Legal development

Financial Services SpeedRead - Germany: 9 July 2024 edition

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    Financial Markets

    No new entries.

    Banking and Prudential

    1. BaFin: Updated information sheet on external bail-in implementation

    BaFin has published an expanded information sheet on external bail-in implementation which now covers all mandatory information required by the European Banking Authority. Insofar, BaFin is implementing the guidelines of the European Banking Authority on the "Guidelines to resolution authorities on the publication of the writedown and conversion and bail-in exchange mechanic" (EBA/GL/2023/01). In addition, the new version also includes a standardised concept for the write-down and conversion of percentage and unit-listed structured debt instruments.

    The information sheet is aimed at all companies within the meaning of Article 2 of the Single Resolution Mechanism Regulation (Regulation (EU) No. 806/2014 - SRM Regulation) and companies within the meaning of Section 1 (1) Nos. 1 to 3 of the German Recovery and Resolution Act (Sanierungs- und Abwicklungsgesetz) with their registered office in Germany for which the resolution strategy provides for a bail-in. This also includes institutions within the remit of the Single Resolution Board (SRB) as the resolution authority.

    2. Official Journal of the EU: Legislation: Delegated Regulation on regulatory technical standards on the scope and methods for prudential consolidation of an investment firm group under the Investment Firms Regulation

    On 25 June 2024, Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2024/1771 of 13 March 2024 on supplementing Regulation (EU) 2019/2033 with regard to regulatory technical standards specifying the details of the scope and methods for prudential consolidation of an investment firm group was published in the Official Journal of the EU.

    The Regulation enters into force on 15 July 2024.

    3. EBA: Final report: Updates to disclosure framework finalising the implementation of the Basel III Pillar 3 framework (EBA/ITS/2024/05)

    On 21 June 2024, the EBA published a final report containing draft implementing technical standards (ITS) on public disclosures by institutions which implements the changes in the Pillar 3 disclosure framework introduced by CRR III Regulation ((EU) 2024/1623).

    The aim of the ITS is for market participants to have sufficient information to assess risk profiles of institutions and understand compliance with CRR III requirements. The ITS implements the CRR III prudential disclosures by including new obligations on output floor, crypto assets, credit valuation adjustment risk, credit risk, market risk and operational risk.

    The EBA plans to complement these ITS with the CRR III disclosure requirements that are not directly linked to Basel III implementation later this year.

    4. Official Journal of the EU: Legislation: CRR III Regulation and CRD VI Directive published

    On 19 June 2024, the following legislation was published in the Official Journal of the EU:

    This is the final text on the EU implementation of the Basel III standards as well as EU specific reforms.

    CRR III will apply from 1 January 2025, with the exception of certain provisions in Article 1, which will apply from 9 July 2024.

    CRD VI enters into force on 9 July 2024 and certain provisions in Article 1 shall apply from 29 July 2024.

    5. Official Journal of the EU: Legislation: Delegated Regulation on regulatory technical standards on identifying connected clients under CRR

    On 18 June 2024, Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2024/1728 of 6 December 2023 supplementing the Capital Requirements Regulation (No 575/2013) with regard to regulatory technical standards specifying in which circumstances the conditions for identifying groups of connected clients are met was published in the Official Journal of the EU.

    The Delegated Regulation will enter into force on 8 July 2024.

    Fund Management

    No new entries.

    Senior Managers and Governance

    No new entries.

    Financial Crime

    6. Official Journal of the EU: Legislation: Directive on cross-border law enforcement access to bank account registries published

    On 19 June 2024, Directive EU 2024/1654 of 31 May 2024 amending Directive (EU) 2019/1153 as regards access by competent authorities to centralised bank account registries through the interconnection system and technical measures to facilitate the use of transaction records was published in the Official Journal of the EU.

    The Directive allows designated competent authorities to access and search the centralised bank account registers of other Member States through the bank account registers interconnection system (referred to as BARIS) and use the transaction records for the prevention, detection, investigation or prosecution of serious criminal offences.

    The Directive enters into force on 9 July 2024.

    7. Official Journal of the EU: Legislation: AML Regulation, MLD 6 and AMLA Regulation

    On 19 June 2024, the following three statutory instruments, which have the aim of strengthening the EU's AML/CTF framework, were published in the Official Journal of the EU:

    • Regulation (EU) 2024/1624 of 31 May 2042 on the prevention of the use of the financial system for the purposes of money laundering or terrorist financing: This Regulation lays down rules concerning the measures to be applied by obliged entities, beneficial ownership transparency requirements and measures to limit the misuse of anonymous instruments. The Regulation enters into force on 9 July 2024 and will apply from 10 July 2027, except for certain obliged entities referred to in Article 3(3)(n) and (o) which apply from 10 July 2029.
    • Directive (EU) 2024/1640 on the mechanisms to be put in place by Member States for the prevention of the use of the financial system for the purposes of money laundering or terrorist financing, amending Directive (EU) 2019/1937, and amending and repealing Directive (EU) 2015/849: This Directive is referred to as MLD6 and will repeal the Fourth Money Laundering Directive ((EU) 2015/849) with effect from 10 July 2027. This Directive enters into force on 9 July 2024.
    • Regulation (EU) 2024/1620 establishing the AML/CTF Authority and amending Regulations (EU) No 1093/2010, (EU) No 1094/2010 and (EU) No 1095/2010: This regulation establishes the Authority for AML/CTF, the powers conferred to it and its objectives.

