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PERG 13.1 Introduction

PERG 13.1

1The purpose of this chapter is to help UK firms consider:

  • • whether they fall within the scope of the UK provisions which implemented 6Markets in Financial Instruments Directive 2014/65/EU5(‘MiFID’) and therefore are subject to the requirements derived from 6it, and8
  • • how their existing permissions correspond to related MiFID derived6 concepts;
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88This chapter is mostly aimed at questions that are relevant to someone who wants to know whether they need to be authorised under the Act. This means that this chapter does not cover those types of persons for whom MiFID or MIFIR requirements are applied outside the authorisation regime under the Act, such as:
  • • a data reporting service provider;5
  • • those subject to position limit requirements in derivatives markets;5
  • • those subject to an obligation to trade in derivatives on a regulated market, OTF or MTF; 5
  • • persons with a proprietary interest in benchmarks who are obliged to provide access to certain information; or5
  • • central counterparties subject to the requirements about non-discriminatory access for financial instruments.5

Background

MiFID replaced6 the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive 2004/39/EC (MiFID 1), which in turn replaced5 the Investment Services Directive (ISD). 5

6

MiFID onshoring in UK legislation and the FCA Handbook 6

The United Kingdom’s onshoring of the directive takes the form of a combination of legislation made by HM Treasury, in the form of a number of statutory instruments, and rules contained in the FCA Handbook and the PRA Rulebook. “Onshoring”, for these purposes, refers to the process by which law deriving from EU legislation at IP completion day is retained or adapted, post IP completion day.6

The Treasury legislation is set out in the following statutory instruments as amended by the Exit Regulations, in particular:6

Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Markets in Financial Instruments) Regulations 2017 (‘MiFI regulations’), SI 2017/701;6

Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Regulated Activities) (Amendment) Order 2017 2001 (‘RAO Amendment Order’), SI 2017/488 2001/544.6

The FCA Handbook complements the Treasury legislation, referred to above.6

Transitional onshoring provisions 6

The effect of section 3 of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 is that “direct EU legislation” became part of UK law, as at IP completion day (and is known as “retained EU law” in accordance with section 6 of the same legislation). As such, MiFIR and all directly applicable regulations made under MiFID and MiFIR including the MiFID Org Regulation (Commission Delegated Regulation 2017/565), the MiFIR Delegated Regulation (Commission Delegated Regulation 2017/567) and technical standards became part of UK law, as at IP completion day.6

Each of these pieces of legislation is subject to the power in section 8 of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 to deal with deficiencies arising out of the United Kingdom’s withdrawal from the EU. The Treasury has exercised this power in the Markets in Financial Instruments (Amendment) (EU Exit) Regulations 2018 (the ‘Exit Regulations’) to amend each of the following:6

● MiFIR6

● MiFID Org Regulation6

● MiFIR Delegated Regulation6

● Data Reporting Services Regulations6

● The Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Markets in Financial Instruments) Regulations 20176

A reference to any of the above in the remaining text of this chapter is to the legislation as amended by the Exit Regulations.6

MiFID scope

The scope aspects of MiFID are primarily addressed through the Regulated Activities Order (‘RAO’) and PERG 2 focuses on the scope of regulated activities under the RAO and includes materials on the effect that the UK provision which implemented MiFID has had6 on the RAO. This chapter focuses more on the underlying MiFID investment services and activities, as well as the exemptions.

Where a firm’s regular occupation or business is providing one or more investment services to third parties or performing investment activities in relation to MiFID financial instruments on a professional basis, it is a firm to which UK provisions which implemented6 MiFID applies unless it is exempt.

Broadly, the exemptions from MiFID are likely to be relevant to insurers, group treasurers, professional firms to which Part XX of the Act applies, many authorised professional firms, professional investors who invest only for themselves, pension schemes, depositaries and operators of collective investment schemes or other collective investment undertakings (such as investment trusts), journalists, and commodity producers and traders. The exemptions are subject to conditions and limitations described in more detail below (see PERG 13.5).

The Treasury’s implementation of the article 3 MiFID exemption, onshored in regulation 8 of the MiFI Regulations,6 is likely to be relevant to many financial advisers (see Q50) including some corporate finance advisers. It may also be relevant to some venture capital firms. The Treasury legislation enables firms falling within the scope of the exemption to elect to be subject to the requirements derived from of MiFID 6(see Q52).

In each case, it will be for firms and individuals to consider their own circumstances and consider whether they fall within the relevant exemptions. A firm which takes the benefit of one or more of the exemptions in article 2 or 3 MiFID, onshored in Part 1 of Schedule 3 to the Regulated Activities Order and Regulation 8 of the MiFI Regulations,6 may nevertheless require authorisation under the Act (see PERG 2).

In addition to investment firms, the UK provisions which implemented MiFID4are6 also relevant to credit institutions4 providing investment services or performing investment activities (see Q5), to AIFMs to which the UK provisions which implemented6 article 6.4 of AIFMD applies (in other words, AIFM investment firms)4 and to UCITS management companies2 to which the UK provisions which implemented6 article 6.4 of the2UCITS Directive applies (in other words, UCITS investment firms).2

This guidance is concerned with the scope of the UK provisions which implemented6 MiFID and does not address the question of whether an investment firm that falls within the scope of the UK provisions which implemented6 MiFID is providing a MiFID investment service as opposed to an investment activity.

CRD IV 3 [deleted] 8.

8

How does this document work?

This document is made up of Q and As divided into the following sections:

We have also included guidance in the form of flow charts to help firms decide whether the UK provisions which implemented6 MiFID 8 apply to them as well as permission maps indicating which regulated activities and specified investments correspond to MiFID investment services, activities and MiFID financial instruments (see PERG 13 Annex 1 and PERG 13 Annex 28.)

Article and recital references are to MiFID (Level 1 measures) unless otherwise stated. References to categories of MiFID investment services and activities and MiFID financial instruments adopt the structure of Annex 1 MiFID: for example, A1 refers to "reception and transmission of orders in relation to one or more financial instruments" and C1 relates to "transferable securities".

While these provisions have been “onshored”, we have, unless otherwise stated, retained the references in this chapter, and its annexes, to the provisions in MiFID and other relevant directives such as CRD, UCITS directive and AIFMD for ease of reference. As a result, where the context requires, any references to a directive, its articles or recitals, which could be read as having continuing effect, should be read as a reference to ‘the UK provisions which implemented’ that directive or the relevant article. In addition, any reference which adopts the structure of Annex 1 of MiFID, for example by referring to A1 or C1, should be read as a reference to the relevant corresponding paragraph as onshored in Schedule 2 of the Regulated Activities Order.6

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