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LEI ROC

Progress report
by the Legal Entity Identifier
Regulatory Oversight Committee (LEI ROC)

The Global LEI System and regulatory uses of the LEI

30 April 2018
Executive Summary
The G-20 Leaders supported in 2011 "the creation of a global legal entity identifier (LEI) which
uniquely identifies parties to financial transactions” and, following recommendations by the
Financial Stability Board (FSB), tasked the LEI Regulatory Oversight Committee (ROC),
established in January 2013, with coordinating the actions of the regulatory community in
establishing and overseeing a Global LEI System (GLEIS) in charge of issuing and maintaining
LEIs, in accordance with the principles endorsed by the G20. The Global LEI Foundation
(GLEIF) is the operational arm of the GLEIS. The GLEIF is overseen by the ROC, a group of
more than 70 public sector authorities that have assented to the ROC charter1.
The governance of the Global LEI System designed by the FSB with the contribution of private
sector participants is now fully in place: while at the beginning of the GLEIS, LEI issuers
(LOUs) were operating under a temporary endorsement of the ROC, all active LEI issuers have
now been accredited by the GLEIF under a contractual framework establishing the role of the
GLEIF in defining the technical standards of the system and monitoring the compliance of LEI
issuers. The ROC establishes policy standards, such as the definition of the eligibility to obtain
an LEI and conditions for obtaining an LEI; the definition of reference data and any extension
thereof, such as the addition of information on relationships between entities; the frequency of
update for some or all the reference data; the nature of due diligence and other standards
necessary for sufficient data quality; or high level principles governing data and information
access.
The number of LEIs grew rapidly in the second half of 2017, carried by new regulatory
requirements, and now exceeds 1 million. Based on the ECB figures, the LEI covers at least
securities with a total value of EUR 95 trillion worldwide as of November 2017 (+25% since
the end of January 2017). Authorities in jurisdictions represented on the ROC have adopted at
least 91 regulatory actions using the LEI, which are described in this report. These uses of the
LEI contribute to many G20 objectives, in line with the intention expressed by the G20 that the
LEI should support authorities and market participants in identifying and managing financial
risks. Examples of LEI uses already adopted in one or more jurisdictions include:
 identifying, in regulatory reporting, the parties to OTC derivatives contracts and,
increasingly, other securities transactions, as well as the various institutions involved in
processing these transactions, thereby facilitating, among other benefits, the aggregation
of data relating to the same entity;
 enhancing, especially in a cross-border context or across sectors, the comparability of
data reported by banks, insurance companies and other financial institutions, for
instance concerning the identification of their parent entities, their subsidiaries, or their
investments or exposures to third parties;
 supporting more granular disclosures of assets held in securitised products and the
investors’ ability to conduct more cost effectively their own analysis on these assets.
Standard setters of the financial sector and other international bodies have also encouraged
other uses of the LEI, for the consideration of regulators or industry participants, such as

1 A list of members can be found here: https://www.leiroc.org/about/membersandobservers/index.htm

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managing customer relationships by banks, including correspondent banking relationships,
facilitating the monitoring of transactions by legal entities to prevent money laundering and the
financing of terrorism; or improving statistics on the cross-border exposures of non-bank
corporations. Parent information on legal entities started being collected in May 2017, which
will further support data aggregation. However, further benefits from the LEI would be
advanced by data infrastructures upgrades (e.g., payment message formats, data
disseminations), continued support by the public sector, for instance through regulatory uses of
the LEI, and that relevant entities register for LEIs and keep their reference and relationship
data up-to-date.

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1. Introduction
At their Cannes Summit in November 2011, the G-20 leaders supported "the creation of a global
legal entity identifier (LEI) which uniquely identifies parties to financial transactions." The
leaders also called on the Financial Stability Board (FSB) to take the lead in helping coordinate
work among the regulatory community on the governance framework of the Global LEI
System, complementing efforts by the private sector to develop a technical solution, including
through the International Organisation for Standardisation (ISO).
The Global LEI System High Level Principles and recommendations contained in the 8 June
2012 FSB report, “A Global Legal Entity Identifier for Financial Markets” were endorsed by
the Leaders of the G20 at Los Cabos, Mexico on 19 June 2012. The ROC Charter was endorsed
by the G20 on 5 November 2012 and the ROC held its inaugural meeting in Toronto in January
2013, with the participation of authorities from over 50 countries and jurisdictions around the
world. The ROC now counts 72 member authorities and 19 observers including representatives
of national or regional bodies covering 65 jurisdictions as well as representatives from 7
international bodies.2
The ROC Charter defined the mission and role of the ROC:
 Be the ultimate authority for the oversight of the Global LEI System, composed of the
ROC together with an operational component, consisting of a central operating unit, in
charge of the operational oversight of the system and publication of a central database
of LEIs, as well as federated Local Operating Units (LOUs) providing registration and
other services. The ROC oversight function includes setting policy standards for the
system and monitoring its performance with the objective of protecting the broad public
interest and more generally upholding the High Level Principles and recommendations
endorsed by the G20.
 Facilitate the development of the Global LEI System, including the establishment and
designation of the legal entity serving as the central operating unit.
 Promote the use and scope of the Global LEI System to expand the collective benefit
from widespread adoption.
The present progress report describes the completion of the GLEIS governance framework
(section 2), how the GLEIS now provides richer data (section 3), the current status of LEI uses
in ROC jurisdictions (section 4), examples of other potential regulatory uses (section 5), policy
actions currently under preparation by the LEI ROC (section 6), as well as further possibilities
(section 7) for supporting the expansion of the system and the benefits that regulators, industry
and the general public can derive from a wider adoption.

2 A list of ROC members and observers can be found at http://www.leiroc.org/about/membersandobservers/index.htm. 55


jurisdictions are directly represented on the ROC and 5 regional institutions contribute to representing the European Union
(EU), including 10 EU jurisdictions not directly represented on the ROC.

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The LEI
The Legal Entity Identifier (LEI) is a 20-character reference code to uniquely identify legally
distinct entities that engage in financial transactions and associated reference data. Two
fundamental principles of the LEI code are:
 Uniqueness: an LEI is assigned to a unique entity. Once assigned to an entity, and
even if this entity has for instance ceased to exist, a code should never be assigned to
another entity.
 Exclusivity: a legal entity that has obtained an LEI cannot obtain another one. Entities
may port the maintenance of their LEI from one operator to another. The LEI remains
unchanged in the process.
The LEI definition currently relies on a standard published by the International Organisation
for Standardisation (ISO) on 30 May 2012 (ISO 17442:2012, Financial Services - Legal
Entity Identifier (LEI)). The LEI number itself has no embedded meaning. The two last
characters are check digits, contributing for instance to avoid typing errors.
The reference data currently associated in the database with each entity includes:
 The official name of the legal entity;
 The address of the headquarters of the legal entity;
 The address of legal formation;
 The date of the first LEI assignment;
 The date of last update of the LEI;
 The date of expiry, if applicable;
 For entities with a date of expiry, the reason for the expiry should be recorded, and if
applicable, the LEI of the entity that acquired the expired entity;
 The official business registry where the foundation of the legal entity is mandated to
be recorded on formation of the entity, where applicable; and
 The reference in the official business registry to the registered entity, where
applicable.
Entities eligible for an LEI
ISO 17442:2012 states that the ISO standard specifies the elements of an unambiguous Legal
Entity Identifier scheme to identify the legal entities relevant to any financial transaction.
The term "legal entities" includes, but is not limited to, unique parties that are legally or
financially responsible for the performance of financial transactions or have the legal right in
their jurisdiction to enter independently into legal contracts, regardless of whether they are
incorporated or constituted in some other way (e.g., trust, partnership, contractual). It
excludes natural persons, but includes individuals acting in a business capacity.3 It also
includes governmental organizations and supranationals.

3 http://www.leiroc.org/publications/gls/lou_20150930-1.pdf

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The LEI is a non-proprietary system that assures the availability in the public domain,
without limit on use or redistribution, of LEI data. It is financed by fees paid by legal entities
that register in the system.

2. Completion of the GLEIS governance framework


Since its establishment in 2013, the ROC assumed certain tasks of operational oversight and
coordination of the GLEIS, during a start-up period when there was no central operating unit
able to assume its functions. Most of these tasks were handed over to the GLEIF in October
2015, as described in the previous progress report. The division of responsibilities between the
GLEIF and the ROC, as described in their Memorandum of Understanding (section 2.1) could
enter into force for most aspects.
However, additional time was needed for the termination of the interim system of LOU
endorsement established in July 2013 and updated in August 2014, where operators sponsored
by a ROC member authority and endorsed by the ROC as meeting agreed principles, could
issue LEIs that could be used for reporting and other regulatory purposes in the various
jurisdictions represented in the ROC. Under this framework, the ROC had endorsed a total 30
LOUs. This interim system was progressively replaced with the intended framework, where the
GLEIF is in charge of the oversight of LOUs under a contractual framework (Master
Agreement, described in section 2.2). From 7 October 2015, new institutions that wish to
become LEI issuers need to be accredited by the GLEIF. To continue operating, all endorsed
pre-LOUs also had to undergo the same accreditation process to ensure a level playing field
across LEI issuers of high level data quality. This accreditation process was completed in
January 2018 (see section 2.3).
With the completion of the accreditation of pre-LOUs, the GLEIS has entirely exited the interim
phase and the GLEIF has the contractual basis to fully play its role towards LOUs.
Since October 2015, the GLEIF is responsible of developing the operational and
technical standards for the GLEIS, in consultation with the ROC and other relevant
stakeholders, such as data file formats and the normalization of reference data (e.g.,
business registry naming conventions); operational manuals, methods and procedures
for the GLEIF or for LOUs. With the completion of the accreditation of pre-LOUs, the
GLEIF is also now fully in charge of monitoring LOUs’ compliance with the standards
of the GLEIS. The ROC continues to be responsible of policy standards, such as the
definition of the eligibility to obtain an LEI and conditions for obtaining an LEI; the
definition of reference data and any extension thereof, such as the addition of
information on relationships between entities; the frequency of update for some or all
the reference data; the nature of due diligence and any other standard necessary to ensure
sufficient data quality; or principles governing data and information access.
With the GLEIF fully operational as the central operating unit of the system, the framework
endorsed by the G20 is now fully implemented and will support the further expansion of the
system, as further detailed below.

