EMIR refit: Difference between revisions
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{{ | {{a|emir|}}A rare example of a regulator admitting it got a bit carried away, the [[EMIR refit]] — which project managers will be saddened to hear has now passed into law, so no longer a suitable occupation for the foreseeable future, was a selective rowing back on aspects of 2012’s {{emir}} — known and loved by all as [[EMIR]]. City law firms will be equally distressed to see it pass into history, depriving them of yet another opportunity to bore the living daylights out of their clients with [[tedious]] bulletins, [[CPD]] lectures and assorted [[panel discussion]]s on the topic, meaning they will have to think about something else. Good news: there is still [[LIBOR]] remediation and [[CSDR]] for that. | ||
===What changed?=== | ===What changed?=== |
Latest revision as of 13:29, 14 August 2024
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A rare example of a regulator admitting it got a bit carried away, the EMIR refit — which project managers will be saddened to hear has now passed into law, so no longer a suitable occupation for the foreseeable future, was a selective rowing back on aspects of 2012’s European Markets Infrastructure Regulation (EU Regulation 648/2012 (EUR Lex)) — known and loved by all as EMIR. City law firms will be equally distressed to see it pass into history, depriving them of yet another opportunity to bore the living daylights out of their clients with tedious bulletins, CPD lectures and assorted panel discussions on the topic, meaning they will have to think about something else. Good news: there is still LIBOR remediation and CSDR for that.
What changed?
Who honestly cares? It changed. We move on. But FRANDT rules.