ON OCTOBER 7, EU finance ministers adopted a revised Investment Services Directive despite strong opposition from the UK and four other member states. ISD2, as it is called, has sparked controversy in many areas, particularly over the directive’s treatment of what is known as internalization. This involves investment banks (internalizers) executing client trades using their own capital as opposed to routeing trades to a central stock exchange.
The good news is that ISD2 is pledged to foster competition in equity execution and is set to scrap the concentration rules that apply in some EU countries (for example, Belgium, France and Italy).
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