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2.1. Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between the GLEIF and the
ROC
The ROC and GLEIF published on 7 October 2015 an MOU, which describes the common
understanding between them for the implementation of the Governance Principles of the GLEIS
and GLEIF Statutes, in particular the expected division of responsibilities for overseeing
various parts of the GLEIS.4
This MOU describes the oversight of the GLEIF by the ROC, including:
- Communication by the GLEIF to the ROC of relevant documentation, in particular those
underpinning the GLEIF budget and the determination of the fee to be paid by the LOUs
to the GLEIF, strategic plans; draft operational and technical standards; or GLEIF audit
results, with sufficient notice to enable the ROC to review matters and, where relevant,
to issue a recommendation for the consideration of the GLEIF, as foreseen in Article 23
of the GLEIF Statutes, before the GLEIF Board takes an independent decision;
- Participation of representatives of the ROC to meetings of the GLEIF board of directors,
with observer status and no voting rights;
- Organisation of inspections, hearings or other forms of monitoring of the GLEIF by the
ROC;
- Definition by the ROC of the policy standards concerning data or information to be
collected or used for official or regulatory purposes; under Article 30 of the GLEIF
Statutes, “while the ROC is not a body of the Foundation, it defines the framework,
principles and standards under which the GLEIS shall operate, in accordance with the
purpose clause of the Foundation, and oversees the respect thereof”;
- Disagreement and escalation procedures, including, in case of a very serious cause and
where necessary in the public interest, the termination by the ROC of the designation of
the GLEIF as the central operating unit of the system.
The MOU also organises cooperation between the ROC and GLEIF in developing standards
for the GLEIS, in consultation with relevant stakeholders, as well as the coordination of the
promotion of the GLEIS and the use of the LEI.

2.2. Master Agreement between the GLEIF and LOUs


All operational LOUs have signed a Master Agreement5 with the GLEIF.
The Master Agreement defines a framework that supports:
- Data quality, including a Service Level Agreement for GLEIF and LOU services that
govern, inter alia, the issuance and maintenance of LEIs, with due diligence by LOUs
to verify the data against reliable sources and requirements for contracts between LOUs

4 The MOU is available on the ROC website: http://www.leiroc.org/publications/gls/lou_20151007-2.pdf.


5 https://www.gleif.org/content/3-lei-system/3-gleif-accreditation-of-lei-issuers/3-required-documents/2015-09-23-ma-
master-agreement-final.pdf.

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and legal entities supporting the provision of accurate and up-to-date information by
registrants. In particular, these contracts should specify that the legal entity should
provide true, full and authentic information, review the accuracy of this information at
least once annually and promptly submit any changes, all this for the life of the entity,
unless the entity chooses to abandon any use of the LEI and terminates the contract
without porting its LEI to another LOU.
- Free availability of LEI data, including a contractual framework between LOUs and
legal entities ensuring that there are no cost or access obstacles to the free transfer of
data from the LOU to the Global LEI Repository, to the publishing, and to the download
and use of LEIs and associated reference data by anyone, whatever the purpose.
- Operational oversight of the system by the GLEIF: the Master Agreement organises
how LOUs are accredited by the GLEIF before they can issue LEIs; an annual
verification by the GLEIF that accreditation requirements continue to be met by LOUs;
the possibility for the GLEIF to conduct audits, or have independent audits conducted,
at LOU premises relating to LEI operations; and an escalation procedure potentially
leading to the removal or restriction of the accreditation, or other remedies, in case the
Master Agreement requirements cease to be met.
- The funding of the system, including a per-LEI fee to be paid by LOUs to the GLEIF
covering the annual operating expenditures of the GLEIF and supporting GLEIS
governance. The Master Agreement also specifies how the GLEIF will review that the
LOU operations regarding LEIs are sustainably financed in an efficient not-for-profit
cost-recovery manner avoiding excessive costs, and affirms that the GLEIS is
committed to the principles of competition and anti-trust as specified in the GLEIS
Governance Principles.

2.3. GLEIF accreditation and monitoring processes


The Master Agreement defines an accreditation process, with two phases: The first requires the
Applicant LOU to create an Accreditation Plan which, if deemed satisfactory by the GLEIF,
authorises the Applicant to sign the Master Agreement with the GLEIF and become Candidate
LOU. In the second phase, the Candidate LOU submits a more comprehensive accreditation
documentation to the GLEIF, which determines whether (i) the Candidate LOU passes and
receives its Accreditation Certificate and is allowed to commence offering LEI services, or (ii)
fails and has its MA terminated and is not allowed to offer LEI services or (iii) passes
provisionally under certain conditions.
The ROC reviews the proposals for accreditation and may recommend to the GLEIF to re-
examine the accreditation, in case the proposed decision affects the governance principles of
the GLEIS. Such recommendations are governed by Art. 31 of the GLEIF Statutes, and are not
binding (Art. 23) but subject to a “complain or explain” principle. The accreditation process
allows a rigorous, detailed and complete evaluation tool supporting further progress towards a
high level of integrity and data quality within the GLEIS.

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Out of the 30 pre-LOUs endorsed by the ROC, four have withdrawn (CDS Mauritius,
Brønnøysund Register Centre in Norway, APIR in Australia, which became a registration agent
of another LOU and BCRA), and one has not yet started its LEI operations (IRN Portugal). The
25 other pre-LOUs were progressively accredited by the GLEIF in a process that concluded in
January 2018. In addition, five new entrants were accredited by the GLEIF (Bloomberg, EQS,
GS1 Germany, GS1 Mexico and the Swiss Federal Statistical Office). The LEIs of pre-LOUs
that were not accredited were ported to other LOUs.

2.4. Monitoring data quality


The Master Agreement also supports the implementation of a monitoring programme, including
the collection and maintenance of data quality metrics by LOUs, and the implementation by the
GLEIF of quality tests. Various quality metrics are made publicly available. The ROC will
continue to engage with the GLEIF while it develops its data quality management programme
and data quality reporting over time.
The ROC, through its Committee on Evaluation and Standard (CES), has established a working
group to evaluate the data quality monitoring programme of the GLEIF. As underlined in the
Governance Principles of the GLEIS, the LEI system should promote the provision of accurate
LEI reference data at the local level from LEI registrants. Responsibility for the accuracy of
reference data should rest with the LEI registrant, but LOUs have responsibility to exercise due
diligence in guarding against errors, as consistent with ROC standards, and to encourage
necessary updating. In addition, the GLEIF monitors data quality in the system, under the
oversight of the ROC. The ROC oversees the GLEIF in its use of all the tools at its disposal
under the Master Agreement to monitor LOU compliance, including audits as well as escalation
procedures and remedies in case of breaches, as described in previous sections. Already, the
GLEIF has developed a series of quality control procedures, which are focused at this point on
formal definitions of data quality, such as use of appropriate codes or formats and provision of
appropriate information.
To support its monitoring functions, the CES working group has held two workshops with the
GLEIF in August and November 2017, where the GLEIF presented its approach to data quality
management. The workshops were also the opportunity to review case by case issues.
The GLEIF has taken a number of measures to improve data quality, including a new centralised
facility for checking for duplicate registration of a legal entity to avoid issuing a second LEI for
the same entity, the new common data file format and the centralised facility for challenging
LEI data. The publication of LOUs’ individual quality metrics, which started recently, should
also foster LOUs’ efforts to keep the data quality high or further improve data quality, if
necessary. The GLEIF also runs data quality campaigns on specific issues, such as the
misspelling of city names6 or postal code usage in certain jurisdictions. The CES also conducted
a dialogue with the GLEIF on the methodology used to produce the LEI data quality reports
published by the GLEIF.

6 The GLEIF notes that « The exercise showed high quality of data with overall 98.94% correct city names in the LEI data
pool already. The GLEIF quality campaign together with the respective LEI issuers further increased the accuracy of city
names to nearly 100%. » (minutes of the GLEIF Board meeting of October
2017https://www.gleif.org/en/about/governance/board-minutes#).

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3. The Global LEI System is providing richer information

3.1. Addition of information on the direct and ultimate parents of legal


entities
The G20-endorsed FSB report “A Global Legal Entity Identifier for Financial Markets” called
for the GLEIS to include the “Level 1” “business card” information on entities (e.g., official
name of the legal entity, address of its headquarters)7, followed later by “Level 2” data on
relationships among entities.8 Recommendation 12 of the report specifically called for the
development of proposals for additional reference data on the direct and ultimate parent(s) of
legal entities and relationship or ownership data. The FSB report underlined that this
information was essential for risk aggregation, which is a key objective for setting up the
GLEIS.
The LEI ROC published on 10 March 2016 the final version of its report on Collecting data on
direct and ultimate parents of legal entities in the Global LEI System - Phase 1.9 After careful
deliberation and public consultation, the ROC decided that certain information on parents
should be part of the information required by the GLEIS for validating an LEI record, but with
the option to decline providing this information for the reasons listed in section 3.3.1 of the LEI
ROC report of 10 March 2016, such as legal obstacles preventing the provision or publication
of this information and cases where the disclosure of this information would be detrimental to
the legal entity or the relevant parent.
The collection was launched on 1 May 2017 and the data collected is available since 8 May
2017 on the GLEIF website.10 Not all LOUs started collecting the information at the same time,
although a majority, covering more than 82% of active LEIs, had started as of 9 May 2017. As
of 1 January 2018, all LOUs have started implementing the data collection, which means, given
the one year review cycle, that all current LEI should have reported parent information or an
exception by the end of 2018.
Under this framework, entities that have or acquire an LEI have to report their “ultimate
accounting consolidating parent” (hereafter “ultimate parent”), defined as the highest level
legal entity preparing consolidated financial statements, as well as their “direct accounting
consolidating parent” (hereafter, “direct parents”). In both cases, the identification of the
parent is based on the accounting definition of consolidation applying to this parent.
Accounting definitions were chosen as a starting point as the ROC concluded that their
practical characteristics outweighed limitations caused by the fact that they are designed for a
different purpose, i.e., to report relationships to investors on a going concern basis. These
practical characteristics are that: (i) accounting definitions are applicable to both financial and
non-financial companies; (ii) their international comparability has increased, following greater

7 As defined in the ISO 17442:2012 standard.


8 See https://www.financialstabilityboard.org/publications/r_120608.pdf (8 June 2012).
9 http://www.leiroc.org/publications/gls/lou_20161003-1.pdf
10 The Level 2 Relationship Records and Reporting exceptions are available here:
https://www.gleif.org/en/lei-data/gleif-concatenated-file/download-the-concatenated-file.

