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Markets in Financial
Instruments Directive (MiFID)
DIRECTIVE 2004/39/EC
(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. (1)
(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, 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 (1). 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.
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