The Post-Brexit Future of the UK’s Securitisation Regime Takes Shape


As part of the UK’s post-Brexit regulatory reforms, the UK government is working to repeal and replace retained EU financial services law with new domestic rules – this includes the UK’s onshored version of the Securitisation Regulation (UK SR).

The UK government recently published a draft statutory instrument (SI) to replace the UK SR. Many of the key obligations thereunder, including risk retention, transparency and due diligence will remain, but the SI leaves the details of the majority of the rules to the UK regulators, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) (together, the Regulators). The Regulators will implement the rules through each of their respective rulebooks. 

The PRA launched a consultation on its proposed firm-facing rules on 27 July 2023 and the FCA launched its parallel consultation on 7 August 2023. (The rulebooks of the FCA and the PRA cover different entities, hence the separate consultations.) While there will therefore be some duplication between the two rulebooks, the Regulators noted that they have coordinated their approach with a view to creating a coherent framework.

The consultations generally propose to retain the existing onshored laws save for some targeted adjustments. Annex 4 of the FCA’s consultation sets out a useful overview of derivations and changes from the UK SR, and the key proposals include the following:

The consultations both close on 30 October 2023. The final rules are expected to be published in the second quarter of 2024 and implemented shortly thereafter.

The draft SI, PRA consultation and FCA consultation are available herehere and here, respectively.


©2025 Katten Muchin Rosenman LLP
National Law Review, Volume XIII, Number 261