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convergence between IFRS and US GAAP on the scope of consolidation; and (iii) they are
widely used, publicly available and their implementation is periodically reviewed by external
auditors.
As of 31 December 2017, 41,656 direct parents and 46,372 ultimate parents had been identified
with an LEI in the GLEIS. In addition, 443,211 entities had reported that there are no parents
meeting the GLEIS definition: for example (i) the entity is controlled by natural person(s)
without any intermediate legal entity meeting the definition of parent in the GLEIS; (ii) the
entity is controlled by legal entities not subject to preparing consolidated financial statements
(given the definition of parents in the GLEIS, e.g., a number of investment funds) (iii) there is
no known person controlling the entity (e.g., diversified shareholding). Similarly, 444,301
reported the absence of an ultimate parent. For both types of parent relationships, some 18,000
entities declared that legal obstacles prevented them from providing or publishing this
information or the disclosure of this information would be detrimental to the legal entity or the
relevant parent.
As part of Phase 1 of the collection of parent information, LOUs as a pilot are also collecting
information for parents that do not have an LEI, including the name, legal address, headquarters
address and business registry identification (identification of the registry and registry number,
if applicable), as provided by the child (hereafter “parent metadata”). As of 31 December 2017,
some 72,000 direct parent and 69,000 ultimate parent records had been collected in that way.
The ROC committed to determining no later than six months after the start of the effective
collection of relationship data by LOUs whether this pilot parent metadata could be made public
as part of the reference data of the child, or whether the pilot should be extended to provide
additional time to address any issues associated with the publication.11 The ROC further
committed to communicating the determination publicly, including the reasons justifying any
delay for the publication of parent metadata.
The ROC has determined that additional time is needed for a more thorough review of the
parent metadata. The parent metadata are complex, and more time is needed, in particular, to
analyse observed anomalies and idiosyncrasies in the collected data to determine whether there
are any data quality concerns that could cause reputational harm to the GLEIS and whether the
proposed data validation model is sustainable. The LEI ROC is therefore extending the pilot
until June 2018, with a decision to be published in connection with the June Plenary meeting.
As of 31 January 2018, 1,416,970 relationships or exceptions had been reported, compared to
1,071,693 LEI records, of which 875,760 had an issued status.12 Given that two parent or
exception records are expected for each entity (i.e., “ultimate accounting consolidating parent”
and “direct accounting consolidating parent”), this means that, 9 months after its initiation, the
collection had been completed for 80.9% of the LEIs with an issued status. This figure is only
66.1% when considering all LEIs, including lapsed ones, which shows the importance for users
to require current LEIs if they want to benefit from parent information.

11 Issues that could delay publication are whether publication would harm the GLEIS, including concerns that this lower
quality data may affect the reputation of the GLEIS and the adoption of the LEI, and that the minimum level of validation
and exclusivity checking required for the credibility of the system could add costs and complexity going against the
expansion of the GLEIS.
12 As opposed to statuses such as lapsed or annulled. See section 7.1 for more details.

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While relationships files are available for download, the GLEIF has yet to develop an interface
to facilitate the search of relationship data, in the same way as this is done for reference data.
Data vendors have however already started to draw hierarchies from the data published by the
GLEIF, as illustrated in Figure 1 below.

Figure 1: Organizational hierarchy provided by LEI DB AddIn (https://www.leidbaddin.com/).

Uses of this information include, for example:


- The analysis of derivative reporting. As noted later in this report, jurisdictions hosting
the bulk of derivative activities already require that counterparties of reportable
derivative transactions have an LEI. In the EU, the collection of parent data for
commodity derivative reporting is expected to start in early 2018.
- Facilitating the collection and access of information on group entities when opening
correspondent banking relationships, as described by the BCBS (see section 5.4).
- Home mortgage disclosures in the United States (see [US10] in Annex I).
- The analysis of large exposures of banks in India (see [IN01])

3.2. Addition of information on international branches


The LEI ROC defined the policy standards for including data on international/foreign branches
in the GLEIS on 11 July 201613 and the technical requirements were published in November
2016 by the GLEIF as part of the revised LEI Common Data File format CDF 2.0.14 The format
was fully rolled out in October 2017.
Both public sector and private sector needs motivated the ROC to propose the inclusion of data
on international branches in the GLEIS. First, the responsibilities for prudential supervision of
international branches are generally split between the supervisory authority where the entity is
headquartered and the regulatory authority of the host jurisdiction in which the branch is
located. This construct frequently results in multiple specific reporting requirements or
transparency obligations for international branches, for which a separate identifier is already
necessary. Furthermore, a number of regulatory reporting requirements envisage some form of
reporting on branch activities, and a branch LEI could support a common approach across

13 http://www.leiroc.org/publications/gls/roc_20160711-1.pdf
14 The latest format is now CDF 2.1 published in May 2017, which is currently being rolled out:
https://www.gleif.org/en/about-lei/common-data-file-format/lei-cdf-format/lei-cdf-format-version-2-1.

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jurisdictions. Data on international branches may also be necessary for micro- as well as macro-
prudential supervision.
Secondly, assigning LEIs to international branches will help to facilitate orderly resolution for
entities that have cross-border business activities, in the event of a failure. International
branches that may not have a separate status from their head office during normal times may be
treated as separate and distinct legal entities during times of financial distress. Different
resolution or insolvency regimes may apply to the international branch, which may result in
different priorities among creditor claims for the branch’s assets compared to its head office’s
assets, and specific measures such as “ring fencing” may be applied to the branch. Further,
deposits placed in an international branch may be covered by deposit insurance rules that differ
from the rules applicable to its head office. These conditions require the ability to easily
identify, even in normal times, the international branches of a foreign bank.
Finally, LEIs for international branches may be relevant for cooperation in the tax area, market
structure analysis, and statistical reporting, where it could offer similar benefits. Facilitating
identification of international branch activities could in addition help market participants to
measure, monitor, and mitigate their risks, by supporting a more granular tracking of their
relationships with different branches of the same counterparty in several countries, while
preserving the capacity to aggregate risk positions and financial data of all international
branches with those of the head office, given the condition that the LEI of the head office entity
should always be associated with the LEI of the international branch.
The introduction of international branches into the GLEIS is, however, not meant to influence
regulatory reporting policies or market monitoring goals and policies, especially where the
focus is on the legal entity as a whole (home office activity plus its international branches).
Consistent with the mandate of the ROC, the adopted policy only set the conditions under which
international branches are eligible to obtain an LEI from the GLEIS and does not in any way
compel international branches to obtain LEIs or head office entities to register their
international branches into the GLEIS. As it is the case for all LEIs, it is within the purview of
national authorities to define any requirement for international branches to be registered into
the GLEIS as well as whether any other requirements involving branches should involve or not
the use of a branch’s LEI.

4. Current regulatory uses


The ROC surveyed its members and observers for regulatory actions using the LEI. An
overview of these uses is presented here, together with a more detailed list in Annex 1. This list
is not necessarily exhaustive, as jurisdictions or agencies not represented on the LEI ROC may
have adopted other actions.15 This annex lists some 91 rules referring to the LEI, compared to
48 rules listed in the progress report of November 2015.16

15 This is for instance the case of Israel and Malaysia.


16 Some lists provide a higher number of uses. In Annex 1, the ROC sought to avoid duplicates, and does not count separately
drafts (when the final rule has been published), or successive versions of the same text (except where there is a significant
change affecting the LEI-related part of the rule), and generally does not count as separate Questions and Answers or

13
Out of the 91 rules:
 In 6 cases, the LEI is purely optional and other identifiers are allowed even if the
relevant entity has an LEI;
 In 39 cases, the LEI is mandated only if the relevant entity already has one (in these
cases the LEI is described as “requested” in the table);
 In 39 cases, the entity is required to obtain an LEI (in these cases the LEI is described
as “required” in the table);
 In 4 cases, the LEI is “required” for some entities and “requested” (as defined above)
for others; and
 In 3 cases, the classification does not apply, for instance because the LEI is provided
for information, or the details of the rules are not sufficiently specific yet.

