System of National Accounts and Systematic internaliser: Difference between pages

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imported>Doug Williamson
(Create page. Source: UNstats webpage https://unstats.un.org/unsd/nationalaccount/pubs.asp#:~:text=The%20System%20of%20National%20Accounts,compile%20measures%20of%20economic%20activity.&text=To%20serve%20the%20analytical%20purposes,accounts%20data%20from%2)
 
imported>Doug Williamson
(Create the page. Source: EC Europa Glossary: http://ec.europa.eu/internal_market/securities/docs/glossary_en.pdf)
 
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''United Nations - United Nations Statistics Division.''
(SI).


(SNA).
The concept of Systematic internalisers was introduced by [[MiFID]] regulations in 2007.


A UN-sponsored internationally agreed system of economic accounting, used by UN member states when submitting their national accounts to the UN.
SIs are institutions large enough to match client orders internally, or against their own books.


SIs differ from broker crossing networks, which may route client orders between a number of different institutions.


==See also==
*[[Business & Sustainable Development Commission]]
*[[Convention on Biological Diversity]]
*[[Economic and Financial Committee]]
*[[Equality and Human Rights Commission]]
*[[International Labour Organization]]
*[[International Monetary Fund]]
*[[System of Environmental-Economic Accounting]]
*[[UN/EDIFACT]]
*[[UNCITRAL]]
*[[United Nations]]
*[[United Nations Conference on Trade and Development]]
*[[United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change]]
*[[World Bank]]


[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
An SI is defined in MiFID as:
[[Category:The_business_context]]
 
#An investment firm which
#On an organised, frequent and systematic basis,
#Deals on own account by executing client orders outside a [[regulated market]] (RM) or an MTF ([[Multilateral trading facility]]).
 
 
A firm does not need specific authorisation from its competent authority to carry out systematic internalisation.
 
However, similarly to MTFs and RMs, they are required to conform to some transparency requirements,
such as providing public price quotes.
 
 
Only a few (generally large) firms have set up SIs.
 
 
 
== See also ==
*[[MiFID]]
*[[Regulated market]]
*[[Multilateral trading facility]]
 
[[Category:Equity]]
[[Category:Regulation_and_Law]]
[[Category:FX_Risk]]

Revision as of 13:24, 2 August 2014

(SI).

The concept of Systematic internalisers was introduced by MiFID regulations in 2007.

SIs are institutions large enough to match client orders internally, or against their own books.

SIs differ from broker crossing networks, which may route client orders between a number of different institutions.


An SI is defined in MiFID as:

  1. An investment firm which
  2. On an organised, frequent and systematic basis,
  3. Deals on own account by executing client orders outside a regulated market (RM) or an MTF (Multilateral trading facility).


A firm does not need specific authorisation from its competent authority to carry out systematic internalisation.

However, similarly to MTFs and RMs, they are required to conform to some transparency requirements, such as providing public price quotes.


Only a few (generally large) firms have set up SIs.


See also