The Markets in Financial Instruments Regulation (MiFIR), officially Regulation (EU) No 600/2014, is a cornerstone of the European Union's financial market legislation. It operates in tandem with the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive II (MiFID II) to form a comprehensive regulatory framework for investment services, activities, and financial markets across the EU. As a regulation, MiFIR is directly applicable in all EU Member States, ensuring a uniform set of rules to enhance market transparency, efficiency, and investor protection.
MiFIR is part of the MiFID II package, which significantly revised and expanded the original MiFID I framework from 2004 to address shortcomings revealed by the 2008 financial crisis. While MiFID II (Directive 2014/65/EU) sets out requirements for authorisation, conduct of business, and organisational structures for investment firms, MiFIR focuses on the operational aspects of trading, particularly transparency and reporting.
Key relationships include:
The regulation has been amended multiple times to adapt to market developments, including significant updates to transparency regimes, the introduction of a consolidated tape, and the transfer of supervisory powers for data reporting services providers to ESMA.
The primary objectives of MiFIR are to:
MiFIR applies to a wide range of financial market participants, including:
MiFIR includes several specific exemptions and waivers:
MiFIR establishes detailed pre-trade and post-trade transparency rules for trading venues and systematic internalisers. This includes the obligation to make public current bid/offer prices and the price, volume, and time of executed transactions for shares, ETFs, bonds, derivatives, and other financial instruments.
Investment firms must report complete and accurate details of all transactions in financial instruments to their national competent authority as quickly as possible, and no later than the close of the following working day. This data is essential for market surveillance.
Certain classes of derivatives that are subject to the clearing obligation under EMIR must also be traded on a regulated market, MTF, or OTF. This is known as the Derivatives Trading Obligation (DTO).
To foster competition, MiFIR mandates non-discriminatory access between trading venues and central counterparties (CCPs). It also requires that persons with proprietary rights to benchmarks provide access to trading venues and CCPs on a fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory basis.
This title establishes a framework for the authorisation and supervision of Data Reporting Services Providers (APAs, CTPs, ARMs) directly by the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA), centralising oversight for these critical market infrastructure providers.
A framework allows firms from non-EU countries to provide services to professional clients and eligible counterparties in the EU without establishing a branch, provided the European Commission has adopted an 'equivalence decision' for their home country's regulatory regime.
ESMA has direct supervisory and enforcement powers over Data Reporting Services Providers, including the ability to request information, conduct investigations, and impose fines and periodic penalty payments for infringements. For other provisions of MiFIR, enforcement is the responsibility of the national competent authorities of the Member States, which are granted sanctioning powers under the MiFID II Directive.
The Markets in Financial Instruments Regulation (MiFIR) became broadly applicable on January 3, 2018. However, its implementation involves various stages and specific deadlines for different obligations:
No supportive documents available.