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

Commission temporarily authorises aid measures for Austrian bank BAWAG P.S.K.

The European Commission has authorised under EU state aid rules a €550 million capital injection and a €400 million guarantee in favour of the Austrian bank BAWAG. P.S.K. The Commission found the measures to be in line with EU state aid rules. more »

Sharpest Decrease in Hourly Labour Costs Recorded in Lithuania

EUROSTAT has reported that the sharpest annual decrease in hourly labour costs of -10.9% was observed in Lithuania in the 3rd quarter of 2009. more »

Changes in the unemployment rate in III quarter 2009

Statistics Lithuania informs that, according to the Labour Force Survey data, the number of the unemployed in III quarter 2009 made 228.1 thousand. more »

The economic recovery in the euro area is gathering momentum, albeit at a modest pace

What has come to be termed as the "Great Recession" seems to have come to an end in the third quarter of 2009. more »

Commission approves Lithuanian short-term export credit insurance scheme

The European Commission has authorised, under EU State aid rules, a measure adopted by Lithuania to limit the adverse impact of the current financial crisis on exporting firms. more »

Tree more directions from Vilnius to European cities

The schedule of Vilnius International Airport (VIA) is supplemented with 3 more new directions; the airline company airBaltic starts regular flights to Paris today, to Munich tomorrow, and to Berlin on Monday. more »

ECB decides to start construction works for its new premises in spring 2010

The Governing Council of the European Central Bank (ECB) has decided to start the main construction works for its new premises in spring 2010. more »

The award to Bank SNORAS from NASDAQ OMX Baltic Stock Exchange

AB Bank SNORAS was granted the award from NASDAQ OMX Baltic Stock Exchange for the jubilee 15-year listing of the bank’s shares on NASDAQ OMX Vilnius Stock Exchange. more »

Parex banka establishes subsidiary for real estate management

Parex banka has established a subsidiary, SIA NIF, which will professionally manage assets that are not related to the Bank’s core business. more »

Commission proposes measures to ensure that Greek farmers can receive EU support payments

Mariann Fischer Boel, European Commissioner for Agriculture and Rural Development, today put forward a plan to ensure that Greece will put in place the systems necessary to allow EU aid payments to be made to farmers. more »