The United Kingdom and the European Union have concluded technical discussions on the text of the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU)1 referred to in the Joint Declaration on Financial Services Regulatory Cooperation agreed alongside the Trade and Cooperation Agreement (the "Agreement") on 24 December 2020. See our prior alert2 for a discussion regarding the significance of the end of the transition period.

Joint UK-EU Financial Regulatory Forum

Once signed, the MoU will create a framework for voluntary regulatory cooperation in financial services between the UK and the EU. The MoU will establish the Joint UK-EU Financial Regulatory Forum (the "Forum"), which will serve as a platform to facilitate dialogue and cooperation on financial services issues. The framework is comparable to what the EU has in place with the US and Japan. The EU and the UK must complete the necessary formalities before the MoU is signed, but it is expected that this will be done "expeditiously".

Regulatory Co-operation

The MoU codifies the framework for regulatory co-operation proposed by the Joint Declaration. It is within this framework of regulatory co-operation that both sides will discuss how to move forward with equivalence determinations. The Forum commits neither the EU nor the UK to any equivalence findings. Whether equivalence is granted with respect to specific areas of the financial services industry and infrastructure is ultimately a political decision.

Divergence between the EU and UK Financial Regulation

Despite the positive developments on the MoU, there are clear indications that the UK and EU regulatory frameworks are likely to diverge over time, including proposed changes by the EU to the pre-Brexit regulatory framework, including to reflect the UK's third country status. Further, the UK is considering its regulatory approach to financial services and seeking to tailor it for UK markets.3 While such divergence is unlikely to change the UK's "outcomes-based" approach to granting equivalence, the EU has to date adopted a "line-by-line" approach to assessing the equivalence of the UK's regulatory framework.

The current regulatory landscape serves to underline the importance of investment managers operating and investing on a cross-border basis in the UK and the EU to remain up-to-speed with the areas of divergence and to plan ahead for compliance with the applicable EU and UK requirements in parallel.

Footnotes

1. Technical negotiations concluded on UK - EU Memorandum of Understanding, 26 March 2021 (See here).

2. "The End of the Brexit Transition Period: Compliance Requirements for UK Investment Managers and Advisers", Akin Gump Financial Regulatory Alert, 5 January 2021 (See here).

3. Chancellor sets out ambition for future of UK financial services, HM Treasury, 9 November 2020 (See here).

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.