IT directors at financial services firms must start lobbying now for extra
funds for projects to comply with the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive
(Mifid) or risk missing the November 2007 deadline, according to Ash Saluja, a
partner at City law firm CMS Cameron.
Speaking today (3 July), Saluja argued that though the exact requirements of
Mifid are not due to be finalised by the UK's Financial Services Authority (FSA)
until January 2007, IT directors need to lay the groundwork for Mifid-related
projects now.
"Some firms are still in denial and have not got their Mifid projects off the
ground," said Saluja. "IT directors need to be talking to their compliance
departments and need to be shouting about budget now, because it is over the
summer that those budgets for next year will be decided."
He added that there is an IT element for virtually all the requirements of
Mifid, which is intended to harmonise regulations across the European Economic
Area for handling financial instruments, such as securities and derivatives.
For example, the new regulations will require firms dealing in equities to
disclose the prices at which they conduct all transactions and reclassify their
customers - both of which will require many firms to develop new systems,
according to Saluja.
But with the exact requirements still not finalised, Saluja warned that IT
chiefs will face tight deadlines to get new systems in place. "We can't give IT
departments a complete heads up [over what to do] because all the rules will not
be confirmed until January," he said. "It means that IT directors need to look
to design systems that include flexibility."
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