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MiFID II – A Radical Contribution to the Development of Data Law?

Away from the hubbub about HFT (High Frequency Trading) a quiet storm is blowing in to the EU that will radically change securities trading in bonds, OTC derivatives and other asset classes.  The rules, called MiFID II, top off the alphabet soup of an extensive new rule book that, after the European Parliament’s ‘Super Tuesday’ on 15 April 2014, is finally set to become law.

The new rules are at their most radical, both in market and legal terms, in the area of data.  Data is funny, inert stuff in legal terms.  An old theft case held you can’t steal it and, after a judgment earlier this year, you can’t have a lien (a right to retain possession) over a database either.  Although there are strictly speaking no legal rights in data, nevertheless a broad and increasingly valuable range of legal rights and duties has developed in recent years in relation to data, based on contract law, regulatory law and copyright, trademarks and other intellectual property (IP) rights.

Market data is a $25bn global industry, based on an ecosystem of exchanges and other data sources, index providers, data revendors, and buy- and sell- side data users. The ecosystem is held together by contract law, with market practice based on contract structures that license, restrict and allocate risk around data use.  From the legal perspective, these contracts constitute a cohesive normative framework in a market that has seen surprisingly little litigation (outside the area of trademarks, where unlicensed use in the USA and Europe of index names like S&P 500, DJIA and DAX in futures and options has led to trouble).

MiFID II makes its contribution to the dawning era of Big Data – vast exploitable data sets of computerised information – by requiring pre- and post- contract price data to be disclosed and reported to the market for all the securities trades it regulates.  MiFID II effectively takes MiFID I’s regulatory template for public price transparency that was introduced for equities trading in 2007 and extends it to the secondary market for bonds, OTC derivatives and most structured finance products.  As was the case for MiFID I and equities after 2007, MiFID II is likley to lead to hefty growth in the market data world.

But in an industry that needs to cut its costs (market data is frequently the third largest expense of banks after people and property), this will also lead to more acrimonious negotiations as suppliers seek to maximise value by increasing prices and buyers look to reduce what they’re willing to pay.  So an industry that has been reticent to resolve market data disputes through the courts – because of cost and an unwillingness to have an outsider judge decide – may well see more litigation in the years after MiFID II comes into force.

It’s in the area of benchmarks that MiFID II’s legal rules are at their most radical. ‘Benchmark’ is defined broadly as any published ‘rate, index or figure’ which is calculated periodically through a formula based on the value of ‘one or more underlying assets or prices’ and which determines the price of a financial instrument. As well as covering indices and other generally accepted benchmarks, it actually operates more broadly, for example capturing a single rate based on a single underlying linked to the price of a tradable instrument.

Article 30 of MiFIR (the directly applicable EU Regulation that is part of the MiFID II package) will impose a binding regulatory obligation requiring the ‘person with proprietary rights to the benchmark’ – the benchmark IP owner – to licencse it to allcomers on FRAND (fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory) commercial terms.

This amounts to a compulsory licence requirement on benchmark IP holders, and is is as contentious as it it is legally novel. The Article 30 rules could be seen as legisliative interference in property rights, an area where lawmakers have typically been reluctant to get involved: in general terms, the only other areas in the IP world where compulsory licences are applied are in the cases of certain standards and patents.

Article 30 represents a definite policy choice away from ‘after the event’ regulation of data licensing practices through EU competition law (where, for example, the EU Commission decided in November 2011 to accept binding commitments from S&P about its CUSIP licensing and charging policies) and towards mandatory ‘before the event’ regulation.  It is again likely to lead to more litigation, especially as the rules form part of an EU Regulation, which is directly applicable in national Member State law, unlike an EU Directive which requires additional Member State legislation to implement it nationally.

by Richard Kemp

 

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