HomeNewsIndiaIndia, UK regulators close to resolving clearing house impasse

India, UK regulators close to resolving clearing house impasse

The move now paves the way for British banks like Barclays Plc and Standard Chartered Plc, with a significant presence in India, to continue trading in the South Asian nation using the Clearing Corp. of India platform.

June 23, 2023 / 13:15 IST
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India, UK regulators close to resolving clearing house impasse
The headquarters of HM Treasury in the Westminster district of London, UK, on Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2023. The UK tax system allows people to use their pension pots to avoid inheritance tax and should be changed to allow the government to collect more tax, a think tank has said. Photographer: Hollie Adams/Bloomberg

The United Kingdom government has said that Indian clearing houses overseen by the nation’s central bank meet its regulatory requirements, a move that may help resolve the ongoing impasse over allowing overseas regulators oversight over local counterparties.

“The legal framework of India, as implemented by the Reserve Bank of India, provides for an effective equivalent system for the recognition of central counterparties authorized under other regimes of other countries,” according to the UK Treasury documents. This change is a prerequisite for Bank of England to recognize overseas counterparties.

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The move now paves the way for British banks like Barclays Plc and Standard Chartered Plc, with a significant presence in India, to continue trading in the South Asian nation using the Clearing Corp. of India platform.

Hundreds of billions of rupees of trading in government bonds and interest-rate derivatives was threatened to be disrupted with European and British banks required to move away from the platform as the European Securities and Markets Authority, or ESMA, withdrew recognition to six Indian central counterparties from May 2023. The British ruling would have kicked in from July.