UK reverses ban on Swiss shares but trading in EU companies migrates to continental exchanges

About €4.6bn worth of trades in European entities moved to other venues after Brexit

A security guard stands beside the logo for the London Stock Exchange Group outside the stock exchange in London on December 29, 2020. The London stock market soared on December 29 as investors gave their initial verdict on Britain's Brexit deal with the EU, while eurozone equities also rose on upbeat US stimulus news, with Frankfurt extending its record breaking run. / AFP / Tolga Akmen
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The UK is set to reverse a ban on trading in Swiss shares following its exit from the European Union.

The Treasury plans to put legislation to lawmakers in the coming days that will take effect three weeks later if approved, according to a spokesman. The story was first reported by the Financial Times.

“Once in force, the Swiss State Secretariat for International Financial Matters have indicated they will reciprocate by removing restrictions on UK trading venues,” the spokesman said.

The move has been expected. In September, the UK confirmed it would introduce the legislation as soon as its equivalence powers came into effect. Exchange operator CBOE Europe has said it is planning to reintroduce Swiss-listed securities in the UK once British and Swiss mutual recognition is implemented.

The UK allowing Swiss shares to trade will do little to overcome the exodus of EU shares after Brexit. The three biggest venues in London that handle European shares saw almost all of this business shift into the EU on the first day of trading after the UK completed its exit from the bloc on December 31.

Aquis Exchange chief executive officer Alasdair Haynes told Bloomberg TV on January 4 that 99.6 per cent of its European stock trading moved to its parallel venue in Paris. CBOE Europe saw a 90 per cent shift to its Amsterdam venue, while 92 per cent of such trades on London Stock Exchange Group’s Turquoise platforms were inside the bloc by 3 pm in London on January 4, the first day of trading after Brexit. The moves represent about €4.6 billion ($5.6bn) of trades, according to data from CBOE Global Markets.

A political row led to the Swiss Stock Exchange losing EU recognition in 2019, a move the UK had to comply with while still a member of the bloc. Brexit has now freed it of those constraints.

London’s dominance as an investment-management hub is also uncertain. The European Commission is studying whether to tighten rules over how EU–based funds delegate the management of portfolios to investors outside the bloc. While delegation isn’t likely to be banned, Brussels could make it more expensive to manage funds from third-party countries such as the UK by increasing compliance and governance obligations.

Britain and the EU have agreed to draft a memorandum of understanding around the regulation of financial markets by March, an agreement that will supplement the broader Christmas Eve trade agreement, but which won’t be as legally binding. An agreement would still help establish a framework for granting equivalent access to each others’ markets, with predictable rules and proper consultation on any decision to withdraw access.