Content Options:

Content Options

View Options:


You are viewing the version of the document as on 2022-02-28.

MIFIDPRU 5.1 Application and purpose

Application: Who?

MIFIDPRU 5.1.1R

1This chapter applies to:

  1. (1)

    a MIFIDPRU investment firm; and

  2. (2)

    a UK parent entity that is required by MIFIDPRU 2.5.7R to comply with MIFIDPRU 5 on the basis of its consolidated situation.

MIFIDPRU 5.1.2R

1Where this chapter applies on the basis of the consolidated situation of the UK parent entity, any reference to a “firm” or “MIFIDPRU investment firm” in this chapter is a reference to the hypothetical single MIFIDPRU investment firm created under the consolidated situation.

MIFIDPRU 5.1.3G

1MIFIDPRU 2.5.45G and 2.5.46G contain additional guidance on how a UK parent entity should apply the requirements in this chapter on a consolidated basis.

MIFIDPRU 5.1.4G

1MIFIDPRU 5.2 to 5.10 do not apply to a commodity and emission allowance dealer in the circumstances set out in MIFIDPRU 5.11.

Application: What?

MIFIDPRU 5.1.5R

1MIFIDPRU 5.2 applies to all of a firm’s activities that may give rise to concentration risk.

MIFIDPRU 5.1.6G

1MIFIDPRU 5.2 is therefore relevant to both a MIFIDPRU investment firm that deals on own account and one that does not (e.g. an SNI MIFIDPRU investment firm).

MIFIDPRU 5.1.7R

1MIFIDPRU 5.3 to 5.10 apply to a firm when dealing on own account in relation to transactions that are recorded in the trading book.

MIFIDPRU 5.1.8G

1MIFIDPRU 5.3 to 5.10 apply whether a firm is dealing on own account for itself or on behalf of a client.

MIFIDPRU 5.1.9G

1A MIFIDPRU investment firm that has permission to operate an organised trading facility may rely on that permission to:

  1. (1)

    engage in matched principal trading in certain types of financial instruments with client consent, in accordance with MAR 5A.3.5R(1); and

  2. (2)

    deal on own account in illiquid sovereign debt instruments in accordance with MAR 5A.3.5R(2).

Purpose

MIFIDPRU 5.1.10G

1This chapter contains:

  1. (1)

    Rules and guidance on how a MIFIDPRU investment firm must monitor and control concentration risk (MIFIDPRU 5.2).

  2. (2)

    Rules and guidance on the concentration risk requirements that apply to the trading book exposures of a MIFIDPRU investment firm that is dealing on own account (MIFIDPRU 5.3 to MIFIDPRU 5.10). MIFIDPRU 5.3 sets out an overview of these requirements.

  3. (3)

    Rules and guidance on when a commodity and emission allowance dealer is exempt from the requirements of this chapter (MIFIDPRU 5.11).

Interpretation

MIFIDPRU 5.1.11G

1In this chapter, references to client include any counterparty of the firm.

MIFIDPRU 5.1.12R

1Subject to MIFIDPRU 5.1.13R to MIFIDPRU 5.1.16R, a group of connected clients means:

  1. (1)

    two or more persons who, unless it is shown otherwise, constitute a single risk because one of them, directly or indirectly, has control over the other or others; or

  2. (2)

    two or more persons between whom there is no relationship of control as described in (1) but who are to be regarded as constituting a single risk because they are so interconnected that, if one of them were to experience financial problems, in particular funding or repayment difficulties, the other or all of the others would also be likely to encounter funding or repayment difficulties.

MIFIDPRU 5.1.13R

1Where a central government has direct control over, or is directly interconnected with, more than one person, they do not all have to be treated as a single group of connected clients. Instead, the existence of a group of connected clients may be assessed separately at the level of each person directly controlled by or directly interconnected with the central government, which must include all of the natural and legal persons which are controlled by or interconnected with that person, including the central government.

MIFIDPRU 5.1.14R

1Regional governments and local authorities, whether in the United Kingdom or a third country, may be treated in the same way as central governments under MIFIDPRU 5.1.13R if there is no difference in the risk they pose compared to central governments.

MIFIDPRU 5.1.15G
  1. (1)

    1There may be no difference in the risk posed by a regional government or local authority if it has specific revenue-raising powers, or if there are specific institutional arrangements which reduce the risk of default.

  2. (2)

    The PRA maintains a list of all regional governments and local authorities within the United Kingdom which it treats as exposures to the central government of the United Kingdom, in accordance with article 115 of the UK CRR. A firm may have regard to this list when applying the test in MIFIDPRU 5.1.14R to regional governments and local authorities in the United Kingdom.

MIFIDPRU 5.1.16R

1Two or more persons do not constitute a single group of connected clients solely because of their direct exposure to the same central counterparty for clearing purposes.

Exposures to trustees

MIFIDPRU 5.1.17R

1For the purposes of this chapter, if a firm has an exposure to a person (‘A’) when A is acting on its own behalf, and also an exposure to A when A acts in the capacity of trustee, custodian or general partner of an investment trust, unit trust, venture capital or other investment fund, pension fund or a similar fund (a “fund”), the firm may treat the latter exposure as if it was to the fund as a separate client, unless such treatment would be misleading.

MIFIDPRU 5.1.18G

1When considering whether such treatment would be misleading, a firm should consider factors such as:

  1. (1)

    the degree of independence of control of the fund, including the relation of the fund’s board and senior management to the firm or to other funds or to both;

  2. (2)

    the terms on which the counterparty, when acting as trustee, is able to satisfy its obligation to the firm out of the fund of which it is trustee;

  3. (3)

    whether the beneficial owners of the fund are connected to the firm, or related to other funds managed within the firm’s group, or both; and

  4. (4)

    for a counterparty that is connected to the firm itself, whether the exposure arises from a transaction entered into on an arm’s length basis.

MIFIDPRU 5.1.19G

1In deciding whether a transaction is at arm’s length, the following factors should be taken into account:

  1. (1)

    the extent to which the person to whom the firm has an exposure (‘A’) can influence the firm’s operations through, for example, the exercise of voting rights;

  2. (2)

    the management role of A where A is also a director of the firm; and

  3. (3)

    whether the exposure would be subject to the firm’s usual monitoring and recovery procedures if repayment difficulties emerged.