ESMA’s Board of Supervisors, at its July meeting, approved Memoranda of Understanding
(MoUs) with authorities from the Bahamas, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico and the United
States, including the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).
ESMA has now negotiated 38 agreements on behalf of the 31 EU/EEA national competent
authorities for securities markets supervision. The co-operation agreements allow
for the exchange of information, cross-border on-site visits and mutual assistance
in the enforcement of respective supervisory laws. ESMA had approved 31 MoUs with
other non-EU regulators in May.
The agreements cover third-country alternative investment fund managers (AIFMs)
that market alternative investment funds (AIFs) in the EU and EU AIFMs that manage
or market AIFs outside the EU. The agreements also cover co-operation in the cross-border
supervision of depositaries and AIFMs’ delegates.
National securities regulators in the EU, as the supervisors of AIFMs, are in
the process of signing MoUs with those jurisdictions relevant to their market.
The existence of co-operation arrangements between the EU and non-EU authorities
is a precondition of the Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive (AIFMD)
for allowing managers from third countries access to EU markets or to perform
fund management by delegation from EU managers by 22 July 2013.
The co-operation arrangements are applicable from 22 July, and will enable cross-border
marketing of AIFs to professional investors between jurisdictions. This is subject
to the non-EU jurisdiction not being listed as a non-cooperative jurisdiction
by the Financial Action Task Force and, as from the entry into force of the passport
for non-EU managers, having co-operation agreements in place with EU Member States
regarding the exchange of information on tax matters.
The content of the ESMA MoUs follow the IOSCO Principles on Cross-Border Supervisory
Co-operation of 2010, and complements the terms and conditions of the IOSCO Multilateral
MoU Concerning Consultation and Co-operation and the Exchange of Information of
2002 (MMoU).
ESMA had originally contacted all the authorities that have signed the IOSCO
MMoU of 2002. ESMA has now approved MoUs with those 42 authorities that responded
to ESMA’s call. ESMA continues to negotiate the MoU with the Chinese authority.
http://www.esma.europa.eu/news/ESMA-finalises-supervisory-co-operation-agreements-alternative-investment?t=326&o=home