Financial counterparty: Difference between revisions

 
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#redirect[[financial counterparty - EMIR Provision]]
{{a|emir|{{subtable|“Financial counterparty” means an investment firm authorised in accordance with Directive 2004/39/EC, a [[credit institution]] authorised in accordance with Directive 2006/48/EC, an insurance undertaking authorised in accordance with Directive 73/239/EEC, an assurance undertaking authorised in accordance with Directive 2002/83/EC, a reinsurance undertaking authorised in accordance with Directive 2005/68/EC, a UCITS and, where relevant, its management company, authorised in accordance with Directive 2009/65/EC, an institution for occupational retirement provision within the meaning of Article 6(a) of Directive 2003/41/EC and an alternative investment fund managed by AIFMs authorised or registered in accordance with Directive 2011/61/EU;}} }}The EU’s EMIR regulation — which deals with unglamorous but important stuff like trade reporting, mandatory clearing of derivatives, regulation of central counterparties and regulatory margin, and makes a big fuss about whether one is a “[[financial counterparty]]”, and therefore automatically in scope for the full horror of European infrastructure regulation, or [[Non-financial counterparty|not]], in which case your scoping will have to do with how often, in your daily travels, you interact with the regulated bits of the financial system.
In a nutshell the following are financial counterparties:
{{quote|
*a [[MiFID]] investment firm
*a [[Bank|credit institution]] authorised under the Capital Requirements Directive
*an EU-regulated [[insurer]], [[life insurance|assurer]], [[reinsurer]];
*a [[UCITS]] and its management company;
*An EU-regulated [[pension fund]]; and
*An [[Alternative investment fund|AIF]] and its [[AIFM - AIFMD Provision|AIFM]]}}
Which means a number of potentially important entities will not be. For example:
*Ordinary corporates — your Vodafones, Apples and, Volkswagens, who will generally be ''clients''
*Commodity traders who are not active in regulated financial markets
*any [[Special purpose vehicle|espievies]] that are not specifically set up as investment funds — so repackaging SPVs, securitisation vehicles — that kind of thing.
{{sa}}
*[[Non-financial counterparty]]

Latest revision as of 13:25, 28 June 2023

“Financial counterparty” means an investment firm authorised in accordance with Directive 2004/39/EC, a credit institution authorised in accordance with Directive 2006/48/EC, an insurance undertaking authorised in accordance with Directive 73/239/EEC, an assurance undertaking authorised in accordance with Directive 2002/83/EC, a reinsurance undertaking authorised in accordance with Directive 2005/68/EC, a UCITS and, where relevant, its management company, authorised in accordance with Directive 2009/65/EC, an institution for occupational retirement provision within the meaning of Article 6(a) of Directive 2003/41/EC and an alternative investment fund managed by AIFMs authorised or registered in accordance with Directive 2011/61/EU;

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The EU’s EMIR regulation — which deals with unglamorous but important stuff like trade reporting, mandatory clearing of derivatives, regulation of central counterparties and regulatory margin, and makes a big fuss about whether one is a “financial counterparty”, and therefore automatically in scope for the full horror of European infrastructure regulation, or not, in which case your scoping will have to do with how often, in your daily travels, you interact with the regulated bits of the financial system. In a nutshell the following are financial counterparties:

Which means a number of potentially important entities will not be. For example:

  • Ordinary corporates — your Vodafones, Apples and, Volkswagens, who will generally be clients
  • Commodity traders who are not active in regulated financial markets
  • any espievies that are not specifically set up as investment funds — so repackaging SPVs, securitisation vehicles — that kind of thing.

See also