|
Markets in Financial
Instruments Directive (MiFID)
DIRECTIVE 2004/39/EC
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.
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 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).
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.
|