(Utkast) Delegert kommisjonsforordning (EU) .../... av 28. november 2024 om utfylling av europaparlaments- og rådsforordning (EU) 2023/1114 med hensyn til tekniske reguleringsstandarder for hvordan tilbydere av kryptoaktivetjenester som driver en handelsplattform for kryptoaktiva skal presentere åpenhetsdata
Europeisk rammeverk for markeder for kryptoverdier (MiCA): framstilling av åpenhetsdata
Utkast til delegert kommisjonsforordning sendt til Europaparlamentet og Rådet for klarering 28.11.2024
Nærmere omtale
BAKGRUNN (fra kommisjonsforordningen)
(1) A high degree of transparency is essential to ensure that investors are adequately informed of the true level of actual and potential transactions in crypto-assets traded on a trading platform operated by a crypto-asset service provider. This high degree of transparency should also ensure a level playing field between trading platforms so that the price discovery process in respect of an individual crypto-assets is not impaired by the fragmentation of liquidity, and investors are not thereby disadvantaged.
(2) In order for investors to be adequately informed about access, costs, scope, functioning of trading platforms they use or intend to use, it is important for trading platforms to make available their operating rules in a transparent and nondiscriminatory manner. Investors should have easy access to this information.
(3) To enable investors to take informed decisions on orders or transactions on cryptoassets and to help maintain market integrity, trading platforms for crypto-assets should publicly disclose all orders and transactions as close to real-time as is technically possible on their platforms. In relation to that, it is also important to harmonise the information to be published so as to enable investors to use, compare and aggregate the information published from different trading platforms for crypto-assets.
(4) To ensure fair conditions for all types of investors, both qualified investors and retail holders, regarding the access to order management facilities, trading platforms for crypto assets may offer reserve and stop orders directly through their trading platform when certain conditions are met.
(5) Distributed ledger technology has given rise to innovative structures in crypto-asset trading platforms. Crypto-asset trading platforms are often differentiated as either offchain Centralised Exchanges (CEXs) or on-chain Decentralised Exchanges (DEXs), such as those operated under an automated market maker model. CEXs are characterised by centralised control over trading operations and custodial practices. CEXs typically use mechanisms which are common in traditional finance, including central limit order books. DEXs, by contrast, operate without a central operator and facilitate trading directly on distributed ledgers through smart contracts, while allowing users to trade using their non-custodial wallets. In addition, the evolving landscape that includes hybrid models that combine features of both CEXs and DEXs necessitates a regulatory approach that is both precise and adaptable. In view of these developments, it is appropriate to clarify the transparency data requirements applicable to those trading systems that facilitate trading directly on distributed ledgers through smart contracts, in as much as they are not operated in a fully decentralised manner without intermediary and hence subject to Regulation (EU) 2023/1114.
(6) Information which is required to be made available as close to real time as possible should be made available as instantaneously as technically feasible, assuming a reasonable level of efficiency of the systems of the crypto-asset service providers operating a trading platform for crypto-assets. The publication of the information close to the maximum time limit should occur only in exceptional cases where the systems available do not allow for a publication in a shorter period of time.
(7) Specifying the level of disaggregation by which trading platforms can sell data is important to meet the diverse needs of market participants that contribute to efficient markets. To ensure that users of data can purchase or access only data that meets their specific needs, crypto-asset service providers operating a trading platform for cryptoassets should disaggregate data by, as a minimum, the type of crypto-asset (assetreferenced tokens, e-money tokens, crypto-assets other than asset-referenced tokens and e-money tokens), the currency in which the crypto-assets are traded, and the type of trading system. Those data should be provided to users on a crypto-asset basis where possible.
(8) To ensure that pre-trade and post-trade data offered for purchase appropriately match the demand from market participants, crypto-asset service providers operating a trading platform should offer any combination of disaggregation criteria on a reasonable commercial basis.
(9) This Regulation is based on the draft regulatory technical standards submitted to the Commission by the European Securities and Markets Authority.
(10) The European Securities and Markets Authority has conducted open public consultations on the draft regulatory technical standards on which this Regulation is based, analysed the potential related costs and benefits and requested the advice of the Securities and Markets Stakeholder Group established in accordance with Article 37 of Regulation (EU) No 1095/2010 of the European Parliament and of the Council3 ,