4.1. Regulatory uses by jurisdiction


At least 45 jurisdictions have rules referring to the LEI: Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada,
China, 31 members of the European Union and European Economic Area, Hong Kong, India,
Japan, Mexico, Russia, Singapore, South Africa17, Switzerland and the United States, as well
as, outside the ROC membership, Israel and Malaysia. In most of these jurisdictions, at least
one rule referencing the LEI is already applicable, although some other rules may have not yet
been implemented, or have only been published as drafts. The table in Annex 1 provides the
envisaged implementation dates of the part of the rule concerning the LEI, when known.
The regulators in the US and the EU have required or requested an LEI in the securities, banking
and insurance and occupational pensions industries. The EU rules discussed here generally
apply as well to the European Economic Area. Both the US and EU have several dozens of
uses.
Australia (ASIC, APRA) and Canada (several agencies) have published 4 or 5 uses each.
Argentina (BCRA), Brazil, China, Hong Kong (HKMA), India (RBI), Japan, Mexico (Banco
de Mexico), Russia (Central Bank), Singapore, South Africa and Switzerland (several agencies)
stated one or two uses. Except for Argentina and Mexico, where the jurisdictions’ requirements
apply to banks or other financial institutions supervised by the central bank, and for India where
its requirements apply to corporate borrowers with exposures above a certain thresholds, these
jurisdictions’ LEI requirements focus on the securities sector, especially OTC derivatives
reporting and in a few cases the reporting of other securities transactions or the identification
of nominee shareholders/securities depositories.

implementation documents (such as guidance, or reporting forms that accompany a main text). In some instances, related
rules have also been grouped. The list also seeks to avoid double-counting, for instance when Member States of the EU
merely implement an EU rule, or when several Provinces in Canada implement the same instrument.
17 The use in South Africa is still a draft.

14
Other ROC members have stated that draft regulations are currently under preparation, although
these have not been published yet.

4.2. Regulatory uses by area


At the G-20 Summit of June 2012, the heads of state and government encouraged “global
adoption of the LEI to support authorities and market participants in identifying and managing
financial risks.”18
The Global LEI System was established for a large range of potential uses including19:
 By authorities of any jurisdiction or financial sector to assess systemic risk and maintain
financial stability, conduct market surveillance and enforcement, supervise market
participants, conduct resolution activities, prepare high quality financial data, and to
undertake other official functions; and
 By the private sector to support improved risk management, increased operational
efficiency, more accurate calculation of exposures, and other needs.
This section lists the various uses already adopted or contemplated in public draft rules by
jurisdictions.

4.2.1. OTC Derivatives Reporting


G20 Leaders agreed in 2009 that all over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives contracts should be
reported to trade repositories (TRs) as part of their commitment to reform OTC derivatives
markets with the aim of improving transparency, mitigating systemic risk and preventing
market abuse.20 Aggregation of the data reported across TRs will help ensure that authorities
can obtain a comprehensive view of the OTC derivatives market and its activity.
The FSB noted in its Feasibility study on approaches to aggregate OTC derivatives data,
September 2014, that “counterparty identifiers (LEI) are required to accumulate accurate
position data across TRs. The LEI with hierarchy (for consolidation purpose) is also needed
for some mandates at least in a second step when the fully fledged LEI is in place”.21 This study
concluded that “it is critical for any aggregation option that the work on standardisation and
harmonisation of important data elements be completed, including in particular through the
global introduction of the Legal Entity Identifier (LEI), and the creation of a Unique
Transaction Identifier (UTI) and Unique Product Identifier (UPI)”.
Work has since progressed on all these elements. In addition to the proposed use of the LEI for
the identification of the primary obligors and the payer of payment streams of reportable

18 See paragraph 44 of the G20 Communiqué.


19 See Preamble of the Charter of the LEI ROC, endorsed by the G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors on 5
November 2012.
20 See declaration of the G20 Summit in Pittsburgh, September 2009, paragraph 13.
21 Concerning the latter part, the LEI ROC published for consultation on 7 September 2015 a proposal on collecting data on
direct and ultimate parents of legal entities in the Global LEI System (see also section 5).

15
derivative contracts published in September 201522, in February 2017, the Committee on
Payments and Market Infrastructures (CPMI) and the International Organization of Securities
Commissions (IOSCO) published the final technical guidance to authorities on Unique
Transaction Identifiers (UTIs).23 The technical guidance states that CPMI and IOSCO have
applied the preference for using existing international standards and have selected the LEI as
the code that should constitute the mint component in the UTI generation. The CPMI-IOSCO
guidance further states that authorities’ rules should ensure that new UTIs are structured as a
concatenated combination of the LEI of the generating entity at the point of generation and a
unique value created by that entity.
In October 2016 and June 2017, CPMI and IOSCO published for public comment two
consultative reports on the harmonisation of a second and third batch of critical OTC derivatives
data elements (other than UTI and UPI).24 The final technical guidance on the harmonisation
of all the critical OTC derivatives data elements was published in April 2018 and encouraged
the use of the LEI for the identification of legal entities in the data reported to TRs.25
Jurisdictions hosting the bulk of derivative activities already require that counterparties of
reportable derivative transactions have an LEI: Canada ([CA01],26 [CA02] and [CA05]), the
European Union [EU05], India [IN01], Mexico (from September 2018, [MX02]) Russia
[RU01], Singapore [SG01], Switzerland [CH01] and the United States ([US03], [US04] and
[US14]). The LEI is also requested when available in Australia [AU01], Hong Kong [HK01]
and Japan [JP01]. Draft LEI rules on derivatives are being considered in South Africa. In the
US, CFTC took enforcement actions against large banks for failing to report LEI information
in derivatives reporting.27

4.2.2. Reporting to national regulators


In 2009, G20 Leaders committed to “ensure that national regulators possess the powers for
gathering relevant information on all material financial institutions, markets and instruments
in order to assess the potential for their failure or severe stress to contribute to systemic risk.

22 http://www.bis.org/cpmi/publ/d132.htm.
23 http://www.bis.org/cpmi/publ/d158.pdf. The final guidance on UPI, which does not directly relate to LEI, has been
published in September 2017.
24 http://www.bis.org/cpmi/publ/d153.pdf (second batch) and http://www.bis.org/cpmi/publ/d160.pdf (third batch). A
consultative report on the Harmonisation of a first batch of key OTC derivatives data elements (other than UTI and UPI)
was published in September 2015 (http://www.bis.org/cpmi/publ/d132.pdf). The harmonisation proposal in this first batch
included the use of the LEI for the identification of the primary obligors and the payer of payment streams of reportable
derivative contracts.
25 The use of LEI is encouraged for the counterparties to the derivatives contract (including the reporting entity), the
beneficiaries of the contract, the central counterparty and the clearing member, other payment payers and receivers and the
structurer of a custom basket code.
26 References between square brackets correspond to the list of uses in Annex 1.
27 For instance, see http://www.cftc.gov/PressRoom/PressReleases/pr7616-17 and
http://www.cftc.gov/PressRoom/PressReleases/pr7430-16.

16
This will be done in close coordination at international level in order to achieve as much
consistency as possible across jurisdictions.”28
In this context, the use of the LEI in regulatory reporting facilitates the consistent identification
of reporting entities and their counterparties.
The identification of reporting entities and their counterparties, which started with derivatives
reporting (section 4.2.1), is now being expanded to additional areas.
4.2.2.1. Identification of reporting entities:
In the European Union, credit institutions and investment firms, are required to obtain an LEI
and use it to fulfil their reporting obligations [EU01]. Insurance and reinsurance undertakings
subject to Solvency II are requested to use LEI in fulfilling their reporting obligation since
January 2016 [EU04]. Moreover, in accordance with EIOPA’s Guideline29, national competent
authorities should have verified that institutions under their supervisory remit had requested the
LEI codes by 30 June 2015 for institutions falling within the scope of the Solvency II Directive
and by 30 June 2016 for others including institutions for occupational retirement provision
[EU03]. Recently, EIOPA has published its occupational pensions reporting package where
LEI code is also one of the requested fields [EU38].
Since end-2016 (depending on the date of their authorisation under the CSDR), EU Central
Securities Depositories (CSD) are required to identify themselves, as well as issuers, CSD
participants and settlement banks by using LEIs for reporting purposes to the national
authorities [EU17]. From the end of 2017, beginning of 2018, settlement internalisers have to
use LEIs when reporting to national authorities [EU18]. Since the beginning of 2017,
investment firms that wish to trade in financial instrument traded in the EU will be required to
obtain a LEI and ensure that the reference data related to their LEI is renewed according to the
terms of any of the accredited LOUs of the GLEIS.
In the United States, the LEI is requested, when the entity has one, when investment advisers
register with SEC [US01], for investment advisers to private funds that report to the SEC30
[US02], Money Market Funds (MMF) [US09] and reporting institutions for several reports in
the banking sector, such as quarterly consolidated reports of condition and income [US20] and
capital reporting for institutions subject to the advanced capital adequacy framework [US 21]
as well as other reports relating to market risks [US22], country exposure [US23] and stress
tests [US24]. The LEI will be required for the identification of home mortgage lenders [US10],
with LEIs part of the information required to be collected in 2018 and reported to regulators
beginning 1 March 2019; the LEI will also be used to generate a Universal Loan Identifier
(ULI) for home mortgages. The use of the LEI is optional for all entities regulated by the
Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board [US08].
Argentina [AR01] and Mexico [MX01] also require banks to obtain an LEI.

28 The London Summit Declaration on Strengthening the Financial System (2 April 2009).
29 https://eiopa.europa.eu/Publications/Guidelines/LEI_GLs_EN_ORI.pdf
30 This includes the reporting fund and any parallel fund and certain commodity pool operators and commodity trading
advisers as well as large liquidity fund advisers.

