logo
ESMA head says EU lacks unified view on regulator's expanded powers

ESMA head says EU lacks unified view on regulator's expanded powers

Reuters5 hours ago

PARIS, June 23 (Reuters) - Efforts to grant the European Securities and Markets Authority greater supervisory powers face resistance from some EU members, its chair Verena Ross told Reuters, underscoring the challenges in unifying Europe's fragmented capital markets.
"It's clear that when it comes to supervision and also some of the other measures, there's not a unified view that is definitely the way to go," said ESMA's Ross.
"It's quite hard to predict where we will come out," she said in an interview in Paris, while remaining confident about broad support for the EU's package of measures to harmonize financial markets.
The European Commission's Savings and Investment Union (SIU) package is the latest iteration of plans to deepen capital markets across Europe, which have been discussed for a decade, but which have made little progress.
Announced in March, the SIU seeks to use trillions of euros in private savings held in bank accounts to fund technological and industrial development. As part of this initiative, ESMA could gain powers to directly oversee large cross-border financial firms, including crypto companies.
Currently, Paris-based ESMA's direct oversight is limited to rating agencies and central counterparties. While EU leaders have voiced support for strengthening ESMA, progress has been slow due to key EU members' reluctance to give up control of their national financial rules.
The head of France's financial regulator told Bloomberg, opens new tab in March that she would be willing to relinquish some national authority, while Luxembourg's prime minister wrote in the Financial Times, opens new tab "a decentralised European supervisory system leverages national authorities' expertise and avoids unnecessary bureaucracy."
The rollout of the EU's landmark crypto regulation, MiCA, has raised concerns about inconsistent approaches among national regulators and whether they can effectively supervise complex cross-border financial firms.
France's financial regulator last month warned that ESMA's lack of direct authority could lead to a "regulatory race to the bottom". Regulators across the bloc are divided over the speed and rigour of other countries' approvals.
Ross acknowledged that individual countries were moving at different speeds on MiCA due to varying levels of pre-existing crypto regulation.
But Ross added that "some have argued that rather than having 27 national supervisors responsible, let's just make ESMA responsible for it," a move that would make supervision more effective.
ESMA has also been warning about excessive leverage, opens new tab in parts of fund management, some of which remains opaque. The regulator plans to collect information from market participants to address any lack of transparency.
The regulator welcomed comparisons between ESMA and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) but pointed out key differences.
"I always find it very flattering if people talk about the European SEC. I personally have not used this term," Ross said.
"We are not the U.S. - Europe is different, and we are talking here about natural steps to potentially move some of the direct supervision responsibility to the EU level, but in a very narrow and selected way."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Car Deal of the Day: Vauxhall Grandland Ultimate for an unbelievable £179 a month
Car Deal of the Day: Vauxhall Grandland Ultimate for an unbelievable £179 a month

Auto Express

time31 minutes ago

  • Auto Express

Car Deal of the Day: Vauxhall Grandland Ultimate for an unbelievable £179 a month

Range-topping Ultimate model £3 a month more than a Mokka Only £178.82 a month The Vauxhall Grandland is the largest model Vauxhall offers, and as such the British brand has thrown the proverbial kitchen sink at it in terms of technology and equipment. But, despite its grand positioning, it's one of the cheapest family SUVs around to lease. Advertisement - Article continues below Currently Leasing Options is offering the Grandland for a miniscule £178.82 a month – just £3 more than the significantly smaller Vauxhall Mokka. It's a two-year deal and requires a very modest £2,495.83 initial payment, with mileage limited to 5,000 a year. This can be bumped up to 8,000 for a pretty steep £27.95 extra a month, so this deal is better suited to lower-mileage drivers. Not only will you be getting the largest model Vauxhall sells, but also the poshest version. This deal is for the ambitiously named 'Ultimate', but it is true to its badge, because it's packed with features. Vauxhall throws in 19-inch diamond-cut wheels, a panoramic roof, a large 16-inch touchscreen with wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, and full matrix-LED headlights, plus LED lighting strips. The Ultimate also gets illuminated Vauxhall badges, so everyone will know how posh your car is. Under the bonnet you'll find a 1.2-litre petrol hybrid engine. With 134bhp, power isn't the name of the game here, and that also goes for the driving experience. The Grandland isn't a thrill-a-minute ride, but given that this is a family car, its supple ride and high levels of refinement are far more impressive. The Grandland is also one of the most spacious cars in the class. There are numerous storage spaces, back-seat room is plentiful, and the 550-litre boot capacity is very generous. The Car Deal of the Day selections we make are taken from our own Auto Express Find A Car deals service, which includes the best current offers from car dealers and leasing companies around the UK. Terms and conditions apply, while prices and offers are subject to change and limited availability. If this deal expires, you can find more top Vauxhall Grandland leasing offers from leading providers on our Vauxhall Grandland hub page. Check out the Vauxhall Grandland deal or take a look at our previous Car Deal of the Day selection here …

