Compliance
Compliance Corner – Survey Reveals US, European Regulatory Readiness Gap

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Far more US financial institutions say they aren’t ready for
upcoming regulations than is the case with their European peers,
according to a study.
While 38 per cent of respondents with European Market
Infrastructure Regulation Refit requirements are confident that
they'll be ready or have made significant progress on the program
– expected to go live in the first half of 2024 – more than half
of respondents with Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)
Rewrite reporting requirements are not ready for December's
implementation date. (EMIR is designed to mitigate the systemic
risks inherent in the European derivatives market. It is
scheduled to go live in the first half of 2024. The Rewrite
requirements, due to go live in late 2023, address changes to the
swaps market.)
The findings come from the S&P Global Market Intelligence
Global Regulatory Reporting Survey, published today.
The survey found that 99 per cent of respondents indicate having
reporting obligations in at least two jurisdictions.
"The industry has matured significantly over the past decade and
there is a realization that reporting requirements will continue
to change and evolve, and firms need to plan ahead, not only for
new regulations, but in terms of how best to benefit from
improved technology and global solutions," Ronen Kertis, head of
Cappitech, S&P Global Market Intelligence, said. "In some
regions, we are starting to see a genuine shift in the way in
which firms consider and plan for their regulatory reporting
requirements, while there are other regions where work still
needs to be done."
Survey data was collected during August and September from 89
respondents, of which 51 per cent worked for banks, 18 per cent
asset managers and 9 per cent brokers. Some 31 per cent were from
Global Tier 1 organizations. The geographic spread was also
varied with 37 per cent of respondents based in Europe, 31 per
cent in the UK, 7 per cent in North America and 25 per cent in
Asia-Pacific.