UK Chancellor to sign financial services agreement with EU
Jeremy Hunt, Chancellor of the Exchequer, will sign an agreement on financial services cooperation
- Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt is expected to sign a Memorandum of Understanding on financial services which sets out plans for UK/EU cooperation
- Comes as the Chancellor is in Brussels for the first time in post on Tuesday 27 June
- Chancellor Hunt will discuss UK/EU cooperation with his counterparts at the European Commission
Jeremy Hunt, Chancellor of the Exchequer, will sign an agreement on financial services cooperation with Commissioner Mairead McGuinness, which will help to establish a constructive, mutually beneficial relationship between the UK and the EU in financial services.
This comes as the Chancellor is in Brussels for a series of meetings with European Commissioners, in the first visit from a UK Chancellor in over three years.
Commissioner McGuinness is the European Commissioner for financial services, financial stability and capital markets union.
The Memorandum of Understanding signifies an important step in UK/EU relations post-Brexit. The UK is a leading global hub of financial services – of the £11 trillion of assets managed in the UK in 2020, around 44 per cent is on behalf of international investors including the EU.
The agreement will establish an ongoing forum for the UK and the EU to discuss voluntary regulatory cooperation on financial services issues. Both sides will share information, work together towards meeting joint challenges and coordinate positions where appropriate on issues ahead of G7, G20 and other international meetings.
The UK and the EU committed to the Memorandum of Understanding alongside the Trade and Cooperation Agreement. It adds to the growing number of regulatory cooperation arrangements the UK already has with major financial sector partners including the U.S., Japan and Singapore.
Jeremy Hunt, Chancellor of the Exchequer, said:
“The UK and EU’s financial markets are deeply interconnected and building a constructive, voluntary relationship is of mutual benefit to us both.
“In the UK, our financial services sector is a true British success story. Together with the related professional services sector it was worth £275bn last year, making up an estimated 12 per cent of the British economy.
“This agreement with our European partners as sovereign equals builds on our arrangements with the U.S., Japan and Singapore, helping to support the sector’s role as a global financial services hub.”
While the Chancellor is in Brussels he will also be meeting with Valdis Dombrovskis (European Commission Executive Vice-President responsible for an Economy that Works for People, also in charge of Trade) and Margrethe Vestager (European Commission Executive Vice-President for ‘A Europe Fit for the Digital Age and Competition). He will discuss the UK’s competitiveness and growth, the EU’s Green Deal Industrial Plan and economic security.