17
4.2.2.2. Identification of the clients, counterparties or investments of reporting
entities
In the European Union, the LEI is requested, when the counterparty has one, in the reporting
to the European Banking Authority (EBA) of data on large exposures of credit and financial
institutions. It is also requested to identify entities within the consolidated group of such
institutions [EU02]. In the insurance sector in the EU, all entities in the scope of the group31,
on which information is required under their reporting obligations are requested or required to
have an LEI since January 2016 [EU04 and EU 03]. The LEI is also requested in the EU, in the
area of financial conglomerate supervision, for the reporting of significant transactions between
group entities, and of significant risk concentration by counterparties and groups of
interconnected counterparties [EU18].
In the European Union as well, investment firms are required since 3 January 2018 to obtain
the LEI of their clients (if eligible), validate the format and content of the LEI code against ISO
17442 and the global LEI database maintained by the Central Operating Unit. Since that date,
investment firms are no longer allowed to provide a service that would trigger the obligation of
an investment firm to submit a report for a transaction entered into on behalf of a client who is
eligible for an LEI, prior to the LEI being obtained from that client [EU11]. The LEI is also
requested since August 2014, when available, for certain counterparties and the five largest
sources of borrowed cash or securities of alternative investment funds [EU06].
In the United States, the LEI is also requested, when the relevant entity has one, (i) for the
identification of securities held by the reporter or subject to repo, (ii) in the monthly reporting
by MMF and large liquidity fund advisers, and (iii) the identification of mortgagers,
counterparties, depositories, issuers of stock and bonds in which an insurance company is
investing, for reporting, each to the relevant supervisor [US09, US06].
In Australia, the LEI is requested for large exposures of deposit-taking institutions [AU04].
4.2.2.3. Identification of the parent entities, subsidiaries or other related entities
of reporting entities
In the United States, bank holding companies and certain other top tier entities have been
required, since end 2015, to report to the Federal Reserve the LEI of the entities they control
and other related entities, if these entities have an LEI [US15]. In addition, as noted above,
CFTC ownership and control reporting (OCR) rules also require a party exceeding certain
position or volume thresholds to provide the LEI (if any) of the account owners, controllers,
and originators [US07].
In the European Union, the LEI of related entities is also requested in reporting in case of
significant transactions (see section 4.2.2.2).
4.2.2.4. Use of the LEI to support the identification of contracts or transactions
As described above, the LEI will constitute the mint component in the Unique Transaction
Identifier used for derivatives reporting, and for the Universal Loan Identifier for home
mortgages in the US [US10]. These identifiers are a concatenated combination of the LEI of
the generating entity at the point of generation and a unique value created by that entity.

31 as defined under Article 212(1)(c) of Directive 2009/138/EC.

18
4.2.3. Enhanced disclosure of securitised products
The Financial Stability Forum had recommended in 2008 that securities market regulators
should work with market participants to expand information on securitised products and their
underlying assets. IOSCO developed eleven principles in its Report on Principles for Ongoing
Disclosure for Asset-Backed Securities (Nov 2012).32 For instance, Principle 3 recommends that
“Periodic and event-based disclosure should contain sufficient information in order to increase
the transparency of information for investors and to allow investors to independently perform
due diligence in their investment decisions regarding the specific ABS.”, including financial
information about significant obligors.
In the United States, 6 agencies are requesting that the LEI be used, if available, to identify the
obligor of loans or asset held or to be held by an open market collateralized loan obligation
(CLO), in the information provided to potential investors. This rule was effective for CLOs
beginning 24 December 2016 [US12].
In the European Union, originators of structured finance instruments are required to be
identified with an LEI since 1 January 2017 [EU09].

4.2.4. Enhancing regulation and supervision of credit rating agencies


The G20 in the London Summit Declaration33 called for regulatory reforms of credit ratings
and credit rating agencies. The LEI has been employed in these reforms.
In the United States [US11], since 15 June 2015, the LEI is required when available for the
identification of obligors rated by Nationally Recognized Statistical Rating Organisations
(NRSROs), or issuers whose securities are rated by NRSROs.
In the European Union ([EU07 and [EU 08]), the LEI is required, since the first quarter of
2016, for the identification of (i) credit rating agencies, (ii) entities for which credit ratings have
been issued, (iii) in case of the subsidiary of a rated parent, the parent entity; (iv) in case of
credit ratings on structured finance instruments, the identification of the originator.

4.2.5. Identification of securities issuers and use in securities


transactions reporting
In Canada, the LEI is requested, when the relevant entity has one, for the identification of
certain trading counterparties, in the confidential reporting of all fixed income transactions
[CA03].
In the European Union, the LEI is required since 2016 for the identification of issuers by CSDs
[EU17]. Since 1 January 2017, the LEI is required for the identification of the issuer of
structured finance instruments [EU09], and for all issuers whose securities are admitted to

32
This report contains principles designed to provide guidance to securities regulators who are developing or reviewing
their regulatory regimes for ongoing disclosure for asset-backed securities (ABS).
33 The London Summit Declaration on Strengthening the Financial System (2 April 2009).

19
trading on regulated markets [EU16]. By 21 July 2019, the LEI will also be required for the
identification of issuers, offerors and guarantors in the prospectus to published when securities
are offered to the public or admitted to trading on a regulated market, in the cases defined by
Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2017/2055 of 23 June 2017 [EU34].

4.2.6. Resolution of failing financial institutions


In the European Union, to support the resolution of financial difficulties that financial
institutions could face, the LEI is requested to be included (when available) in the
recordkeeping of designated financial contracts by certain financial institutions in certain
financial groups, to facilitate access to information by competent authorities and resolution
authorities [EU28].
Similarly, in the United States, certain insured depository institutions are required to have an
LEI, and the counterparties of qualified financial contracts of these institutions are requested to
be identified with an LEI if these counterparties have an LEI [US13].

4.2.7. Credit registries


In the European Union, the LEI is requested, when available, to identify banks’ counterparties
in the credit registry held by the European Central Bank (Anacredit) [EU25].
In India, the RBI will require banks to make it mandatory for corporate borrowers having
aggregate fund-based and non-fund based exposure of ₹ 5 crore and above from any bank to
obtain LEI registration and the LEI will be captured in the Central Repository of Information
on Large Credits (CRILC). The objective is to facilitate assessment of aggregate borrowing by
corporate groups, and monitoring of the financial profile of an entity/group [IN02].

4.2.8. Payment markets


Since July 2017, competent authorities should use the LEI, when available, to identify payments
services providers, as well as their agents and their distributors, in certain notifications related
to the right of establishment and the freedom to provide services on a cross-border basis within
the European Union [EU33]. Malaysia is implementing the LEI in their large value payment
system.34

4.2.9. Other regulatory uses


The LEI is requested in the EU for the identification of managers of alternative investment
funds as well as for the prime broker and companies in which the AIF has a dominant influence,
certain counterparties and the five largest sources of borrowed cash or securities of an

34 Real-time Electronic Transfer of Funds and Securities System (RENTAS)


http://www.bnm.gov.my/index.php?ch=en_fxmm_mo&pg=en_fxmm_fmc&ac=585&lang=bm.

20
alternative investment fund [EU06]35, in Russia for the entities that perform the record keeping
of securities ownership [RU02].
The LEI is optional in the European Union in data reporting regarding wholesale energy
contracts in relation to the supply of electricity and natural gas and for the transportation of
those commodities [EU23]. The LEI is requested when available in the United States for
electric market participants to report their “connected entities” [US17].

5. Examples of other potential regulatory uses


While not necessarily an endorsement of the ROC for a particular use or approach, this section
is intended to raise awareness of potential uses for the LEI which have been identified, in line
with the objective given to the ROC in its Charter to promote the use and scope of the GLEIS
and ROC members’ commitment to support the introduction of the LEI for official or
international identification purposes. Any requirement to use the LEI is a matter of a
jurisdiction’s laws and regulations.

5.1. Risk management by banks

5.1.1. Customer identification

The BCBS published in February 2016 a revised version of its General guide to account
opening,36 which focuses on effective customer identification and verification programmes and
recommends that banks could potentially collect, on the basis of risks, the LEI, if the customer
is eligible, when identifying legal persons and legal arrangements, and that the bank should
“[validate] the LEI and associated data in the public access service”. The BCBS notes that,
“Subject to developments in the LEI project, this information may become required in the
future”. This document applies to account opening defined as any formal banking or business
relationship established by a bank to provide or engage in products, services, dealings, or other
financial transactions. This includes demand deposits, savings deposits, or other transaction or
asset accounts, or credit accounts or other extension of credit, but not the conducting of
occasional transactions.

35 The G20 London Summit Communiqué (2 April 2009) stated “Hedge funds or their managers will be registered and will
be required to disclose appropriate information on an ongoing basis to supervisors or regulators, including on their leverage,
necessary for assessment of the systemic risks they pose individually or collectively. Where appropriate registration should
be subject to a minimum size. They will be subject to oversight to ensure that they have adequate risk management.”
IOSCO’s Report on Hedge Fund Oversight (June 2009) inter-alia contained high level principles on the regulation of Hedge
funds. The IOSCO principles state, among other things, that hedge fund and/or hedge fund managers/advisers should be
subject to mandatory registration and hedge fund managers/advisers which are required to register should also be subject
to appropriate on-going regulatory requirements such as disclosure to investors.
36 http://www.bis.org/bcbs/publ/d353.htm, Annex IV; a new version of the guidelines were published since then in June 2017
http://www.bis.org/bcbs/publ/d405.htm, but the LEI-related text in Annex IV is unchanged.

21
5.1.2. Data aggregation

In its Principles for effective risk data aggregation and risk reporting37, published in January
2013, the BCBS also stated that “The LEI system will identify unique parties to financial
transactions across the globe and is designed to be a key building block for improvements in
the quality of financial data across the globe”. Higher data aggregation capabilities are also one
of the additional requirements applying to all Systemically Important Financial Institutions
(SIFIs).38
In March 2017, the BCBS published a report on Progress in adopting the Principles for effective
risk data aggregation and risk reporting39, where it notes that, out of the seven banking
supervisors in charge of G-SIBs, two are promoting the use of the LEI as a way to foster
compliance with the Principles. The report also observes that “LEI availability could enhance
banks’ management of information across legal entities, facilitate a comprehensive assessment
of risk exposures at the global consolidated level and improve the speed at which information
is available internally and to supervisors, especially after a merger and acquisition”.
The report highlighted the unsatisfactory results where only one G-SIB had attained full
compliance with the Principles by the January 2016 deadline and with another bank expected
to achieve full compliance in March 2017. While the LEI initiative is not targeted specifically
at the G-SIBs, and the LEI is not required as part of the Principles, the report mentions the use
of industry taxonomy such as the LEI to effectively manage customer information among the
examples of effective data architecture and IT infrastructure demonstrated by banks that were
rated as fully or largely compliant for this principle.

