,000 Lower of 10% of ADT and EUR 3,500,000 Lower of 10% of ADT and EUR 7,500,000 180 minutes EUR 25,000 Greater of 15% of ADT and EUR 75,000 Lower of 15% of ADT and EUR 5,000,000 Lower of 20% of ADT and EUR 15,000,000 149 Until end of trading day (or roll-over to noon of next trading day if trade undertaken in final two hours of trading day) EUR 45,000 Greater of 25% of ADT and EUR 100,000 Lower of 25% of ADT and EUR 10,000,000 Lower of 30% of ADT and EUR 30,000,000 Until end of trading day next after trade EUR 60,000 Greater of 50% of ADT and EUR 100,000 Greater of 50% of ADT and EUR 1,000,000 100% of ADT Until end of second trading day next after trade EUR 80,000 100% of ADT 100% of ADT 250% of ADT 250% of ADT 250% of ADT Until end of third trading day next after trade 150 Appendix 2 MiFID scope and non-scope business MiFID scope Non-MiFID scope MiFID scope firm Note: For MiFID Directive purposes, an “investment firm” means any person whose regular occupation or business is the provision of one or more investment services to third parties and/or the performance of one or more investment activities on a professional basis (Article 4.1(1)). In effect it can encompass a firm which is an investment firm plus, for some purposes only, a credit institution and a UCITS investment firm unless and to the extent it is exempt under Articles 2 or 3 of MiFID. Each member state must require that the performance of investment services or activities as a regular occupation or business on a professional basis by an investment firm shall be subject to prior authorisation in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 1 of the MiFID Directive. The authorisation must specify the investment services or activities which the investment firm is authorised to provide. The authorisation may cover one or more of the ancillary services but in no case shall be granted solely for the provision of ancillary services. MiFID does not apply to a range of institutions. (Article 2) For example: (a) insurance companies; (b) persons providing investment services exclusively for their parent undertakings for their subsidiaries or for other subsidiaries of their parent undertakings; (c) persons providing an investment service where that service is provided in an incidental manner in the course of a professional activity and that activity is regulated by legal or regulatory provisions or a code of ethics governing the profession which do not include the provision of that service; (d) persons who do not provide any investment services or activities other than dealing on their own account (unless they are market makers or deal on own account outside the regulated market or an MTF or an organised frequent and systematic basis for providing a system accessible to third parties in order to engage in dealings with them); (e) persons who provide investment services consisting exclusively in the administration of employee participation schemes; (f) persons which provide investment services which only involve both admin of employee participation schemes and the provision of investment services exclusively for their parent undertakings for their subsidiaries or for other subsidiaries of their parent undertakings; (h) collective investment undertakings and pension funds whether co-ordinated at community The authorisation shall be valid for the entire community and shall allow an investment firm to provide the services or perform the activities which it has been authorised throughout the community either through the establishment of a branch or the free provision of services. MiFID scope Non-MiFID scope level or not and the depositaries and managers of such undertakings; (j) persons providing investment advice in the course of providing another professional activity not covered by this directive provided that the provision of such advice is not specifically remunerated; (k) certain persons whose main business consists of dealing on an account in commodities and/or commodity derivatives (exception not applicable where the persons that deal on account are part of a group the main business of which is the provision of other investment services within the meaning of this directive, or banking services under the Banking Directive; (l) firms which provide investment services and/or perform investment activities consisting exclusively in dealing on own account on the markets in financial futures or options or other derivatives and on cash markets for the sole purpose of hedging positions on derivative markets or which deal for the accounts of other members of those markets or make prices for them and which are guaranteed by clearing members of the same markets, for responsibility for ensuring the performance of contracts entered into by such firms is assumed by clearing members of the same markets. Many EU member states (including the UK) are taking advantage of the Article 3 discretion to exempt intermediaries who only accept and receive orders for transferable securities and units in collective investment schemes and only provide advice on those orders. (Note that firms which do not fall within MiFID’s scope only include collective investment undertakings and operators of such insofar as they do not provide segregated discretionary portfolio management and/or investment advice, or safekeeping and administration in relation to units of collective investment undertakings.) MiFID scope Non-MiFID scope MiFID services and activities Not, for example: “Investment services and activities” are defined in MiFID to mean any of the services and activities listed in Section A of Annex 1 relating to any of the instruments listed in Section C of Annex 1. “Ancillary services” means any of the services listed in Section B of Annex 1 (Article 4(2)). - insurance contracts - deposits Core services and activities The FSA is taking the opportunity to review the regulation of some of the non-MiFID business areas which are within the scope of NEWCOB, namely: (1) reception and transmission of orders in relation to one or more financial instruments - venture capital business or corporate finance business (defined by the FSA glossary) where it falls outside the scope of business or is carried on by non-MiFID firms (2) execution of orders on behalf of clients - commodities business (3) dealing on own account - (4) portfolio management business falling within the Article 2(1)(i) and (k) MiFID exemptions. These generally relate to commodities derivatives although they also cover some ancillary dealing in other financial instruments (5) investment advice, which is defined to mean the provision of personal recommendations to a client, either upon its request or at the initiative of the investment firm, in respect of one or more transactions relating to financial instruments. - energy market and oil market activity that does not fall within the scope of MiFID. This will largely (but not entirely) overlap with matters under the preceding paragraph. - sports and leisure spread betting - Lloyds business (designated investment business currently subject to Chapter 12 of COB to the extent it falls outside the MiFID scope) - collective investment undertakings and their operators focusing principally on the scheme management activity of operators (6) underwriting of financial instruments and/or placing of financial instruments on a firm commitment basis (7) placing of financial instruments without a firm commitment basis (8) operation of a multilateral trading facilities (or MTF) meaning a multilateral system operated by an investment firm or a market operator, which brings together multiple third party buying and selling interests in financial instruments – in the system and in accordance MiFID scope with non discretionary rules – in a way that results in a contract in accordance with the provisions of Title II. Non-MiFID scope - OPS firms (primarily concerning the provision of services such as asset management to pension funds rather than the provision of services in relation to pension products that are investments) - the provision of investment research by a non-MiFID firm by a college institution on a stand alone basis or by a MiFID firm in relation to non-MiFID instruments - locals - service companies and other firms engaged in activity falling within Article 25(2) of the Regulated Activities Order in relation to arrangements with professional clients - business falling within the existing regimes for depositaries and trustees (including those within the Article 2(1)(h) exemption for collective investment undertakings in MiFID) except for MiFID business of trustee firms that are MiFID firms - best execution and order handling for all firms outside the scope of MiFID - client categorisation rules concerning the professional client/eligible counterparty boundary outside the scope of MiFID - requirements relating to projections of future returns and the effect of charges for packaged products Ancillary Services Any of the services listed in Section B of Annex 1 to MiFID that is: (1) safekeeping and administration of financial instruments for the account of clients, including custodianship and related services such as cash/collateral management; (2) granting credits or loans to an investor to allow him to carry out a transaction in one or more financial instruments, where the firm granting the credit or loan is involved in the transaction; (3) advice to undertakings on capital structure, industrial strategy and related matters and advice and services relating to mergers and the purchase of undertakings; (4) foreign exchange services where these are connected to the provision of investment services; (5) investment research and financial analysis or other forms of general recommendation relating to transactions in financial instruments; (6) services related to underwriting; and (7) investment services and activities as well as ancillary services of the type included under Section A or B of Annex 1 related to the underlying of the derivatives included under Section C – 5, 6, 7 and 10- where these are connected to the provision of investment or ancillary services that is in accordance with that Annex and Recital 21 to, and Article 39 of, the MiFID Regulation) MiFID scope Non-MiFID scope where these are connected to the provision of investment services or ancillary services. Note that the MiFID Directive does not indicate which are “services” and which are “activities”. The distinction is important because under MiFID an investment firm is subject to various requirements when it is providing investment services or providing investment activities but other requirements only apply to an investment firm when it is providing investment services but not when it is performing investment activities. In the FSA’s view, some of these business outlined above may be conducted only by way of investment service – for example portfolio management and investment advice. It is also the FSA’s view that an investment firm could conduct others of the activities listed above as either investment services or investment activities. Whether the firm is providing a service or conducting an activity will at least in part depend on the nature of the relationship between the parties. The central factor in determining this issue is the presence (or absence) of a “client relationship”1 1 - - Criteria indicating that an investment firm has a client relationship with another person could include: the nature of the obligations that each person has agreed to