There has been mixed reaction to the news that a
consortium of major International Investment Banks is to build a
new exchange, or, to be precise, a Multi-lateral Trading Facility
(MTF)—“the project Turquoise”—to challenge
the dominance of the predominantly national stock exchanges in
trading of cash equities, though it should be noted that MTFs may
trade any financial instruments and are not restricted to the
trading of cash equities. The MTF will be operated on a mutual
not-for-profit basis and access will be available to other
financial intermediaries and investors: banks, brokers and fund
managers. European exchanges have, anecdotally, reacted with
apprehension and there has been some downward movement in the share
prices of publicly listed exchanges.
Some commentators suggest that the underlying
motives of the consortium are to pressurise the exchanges into
reducing their fees and revising their overall cost structures,
directly or through consolidation with other exchanges, before they
reach the point of substantial investment in the MTF venture.
Others are highly sceptical about the cultural aspects of the
consortium's proposition: delivery and management of a not-for
profit exchange by some highly egotistical organisations. Such
varied comments as “piranhas have to feed” and
“would this MTF endure a lengthy period of dull or weak cash
equities markets?” reflect the scepticism.
Aside from these comments the consortium does face
a number of technology challenges if, as reported, it is to deliver
the MTF for November 2007, when MiFID is due to become operational.
It should be stressed that there is no regulatory imperative for
the MTF to be delivered by this date. Perhaps, it is aspirational
at this stage, motivated by ego?
By way of background:
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MTFs are alternative venues for trading financial
instruments, referred to in the UK as Alternative Trading Systems
(ATS).
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MiFID establishes and sets authorisation
requirements for MTFs, which can be operated by investment firms or
market operators, such as Regulated Markets (Stock Exchanges). It
formalises to a great extent the regulatory regime, which already
exists, for example in the UK, under the FSA regulatory regime for
Alternative Trading Systems.
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MiFID permits both investment firms and operators
of RMs to operate MTFs (currently systems operated by RMs are not
classified as MTFs/ATS.) RMs operating MTFs will have to comply
with MTF requirements.
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MTF operators will be able to make their facilities available
to users across the EU on the basis of their home country
authorisation.
Each national financial regulator will have to
establish specific rules and regulations for MTFs. The UK Financial
regulator published a consultation paper outlining the rules under
which it would propose to operate a regime for MTFs for which it
becomes the home regulator. It would be surprising if other EU
national financial regulators, who have yet to publish proposed
detailed rules, propose any rules which have substantive
differences, unless they are seeking to discourage the
establishment of MTFs by more restrictive regulations or to
encourage regulatory arbitrage by “a lighter regulatory touch
over their MTF regime.” The FSA sets out the major business
and environmental issues in which the technology will have to
accommodate:
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The FSA intends to implement the MiFID
requirements by setting uniform requirements for all MTFs except in
respect of transparency rules. However, it does intend to retain
tailored permission variations of “permissions for those MTFs
that operate a primary market in shares to clarify how they would
expect MTF operators to satisfy some of the MiFID
requirements.”
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The FSA will continue the transparency regime it already has
in place for ATS operators for MTFs including publishing of pre-
and post-trade information for financial instruments traded on RMs
as well as for instruments not traded on RMs. The FSA views
transparency requirement as “a necessary element of
appropriate arrangements for fair and orderly trading and expects
MTFs to maintain them under MiFID.”
- MTFs will be required to establish transparent rules governing
access to their facilities and the financial instruments that can
be traded on those facilities. MTFs will have to comply immediately
with any instructions from the FSA to suspend or remove a financial
instrument from trading.
- MTF operators must have in place the necessary arrangements to
facilitate the settlement of trades transacted through their system
and ensure users understand their own responsibilities for
settlement.
- While MTF operators may make arrangements with Central
Counterparties (CCPs), Clearing Houses and Settlement Systems from
other Member States but the FSA “may prevent MTFs from
entering such arrangements where necessary to maintain the orderly
functioning of the market and taking into account the conditions
for settlement systems established by the Directive.”
- Pre-trade transparency obligations will require MTFs to ensure
that business is conducted on a fair and orderly basis for all
asset classes, and provide sufficient information about quotes and
orders to users, though waivers are permitted for some market
models, but there are more extensive requirements for shares
admitted to trading on a RM.
- The FSA intends to use its powers to grant pre-trade
transparency waivers for:
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- crossing systems which meet MiFID conditions.
- systems which formalise negotiated transactions and meet MiFID
conditions.
- order management systems operated by MTFs that meet MiFID
conditions, and/or
- transactions which are large in scale.
- The FSA considers there is sufficient post trade transparency
in the markets of a UK ATS operator when determining whether the
business conducted by means of its facilities is carried out in a
fair and orderly manner. MiFID imposes more rigid and detailed
requirements for post-trade transparency for MTFs, which operate
markets in shares traded on a RM. Arrangements to make pre- and
post-trade information public must meet certain conditions.
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In respect of capital requirements any firm operating a MTF
will be subject to the recast EU Capital Requirements Directive
(CRD) from 1/11/07 but may be subject to the CRD before that
(1/1/07) on the basis of its other activities, specifically where
they carried out other investment services. However, if they were
service companies operating ATSs (which are not eligible activities
and were outside the scope of CRD) this will not come into
operation until 1/11/07.
-
Firms operating MTFs in addition to other investment services
will have to meet higher requirements post MiFID.
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The FSA estimates the minimum capital requirement for
operating a MTF under the MiFID will be EU 750k. MTFs will be
subject to capital resource requirements, which take into account
risk profile of the business and the cost associated with
undertaking their investment activities but MTF operators operating
“a limited licence firm” may have lighter
requirements.
The key questions for the technology delivery and operation
are:
-
The Technology attributes will be increasingly
important for differentiating the RM and competing with Exchanges
and other RMs from a cost and operating efficiency
perspective.
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Technology is capital intensive. As part of the
continual demands for improved speed and transparency of
transaction execution, IT investment will be a continual and
substantial investment requirement. Exchanges and, doubtless, RMs,
will be assessed and rated from a credit rating perspective on
their management of IT investment from risk management, financial
and operating efficiency criteria.
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Becoming a RM is a strategic step—one for
the longer term. Members of the consortium have a historic
reputation of exiting markets, which turn commercially adverse.
Such behaviour would affect reputation in an enterprise with a
mutual not-for-profit culture, where surplus revenues are
reinvested to reduce the costs of transaction fees for members and
where they members would have to fund the deficits at least until a
point at which exit or termination was mutually agreed.
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To deliver this project the consortium will have
to buy the technology from a third party—most likely another
exchange or existing ATS. Those with suitable technology for
sale/licence may be somewhat resistant if they see the project
Turquoise as a threat to their own business.
-
The technology will require versatility, enabling
connection to facilitate the settlement of trades transacted
through their system and ensure users understand their own
responsibilities for settlement of transactions. Equally project
Turquoise will be obliged to make arrangements with CCPs, Clearing
Houses and Settlement Systems from other Member States.
-
The governance of the RM will have to be
independent. The consortium must not influence operational and
technology issues in a way which promotes the individual members of
the consortium. Conflict of interest must be as rigidly managed in
this element of the business as much as in the trading and
execution of transactions.
At present the challenges to deliver the MTF by
November 2007 seem overwhelming. As project Turquoise unfolds over
the next year it will be interesting to revisit some of these
issues in more detail to evaluate how the consortium addresses
them.
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