5.2. Statistical uses of the LEI

5.2.1. The LEI as a tool to support the use of more granular data

In September 2015, a second phase of the Data Gaps Initiative (DGI-2) was launched, based on
the recognition that data coming out of the DGI were increasingly being used to support analysis
and policy-making decision at national, regional and international organisation levels. It was
also acknowledged that more granular data were increasingly being required by policy makers
to meet users’ needs, bridging the divide between micro and macro analysis and delivering a
global view of markets where needed.
A recommendation in the DGI-240 encouraged G20 economies to increase the sharing and
accessibility of granular data. Following up on this recommendation, the G20 economies and

37 https://www.bis.org/publ/bcbs239.pdf.
38 See Policy Measures to Address Systemically Important Financial Institutions, FSB, November 2011.
39 http://www.bis.org/bcbs/publ/d399.pdf
40 See the Sixth Progress Report on the Implementation of the G-20 Data Gaps Initiative (September 2015) that presents the
launch of the second phase of the Initiative, http://www.fsb.org/wp-content/uploads/The-Financial-Crisis-and-Information-
Gaps.pdf.

22
the Inter-Agency Group on Economic and Financial Statistics (IAG)41 set up an informal
working group chaired by the IMF and Eurostat that prepared seven recommendations,
welcomed by the G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors in their March 2017
meeting.42
As common identifiers are essential to fully take advantage of granular data and allow the
linking of different datasets, the first of these seven recommendation is about Promoting the
use of common statistical identifiers and encourage economies and international organizations,
as appropriate, to foster the use of common identifiers to help aggregating, linking and
managing data. The LEI figures prominently in this recommendation as authorities are invited
to “consider including the LEI in their data disseminations and data collections, mandating its
use, as appropriate. In this context, economies and relevant international organisations, the
Global LEI Foundation and the LEI Regulatory Oversight Committee should continue working
together to further investigate all ways to promote wider use of the LEI, enabling a better
coverage of the non-financial sector and linking to existing identifier systems that already have
very wide coverage, such as the Legal Entity Identifier Number (LEID Number) of Eurostat,
the BIC-Code of SWIFT and the ISIN.”
The recommendation also mentioned that “minimizing registration and maintenance costs for
enterprises or offering these services for free as a public service could be a way to increase the
use of common identifiers, in particular the LEI for entities and the ISIN for instruments”.
The FSB-IMF 2017 annual progress report(s) on the DGI-243 have recognized the importance
of a LEI as a global initiative that have important synergies with the DGI-2 as it can contribute
to the consistency and quality of several datasets covered by the DGI-2 framework.44 It stressed
that the wide adoption of a global entity identifier may greatly enhance statistical compilation,
notably in the management and aggregation of granular data and it also noted the importance
of the ongoing enhancements of the data collected within the LEI framework, including
information on the direct and ultimate parents of the legal entities for supporting further
progress in the DGI-2 and mapping of LEI with other existing identifiers.
The European Committee on Monetary, Financial and Balance of Payments Statistics (CMFB)
provided on 2 December 2016 its Opinion on business identifiers and business registers -
Recommendations for statistical production.45 At the outset it expressed its strong support for

41 The IAG is composed of senior officials of the statistical functions of the BIS, the IMF, the ECB, Eurostat, the OECD, the
World Bank and the United Nations (see www.principalglobalindicators.org).
42 http://www.bundesfinanzministerium.de/Content/EN/Standardartikel/Topics/Featured/G20/G20-Documents/iag-update-
on-the-data-gaps-initiative-and-the-outcome-of-the-workshop-on-data-
sharing.pdf;jsessionid=43EF85E3D3FEDA3E74DA98697DF1D5E0?__blob=publicationFile&v=1.
43 http://www.fsb.org/wp-content/uploads/P210917.pdf
44 As noted in the previous LEI ROC Progress Report, the LEI might help with the identification of foreign subsidiaries (as
part of the effort to better monitor cross-border capital flows and detect risks and vulnerabilities associated with such
flows). The G20 International Architecture (IFA) Working Group has recently placed a strong emphasis on the
importance of addressing data gaps on cross-border capital flows as noted in the IFA WG 2017 Report
(http:\www.bundesfinanzministerium.de\Content\EN\Standardartikel\Topics\Featured\G20\G20-
Documents\Hamburg_Background-documents\International-Financial-Architecture-Working-
Group.pdf?__blob=publicationFile&v=4.).
45 Available on the CMFB website at http://www.cmfb.org/. The CMFB is the forum for coordination of statisticians from
the European national statistical institutes and Eurostat on the one hand, and the European national central banks and the
European Central Bank on the other.

23
the LEI initiative as a global common identifier is crucial for the development and management
of granular statistics.
Its first recommendations, on LEI extension, encourages the bodies supporting the LEI to reflect
about further developments of the business model underlying the LEI initiative with a view to
enlarging the LEI use to non-financial corporations, in particular small and medium enterprises.
The CMFB members could provide help in achieving better coverage of the LEI, by promoting
its statistical use and by requiring or supporting the inclusion of the LEI in EU/national legal
framework.
The CMFB also recommended (R3: Use of the LEI in Administrative Business Registers) that,
to fully gain the benefits of the LEI, CMFB members shall consider the opportunity of having
the LEI and its reference data (such as name, entity status, registration status, necessary to fully
deploy the LEI correctly) in their reference source databases for statistical production.
The CMFB is promoting the universal use of LEI for global entity identification purposes. In
this sense, the CMFB suggests that countries and European institutions should consider
including and using the LEI as unit identifier, in a period of transition in conjunction with other
identifiers–also ensuring an appropriate mapping with the GLEIF support–in the Statistical
Business Registers as well as in the Eurostat EuroGroups Register (EGR), ECB Register of
Institutions and Affiliates Database (RIAD) and the ECB Centralised Securities Database
(CSDB) (Recommendation R4: Use of the LEI in Statistical Business Registers (SBRs)).

5.2.2. Improving the data on cross-border exposures of non-bank corporations

As noted in the 2015 LEI Progress Report, the FSB-IMF report The Financial Crisis and
Information Gaps endorsed by the G20 in 2009, tasked the Inter-Agency Group on Economic
and Financial Statistics (IAG) to investigate, in the context of the G20 Data Gaps Initiative, the
issue of monitoring and measuring cross-border, including foreign exchange derivative,
exposures of nonfinancial, and financial, corporations with the intention of promoting reporting
guidance and the dissemination of data.46
In September 2015, a second phase of the G20 Data Gaps Initiative was launched to continue
this work, by improving the consistency and dissemination of data on non-bank corporations’
cross-border exposures, including those through foreign affiliates and intra-group funding, to
better analyse the risks and vulnerabilities arising from such exposures, including foreign
currency mismatches. In this context, it was noted that the LEI might help with the identification
of foreign subsidiaries and that it would support cross country comparison and consistency in
the view of private sector representatives.47
On 14 October 2015, the IAG published a report entitled Consolidation and corporate groups:
an overview of methodological and practical issues,48 which stated that the G20 initiative to
promote an LEI for all corporations, especially with the collection of data on direct and ultimate

46 http://www.financialstabilityboard.org/2009/10/r_091029/.
47 FSB-IMF 6th progress report on the Implementation of the G-20 Data Gaps Initiative
http://www.imf.org/external/np/g20/pdf/2015/6thprogressrep.pdf.
48 http://www.bis.org/ifc/publ/iagrefdoc-oct15.pdf. The report was prepared by a dedicated task force of the IAG chaired by
the BIS and also comprising representatives of other bodies (IAIS, BCBS, FSB).

24
parent of legal entities, is of particular interest for improving the data on cross-border exposures
of non-bank corporations, as it would represent a key step in facilitating the identification of
individual institutional units and their control relationships across the world. In particular, “the
combination of individual transaction reporting with a unique entity identifier and the
incremental introduction of different types of data on the relationships between entities into the
Global LEI System could offer new perspectives for consolidating or aggregating data using
different perimeters.”49 The report observed that the residency-based approach, used for
instance for the balance of payments and international investment position statistics, could be
usefully complemented by a “corporate group” approach as it is already implemented in the
business accounting and the financial supervisory frameworks, but that it is currently
impossible to reconcile aggregated data compiled on a residency basis and those constructed
under the corporate group approach (one would have to split a corporate group into the various
subgroups residing in each of the relevant countries). The report identified, among the areas in
which further work could be carried out:
 “Further improve the “infrastructure” for an easier consolidation of statistical data at
a granular corporate level, in particular by (i) promoting the reporting of
“relationships” amongst individual firms through the development of registers that
draw on the LEI initiative to facilitate the identification of foreign subsidiaries and the
approach of group-level information; and (ii) enhancing the standardisation of the
identification of financial instruments.”
 “Encourage international and supranational initiatives to identify and regularly review
the structure and nationality of corporations included in groups operating at global
level, by mobilising existing information (e.g., business registers, supervisory public
information, consolidated balance sheet) and conducting reconciliation exercises. The
disclosure of reconciled and updated reference lists should be supported to improve the
consistency of consolidated statistics and remove double-counting. The inclusion of
relationship data in the Global LEI System could be a way to record and compare more
cost-effectively the lists of entities included in different perimeters of consolidation.”
Consistent with several of these suggestions, and taking advantage of the inclusion of
relationship data in the GLEIS since May 2017, the OECD has started to develop an analytical
database of individual multinational enterprises (MNEs) and their affiliates (ADIMA) relying
on a variety of sources, including LEI relationship data. In light of the scarcity of available data
on the scale and scope of the international activities of MNEs, information is collected also
from unstructured data sources (e.g., through web-scraping and text analytics), for example to
allocate MNE activities across countries. The database aims to provide a Register of MNE
parent-affiliate structures, several economic Indicators for both the whole MNE and the
different countries where its affiliates reside and a Monitoring tool to ensure timely information
on MNEs’ restructurings. The first results disseminated in an OECD paper published in March

49 The report notes, however, that “However, further progress in the standardisation of reporting financial operations –
including the definition of a unique transaction identifier (UTI) and unique product identifier (UPI) – and in the ability to
share granular data, as well as a massive collection of relationship information, will be required.”