Turkish Airlines confirms non-binding talks over potential Air Europa investment
Turkish Airlines confirms non-binding talks over potential Air Europa investment

Reuters

time37 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Turkish Airlines confirms non-binding talks over potential Air Europa investment

GDANSK, June 23 (Reuters) - Turkish Airlines ( opens new tab is holding non-binding discussions to assess a potential investment in Spanish airline Air Europa and explore possible partnership synergies, it said in a statement. The confirmation, in a filing to the stock exchange late on Friday, followed a Reuters report on June 20 that Turkish Airlines was exploring a bid for a minority stake in Air Europa. The flag carrier said it regularly evaluates growth opportunities to strengthen its global position and competitiveness in the aviation industry. "There have been media reports stating that Turkish Airlines is in discussions to acquire shares in Air Europa. In this context, non-binding discussions are being held to assess the investment opportunity in Air Europa and to explore potential partnership synergies," the company said in the statement. Turkish Airlines' consideration of a bid is significant, as there are few examples of carriers outside Europe buying shares in players in the region. Air Europa flies within Spain, and between Madrid and large cities in Europe and Latin America.

Stocks falter but avoid sell-off after US strikes on Iranian nuclear sites
Stocks falter but avoid sell-off after US strikes on Iranian nuclear sites

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

Stocks falter but avoid sell-off after US strikes on Iranian nuclear sites

London's FTSE closed down on Monday as traders awaited Tehran's response to US strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities over the weekend. The FTSE 100 index closed down 16.61 points, 0.2%, at 8,758.04. The FTSE 250 ended 27.55 points lower, 0.1%, at 21,120.95, but the AIM All-Share rose just 0.15 of a point at 759.29. In European equities on Monday, the CAC 40 in Paris closed down 0.7%, and the DAX 40 in Frankfurt ended 0.3% lower. 'The markets are not yet reacting with any degree of panic to the US air strike on Iran's nuclear facilities as they await to see how Tehran responds,' said Russ Mould, at AJ Bell. Israel said it struck 'regime targets' in the city, escalating tensions a day after US air strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities. Iran, in turn, fired missile barrages at Israel and vowed retaliation against the US, as both sides intensified attacks on the war's 11th day. But fears of a further sharp spike in the oil price were not realised, although the outlook remains uncertain. Stephen Innes, at SPI Asset Management, said: 'Everything hinges on Iran's response – and whether it's a symbolic jab or a haymaker that knocks the Strait of Hormuz offline. That narrow bottleneck, through which 20% of global oil flows, has morphed from geographic trivia to a live wire pulsing beneath the entire financial complex.' He added: 'If Hormuz does shut – even for a week – the 100 dollars per barrel oil scenarios that everyone's scribbled in the margins go front and centre.' On Monday, Brent oil traded lower at 76.39 dollars a barrel, down from 76.49 dollars on Friday. Safe haven gold was quoted higher at 3,387.65 dollars an ounce against 3,366.36 dollars. Gold miners Endeavour Mining and Fresnillo climbed 2.9% and 2.6% respectively. Goldman Sachs said: 'Aside from energy supply disruptions and price increases, spillovers from the Iran-Israel war should be limited, since most countries have very limited trade exposure (outside of energy products) to Iran, Israel or the Middle East more broadly.' On Wall Street, markets were higher at the time of the London close on Monday as another Federal Reserve official put the case for an interest rate cut at the July meeting. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 0.2%, the S&P 500 was 0.4% higher, and the Nasdaq Composite gained 0.5%. A key US central bank official called for an interest rate cut as early as July if inflation effects from President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs remain limited. The comments by Federal Reserve vice chair for supervision Michelle Bowman came days after Fed governor Christopher Waller said the bank could lower rates as soon as next month – amid differences among officials on how they should respond to levies. 