Better regulated and transparent financial markets

Ensuring financial products are traded on regulated venues The aim is to close loopholes in the structure of financial markets. A new regulated trading platform is established to capture the maximum of unregulated trades: the organised trading facility (OTF) *, which exists alongside other trading platforms such as regulated markets.

Increased transparency The rules strengthen the transparency requirements that apply before and after financial instruments are traded, for instance when market participants have to publish information regarding the prices of financial instruments. These requirements are calibrated differently depending on the type of financial instrument.

Limiting speculation on commodities Speculation on commodities – a financial practice that can lead to the prices of basic products (such as agricultural products) soaring – is restricted by introducing a harmonised EU system setting limits on the positions held in commodity derivatives. National authorities may limit the size of a position that market participants can hold in commodity derivatives.

Adapting rules to new technologies Under the new rules, controls must be established for trading activities that are performed electronically at a very high speed, such as high-frequency trading *. Potential risks from the increased use of technology are mitigated by a combination of rules aiming to ensure these trading techniques do not create disorderly markets.

Reinforcing investor protection Investment firms should act in accordance with the best interests of their clients when providing them with investment services. These firms should safeguard their clients’ assets or ensure the products they manufacture, offer or recommend are designed to meet the needs of final clients. Investors will also be provided with increased information on products and services offered or recommended to them. Moreover, firms must ensure that staff pay and incentives received by, or paid to, the firms to recommend a particular financial product are not organised in a way that goes against clients’ interests.

Initial capital Amending Directive (EU) 2019/2034 on the prudential supervision of investment firms (see summary) harmonises the required level of initial capital of investment firms operating OTFs and multilateral trading facilities * (MTFs).

Authorisation and supervision The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) is responsible for authorising and supervising undertakings that intend to provide data reporting services, following amendments introduced by Directive (EU) 2019/2177.

Crowdfunding service providers Legal persons authorised as crowdfunding service providers under Regulation (EU) 2020/1503 are excluded from the scope of Directive 2014/65/EU.

Small and medium-sized enterprise growth markets Amending Regulation (EU) 2019/2115 introduces new rules to actively promote the use of small and medium-sized enterprise (SME) growth markets , a new type of trading venue created under Directive 2014/65/EU and a subcategory of MTFs. These are designed to improve SMEs’ access to capital and enable them to grow, and to encourage the development of specialist markets catering to the needs of SME issuers with growth potential.

COVID-19 pandemic To help recovery from the pandemic, amending Directive (EU) 2021/338 simplified certain MiFID rules that appeared not useful or too burdensome. The periodic reporting due to be published by trading and execution venues and systematic internalisers * was suspended until February 2023. The amending act also introduced some changes to the position limit regime for commodity derivatives to support the emergence and growth of euro-denominated commodity derivative markets.

Digital operational resilience Amending Directive (EU) 2022/2556 aligns the provisions of the directive, and several other related directives, with the requirements on ICT risk for financial entities set out in the digital operational resilience of the financial sector (DORA) regulation, Regulation (EU) 2022/2554 (see summary).

The European Commission has adopted a series of delegated and implementing acts, including the following.