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MiFID II Systematic Internalizers Raise Concerns

Traders Magazine Online News, April 19, 2017

The International Capital Market Association has warned that the introduction of the systematic internaliser regime in the bond market is one of the most complicated and nuanced MiFID II rules and may not be successful.

Systematic internalisers were originally set up for equities in MiFID in 2007 for all off-venue trading. However only nine banks became SIs and very few trades took place on the back of an SI quote as off-venue trading moved to broker crossing networks.

MiFID II, which will come into force for financial markets in the European Union in January, defines thresholds for becoming an SI based on “frequent and systematic” and “substantial” trading volumes outside regulated venues.

Elizabeth Brooks Callaghan, director of market structure and MiFID II strategy & regulatory response at ICMA, said in the association’s second quarter report last week that large global or regional banks are the most likely candidates to become SIs as regulators aim to capture over-the-counter trading activity, increase transparency and ensure that the internalisation of order flow does not undermine the efficiency of price formation on trading venues.
 

“The idea in MiFID II is to bring about transparency in bond trading by creating transparency obligations on a quote-by-quote basis – bringing light into the previously un-lit OTC trading practice.” she added.

Therefore to improve pre-trade transparency for liquid bonds, SIs must make all firm quotes public to all clients either via a trading venue, an Approved Publication Arrangement or proprietary means such as its own website.

“There is flexibility within pre-trade transparency, however; SIs can limit the number of transactions a client may enter into, and the clients to whom the quotes are provided, so long as its commercial policy is set in a non-discriminatory way (eg a policy of “one transaction per quote”),” added Brooks Callaghan.

There are also post-trade obligations for SI trading activities for liquid bonds.

Brooks Callaghan said: “It is important to note that the obligation for pre-trade and post-trade transparency for OTC trading is a complete change compared with OTC trading practices today. In Europe today, there is no transparency for OTC trading in either the pre-trade or the post-trade space.”

However, she continued that the practicalities of implementing this regime are proving a challenge as the buyside will need to know which bank is an SI for an individual bond and the European Securities and Markets Authority has refused to provide a centralized database. Instead, the individual APAs are each attempting to develop industry solutions.

“The SI regime – and the concept of bringing transparency to the over-the-counter market in bond trading – is one of the most complicated and nuanced MiFID II rules,” added Brooks Callaghan. “It remains to be seen how successful this regime will be. There is a view that it will most likely be used for bonds where banks are specialists or primary dealers. However, beyond that it is unknown how the regime will roll out.”

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