ESMA Publishes Advice on Potential Extension of AIFMD Marketing Passport


On July 19, the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) published its long-delayed and much anticipated advice to the European Commission (Commission) in relation to the extension of the Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive (AIFMD) marketing passport to non-EU Alternative Investment Fund Managers (AIFMs) and Alternative Investment Funds (AIFs). In it, ESMA gives broadly positive advice in relation to 12 countries: Australia, Bermuda, Canada, Cayman Islands, Guernsey, Hong Kong, Japan, Jersey, Isle of Man, Singapore, Switzerland, and the United States—with some reservations, as noted below.

Currently, non-EU AIFMs and AIFs must comply with each EU country’s national private placement rules when they market funds in that country, whereas under AIFMD, EU AIFMs managing an EU AIF have the benefit of a marketing passport so that those AIFs can be marketed throughout the European Union.

A year ago, in July 2015 (see the Corporate & Financial Weekly Digest edition for July 31, 2015), ESMA published its first advice on the application of the passport to six non-EU countries (Guernsey, Hong Kong, Jersey, Switzerland, Singapore and the United States). At that time, ESMA deemed Jersey, Guernsey and Switzerland as being “equivalent,” but ESMA could not recommend equivalence for the United States because of competition concerns. In response to the July 2015 advice, the Commission elected to wait for ESMA to approve more countries as being “of equivalence” before endorsing these decisions. ESMA has now reassessed the initial list of jurisdictions and several others, looking at how equivalent their competition rules, market disruption, regulatory enforcement, market access, investor protection and the monitoring of systemic risk are to the rules in the European Union.

In the new advice ESMA comments that:

The possible extension of the passport to such countries (which remains subject to sign-off by each of the Commission, Parliament and Council) bodes well for the UK, which voted last month to leave the European Union. Post-“Brexit,” as a non-EU jurisdiction that has EU law in effect, the UK also should be approved by ESMA with a positive “equivalence” determination, meaning that UK AIFMs and AIFs would be treated broadly as they are today—allowing UK firms to retain their “passporting” access to the single market, as at present.

A copy of the ESMA advice is available here.


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National Law Review, Volume VI, Number 205