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2. What is Capital Market Integration?. Regional financial markets are said to be integrated if there is perfect capital mobility such that there is no relation between domestic saving and domestic investment, as saving responds to the regional opportunities for investment while investment is finan
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1. 1 Regional Capital Markets, Integration and Harmonization: Way Forward SAM MENSAH
Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning, Ghana
2006 Annual Conference of the African Stock Exchanges Association
Johannesburg, South Africa
2. 2 What is Capital Market Integration? Regional financial markets are said to be integrated if there is perfect capital mobility such that there is no relation between domestic saving and domestic investment, as saving responds to the regional opportunities for investment while investment is financed by the regional pool of capital.
Translated into regional terms, capital market integration means that capital should move freely across the boundaries in a region with minimal friction (transaction costs)
3. 3 In practice…. Issuers and investors should be free to act across the region and in any member state
Intermediaries should be able to act across the region and recognized elsewhere
Convergence of accounting standards
Integration of clearing and settlement systems
4. 4 What capital market integration is not A single market serving several countries does not necessarily imply integration unless impediments to the cross-border flow of capital are removed
Therefore, both within region single markets and within region multiple markets can be fragmented
5. 5 Why integrate capital markets? Integrated capital markets mean:
Deeper capital markets
a single pool of liquidity
more competition
a greater range of investment.
Results in a more efficient financial system and increased output, more jobs and lower prices.
A lower cost of capital for the businesses.
6. 6 Some urgency is required African countries are rapidly reforming their exchange control regimes with capital account liberalization
Pace of technological change, market innovation and globalization
Without competitive, liquid markets issuers and investors will look elsewhere
7. 7 Key Reforms to Foster Integration
8. 8 Regional integrations rests on several pillars Preconditions
Multidimensional approach to integration requires several related initiatives
Strengthening capital markets
Building infrastructures
Minimizing risks
Removing impediments
Harmonizing rules and practices
Regional cooperation required all these dimensions
9. 9 Strengthening capital markets developing institutional investors, especially pension funds
strengthening corporate governance
improving the transparency and consistency of financial statements.
10. 10 Building infrastructures enhance the depth and liquidity of capital markets
establish links between national clearing and payments systems
create regional credit rating agencies and benchmarks.
11. 11 Minimizing Risks Risks of Market integration especially as institutions and individual invest in new markets and instruments.
potential for currency mismatches
risks arising from country exposures,
risks from institutions that are increasingly active in a variety of financial sectors and geographical regions.
A strong framework for prudential regulation and supervision is necessary to ensure that risks arising from integration are being assessed and managed well.
move towards risk-based supervision, and
changes in prudential regulation and supervisory oversight to address crossborder activities.
12. 12 Removing Impediments Legal barriers remain
Removal of capital and exchange controls could increase cross-border flows and competition and enable investors and firms to tap regional markets to find the lowest cost of funding and highest risk-adjusted return.
Limits on the level of ownership and associated rights
In many countries, the existing prudential requirements biases investment toward domestic assets (e.g. restrictions on foreign stock ownership and investments of mutual funds/unit trusts)
13. 13 Harmonizing Rules and Practices Address major differences in laws, regulations, and tax treatments that still prevent investors from building pan-regional portfolios.
Emphasize convergence with globally accepted standards and best practices to facilitate easier global integration.
14. 14 Where are we now? African Regional Economic Communities (RECs)
ECOWAS
UEMOA
WAMZ
CEMAC
EAC
SADC
COMESA
ARAB MAGHREB UNION
Some are overlapping e.g. SADC/EAC/COMESA
Not all RECs have an active capital market integration program
15. 15 UEMOA/BRVM FRAMEWORK Union Economique et Monétaire Ouest Africaine (UEMOA) established in 1973 and made up of eight countries (Benin, Burkina Faso, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea Bissau, Mali, Niger, Senegal, and Togo).
BRVM opened in 1998
Underpinned by UEMOA Treaty signed is 1973
Common central bank BCEAO
Common regulator -Regional Council for Public Savings and Financial markets
Common Business Law (OHADA)
Common Insurance regulator
BVRM has branches in each UEMOA country and its headquarters in Abidjan, Cote D'Ivoire. Although the bourse is majority owned by the private sector, the member states own 13.4% of the capital.
