Tag:AIFMD UCITS

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Europe: UK Reform of Short Selling Regime–FCA Consultation
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Europe: UK FCA Looks to Accelerate Fund Tokenisation and Direct Dealing
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Europe: ESMA’s Draft RTS on Open-Ended Loan-Originating AIFs-AIFMD II in Practice
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Europe: European Commission Delays “Non-Essential” Level 2 Measures Concerning AIFMD II and the UCITS Review
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Europe: ESMA Issues Technical Advice to the Commission for Its Review of the UCITS Eligible Assets Directive (EAD) 
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Europe: Ireland Agrees Mutual Recognition of Funds Framework With Hong Kong
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Europe: Central Bank of Ireland Updates its UCITS Q&A on Portfolio Transparency for ETFs
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Europe: National Regulators Announce Digital Operational Resilience Act Reporting Windows
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Europe: ESMA and National Regulators Launch Coordinated Review of Fund Manager Compliance and Internal Audit Functions
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Europe: New Irish Fast-Track Filing Process for Fund Name Changes To Comply With ESG-Related Rules

Europe: UK Reform of Short Selling Regime–FCA Consultation

By: Andrew Massey, Kai Zhang, and Ron Feldman

The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) is consulting on changes to the short selling regime in the United Kingdom (UK), as set out in Consultation Paper CP25/29.

The proposed regime will not be fundamentally different to the current regime, but there will be some changes. The UK short selling regime will continue to apply to shares listed on a UK trading venue, but UK sovereign debt and CDS will be removed from the regime. The UK regime will continue to have extraterritorial effect, applying to a person anywhere in the world and regardless of whether the short selling activity is on or outside a trading venue.

Other features of the proposed regime include the following:

  • Anonymised, aggregated disclosure of net short positions (NSPs): The requirement for a person to publicly disclose individual short positions would be removed. Instead, short sellers would need to notify the FCA of NSPs of 0.2% or more in an issuer, with the FCA publishing the aggregated short positions in an issuer without identifying the individual short sellers.
  • Definitive reportable shares list: The FCA would maintain a single definitive list of all shares within scope of the regime (in place of the current listed shares and exempt shares lists). The FCA plans to make the list machine-readable so that firms may easily integrate it into their systems.
  • Notification timing: The deadline for NSP notifications would be extended from 15:30 to 23:59 on the working day following the trading day.

The current UK regime is based on the EU regulation on short selling, which was retained in UK law following Brexit. The changes proposed by the FCA, if implemented, would lead to divergence between the EU and UK regimes. Whilst divergent requirements add operational complexity, the proposed changes to the UK regime have the potential to reduce the compliance burden, which is welcome.

Europe: UK FCA Looks to Accelerate Fund Tokenisation and Direct Dealing

By: Andrew J. Massey, Kai Zhang, and Zainab Kuku

The FCA has published Consultation Paper CP25/28 with a view to accelerating the adoption of tokenisation by UK authorised funds. The consultation also proposes changes to allow direct dealing models, which would facilitate tokenisation as well as improve the operating environment for UK authorised funds generally.

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Europe: ESMA’s Draft RTS on Open-Ended Loan-Originating AIFs-AIFMD II in Practice

By: Susanna Güven and Mathieu Volckrick

On 21 October 2025, the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) published its draft Regulatory Technical Standards (RTS) on open-ended loan-originating alternative investment funds (AIFs). This marks a key step in the implementation of Directive (EU) 2024/927 (AIFMD II), which updates the Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive (AIFMD) and Undertakings for Collective Investment in Transferable Securities (UCITS) frameworks to strengthen rules on delegation, liquidity risk, supervisory reporting, depositary services, and loan origination.

