By Jacopo Borgognone, EBF Policy Adviser
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BRUSSELS, 20 June 2022
In the context of the 2020 Capital Markets Union Action Plan, the European Commission put forward the proposal to establish a European Single Access Point (ESAP) for financial and sustainability-related information reported under EU law. Arguably, this is not just about innovation, but about providing a European solution to an exquisitely European problem: fragmentation along invisible borders. As statistics from the European Commission and IMF also show, European companies and financial entities under EU law report a great deal of information. However, information travels very hardly across borders, and even more hardly to the end user. This in turn reinforces the home-bias of European investors, reducing the share of market-based financing in the EU and thus the specific weight of European capital markets as a whole. A successful ESAP can reverse the trend but -the paper explains- it is key that ESAP does not fall victim to its own ambition. To do so, it is necessary that it ‘starts small, but thinks big’. Here is how.
For more information:
Jacopo Borgognone, Financial Markets – Financing Sustainable Growth j.borgognone@ebf.eu
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]]>BRUSSELS, 15 March 2021 – The European Banking Federation has responded to the European Commission’s consultation on the establishment of a European single access point (ESAP) for financial and non-financial information publicly disclosed by companies.
Why is ESAP needed?
ESAP is seen as:
ESAP should not:
ESAP should:
1. Start small, think big:
2. Pull in existing public registers (interconnect existing MS databases)
3. Ensure information is easily accessible in user friendly format
4. Ensure information quality in a comparable and machine-readable manner including those provided on a voluntary basis (common standards and structure)
5. Provide access to raw data
6. Include data source
7. Be publicly funded and governed as it is a public good. In this spirit, we believe that access to ESAP should be free for end-users.
Find the EBF response to this consultation by clicking the ‘full document’ button below:
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FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Sustainable Finance page on the EBF website: CLICK HERE
Denisa Avarmaete, Senior Policy Adviser, Sustainable Finance, EBF
d.avarmaete@ebf.eu
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