    Retail Services

    8. ESAs: Q&A: Updated Consolidated Q&A on the PRIIPs Key Information Document (JC 2023 22)

    On 28 June 2024, the European Supervision Authorities (ESA) published an updated version of its consolidated questions and answers (Q&A) on the packaged retail and insurance-based investment products (PRIIPs) Key Information Document.

    A new Q&A has been added under the heading "General Topics" regarding whether FX forwards fall within the scope of the PRIIPs regulation, with the answer being in the affirmative.

    Digital Finance and Fintech

    9. ESMA/EBA: Final report: Guidelines on suitability of management body members and shareholders for entities under MiCA

    On 27 June 2024, EBA and ESMA jointly published two sets of guidelines on the suitability of members of the management body, and on the assessment of shareholders and members with qualifying holdings for issuers of asset reference tokens (ARTs) and crypto-asset service providers (CASPs), under the Markets in Crypto Assets regulation ((EU) 2023/1114).

    The first set of guidelines covers the presence of suitable management bodies within issuers of ARTs and CASPs, by, among other things, providing common criteria to assess their knowledge, skills, experience, reputation, honesty and integrity, as well as considerations regarding whether they can commit sufficient time to perform their duties to ensure a sound management of these entities.

    The second set of guidelines is regarding the assessment of the suitability of shareholders or members with direct or indirect qualifying holdings in a supervised entity. It provides competent authorities with a common methodology to assess their suitability for the purpose of granting authorisation as issuers of ARTs or as CASPs, and for carrying out the prudential assessment of proposed acquisitions.

    10. ECB: Report: First progress report on the digital euro preparation phase

    On 24 June 2024, the ECB published its first progress report on the digital euro preparation phase which will last until 31 October 2025.

    This report considers the progress made on key digital euro design features and outlines the ECB's planned next steps for the potential issuance of a digital euro. Of particular relevance, the report notes that:

    • the ECB is designing high privacy standards to make online and offline digital payments as close as possible to cash transactions;
    • the Eurosystem is conducting further testing and exploration into the technical aspects of the digital euro, including its offline functionality, testing and rollout plan;
    • the ECB has started work on designing methodology for calibrating digital euro holding limit;
    • the digital euro Rulebook Development Group has completed an interim review of the first draft of the rulebook, which sets out the rules and procedures to standardise digital euro payments across the euro area; and
    • the ECB continues to provide technical input to legislative discussions with European co-legislators.

    The next progress report on the preparation phase will be published in autumn 2024.

    11. EBA: Guidelines and RTS: EBA publishes regulatory products under the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation

    On 19 June 2024, the EBA published a package of technical standards and guidelines under the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCAR). The package includes:

    • Guidelines on establishing the common reference parameters of the stress test scenarios for the liquidity stress tests referred in Article 45(4) of MiCAR;
    • Draft Regulatory Technical Standards on the methodology to estimate the number and value of transactions associated to uses of asset-referenced tokens as a means of exchange under Article 22(6) MiCAR and of e-money tokens denominated in a currency that is not an official currency of a Member State under Article 58(3) of MiCAR;
    • Draft Implementing Technical Standards on the reporting on asset-referenced tokens under Article 22(7) of MiCAR and on e-money tokens denominated in a currency that is not an official currency of a Member State pursuant to Article 58(3) of MiCAR; and
    • Draft Regulatory Technical Standards on supervisory colleges under Article 119(8) of MiCAR.

    The EBA will now submit the final draft RTS, ITS and guidelines to the European Commission for endorsement, following which they will be subject to scrutiny by the European Parliament and the Council of the EU before being published in the Official Journal of the EU.

    12. European Commission: Targeted consultation: Artificial intelligence in the financial sector

    On 18 June 2024, the European Commission published a targeted consultation on the application and impact of artificial intelligence (AI) in the financial sector.

    The consultation specifically welcomes input from financial services stakeholders in relation to the following three areas of focus:

    • the development of AI applications in financial services, including with regards to the use, benefits, challenges, risks and compliance burden associated with AI;
    • specific use cases of AI in finance (e.g. banking and payments, market infrastructure, securities markets, insurance and pensions, and asset management); and
    • the implementation of the AI framework set out in the AI Act, particularly in relation to high-risk use cases.