undertake whether the relationship involves some act or work to be done for the other person, for example customisation of a particular product or a transaction to meet the needs of the other party; where an investment firm “works” a transaction that it enters into or brings about with another person; or where an investment firm is providing a facility to the other person such as the facilitation of transactions or providing an opportunity to trade the reasonable expectations of the parties as to their relationship including any relevant communications between them (although a statement that there is no client relationship will not be conclusive if it is inconsistent with the overall nature of the relationship) whether an investment firm has agreed to treat a person as a retail professional client whether the investment firm holds itself out as providing services and whether the relationship involves fiduciary agency or similar obligations MiFID scope Non-MiFID scope If an investment firm is only performing an investment activity without providing an investment service, it will have no client and other protections will not apply.2 For example, a firm dealing on its own account may be performing an investment activity without providing an investment service, depending on the nature of its relationship with its counterparty. (In the FSA’s view, portfolio managers and investment advisers will always be conducting activities by way of investment services rather than simply an investment activity.) 2 The following MiFID requirements are, at least in some respects, limited to investment services business: suitability and appropriateness conflicts of interest inducements financial promotions/marketing communications investment research client money and assets information to clients and potential clients client order handling including aggregation and allocation and reporting obligations - Other obligations under MiFID are not dependent upon there being a “client” to whom investment services and/or ancillary services are being provided including: compliance risk management internal audit senior management responsibility personal transactions outsourcing the provision of information in a durable medium and aspects of record keeping MiFID scope MiFID instruments Instruments specified in Annex C of Annex 1 of MiFID, that is: 1. transferable securities; 2. money market instruments; 3. units in collective investment undertakings; 4. options, futures, swaps, forward rate agreements and any other derivative contracts relating to securities, currencies, interest rates or yields or other derivative instruments, financial indices or financial measures which may be settled physically or in cash; 5. options, futures, swaps, forward rate agreements and any other derivative contracts relating to commodities that must be settled in cash or may be settled in cash at the option of one of the parties (otherwise than by reason of a default or other termination event); 6. options, futures, swaps or any other derivatives contract relating to commodities that can be physically settled provided that they are trading on a regulated market and/or MTF. 7. options, futures, swaps, forwards and any other derivative contracts relating to commodities, that can be physically settled not otherwise mentioned in (f) and not being for commercial purposes, which have the characteristics of other derivative financial instruments, having regard to whether, inter alia, they are cleared and settled through recognised clearing houses or are subject to regular margin calls as determined (articles 38(1), (2) and (4) of the MiFID Regulation); Non-MiFID scope MiFID scope Non-MiFID scope 8. derivative instruments for the transfer of credit risk; 9. financial contracts for differences; and 10. options, futures, swaps, forward rate agreements and any other derivative contracts relating to i. commodities; ii. climatic variables; iii. freight rates; iv. emission allowances; v. inflation rates or other official economic statistics; vi. telecommunications bandwidth; vii. commodity storage capacity; viii. transmission or transportation capacity relating to commodities, where cable, pipeline or other means; ix. an allowance, credit, permit, right or similar asset which is directly linked to the supply, distribution or consumption of energy derived from renewable resources; x. a geological, environmental or other physical variable; xi. any other asset or right of a fungible nature, other than a right to receive a service, that is capable of being transferred; xii. an index or measure related to the price or value of, or volume of transactions in any asset, right, service or obligation; where the conditions in Article 38(3) and (4) of the MiFID Regulation are met. MiFID scope [Note: Articles 38(3) and (4) and 30 of the MiFID Regulation.] [Note: Article 4(1)(17) of MiFID] Non-MiFID scope Appendix 3 Ongoing FSA work FSA publication Date 1. MiFID Transposition Instrument January 2007 2. NEWCOB Policy Statement, formal making of NEWCOB (this will incorporate and replace the MiFID Q2 2007 (May) Transposition Instrument) 3. Deferred matters CP, including review of non MiFID projections regime. Q2 2007 4. Consequentials CP Q2 2007 5. Ongoing engagement with European Commission review of the Simplified Prospectus 6. Further work (to which MPBR approach to be applied) re 7. - depolarisation - menu - IDD - basic advice → NEWCOB implementation 1 November 2007 Review of Financial Promotion Region (HM Treasury/FSA) Post November 2007 Appendix 4 Ongoing CESR Work Programme re MiFID There follows: 1. a summary of consultations 2. a copy of CESR’s 2007 Work Programme (published December 2006) 3. a copy of the 2006/7 Work (published 20 October 