European Central Bank Pondering Nationalization Of Securities Settlement In Europe

The European Central Bank (ECB) says it is considering creating the securities settlement equivalent of TARGET2, the wholesale cross border euro payments system that will replace the links between national RTGS systems established when the euro was introduced in January

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The European Central Bank (ECB) says it is considering creating the securities settlement equivalent of TARGET2, the wholesale cross-border euro payments system that will replace the links between national RTGS systems established when the euro was introduced in January 1999 with a single, integrated technical platform. In a statement published today, the ECB says it is examining the viability of a so-called TARGET2 – Securities platform that would centralise both domestic and cross-border securities transaction settlement within the euro zone. The statement read as follows:

Conscious of the need for further integration in market infrastructures, and extracting the benefits from the implementation of the TARGET2 payment system, the Eurosystem is evaluating opportunities to provide efficient settlement services for securities transactions in central bank money, leading to the processing of both securities and cash settlements on a single platform through common procedures. At its meeting on 6 July 2006, the Governing Council of the European Central Bank decided to further explore in cooperation with central securities depositories and other market participants, the setting up of a new service – which may be called TARGET2-Securities – for securities settlement in the euro area.

The objective of this project is to allow the harmonised settlement of securities transactions in euro which are settled in central bank money. Synergies for the market with other facilities operated by the Eurosystem will be sought, in particular in connection with the future TARGET2 payment system.

The implementation of such a facility, which would be fully owned and operated by the Eurosystem, would allow large cost savings as a result of the high level of technical harmonisation that this facility would entail for all market participants and would represent a major step towards a single Eurosystem interface with the market.

The Eurosystem will now consult central securities depositories and other market participants on the envisaged facility. A final decision on this project is expected by early 2007.

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