    Responses to this consultation must be sent before the 13 September 2024, and can be submitted here. The EU Commission will then publish a report analysing its findings on the main trends arising from the use of AI within the financial services sector.

    For further information on the AI Act, please see our previous briefing here.

    Payments

    13. BaFin: Current account comparison: Payment service providers to prepare reporting procedures

    BaFin will operate a comparison website for current accounts for which payment service providers must report and submit the required data for the comparison website via BaFin's MVP portal as of September 2024. Data provision is only legally effective via a manual XML upload or an automated web service procedure. BaFin recommends that all payment service providers finalise the technical requirements for data transmission. In a separate dry-run offered by BaFin, they can test this to identify potential sources of error.

    Payment service providers must register and submit an application for authorisation for the specialised procedure "comparison website for payment accounts" in the MVP portal which may take several days until authorisation is granted. BaFin recommends that payment service providers that are not yet authorised for the specialised procedure register as soon as possible.

    ESG

    14. NGFS: Guide: Climate related disclosure for central banks

    On 19 June 2024, the Network for Greening the Financial System (NGFS) published the second edition of its guide on climate-related disclosure for central banks.

    This edition of the guide reaffirms the NGFS’s commitment to robust, globally consistent disclosure standards that are based on the headline disclosure recommendations in the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures' (TCFD) framework. These headline recommendations are as follows:

    • Governance: Disclose the institutional climate-related objectives and decision-making process of the central bank, as well as climate-related governance structures for specific areas and functions;
    • Strategy: Disclose the climate-related impacts related to the central bank, as well as the strategy for handling these impacts;
    • Risk Management: Disclose the processes for managing climate-related risks at the central bank, focusing on identification, assessment, and integration; and
    • Metrics and Targets: Disclose metrics and targets relating to the central bank’s management of climate-related risks and exposure to climate-related risks and opportunities.

    The guide offers flexible options tailored to central banks' specific circumstances, noting there is no one-size fits all solution for all central banks. It also emphasises the importance of transparency in the transition to a climate-friendly economy.

    The NGFS has noted that will continue to help central banks navigate the landscape of evolving disclosure frameworks, and will further strengthen its role as a forum for central banks to share their practical experiences.

    15. ESAs: Opinion: The assessment of the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation

    On 18 June 2024, the ESAs published a joint opinion on the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation, in which they recommend to the European Commission several changes to improve the SFDR framework. The changes focus largely on investor disclosure, and are intended to help consumers better understand the sustainability disclosures made in respect of in-scope financial products.

    The recommendations in the opinion include:

    • introducing a product classification system, based on regulatory categories and/or sustainability indicator(s);
    • introducing a financial product sustainability indicator, based on a graded scale;
    • clarifying the concepts of "taxonomy-aligned" and "sustainable investment", with a view to ensuring consistent application of these terms across financial products; and
    • potentially expanding the scope of the SFDR to align disclosure across different financial products.

    For more information on the ESAs opinion, please see our briefing here.

    Other

    16. BaFin: Implementation guidance on DORA

    BaFin published a supervisory notice on IT risk management and IT third party risk management as an implementation guidance on DORA. Currently, the companies in the banking and insurance sectors supervised by BaFin have to apply the banking and insurance supervisory requirements for IT (Bankaufsichtliche Anforderungen an die IT, BAIT and Versicherungsaufsichtliche Anforderungen an die IT, VAIT) which will be replaced by DORA as of 17 January 2025.

    The supervisory notice is a non-binding document intended to support supervised companies in implementing the DORA requirements for regular ICT risk management and ICT third party risk management. The supervisory notice also takes into account the relevant technical regulatory standards and provide an overview of the minimum contractual content to be agreed with ICT third-party service providers.

    BaFin points out that the implementation guidelines do only refer to BAIT and VAIT but are often comparable with the supervisory requirements for fund managers (Kapitalverwaltungsaufsichtliche Anforderungen an die IT, KAIT) and payment and e-money institutions (Zahlungsdiensteaufsichtliche Anforderungen an die IT von Zahlungs- und E-Geld-Instituten, ZAIT).

    17. Official Journal of the EU: Legislation: DORA Commission Delegated Regulations published

    On 25 June 2024, the following supplementary provisions to Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2022/2554 (i.e. the Digital Operational Resilience Act) were published in the Official Journal of the EU:

    The Delegated Regulations will enter into force on 15 July 2024.

    The information provided is not intended to be a comprehensive review of all developments in the law and practice, or to cover all aspects of those referred to.
    Readers should take legal advice before applying it to specific issues or transactions.