Dealing with derivatives

Published: 23 October 2009 y., Friday

Pinigai
The EU has announced plans to regulate the market for derivatives – complex financial products that helped trigger the financial crisis.

The commission will introduce legislation in 2010 to reduce the risk these securities pose to the economy. The proposals are the latest in a series of steps by the EU to strengthen oversight of the financial industry so as to prevent another crisis.

Financial services commissioner Charlie McCreevy said the plans marked “a paradigm shift away from the traditional view that derivatives are financial instruments for professional use and thus require only light-handed regulation.”

As it draws up the legislation, the commission will work with G20 nations to ensure coherence in global policy. The Group of 20 top economies recently agreed to clamp down on derivatives, and the US administration has already introduced legislation to that effect.

Derivatives get their name from the fact that their value is derived from the price of an underlying asset such as interest rates or oil. The EU plan concerns over-the-counter derivatives or OTCs – securities that are privately negotiated and traded directly between two parties.

Trading in these derivatives has exploded in the last decade, with the global market now in the hundreds of trillions of euros. But in the years leading up to the crisis, traders underestimated the risk of default.

The EU wants to shed more light on the market by requiring standard versions of these instruments to be traded through central clearinghouses (CCPs) that absorb much of the risk of default. All other deals would have to be recorded.

The new rules will also require financial institutions to post more collateral and hold more capital against deals that do not clear centrally.

On a related issue, the commission is seeking public comment on how to prevent troubled banks from threatening the broader financial system and forcing taxpayers to bail them out. A spate of bank failures during the financial crisis brought home the need for new legal tools to cope with their cross-border impact.

Saying, “no bank will ever be immune to failure”, commissioner McCreevy called for “a robust set of arrangements” to detect and avert a bank's collapse if possible, and if not, to reorganise it.

 

Šaltinis: ec.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

China bought Volvo

In Gothenburg Sweden a deal is done for Volvo. A delegation from China’s Zhejiang Geely Holding Group, China’s largest private-run car maker, was given the red carpet treatment when it agreed to buy Ford Motor’s Volvo car unit for 1.8 billion dollars. more »

Zapatero hopes to reach employment figures of 70 percent for women in the EU by the year 2020

The President of the Spanish Government and current rotational President of the European Union, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, affirmed this Sunday that during his presidency of the EU, Spain will continue to support the inclusion of the "complete affirmation of equality between men and women" within the new economic strategy. more »

UniCredit Bank Lithuanian Branch resisted the economic recession

Despite the unfavorable macroeconomic situation, AS UniCredit Bank Lithuanian Branch achieved positive activity indicators in 2009: the bank branch operated profitably, the total loan portfolio and assets increased and the number of customers grew. more »

2011 budget: Parliaments spells out its priorities

Young people, economic recovery and research should be the EU's top budgetary priorities, said the European Parliament on Thursday, when it became the first EU institution to adopt an opinion on next year's budget. more »

Eurogroup countries give their support to the aid mechanism for Greece

The sixteen leaders of the euro area countries (the Eurogroup) have given their support to the financial aid mechanism for Greece; this involves the participation of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and of the euro area countries through bilateral loans. more »

European social partners meet EU to debate exit from the crisis and Europe 2020 strategy

Today, President of the European Commission José Manuel Barroso, President of the European Council Herman Van Rompuy and Spanish Prime Minister José Luis Rodriguez Zapatero representing the Presidency of the Council met the European social partners to look at how Europe can exit the current economic and financial crisis. more »

Parliament backs aid to unemployed in Lithuania

Around 1,100 former furniture and textile workers in Lithuania will receive EU aid worth €1.2 million following a vote by Parliament on Thursday. more »

Developing countries facing the “abyss” says report

An estimated 100 million people in developing countries will fall into extreme poverty because of the economic and financial crisis, according to a report being presented Wednesday evening in the House. more »

EU to make its first formal decisions on the common economic strategy for the next ten years

The Heads of State or Government of the EU-27 will make their first formal decisions in the process to develop the “Europe 2020” strategy that aims to achieve sustainable economic growth, job creation as well as recognition for the European social model. more »

Telecoms: Lithuania withdraws proposed regulatory measures on network access market

On 16 March 2010 the Lithuanian Authority, Ryšių reguliavimo tarnyba (RRT), informed the European Commission that it was withdrawing its proposed measure on network infrastructure access markets. more »