UK and EU to Sign Memo for Post-Brexit Finance Regulation

The UK and the European Union are due to sign a long-awaited memorandum of understanding on financial services on Tuesday, marking a moment of accord amid years of wrangling over post-Brexit co-operation.

(Bloomberg) — The UK and the European Union are due to sign a long-awaited memorandum of understanding on financial services on Tuesday, marking a moment of accord amid years of wrangling over post-Brexit co-operation. 

Jeremy Hunt will sign the memo with Commissioner Mairead McGuinness during the first visit by a UK chancellor to Brussels in more than three years, the UK government said in a statement.

“The UK and EU’s financial markets are deeply interconnected and building a constructive, voluntary relationship is of mutual benefit to us both,” Hunt said. The UK’s financial services and related professional services sectors were worth £275 billion ($350 billion) in 2022, making up about 12% of the UK economy, according to the Treasury.

The memo, which was initially expected in 2021, became stuck in limbo, first because of a dispute over fishing permits and then after the EU accused then-Prime Minister Boris Johnson of breaching international law.

The agreement outlines how financial regulators will interact and does not grant companies access to markets across borders, known as equivalence. The EU has so far only granted limited equivalence to clearinghouses and has been pushing banks and other firms to conduct more business within the bloc to reduce its dependence on London. 

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