2006) Programme for the MiFID Level 3 Expert Group CESR Work Programme on MiFID Level 3 work Issue Publication date Consultation Period Hearing date Completion date Planned completion date The list of minimum records in 20 October 2006 Article 51(3) of the MiFID 20 October 2006 – 27 Recommendations November 2007 published implementing Directive (Public Consultation on 9 February 2007 Ref: Ref: CESR/06-552c CESR/06-552) Publication and Consolidation 20 October 2006 of MiFID Market Transparency 20 October 2006 - 15 Recommendations December 2006 published on 9 February 2007 (Public Consultation Ref: CESR/07-043 CESR/06-551) The Passport under MiFID 15 December 2006 15 December 2006 – 9 2 February 2007 March 2007 8 January 2007 Quarter 1/2 2007 February 2007 (Public Consultation Ref: CESR/06-0669) Use of reference data standard codes in transaction reporting 15 December 2006 15 December 2006 – 15 January 2007 Issue Publication date Consultation Period Hearing date Completion date Planned completion date (Public Consultation Ref: CESR/06-648b) 22 December 2006 Inducements under MiFID 22 December 2006 – 9 2 February 2007 Quarter 1 2007 7 March 2007 Quarter 1 2007 1 March 2007 Quarter 1/2 2007 February 2007 (Public Consultation Ref: CESR/06-687) Best execution under MIFID 2 February 2007 2 February 2007 – 16 March 2007 (Public Consultation Ref: CESR/07-050b) CESR Level 3 Guidelines on MiFID Transaction reporting (Public Consultation CESR/07-047) Ref: 2 February 2007 2 February 2007 - 2 March 2007 THE COMMITTEE OF EUROPEAN SECURITIES REGULATORS Date: December 2006 Ref: 06-627 2007 Work Programme for the Committee of European Securities Regulators 11-13 avenue de Friedland - 75008 PARIS - FRANCE - Tel.: 33.(0).1.58.36.43.21 - Fax: 33.(0).1.58.36.43.30 Web site: www.cesr.eu Introduction : areas of work The Work Plan for 2007 presented below, reflects the marked ‘shift in focus’ that CESR has been undertaking since completing the submission of its advice to the European Commission on the various legislative proposals in the Financial Services Action Plan. During the period that CESR undertook a great deal of work to provide Level 2 advice, in particular in 2005 and 2006, CESR also began to establish and build a number of operational groups. These groups are CESR-Pol, drawing together enforcement officers from across the organisations, and CESRFin, on financial information. CESR also developed the work of the Review Panel, whose role it is to undertake assessment exercises to establish the level of convergence and increase peer pressure. In addition, a mediation system to resolve any disputes that arise amongst supervisors, has also been established. The work within the operational groups has been accompanied by the development of a number of tools to assist convergence through databases of decisions. During 2007, the work of these ‘operational groups’ is going to receive even greater impetus and emphasis, with ever increasing dialogue of very day to day operational nature taking place. CESR also intends in 2007 to give a more operational focus to its work on Investment Management, building further on the Level 3 work already undertaken. In addition, 2007 will witness the entry into force of the Transparency Directive and the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID). CESR will continue to make every effort to converge practices in the daily application of these Directives. In this spirit, CESR will be undertaking a great deal of work, particularly in respect to MiFID, where a clear list of priorities for guidance has been established in the form of a detailed work plan developed in close discussion with market participants. Similarly, efforts to converge practices amongst supervisors for those Directives which have now been implemented for a year, namely the Prospectus Directive and Market Abuse Directive, will receive fresh attention. During 2006, ‘calls for evidence’ were launched to review the functioning of these two Directives and to establish what further work needs to be done. The responses will be reviewed and action will be taken to improve further the daily application. To assist convergence in supervisory practices, in the daily application of the Prospectus Directive, CESR Members developed a ‘question and answer’ (Q and A) mechanism to provide responses in a timely, clear and consistent manner. Similarly, guidance was developed for the Market Abuse Directive. Where helpful or necessary, further guidance will be issued, or the ‘Q and A’ adapted or added to. Further practical steps will be taken to develop a common culture and to refine and improve the process of peer pressure, both through putting in place systems to facilitate the movement of staff amongst Members and the development of a training strategy. In addition, the methodology and process used by the Review Panel will be reviewed to see in what ways it can be made more effective and powerful as a tool to increase convergence. The work programme presented below is divided into four areas, namely: - Markets and intermediaries; - Financial Information; - Policy - Supervisory convergence and peer pressure The joint ‘Three-Level-Three Committees’ (3L3) 2007 work programme, on cross sector issues, will be published by CESR, CEBS and CEIOPS in the forthcoming weeks. -2- Markets and Intermediaries MiFID • Input to reports from the European Commission on: - Pre and post transparency for bond trading - Capital requirements for commodities firms - Rules for tied agents Rolling out the ‘Level 3’ Work Programme to create convergence amongst supervisors with the development of guidance on: • Passport functioning (Home/Host) • Best execution • Record keeping • Inducements • Publication and consolidation of market