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

EBRD makes equity investment in Croatian geodetic company

The EBRD is making a €4 million equity investment in Geofoto, a Croatian geodetic company offering mapping, geodetic survey, photogrammetry, geoinformatics and aerial survey services, to support its drive to expand operations on international level. more »

Strong year - risk-adjusted profit up 22%

Nordea came out of 2009 in an even stronger position, despite one of the most challenging years for decades. Risk-adjusted profit increased 22% and our capital position and cost of funding are among the best in Europe. more »

Small business start-ups by the unemployed: deal agreed on funding

MEPs gave the green light on Thursday for EU funding to help Europe's unemployed start up small businesses. more »

Yemen: international efforts needed to prevent crisis escalation

MEPs are deeply concerned about the long-standing and growing presence of al-Qaeda, and the deteriorating security, social and economic problems in Yemen, which they think could destabilise neighbouring countries. more »

Africa: Fighting the Global Economic Crisis through Private Enterprise, Innovation and Integration

At the start of a new decade, Sub Saharan Africa is reeling from the effects of three major global crises – food, fuel and financial – that have reversed many of the economic achievements of the last 10 years and left some growth projections at levels below those of 30 years ago. more »

5th High-level Seminar of Central Banks in the East Asia-Pacific Region and the Euro Area

The 5th High-level Seminar of Central Banks in the East Asia-Pacific Region and the Euro Area was jointly organised by the European Central Bank and the Reserve Bank of Australia, in cooperation with the Hong Kong Monetary Authority. more »

EBRD and EFSE support micro and small businesses in Moldova

The EBRD and European Fund for Southeast Europe are boosting the availability of financing to private businesses in Moldova with a $10 million loan to ProCredit Bank in Moldova for on-lending to micro and small enterprises. more »

EBRD finances new shopping centre in Croatia

The EBRD is supporting the development of the retail infrastructure in Croatia with a €68 million loan to finance the construction of a modern shopping centre in Split, the second largest city in Croatia. more »

EBRD agrees to sell 15 percent stake in Swedbank’s Russian banking arm

The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development has agreed to sell its 15 percent stake in OAO Swedbank Russia to its parent and major stakeholder, Sweden’s Swedbank AB, a move which would give it full ownership of its Russian subsidiary. more »

Ministers of Industry agree that the European Commission should promote a common strategy on electric cars

The Ministers of Industry took the first steps in San Sebastián today to make the electric vehicle a reality in Europe and agreed that European institutions, with the EC at the head, should lead a common strategy on electric vehicles. more »