HomeThemesTypesDBAbout
Showing: ◈ news×◈ equivalence×
Brussels looks set to lock the City of London out of European markets from 1 January, with the EU not planning on granting regulatory equivalence before the end of the Brexit transition period.
The European Commission’s financial services head insisted that U.K. clearinghouses will get no further access to the bloc’s markets after 2025, knocking back the Bank of England governor’s calls for an indefinite trade route into the European Union.
Deadline to agree regulatory equivalence for financial services and allow business after Brexit likely to be missed.
House of lords says ‘significant challenges remain’ for the financial services sector.
First trading day since Brexit shows early damage to London / Aquis CEO is pessimistic about prospects for ‘equivalence’
Group launches to try and fix EU-UK friction post-Brexit.
The U.K.’s departure from the European Union pushed more than 440 financial firms to move at least some of their operations, staff, assets or legal entities from Britain to the bloc.
Britain’s finance industry is appealing for greater access to the European Union single market, amid fears that politics could leave large parts of the City of London shut out of Europe for good.
London has been the unrivaled king of European finance for more than three decades. Brexit is starting to change that.
London, at the heart of the UK’s service sector economy, may lose up to £9.5bn in economic output a year from Brexit.
Amsterdam surpassed London as Europe’s largest share trading centre last month, as Brexit led London to lose business.
Sadiq Khan urges government to strike financial services equivalence deal with EU.
London’s status as the global hub for FX and derivatives trading is under threat for the first time since Brexit.
Move by UK regulator seen as limiting relocation to EU’s financial centres.