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Many believe that at the heart of
the global economic crisis lies an
overuse and over-reliance by
banks on excessively complex
off-balance sheet investment
vehicles, and a regulatory regime
that is incapable of adequately
overseeing international financial
markets.
"The financial market has
become a global market, but selfregulation
and soft law were not
enough to discipline the industry
and prevent the crisis," says Dr
Fernando Zunzunegui, Chairman
of the European Union’s (EU)
Commission of Financial Services
Users (FIN-USE).
A clear outcome of the recent
G20 meeting of world leaders in
London has been a greater
emphasis on strengthening the
roles of financial regulators but
also the suggestion of the need
for new international regulatory
bodies.
"Coordination between
financial regulators is a step in
the right direction. But in the
current crisis we need a new
culture to regulate the market,
with a users’ perspective and the
presence of global financial
regulators," says Zunzunegui.
What is important, lawyers
suggest, is that whatever path is
taken, at a European level
oversight should be coordinated
or integrated within the current
EU regulations or institutions.
"This is necessary in order to
avoid additional complexities
and the risk of a lack of
coordination, but also because
EU regulation has already been
very successful in harmonising
the regulation of many fields, for
example in capital markets," says
Javier Garcia de Enterria, partner
at Clifford Chance.
But while some countries
with important financial centres
may be against global
supervision, others insist that
they present the logical way
forward. "Some countries are
afraid to lose their position and
privileges. But we need to protect
the stability of the market and
the entire economy against
reckless intermediaries," says
Zunzunegui.
Despite the praise given to
Spain’s own regulatory systems,
and particularly the Bank of
Spain’s role in limiting domestic
banks’ use of the most creative
financial instruments, the
government has nonetheless
rekindled the idea of establishing
a new domestic financial
regulator. The debate has
therefore turned to what sort of
body should take the place, if
required, of the Bank of Spain or
Comisión Nacional de Mercado
de Valores (CNMV), to regulate
the banking, insurance and
securities sectors.
"The changes that were being
studied do away with the need
for the existing separate market
authorities. But clearly there is a
need for a full analysis of the
merits of the models that already
exist in countries with different
regulatory supervision," says
Jesus Mardomingo, a partner at
Cuatrecasas and formerly an
inspector with the Bank of Spain.
The options available, he says,
lie with either enhancing the
powers of the existing distinct
sectoral regulators, the creation
of a single supervisory body for
the entire financial system, or the
adoption of a twin peaks’
approach – with a separate
authority for solvency
requirements and another for
market transparency and client
protection.
The process of globalisation
will not stop, and inevitably
there will remain a need for
cooperation between supervisory
bodies, but also a requirement for
national supervision especially in
respect of overseeing solvency
requirements, he believes.
The way forward, others
suggest, is for governments to
adopt a two-track approach with
strong national regulators
applying a transparent,
consistent and globally uniform
set of rules and principles.
"A global financial regulator
might not be sufficiently close to
the financial institutions it is
meant to monitor on a day-today
basis. But local regulators
should have the capacity to
effectively supervise
international groups and
financial conglomerates and,
therefore, it would be necessary
to set up appropriate institutional
arrangements to provide for
mutual cooperation and
exchange of information between
local regulators," says Emilio
Díaz, finance partner at Uría
Menéndez. |