Proposed changes to flawed deferred reporting regime for equity trades will increase costs for investors and issuers, according to new AFME study | AFME


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Proposed changes to flawed deferred reporting regime for equity trades will increase costs for investors and issuers, according to new AFME study
27 Jan 2012
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Author Rebecca Hansford <p>Head of Communications and Marketing</p>
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The public reporting of certain large equity trades must allow for appropriate delays, but the method proposed for calculating time limits proposed by the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) will only increase costs for investors and issuers, according to a new report, published today by the Association for Financial Markets in Europe (AFME).

The ‘Equity Deferred Reporting Blueprint’reportalso concludes that reporting delays permitted under the current MiFID regime, are flawed, since they are based on the value of a trade relative to a historic measure of liquidity – Average Daily Turnover - rather than prevailing market conditions.    

In addition, changes to the current regime – proposed by ESMA and the European Commission – including raising the minimum qualifying trade sizes and reducing the maximum permitted delays – will increase costs for investors as they are likely to force the premature publication of large trades, allowing short term investors to anticipate and materially affect the price of subsequent related trades. This will be most apparent in less liquid stocks such as SMEs whose cost of capital will, as a direct and predictable consequence, be increased.

The AFME study recommends that: 

  • Large equity trades are reported as early as possible within permitted delay periods which, importantly, are based on prevailing market conditions; 
  • An official European Consolidated Tape – as per the Blueprint published by the European Fund and Asset Management Association in September 2011 – should be implemented and form the measure of liquidity used in calculating the allowable delay period; 
  • ESMA assesses alternative approaches to the deferred publication regime and has the power to implement a new regime without undue delay.

Commenting on the ‘Equity Deferred Reporting Blueprint’ report, Christian Krohn, a managing director at the Association for Financial Markets in Europe said:

“Whilst recognising the need for timely information on trading activity, it is important that reporting rules allow for delays to avoid damaging the returns of investors who act collectively to trade in large sizes.  The issue with the current MiFID regime is that permitted delays are based on Average Daily Turnover – which means that a given trade will have the same allowable delay whether it is executed on Christmas Eve or on the day a company announces its results.  

“To protect the efficiency of this mode of execution there must be an appropriate period of confidentiality when transferring the execution risk of a large trade from one party to another, whilst at the same time, maintaining an appropriate level of transparency. ESMA should reassess deferred reporting requirements, with a view to having reporting delays more closely aligned to prevailing market conditions. A future European Consolidated Tape should form the measure of liquidity used in calculating the allowable delay period.” 

-ENDS-

 

 

Contact

Rebecca O'Neill

Head of Communications and Marketing (Interim)