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Europe: European Commission Delays “Non-Essential” Level 2 Measures Concerning AIFMD II and the UCITS Review

By: Gayle Bowen, Shane Geraghty, Mathieu Volckrick, and Dr. Philipp Riedl

In a letter dated 1 October 2025, the European Commission has announced that it will not adopt any non-essential Level 2 acts in respect of AIFMD II or the UCITS review, before 1 October 2027 at the earliest. The list of “non-essential” measures now postponed includes technical standards (i) for loan-originating funds to maintain open-ended features and (ii) on information exchange between national regulators and EU institutions.

It is further reported that the Commission has considered amending, or even repealing, certain acts via an Omnibus package dedicated towards Level 2 measures.

The European Securities and Markets Authority was due to deliver the final draft measures on open-ended loan-originating funds to the Commission this month following their earlier consultation on this topic. It is unclear whether this will now happen.

The Commission letter comes as EU Member States are preparing for AIFMD II implementation.

In Ireland, the Department of Finance issued a Feedback Statement exercising a number of discretionary provisions provided to Member States under the Level 1 Directive. The Central Bank has also commenced a consultation on a complete overhaul of the Irish private funds regime, proposing a copy-out approach to AIFMD and relaxing a number of its requirements, to align with other EU jurisdictions.

On 3 October, Luxembourg published its draft transposition legislation implementing the AIFMD/UCITS review into national law. According to an initial assessment, the Bill implements the provisions of the AIFMD review on a one-to-one basis, without gold plating and exercises several options provided to Member States under the Level 1 Directive.

Germany published its draft legislation implementing AIFMD/UCITS review on 9 July and has also adopted a copy out approach without any gold plating.

Europe: ESMA Issues Technical Advice to the Commission for Its Review of the UCITS Eligible Assets Directive (EAD) 

By: Gayle Bowen and Hazel Doyle

ESMA finally published its long-awaited technical advice for the review of the EAD, which proposes changes to the existing UCITS framework (the Report).

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Europe: Ireland Agrees Mutual Recognition of Funds Framework With Hong Kong

By: Michelle Lloyd and Shane Geraghty

The Central Bank of Ireland (CBI) and the Securities and Futures Commission of Hong Kong (SFC) entered into a Memorandum of Understanding on 14 May 2025 establishing a framework for the mutual recognition of funds (MRF) between the two jurisdictions.

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Europe: Central Bank of Ireland Updates its UCITS Q&A on Portfolio Transparency for ETFs

By: Lucy Deane, Hazel Doyle, and Nicola McCaffrey

In a move that will be welcomed by asset managers conducting ETF business in Ireland, or those who are hoping to move into the Irish ETF space, the Central Bank of Ireland has moved to allow for the establishment of semi-transparent ETFs by amending its requirements for portfolio transparency.

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Europe: National Regulators Announce Digital Operational Resilience Act Reporting Windows

By: Shane Geraghty, Dr. Ulrike Elteste, and Ruth Hennessy

EU national supervisory authorities will collect the Register of Information (ROI) pursuant to the EU’s Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) from in scope financial entities in April 2025, with the reference date set as 31 March 2025. ROIs are reports by in-scope EU financial entities on all contractual arrangements on the use of information and communication technology (ICT) services provided by ICT third-party service providers. The financial entity must differentiate between providers who are not critical and providers who are considered critical and important.

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Europe: ESMA and National Regulators Launch Coordinated Review of Fund Manager Compliance and Internal Audit Functions

By: Shane Geraghty, Hazel Doyle, and Gayle Bowen

On 14 February 2025, the EU’s securities and markets regulator, the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA), launched a Common Supervisory Action (CSA) with EU Member State National Competent Authorities (NCAs), in relation to compliance and internal audit functions of UCITS management companies and Alternative Investment Fund Managers (AIFMs) across the EU.

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Europe: New Irish Fast-Track Filing Process for Fund Name Changes To Comply With ESG-Related Rules

By: Áine Ní Riain and Gayle Bowen

The Central Bank of Ireland (CBI) has announced a streamlined filing process for Irish UCITS and AIFs seeking to change their name to comply with the European Securities and Markets Authority’s guidelines on funds’ names using ESG or sustainability-related terms (the Guidelines).

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