transparency information • Calculation and publication of data (liquid shares, blocs, list of internalisers, etc….) • Transaction reporting (several aspects of practical implementation) TRANSACTION REPORTING EXCHANGE MECHANISM (TREM) • Development of a transaction reporting exchange mechanism (TREM) which involves - Developing manuals and training - Instrument reference data - Conception of the long-term solution - Report to the EU Institutions CLEARING AND SETTLEMENT • Based on a response from the European Commission and EU Institutions at the end of 2006, CESR (with the ESCB) will consider if any further work is necessary. INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT • • • • • • • • Follow-up work on the eligibility of indexes of Hedge funds Development of ‘Level 3’ measures on eligible assets Work on conduct of business rules and supervisory practices Evaluation of the implementation of the notification guidelines Implementation of a more operational focus for the group Follow-up of the White Paper of the European Commission Possible mandate from the Commission on simplified Prospectus Contribution to the cross sector work (through the 3 Level 3 Committees) on substitute products CESR-Pol • • • Joint investigations through urgent issues groups Surveillance and intelligence work Market Abuse Directive - Level 3 guidance for supervisors and for the market -3- • • • • • Evaluation of the supervisory functioning of the MAD Enforcement aspects of MiFID Creation of a database on enforcement cases Uncooperative jurisdictions: - Bilateral contacts - Creation of a database of uncooperative jurisdictions in liaison with the other Level 3 Committees Contacts with the CFTC and IOSCO Financial Information PROSPECTUS • • • • • • • On-going update of the frequently asked questions on the daily application of Directive and the Regulation Evaluation of the functioning of the Directive and the Regulation Pilot study on the transfer of vetting of prospectus (delegation) Follow-up on the Level 2 measures about equivalence of GAAP Follow-up on the Level 2 measures on complex financial histories Input to the cross-sector (3Level 3 Committees’) work on substitute products Possible Level 2 measures on documentation for take-over bids and link with the prospectus directive TRANSPARENCY • • • • Organisation of an implementation forum on the Transparency Directive Follow-up on the advice given to the European Commission on the storage of regulated information Exchange of views with the US SEC on the storage of regulated information Possible level 3 work to facilitate the daily application of the Transparency Directive CESR-Fin • Decisions on the enforcement of IFRS - Sessions (10 per year) - Enrichment of the database of enforcement decisions - Publication of decisions - Supervisory convergence • Equivalence of third countries’ GAAP: Follow up on the decision to delay judgement on equivalence until 2009, especially - Follow-up advice on US, Canada, Japan - Third countries GAAP assessments Implementing the CESR-SEC work programme on the practical cooperation of the enforcement of IFRS and US GAAP • • • • • Report on initial IFRS implementation by EU listed companies Ongoing monitoring of IFRS developments and endorsement Monitoring of International Standards on Auditing (ISA) development and endorsement Checklist for enforcement of IFRS -4- • Specific short-term audit projects CREDIT RATING AGENCIES • • • Annual report to the European Commission on the compliance of Credit Rating Agencies with the IOSCO Code Monitoring of developments in the US Liaison with CEBS and CEIOPS Policy ECONET • • • • Develop an economic assessment of financial activities in Europe in 2006 for publication in the Annual Report Work to develop the bi-annual contribution to the Financial Stability Table of the Economic and Financial Committee (EFC) in March/September Develop an impact assessment methodology and consider how it can be applied to CESR’s work and liaison with the other Level 3 Committees Building links with academics with an aim to improve intelligence gathering and dissemination REPORTING TO EUROPEAN UNION INSTITUTIONS • • • • Annual and half-yearly report to Commission, ECOFIN and European Parliament Supervisory convergence report to the FSC Hearings in EU Parliament Contributions to the Inter Institutional Monitoring Group (IIMG) THE GLOBAL DIMENSION • • • • • Work programme with the SEC: − On IFRS − Exchange of experience on storage and risk based approaches Work programme with the CFTC: − Transparency − Common formats Enforcement cooperation dialogue: Swiss/Liechtenstein Accompanying European Union’s cooperation policy: Russia/China/India/Brazil Provide assistance to the consultative group of Non EEA countries (Turkey, Croatia, Serbia, Montenegro,…) ENGAGING RETAIL INVESTORS MORE EFFECTIVELY IN CESR’S CONSULTATION PROCESSES AND INVESTOR INFORMATION • • Development of an investor corner on the website which will provide investors with some useful information on regulators and investor warnings and things to consider when buying cross border. Annual investor day Supervisory Convergence/Peer Review -5- REVIEW PANEL • • • • • • Mapping of supervisory powers for the implementation of MAD and Prospectus Directive Review of the implementation of the simplification procedure for UCITS notification Revision of existing CESR standards, guidelines and recommendations Updating of previous reviews Development of a protocol and improvement of the methodology for the work of the Panel Refinement of the Review Panel IT-Tool MEDIATION • • Treatment of mediation cases Reporting to EU institutions COMMON SUPERVISORY CULTURE • • • Development of exchange of staff between CESR members Development of training of staff: feasibility study on a long-term strategy Restructuring of CESR’s website to better reflect the work of CESR at Level 3 and to undertake its new responsibilities as set out in Directives, as well as, promoting and delivering information which assists in converging practices and supervisory implementation on a day-to-day basis. -6- THE COMMITTEE OF EUROPEAN SECURITIES REGULATORS Date: 20 October 2006 Ref.: CESR/550b MiFID Level 3 Expert Group – 2006/2007 Work Programme This work-plan covers the period of time that goes from the establishment of the MiFID Level 3 Expert Group until the implementation of the Level 1 and Level 2 Directives and Regulation (November 2007). Therefore it does not address, at this stage, other areas of work contained in the CESR Work Programme on MiFID level 3 work (Ref. CESR/06-413) that was submitted to public consultation. The current work programme has been adopted taking into account the results of the public consultation and having heard the MiFID Consultative Working Group. The work programme is divided in two sections: 1) Intermediaries and 2) Markets. 1. Intermediaries Issue Start date Process and Finish date Practical and operational aspects related to the functioning of the passport of investment firms Q3 2006 Consultation: planned for December for a period of six weeks. • transitional provisions around the passport; Approval planned by March 2007 • home/host relationships in the phase of authorization; Bullet points three and four of the left column should be prioritised over bullet points one and two. • home/host relationships regarding supervision and monitoring in the provision of services/ activities from branches: • issues regarding the provision of cross border business by tied agents. The objective of this work is to achieve a common understanding by regulators on how to collaborate on issues that relate to the passport, hence facilitating the 11-13 avenue de Friedland - 75008 PARIS - FRANCE - Tel.: 33.(0).1.58.36.43.21 - Fax: 33.(0).1.58.36.43.30 Web site: www.cesr.eu cross-border provision of services by investment firms. In essence, this work is directed at creating an optimum environment so that the Directive can meet its objectives. [Articles 23, 31 and 32 of MIFID] Issue Start date Best execution Q3 2006 • Development of convergent views regarding application of the best execution requirements to non-equity markets, order receivers and transmitters, and investment managers; Process and Finish date Q1 2007 Consultation/s will be performed as soon as practicable, but not earlier than December for the first and second bullet points. • Clarification on firms not executing client orders; • Execution venues: need to consider those outside the EU. The main outcome of this work is to reach a convergent view as to how the best execution requirements contained in the Level 1 and Level 2 Directives apply to quote driven markets. This work also comprehends practical points such as the ones raised in the bullet point 3. [Article 21 of MiFID and articles 44 to 46 of Level 2 Directive] Issue Start date Record keeping Q3 2006 Minimum list of records to be maintained. Process and Finish date Q1 2007 A consultation has been launched on 20 October 2006 with a view to have the minimum list of -2- The objective of this work is to achieve consistency in the minimum list of records that competent authorities need to establish. records ready in January 2007 [Article 51(3) of Level 2 Directive] Issue Start date Outsourcing (3L3) Q3 2006 To ensure consistency to the maximum extent permitted by the EU legal framework between the Level 2 provisions and the respective Level 3 guidance stemming from MIFID and the Level 3 guidance developed in relation to the Capital Requirements Directive (CRD). Process and Finish date Q4 2006 The finish date of this work will be the date of publication of the CEBS standards (Q1/Q2 2007) No consultation different from the one undertaken by CEBS will be conducted at CESR, with the objective of not duplicating issues. The aim of this work is to create consistency between standards of CEBS, the Level 2 and 3 work in the MIFID area and the future work on UCITS and Solvency II. To avoid inconsistencies with these developments, CEIOPS is participating in this alignment in view of its work in the framework of the Solvency II project. [Article 13(5) of MiFID and articles 13 to 15 of Level 2 Directive] Issue Start date Internal governance (3L3) Interactions between the CRD and MiFID. Q3 2006 The work within the context of the CRD and the MIFID on internal governance of banks and investment firms will be discussed. An analytical report will be prepared and shared with the market on any overlaps and areas of possible further work. This will take into account the current thinking on Solvency II. -3- Process and Finish date Q1 2007 The deliverable for this date is an analytical report that maps the different initiatives and serves as a reference to determine if further work is needed. No consultation is needed for the mapping as it is a CEBS’ guidelines on internal governance within e.g. the supervisory review process and model validation work, and Level 2 measures under MIFID (based on CESR’s work on internal governance in the MIFID area), will be discussed in order to assess whether there is a need to do future work in this area. purely factual exercise. UCITS will also be taken into account. CEIOPS is participating in this alignment of work in view of avoiding inconsistencies relating to its work on Solvency II, as well as any input following from the pension funds side and current insurance directives. [Article 13 of MiFID and Chapter II of Level 2 Directive] Issue Start date Inducements Q3 2006 Process and Finish date Q1 2007 • Clarification on certain remuneration structures, scope, and distribution channels. Consultation/s will be performed as soon as practicable, but no earlier than December 2006. • Practices of “softing and bundling”. Bullet point one of the left column should be prioritised over bullet point two. Clarification of practical implementation of provisions on inducements. [Article 26 of the draft Level 2 Directive] -4- 2. Markets Issue Start date Process and finish date Depending on the request from the Commission Q2 2008 I- Work in connection with upcoming Commission's Reports State of the removal of the obstacles which may prevent the consolidation at the European level of the information that trading venues are required to publish. The Commission's report is due by April 2008. • Wait for a request from the Commission. Timing: April 2008 is however tight because consolidation should only begin in November 2007. Possible extension of the pre and post-trade transparency obligations to transactions in classes of financial instruments other than shares. The Commission's report is due by October 2007. Request in two phases. First step in progress. Q3 2006 Q4 2006 Q4 2006 Q2 2007 Application of article 27 of MiFID on systematic internalizers (SI). The Commission's report is due by October 2008. • Depending on the request by Wait for a request from the Commission and experience on the the Commission operation of MiFID SI regime. Appropriateness of the definition of transaction, the tables included in Annex II of the Regulation and the criteria for determination of liquid shares contained in article 21 of the Level 2 Regulation. (Re-examination under Level 2 regulation) • Wait for experience on MiFID, possibly discuss the methodology and -5- Depending on the request by the Commission Q2 2008 Q3 2009 Issue Start date Process and finish date Depending on the request by the Commission Q3 2008 national experience well before the deadline. Re-examine table 4 of annex II of the Level 2 Regulation • Wait for experience on MiFID, possibly discuss the methodology and national experience well before the deadline. II- Others Areas of Work Aspects related to the functioning of the passport of investment firms and regulated markets (where relevant), including home/host relationships in the phases of authorization, free provision of services/activities, establishment of branches, crisis management; it also covers transitional provisions around the passport, and issues regarding the provision of cross border business by tied agents. At this stage, CESR has not identified issues which require immediate actions. Potential questions may arise around MTFs. However their cross-border activities are likely to be similar to the ones like RMs (where no major problems are recognized) they should only be addressed on the basis of practical experience. According to current status there is no work anticipated. Q1 2007 (if the work would be needed) If such a work would become necessary, it should have priority (i.e. starting Q4/2006) Publication and consolidation of market transparency information - Publication of transparency information (accuracy of the information, avoiding double publication, requirements for proprietary arrangements etc.) - Consolidating the transparency information • Issues discussed during the previous "consolidation work", like: o how to ensure publication only once; -6- Already started Q1 2007 (Consultation Paper published on 20 October 2006) Issue o o o o o o • Start date necessary technical standards in order to enhance consolidation; publication on non-discriminatory way and guaranteeing the availability of data to all interested parties; synchronization of trading clocks; the issues of websites – minimum requirements for "cheap" publication channels; requirements for data quality monitoring systems (art 32 regulation: reliable, monitoring continuously for errors and correct as soon as errors are detected); publication of cancellations/corrections; Interpretation issues: o When information is published; o Whose obligation is it to publish; o How to define shares; o Definition of transaction – chain of transactions; o Trading by non-EU branches; o How to interpretate end of trading day (which trading day) and non trading days; Common procedures and formats for the calculation and publication of data (liquid shares, block sizes and the list of systematic internalizers). • Process and finish date Internal CESR work – no need for consultation Level 2 sets obligation for CESR to publish certain data. The basic obligation for publication is on competent authorities, but their publication obligation is considered to be fulfilled when the data has been submitted to CESR and published. CESR should establish an internal guidebook on the methods and procedures (including deadlines) how members should submit the data. o Art 11 Level 2 Regulation: list of the relevant competent authority for one or more financial instruments; o Art 21 Publication of sistematic internalizers; -7- Q4 2006 Q1/Q2 2007 Issue • Start date Process and finish date o Art 22 Determination and publication of liquid shares; o Art 23 Determination and publication Standard Market Size; o Art 33, 34 Calculations and estimates for shares en publication. Requirements for CESRs "publication mechanisms": The content as such is "simple" compared for example to transaction reporting, but it should first be noted that it is not static once a year exercise. Depending on the market activity, the list may need to be updated even daily. Another thing is the level of service CESR wants to provide: In terms of timing, for example the list of internalizers needs to be updated at least annually, but in practice such updates would be