1 / 15

Building the Financial System of the 21st Century: An Agenda for the EU and the U.S.

Building the Financial System of the 21st Century: An Agenda for the EU and the U.S. Session I Issuance of Securities: Corporate Governance and Liability Regimes in the EU and the U.S. Private Enforcement. Europe

graham
Download Presentation

Building the Financial System of the 21st Century: An Agenda for the EU and the U.S.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Building the Financial System of the 21st Century:An Agenda forthe EU and the U.S.

  2. Session IIssuance of Securities: Corporate Governance and Liability Regimes in the EU and the U.S.

  3. Private Enforcement • Europe • Procedural obstacles (rights, judicial competence, lack of discovery, fee shifting) • Low incentives: small recoveries • Europe should be very cautious about importing class actions • U.S. • Millstone? • Deeply embedded in culture, legal system and politics • Permit shareholder choice (e.g. class actions, jury trials, ADR)

  4. Public Enforcement: EU • More institutional market • Not done at EU level – all done by member states • Citizens cannot directly insure enforcement • Cumbersome infringement procedure • FSA has prudential approach, so hard to measure enforcement • Is public enforcement (e.g. by fines, restitution) adequate? • Resource problem – FSA self-financed

  5. Public Enforcement: U.S. • Less prudential, more “gotcha” • NAAG problem (a.k.a. Spitzer): federal vs. state enforcement • Race to “over the top” • Federal criminal enforcement issues – U.S. attorney generals’ prosecution of companies • Liability system encourages overly cautious behavior, e.g. SOX 404 audits, but broader problem as well

  6. Transatlantic Agenda • Importance of competitiveness to both sides: jobs and GDP • Approach: combination of mutual recognition plus convergence, issue by issue • Mechanism: Merkel and EU-U.S. regulatory dialogue and/or G7 • need for political involvement but when? • Some key issues • Should U.S. take a multilateral (EU) or bilateral (EU country) approach? • U.S. acceptance of EU rules depends on EU enforcement • EU acceptance of U.S. rules depends on U.S. changing its rules • Some enforcement decisions should be made at transatlantic or global level, e.g. auditor prosecution that affects all countries • Desirable level of regulatory competition?

  7. Governance - I • What does it mean? • Shareholder activism – is it good or bad? • Who has power? EU (U.S. Federal) or EU member state (U.S. States) • Right approach dependent on shareholder structure: more reliance on shareholders, where large blocks, on directors where wide dispersion

  8. Governance - II • Executive compensation • Winner take all trend: higher salaries at successful companies • Shareholder advisory votes? • Arbitrage to private markets: public company limits may cause better managers to move to private equity where compensation is not controlled • Shareholder voting process • Issuers do not know shareholders • Hedge fund vote buying • One share one vote: EU (not now) vs. U.S. (yes)

  9. Session IITrading of Securities: Market Regulation and Structure

  10. Trading Rules: Key Differences Between NMS and MiFID • Overall: most important objective of NMS is to protect retail investors, while MiFID is focused on creating a single market • Best Execution (next slide) • Data fees: regulated under NMS, not MiFID • Prohibition of sub-penny pricing under NMS, but not under MiFID • Dark pools: more pre-trade transparency under MiFID?

  11. Best Execution • NMS: price priority in fast markets (trade-through rule) vs. MiFID’s general duty, taking account of multiple factors • No opt-out in NMS, while easy wholesale opt-out under MiFID, but mechanics of retail opt-out left to member states • Role of clearing and settlement: slow/inaccurate process in EU could affect market choice

  12. NMS – MiFID Integration • Is it necessary given predominance of home-country trading? But transatlantic exchanges (NYSE Group) must now operate under two systems • What country’s rules should apply for mutual recognition? • Place of execution (exchange)? • Place of purchaser? • Where are these places for electronic trading? • Do we need harmonization? Of which rules?

  13. Other Observations • High cost for small intermediaries – barriers to entry • EU deadline may need adjustment (NMS postponed several times) • Do both NMS/MiFID discourage innovation? • Enforcement nightmare

  14. Session IIIDerivative Markets: Alternative Products and Financial Stability Monitoring

  15. Derivatives • Do they increase or decrease financial stability? • What will be the implications of trading credit derivatives on exchanges? • Competition between OTC and exchanges • Greater retail potential on exchanges • Conversion from physical to cash settlement: does the ISDA “Dura Protocol” auction procedure solve the problem?

More Related