25
2018 refer to a pilot study on 37 US MNEs but ADIMA aims to cover 100 of the largest global
MNEs by the end of 2018, targeting 500 MNEs by 2020.50
For the pilot study, LEI reference and relationship data are used to populate the Register part
of the ADIMA database, together with data from the Orbis database by Bureau van Dijk as well
as company reports and regulatory submissions. As noted in the OECD paper, the LEI coverage
is currently insufficient for the construction of company ownership hierarchies and “it remains
unclear at present how many affiliates will acquire an LEI, and to what extent the data can be
used as the sole data source for affiliate hierarchies” which are a foundational element of this
work. However, the OECD paper expects that “as new data sources, in particular the LEI,
expand and mature, their information is incorporated on a nearly real-time basis”.51

5.3. Anti-money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism


(AML/CFT)
The ROC, at the request of some of its members and other authorities, explored potential uses
of the LEI in the area of AML/CFT and contributed to the work of the CPMI on correspondent
banking. The CPMI published in July 2016 its final report on correspondent banking, which
includes several sections on the LEI, related to facilitating AML/CFT due diligence.52
The CPMI observes that the LEI, as a tool to reliably identify parties to financial transactions,
could assist in the prevention of money laundering and terrorist financing and the
implementation of sanction regimes in several ways:
 Help financial institutions to identify specific entities unambiguously and improve the
effectiveness of automatic screening packages, particularly for identifying sanctioned
entities (e.g., reducing the number of “false positive” when screening names and
addresses that only partially match the data of a given entity).
 Facilitate the consolidation of information reported to financial intelligence units, by
identifying more easily transactions of the same entity reported by different financial
institutions.
 Improve the effectiveness of other tools and mechanisms currently under development,
especially if it were used as an identifier for legal entities in databases outside the GLEIS
(such as Know-Your-Customer – KYC – utilities or in the databases on beneficial
ownership that are being established in some jurisdictions or other information sharing
mechanisms).

50 The finality, methods and first evidence for the exercise are described in this OECD paper (March 2018):
http://www.oecd.org/officialdocuments/publicdisplaydocumentpdf/?cote=COM/STD/WPTGS/DAF/WGIIS(2018)1&doc
Language=En
51 As LEI Relationship data were lastly uploaded in ADIMA in February 2018, almost 1.1 million LEIs were analysed, of
which around 60 percent also reported information on direct and ultimate parents (up from 26 percent the previous quarter).
Further information on the LEI data included in the database are included in Section 3.2 and in Annex C of the OECD
paper.
52 http://www.bis.org/cpmi/publ/d136.htm.

26
Although the LEI was primarily developed for identification in a data sense (a unique code to
avoid confusing two entities), not in an AML sense (identification as part of the customer due
diligence), the LEI may facilitate customer due diligence (e.g., determining more easily that an
entity is already a customer and avoid duplicating due diligence and records).
The LEI can also provide information on the customer, such as parent information, or
information on other subsidiaries and branches and their locations (see next section). While this
information is distinct from the identification of the beneficial owner required in AML/CFT
standards, which focus on identifying natural persons that are behind legal entities,53 this
information can in some instances support AML/CFT due diligence, as illustrated by BCBS in
the next section on correspondent banking.

5.4. Correspondent banking


The FSB launched in November 2015 a four-point action plan to assess and address the decline
in correspondent banking54. A decline in the number of correspondent banking relationships
remains a source of concern for the international community because, in affected jurisdictions,
it may affect the ability to send and receive international payments, or drive some payment
flows underground, with potential adverse consequences on international trade, growth,
financial inclusion, as well as the stability and integrity of the financial system.
This action plan, which was encouraged by the G20 on several occasions55, includes two
recommendations concerning the use of the LEI in correspondent banking, as part of a package
of measures recommended by CPMI that could help improve the efficiency of due diligence
procedures and reduce compliance costs.
The FSB and CPMI recommended that “In addition to the general promotion of LEIs for legal
entities, relevant stakeholders may consider specifically promoting the use of the LEI for all
banks involved in correspondent banking as a means of identification which should be provided
in KYC utilities and information-sharing arrangements. In a cross-border context, this measure
should ideally be coordinated and applied simultaneously in a large number of jurisdictions.
All authorities and relevant stakeholders may wish to consider promoting BIC56 to LEI mapping
facilities which allow for routing information available in the payment message to be easily
mapped to the relevant LEI. In addition, the relevant authorities (eg the LEI Regulatory
Oversight Committee (LEI ROC) and AMLEG) are encouraged to elaborate further as to what

53 FATF standards focus on “the natural person(s) who ultimately owns or controls a customer and/or the natural person on
whose behalf a transaction is being conducted. [The beneficial owner] also includes those persons who exercise ultimate
effective control over a legal person or arrangement”.
54 http://www.fsb.org/2015/11/report-to-the-g20-on-actions-taken-to-assess-and-address-the-decline-in-correspondent-
banking/ of 6 November 2015.
55 G20 Leaders stated at their Summit in Hangzhou on 5 September 2016 “We will continue to address, through the FSB-
coordinated action plan, the decline in correspondent banking services so as to support remittances, financial inclusion,
trade and openness” and they welcomed the progress report and action plan at their Summit in Hamburg on 8 July 2017.
56 Business Identifier Code: The LEI is not used as a routing code for cross-border payments; instead, the BIC is widely used
for this purpose.

27
extent banks can rely on the LEI as a means of accessing reliable information to support
customer due diligence in correspondent banking.”
Following up on this recommendation, the revised version of the Wolfsberg Group
Correspondent Banking Due Diligence Questionnaire published on 22 February 201857
includes the LEI as part of the information requested by a correspondent bank before opening
a correspondent banking relationship. The GLEIF and SWIFT also published on 8 February
2018 a first version of the mapping between the BIC and the LEI.
The FSB and CPMI also invited relevant stakeholders to work to define a common market
practice for how to include on an optional basis the LEI in the current relevant payment
messages without changing the current message structure. The SWIFT Payment Markets
Practice Group (PMPG) published in November 2017 an option for including the LEI in
payment messages.58 The PMPG noted that “the ability to clearly identify the originating and
beneficiary parties with LEI (and therefore having additional transparency on these parties)
could bring significant quantitative and qualitative benefits on a strategic basis, mainly for
compliance and risk management functions”, for instance, “eliminating potential delays during
payment processing from false hits in compliance and sanctions screening; optimized and more
accurate AML controls and detection of suspicious activities and ability to identify ordering
and beneficiary customer as meaningful information for correspondent banks acting as
intermediary in the payments chain”. The PMPG underlines that implementing this LEI option
still requires material changes by banks, and also further dialogue with the regulatory
community to maximise the benefits of the option.
Separately, and as part of a potential future migration to message formats based on the ISO
20022 standard, relevant stakeholders (i.e., ISO and SWIFT) were encouraged by CPMI and
FSB to consider developing dedicated codes or data items for the inclusion of the LEI in
payment messages.
In the area of securities messages, the LEI is already used as a party identifier across ISO 15022
category 5 messages, given the wider LEI coverage already existing for securities.
Concerning payment messages, the BCBS, CPMI and FSB organised a workshop in March
2017, which discussed the benefits of the LEI as an additional information in payment
messages. The conclusions of this workshop are described in the FSB progress report on
correspondent banking of July 201759:
 The LEI unambiguously identifies legal entities and reduces the costs of handling false
positive results when screening names against sanctions lists.60

57 https://www.wolfsberg-principles.com/wolfsbergcb.
58 Discussion paper “LEI in the Payments Market”: https://www.swift.com/about-us/community/swift-advisory-
groups/payments-market-practice-group/document-centre/document-centre
59 FSB action plan to assess and address the decline in correspondent banking: Progress report to G20 Summit of July 2017
(http://www.fsb.org/wp-content/uploads/P040717-3.pdf)
60 Even if sanctioned entities do not have an LEI, the LEI can be used in “white lists” of entities that have names similar to a
name on a sanction list but are not targeted by those lists. This is particularly helpful when the original language of a name
on the sanction list is not in Latin characters, which are the only ones supported by SWIFT, and multiple transliterations or
translations are possible, or for entities with long names that exceed the capacity of the SWIFT message fields and get
truncated or abbreviated.