meaningful, if meant to be of use for markets it needs to be updated daily. Secondly, as has been discussed in relation to market data consolidation, a "static website" would not achieve the wanted result. Similarly it can be argued that if CESR’s list were to be useful it should meet the requirement of being "machine readable". Required calculations and estimates concerning liquid shares and delayed publication - Free float: identification of holdings held by a collective investment undertaking or a pension fund and cooperation between competent authorities to share the information; - Average daily turnover; - Average daily number of transactions; - Average value of orders executed; - Estimates in relation to "new listings"; - Block trade thresholds. Apart from the technical manual referred to in the previous box, there is a need to clarify the exact calculation procedures and necessary interpretations in order to reach figures which are comparable (earlier stock taking exercises have the importance of such common understanding). Therefore a more content oriented manual on conducting the calculations is needed. -8- There should be general agreement on these issues well before the first calculations Q4 2006 Q2 2007 Issue Start date Process and finish date Q4/2006 Q1/2007 2) Reporting channel: Transactions reports shall be made either by the investment firm itself, a third party acting on its behalf or by a trade-matching or reporting system approved by the competent authority or by the regulated market or MTF through whose systems the transaction was completed. Reports shall be in electronic format unless a competent authority grants a waiver. Additional work may be needed in the following aspects: Exemptions from being in electronic format and/or approval of the reporting system. Q4/2006 (preliminary analysis) Q4/2006 CESR will first analyse whether any immediate action in this field is needed for the operation of MiFID or whether actions should be taken on long term (if at all). 2008 long term Transaction reporting 1) Interpretation of a transaction: According to the Level 2 Directive a transaction is a reference only to the purchase and sale of financial instrument. However, more work seems to be needed, eg on the interpretation of the term "execution" in relation to a transaction and in particular its application to investment managers and investment advisers. The work should be done in cooperation with CESR-Tech/TREM (Transactions Reporting Exchange Mechanism) project. 3) List of financial instruments and list of "markets": Relevant competent authority shall ensure that there is established and maintained an updated list of those instruments. – Each Regulated Market shall submit identifying reference data on each instrument in an electronic and standardised format to its home competent authority. Similarly competent authorities shall maintain a list of markets. CESR-Tech/TREM project is already working on the subject. The issue of list of -9- Q4/2006 Q2/2007 Issue Start date Process and finish date Q4/2006 Q2/2007 markets will be addressed as part of the calculations manual. 4) Additional content of the reports: (instrument specificities, trading methodology specificities and identification of the client). While MiFID expressly allows individual Member States to have superequivalent requirements it may be possible for those super-equivalent requirements to be implemented in such a way that as much as possible CESR members adhere to 23 standard fields. For example, it may be that those CESR members who decide to require client identification in transaction reports could all agree a common format standard for that field. Furthermore CESR might agree to use existing fields in such a way that minimum system changes are needed for reporting in different jurisdictions. This work should be done in co-operation with CESR-Tech/Trem project. 5) Common IT protocols/formats and interfaces: It would be sensible for European regulators to agree on a common set of protocols and IT formats for reporting mechanisms. CESR recognizes that agreeing common protocols/formats could be difficult. Taking into account the tight timetables in implementing MiFID, this work will take place at a later stage. 6) Article 32(7) of MiFID on the home/host issues from a transaction reporting perspective: The interpretation of Article 32(7) of MiFID has implications for transaction reporting and it is important that the transaction reporting perspective is properly considered in reaching a decision on how this provision should be interpreted. Otherwise there is a risk of double reporting. According to the MiFID, branches report to the host country authority and other firms to their home country authority. There are views among market participants that following this distinction may prove difficult (and costly) and therefore they may be willing to report all trades to both regulators (home and host). - 10 - 2008 (if needed) Q4/2006 Q1/2007 Issue Start date Proposal for a standard service level agreement between an investment firm and the reporting channel. 2008 (if needed) - 11 - Process and finish date Field Fisher Waterhouse LLP 35 Vine Street London EC3N 2AA t. +44 (0)20 7861 4000 f. +44 (0)20 7488 0084 [email protected] www.ffw.com This publication is not a substitute for detailed advice on specific transactions and should not be taken as providing legal advice on any of the topics discussed. © Copyright Field Fisher Waterhouse LLP 2007. All rights reserved. Field Fisher Waterhouse LLP is a limited liability partnership registered in England and Wales with registered number OC318472, which is regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority. 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