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MiFID II’s First Day Comes Off Without Glitches, Regulator Says

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

The first day of MiFID II for European Union markets wasn’t quite the disaster many in the financial industry had predicted, according to the bloc’s top markets regulator, Bloomberg News reported. “What we can see for our part is no glitches so far,” said Steven Maijoor, head of the European Securities and Markets Authority. The revised Markets in Financial Instruments Directive was introduced as part of the EU’s response to the financial crisis. It aims to push trading on to regulated venues, increase market transparency, curb speculation on commodities, adapt EU rules to new technologies such as high-frequency trading and boost investor protections. Industry critics have long complained that the law is too complex and overreaches in areas such as price transparency. “For us the key element is that in the course of today’s rules for the first time we see data of all financial instruments in the EU, the so-called reference data,” Maijoor said. “It will be the first time that we have the ability in the EU to have a complete overview of all financial instruments.”