'Should inflation pressures remain contained, I would support lowering the policy rate as soon as our next meeting in order to bring it closer to its neutral setting and to sustain a healthy labour market,' Ms Bowman said in prepared remarks for a conference in Prague. In its policy meeting last week, the Fed held its benchmark lending rate at a range between 4.25% and 4.50%, keeping it unchanged so far this year. The comments saw bond yields drop. The yield on the US 10-year Treasury was quoted at 4.31%, narrowed from 4.40%. The yield on the US 30-year Treasury was quoted at 4.84%, slimmed from 4.91%. The pound was quoted up at 1.3501 dollars at the time of the London equities close on Monday, compared with 1.3467 dollars on Friday. The euro stood higher at 1.1545 dollars against 1.1521 dollars. Against the yen, the dollar was trading at 146.37 yen, up compared with 145.89 yen. In the UK, economic activity picked up in June. The flash UK composite purchasing managers index (PMI) rose to a three-month high of 50.7 points in June, from May's final tally of 50.3, S&P Global said. The services flash PMI rose to a three-month high of 51.3 in June, from 50.9 in May. The manufacturing PMI spiked to a five-month high of 47.7, though staying in negative territory, from 46.4 in May. Elliott Jordan-Doak, at Pantheon Macroeconomics, said the PMI suggests that business confidence is staging a 'fragile recovery after being battered by tariff threats and tax increases. That said, rising geopolitical stress is likely to be added to the growing list of worries facing businesses'. Elsewhere, Spectris surged 16%. It agreed to a buyout from private equity firm Advent International, although a rival bid could emerge from Kohlberg Kravis Roberts (KKR). Advent will pay £37.63 in cash per Spectris share for the provider of high-tech instruments, test equipment and software, an offer consideration that includes a 28 pence dividend. The bid values the entire issued and to be issued share capital of Spectris at around £3.8 billion. It implies an enterprise value of £4.4 billion. However, a rival bidder could yet emerge after KKR, the New York-based private equity firm, said it continues to engage 'constructively' with Spectris, although it added there 'can be no certainty' that any firm offer will be made. KKR, meanwhile, was thwarted in its consortium's effort to acquire Assura. Assura recommended the new cash-share offer from peer Primary Health Properties, describing it as 'fair and reasonable'. Under the terms of the increased Primary Health Properties offer, Assura shareholders would receive 0.3865 new Primary Health Properties shares and 12.5 pence in cash. In addition, Assura shareholders would be entitled to receive a special dividend of 0.84p per Assura share. Based on the Primary Health Properties closing share price of 103.5p on Friday last week, the fresh Primary Health Properties offer implies a total value to be received by Assura shareholders of 53.3p for each Assura share. This represents a premium of 5.8% to the value of the best and final cash offer of 50.42p per Assura share, made by Sana Bidco, a consortium made up of KKR and property investor Stonepeak Partners. Assura shares fell 0.2%. Primary Health fell 4.2%. One Health Group shot up 11%. It reported strong growth in annual sales and profit as it delivered more surgical procedures to NHS patients. Pre-tax profit rose 36% to £1.5 million in the financial year that ended March 31 from £1.1 million the year prior, as revenue climbed 23% to £28.4 million from £23.0 million. Chief executive Adam Binns said: 'We have delivered a strong performance in all our three drivers of growth; more patients, more operating theatre capacity and a record number of new surgeons applying to provide their services to the group.' The biggest risers on the FTSE 100 were Endeavour Mining, up 70.00 pence at 2,356.00p, National Grid, up 28.00p at 1,077.00p, Fresnillo, up 36.00p, at 1,443.00p, ConvaTec, up 6.80p at 289.80p, and Bunzl, up 48.00p at 2,320.00p. The biggest fallers on the FTSE 100 were NatWest, down 12.30p at 494.30p, Mondi, down 29.00p at 1,170.00p, easyJet, down 12.40p at 506.60p, Marks & Spencer, down 7.90p at 354.00p, and AB Foods, down 44.00p at 2,033p. Tuesday's global economic calendar has US consumer confidence data and house price figures. Tuesday's local corporate calendar has half-year results from cruise operator Carnival and a trading statement from distribution and outsourcing company Bunzl. Contributed by Alliance News.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store