16. 16 UEMOA/BRVM FRAMEWORK (2) Computerized with satellite links, which allow brokers to transmit orders from any of the member countries to the central site in Abidjan, to check and interact with the order book and to see information about the market and the central depository.
15 brokerage firms.
Trades are cleared and settled at the Depositaire Central/Banque de Reglement SA.
17. 17 UEMOA Financial Sector Regulatory Framework Regional Bodies
the Banque Centrale des Etats de l'Afrique de l'Ouest (BCEAO),
the Banking Commission,
the Conseil Regional de l'Epargne Publique et des Marchés Financiers (CREPMF),
the Conférence Interafricaine des Marchés de l’Assurance (CIMA, the regional insurance regulator
the Conference Interafricaine de la Prevoyance Sociale (CIPRES), which oversees national social security systems.
OHADA (Organisation pour l'Harmonisation en Afrique du Droit des Affaires) Treaty harmonizes business law in 14 countries
Full capital account liberalization based on common currency (CFA Franc)
18. 18 Communauté Économique et Monétaire de l'Afrique Centrale (CEMAC) CEMAC, a regional grouping whose membership comprises Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea and Gabon. CEMAC
Common central bank, the Banque des Etats de l'Afrique centrale (BEAC) with common currency pegged to the euro.
Efforts to create regional market have floundered with Cameroon going it alone:
Douala Stock Exchange
the Commission des Marchés Financiers (the Securities Commission)
Separate bourse established in Libreville (Gabon)
19. 19 SADC Established Committee of SADC Stock Exchanges (1997)
Harmonized Listing requirements
On the drawing board
Common framework for clearing and settlement
Common standards for market dealers
20. 20 EAST AFRICAN COMMUNITY 1997 MOU between Regulators of Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda setting out cooperation goals for the
three countries’ securities markets and the set up the East African Member States Securities Regulatory Authorities (EASRA) as the coordinating regulatory body for capital market;
Article 80 of the 1999 Treaty of East African Cooperation recognizes EASRA
Cooperation occurring at various levels
Cross border listing of debt and equity instruments
21. 21 West African Monetary Zone (WAMZ) Ghana, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Gambia and Guinea
Two stock exchanges
Nor formal regional cooperation except MOU between stock exchanges and SECs of Ghana and Nigeria
Heads of state directed a cross listing of securities as part of implementation WAMZ monetary union but no progress has been made
22. 22 In Summary…… BRVM single market comes closest to integrated regional market because of
Convergence on preconditions (macroeconomic, judicial, auditing and accounting, etc)
Common regulatory framework
Single market does not guarantee all benefits of integration (e.g. liquidity)
Mixed results in other regional economic communities (SADC, EAC, COMESA, WAMZ)
23. 23 Possible reason for slow progress Preoccupation with harmonization
Regional efforts have overemphasized harmonization while elimination of impediments to capital flows has been largely overlooked
“Putting the cart before the horse”?
Harmonization is not necessary for financial market integration
Principle of “Mutual Recognition” and “Home Country Control” is important
24. 24 Lessons from EU Harmonization Model? Basis of EU’s integration is that minimal harmonisation of rules and mutual recognition, should lead to gradual convergence over time
Financial Services Action Plan (1999) implemented through a series of directives (agreements) adopted one at a time after long periods of negotiation
Regulation on International Standards
Financial Conglomerates Directive
Market Abuse Directive
Pension Fund Directive
Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (effective November 2007)
Under Preparation
Prospectus Directive
Investment Services Directive
Transparency Directive
Takeovers Directive
Principle of home country supervision
Single passport allows financial institutions to do business across EU armed only with the approval of their home authorities
25. 25 Possibilities going forward….. Make haste slowly
Keep multidimensional integration needs in focus and avoid obsession with harmonization
Agree on common principles setting minimal standards for mutual recognition
Agree on the key national rules which must be removed
Agree on mutual recognition of all regional regimes
Coordination of supervision to facilitate the resolution of differences in application and interpretation
Remove discrimination against nonresident investors and issuers
26. 26 THANK YOU!