Thursday, 18 September 2008

Europe: legislation under review

In a speech delivered this week at the annual dinner of the Quoted Companies Alliance, European Commissioner Charlie McCreevy outlined work currently being undertaken concerning the operation of the Prospectus, Transparency and Market Abuse Directives. In this regard, Mr McCreevy observed:

We are currently carrying out an evaluation of the functioning of the EU Prospectus regime, five years after it was put in place. Overall, our assessment is positive; however, we have identified a number of areas where the regime does not work as efficiently as we would like. Also we have found a number of unintended consequences nobody thought about when the text was agreed. Employee shares schemes are one example. But there are others. These are the areas where we want to propose changes to reduce the administrative burden on issuers, without lowering investor protection standards.

One thing that we have heard so far is that the way Member States have implemented the [Transparency] Directive has not helped. My services are currently conducting research on the extent of the national gold plating. The preliminary findings show that problems with the Directive may not always be Brussels' fault. Interestingly, in the UK there are some slightly more stringent transparency measures in place because some obligations from a previous regime were maintained when transposing the Directive. Actually, when they were consulted, market participants had expressed a preference for the older rules they already knew. So, the UK chose to listen to market participants and did not to take all the opportunities for simplification offered by the Directive.

At the moment, we are commissioning an independent study on the way in which the Transparency Directive operates in practice. A survey on stakeholders' perceptions will be an important component of this study. And we will be listening carefully to smaller quoted companies. This study will help the Commission evaluate the Directive in 2009. I hope that it will help us identify any problems and how best to address them.

Our review of the Market Abuse Directive is well underway. It will look at the efficiency of the Market Abuse framework and, more precisely, its scope of application, insider dealings, market manipulations, the powers of national administrative authorities and the sanctioning process. This review will give us an excellent opportunity to simplify some provisions of the Directive".

Note: Research undertaken by the Commission concerning the operation of the Prospectus Directive was published in June and is available here.

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