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Markets in Financial
Instruments Directive (MiFID)
DIRECTIVE 2004/39/EC
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) 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
(2) 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 non professional 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.
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.
L 145/44 EN Official Journal of the European Union 30.4.2004
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.
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.
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