28
 The LEI can provide information on entities61. The LEI can also serve as a bridge
between information in payment messages and information in KYC utilities and other
databases on legal entities. The FSB Correspondent Banking Coordination Group had
therefore noted the possibility that adding the LEI into payment messages may reduce
the number of requests for additional information by correspondent to their respondents.
 The LEI, because it is machine readable, can facilitate automated analysis at a lower
cost, especially in situations that require enhanced due diligence and tend to be the ones
more affected by the decline in correspondent banking.
The Wolfsberg Group published on 15 October the Wolfsberg Payment Transparency
Standards62 which recognises several of the benefits described above but notes that the industry
needs sufficient assurance that the LEI will effectively be used for a significant proportion of
transactions.
The rapid expansion of LEI numbers in late 2017 may be a response to these concerns. The LEI
ROC also highlights several practical benefits of using the LEI to address the issues described
by the Wolfsberg Group in their Transparency standards:
The Wolfsberg Group observes for instance that multiple addresses may exist for legal entities,
e.g., registered address, place of business address, mailing address, and gives the example of a
branch in Angola of a UK company: should the bank mention the address of the branch or the
head office? The Wolfsberg Group provides broad principles on how to handle such situations.
Using the LEI would provide both the legal address and headquarters address. The introduction
of the branch LEI will give information on both the branch and its head office in 20 characters,
which would help overcome space constraints in current message formats. One of the
requirements set by the LEI ROC is that “The head office (or headquarters) of the branch
already has an LEI so that the LEI of the head office entity can always be associated with the
LEI of the international branch in the GLEIS”. The GLEIF technical documentation specifies
that the reference data of the branch should include the address of the entity (branch) as well as
the address of the head office.63
The Wolfsberg Group also observes that “For legal entity customers (e.g., companies,
partnerships) multiple names may exist such as registered legal name, trading name, ‘doing
business as’ name or commonly abbreviated name” and recommends a “preference on the
registered legal entity name verified as part of Customer Due Diligence (CDD)”. Here as well
the LEI could help, as the LEI Common Data File Format v. 2.1 includes the possibility to
record previous legal names, as well as “trading as”, “brand name” or “operating under” names
currently used by the entity64.
A third example of difficulties described by the Wolfsberg Group is that fields may lack
sufficient space, which may result for instance in the truncation of names and addresses, which

61 E.g., legal and headquarter address, and from May 2017 also certain parent entities, but not beneficial owner, information.
62 http://www.wolfsberg-principles.com/pdf/home/Wolfsberg-Payment-Transparency-Standards-October-2017.pdf.
63 The data element « HeadquartersAddress » of the branch shall be “the address of the head office and shall match the head
office LEI LegalAddress”. See section 3.2 “Issue New LEI – Branch” of the document “State transition rules for LEI CDF,
available at https://www.gleif.org/en/about-lei/common-data-file-format/lei-cdf-format/lei-cdf-format-version-2-1.
64 LEI Common Data File format V 2.1, Section 2.3.85.

29
is a concern as this information is used for screening and monitoring purposes both in real time
and post transaction. An analysis of the GLEIS database in May 2016 shows that for 12.1% of
entities, the number of characters needed to fully enter the name and address (without city and
country) exceeded 99 characters, which is the limit in some uses of the field for the ordering
customer in SWIFT MT103 messages65. As underlined by the Wolfsberg Group, the issue is
compounded when a customer is making payments on behalf of an ultimate originator (e.g., as
part of a transaction, a law firm who is the customer of the financial institution, is making a
payment on behalf of its client who is the ultimate originator) or where there are several account
holders. The LEI would help address these concerns, given that it provides, free of charge, in a
publicly available file, the name and address of the entity associated with an LEI.
Another example of the use of the LEI in correspondent banking is the revised BCBS guidance
on correspondent banking.66 The BCBS notes that information on the group structure available
in the LEI system may be a way to access information on the jurisdictions in which subsidiaries
and branches of the respondent bank corporate group are located, to support their risk
assessment, provided respondents make sure the information is comprehensive and up-to-date.

6. Policy standards under development by the LEI ROC

6.1. Corporate action and data history


The LEI ROC has initiated a review of how some corporate actions and events, such as mergers
and acquisitions, affect LEI records. One of the objectives is to determine whether there is a
need to improve the way information on such actions is recorded and retrieved. The relationship
and reference data within the GLEIS should be granular enough to enable analysis and
visualization of changes to an entity and its relationships with other entities, both from the
present looking backward and from the date of an entity’s entry into the GLEIS looking forward
to the present. A public consultation seeking input on possible improvements took place
between 26 July 2017 and 29 September 2017. It explored, among other things, the possibility
to (i) provide a history of data record changes due to corporate events and actions that can easily
be searched by end-users of the GLEIS and (ii) add to the LEI reference data the effective date
of the change (as opposed to when the change is recorded in the system) for events such as
changes in names, legal address, headquarter address, as well transformation of an international
branch into a subsidiary (and conversely).

65 Sum of the fields “Entity.LegalName”, “Entity.LegalAddress.Line1”, “Entity.LegalAddress.Line2”,


“Entity.LegalAddress.Line3”, and “Entity.LegalAddress.Line4” in the GLEIF database. In option F and K for field 50, 3
lines are reserved for the name and address, with an additional line for the city and country. Each line has the format
1!n/33x, which means that each line must start with a digit, followed by a slash ('/'), followed by a maximum of 33
characters, i.e., a maximum of 99 characters for the three lines (Concerning fields descriptions, see:
https://www2.swift.com/uhbonline/books/public/en_uk/us1m_20160722/htframe.htm, and
https://www2.swift.com/uhbonline/books/public/en_uk/usgi_20160722/usgi.pdf). The fact that name and address must be
on separate lines is a source of additional constraints.
66 http://www.bis.org/bcbs/publ/d405.htm

30
It also inquired into other corporate actions such as mergers on which the GLEIS currently
provides easy access to information on the successor of a merged entity, (and it is proposed to
facilitate the retrieval of predecessor entities) and reverse takeovers (about which views were
sought on which LEI should survive). Concerning corporate actions that result in the
disappearance of the registered entity (merger, dissolution) and therefore may not be reported
by the entity, it was proposed to implement alternative sources and methods to update the
information, such as corporate action data feeds.
The LEI ROC is currently analysing the response to the consultation and plans to further
deliberate on this issue in the course of 2018.

6.2. Improving relationship data for investment funds


The LEI ROC published on 26 September 2017 a consultation document which proposes a
limited update to the way relationships affecting funds are recorded in the GLEIS, with
the objectives of making sure that the implementation of relationship data is consistent
throughout the GLEIS and provide a means to facilitate a standardized collection of fund
relationship information at the global level. This proposal is designed to meet these objectives:
(i) providing definition of fund relationships and (ii) aligning the cases where the information
is necessary to what will be done for direct and ultimate accounting parent entities as defined
in the LEI ROC report of March 201667. The proposed collection also is designed to help ensure
that relationships affecting an important proportion of entities that have a LEI are appropriately
covered. The LEI ROC received 7 responses to the consultation on fund relationships, including
from individual banks and industry associations representing interests of the asset management
firms and funds in the United States, European Union and Japan.
The consultation document proposed to replace the current optional reporting of a single “fund
family” relationship as part of Level 1 (reference data of the entity) with the following
relationships, as part of “Level 2” data (relationship data):
 “Fund Management Entity”, proposed to be defined as a legal entity whose regular
business is managing one or more investment funds (possibly distinguishing a main
Fund Management Entity from other Fund Management Entities involved in the
management of the same fund). Funds would have to provide this information in order
to receive or renew an LEI. An entity would report if it is a fund, and this information
would be recorded as part of the public reference data of the entity, subject to challenge
by third parties. Views were sought in this consultation on the scope of possible
exceptions for reporting the relationship with a Fund Management Entity to the GLEIS,
beyond the absence of such relationship, in particular whether there are examples where
a Fund Management Entity’s identity would not be public for registered funds.
 “Umbrella Funds” relationship, proposed to be defined as a situation where an
investment fund has one or more than one sub-funds/compartments where all sub-
funds/compartments have a common (Main) Fund Management Entity and each sub-

67 See LEI ROC publication “Collecting data on direct and ultimate parents of legal entities in the Global LEI System – Phase
1”, March 2016, https://www.leiroc.org/publications/gls/lou_20161003-1.pdf.

31
fund/compartment has its own investment objectives, separate investment policies and
strategies, segregation of assets, separate investors and where an investment fund has
segregated liability between sub-funds/compartments. There would be no opt out from
reporting the existence of an umbrella fund where the sub-fund does not itself have legal
personality and is a sub-set of another legal person, consistent with the decision made
by the ROC for international branches. In other cases, reporting of the umbrella fund
could either (i) be optional or (ii) be part of the information that must be provided in
order for an LEI to be issued or renewed to a sub-fund/compartment, with the same opt-
outs as for the reporting of Fund Management Entities.
 “Master-Feeder” relationship, proposed to be defined as a relationship, where a Feeder
Fund is exclusively, or almost exclusively, invested in a single other fund, or several
funds that have identical investment strategies referred to as a Master Fund (or Master
Funds). Reporting this relationship could either (i) be optional or (ii) be part of the
information that must be provided in order for an LEI to be issued or renewed to the
Master Fund (or possibly Feeder Fund) with the same opt-outs as for the reporting of
Fund Management Entities.
 “Other Fund Family”: reporting this relationship, which would capture other family
relationships not captured above (such as those specific to a jurisdiction), would be
optional.
The consultation document also discussed and sought views on whether an entity that has a
relationship with a fund should always be reported to the GLEIS using the LEI of this entity
(which would in practice, force such related entities to obtain an LEI, even where they are not
required to do so by the law or regulation of the jurisdiction where they are organized and/or
do business), the nature of any exception or opt-out that would be permissible (for instance in
case the information would not already be in the public domain), or whether the current situation
where a name is recorded could be continued, as well as other issues such as the validation and
recording of these relationships. Some responses suggested revisions of definitions. Most
responses expressed concerns regarding “other fund family” relationships and “other fund
management entity” as being too generic to bring relevant information. One response from a
group of associations questioned whether the operational and cost burden justified the
collection, especially if it were to be mandatory and involve requiring LEIs from a related entity
that is itself not subject to a regulatory requirement to obtain an LEI. The LEI ROC is analysing
the responses received to the public consultation. Any final collection would not be
implemented before 2019.

6.3. Studying the feasibility of incorporating sector information in the LEI


reference data
A LEI ROC Study Group is currently gathering preliminary information on the feasibility of
incorporating information on the sector of activity of participants in financial markets within
the LEI reference data. Based on user needs ascertained so far, adding this information in the
GLEIS might prove beneficial to comply with regulatory requirements in the financial sector

32
but also for other purposes (e.g., risk management). Costs and other challenges related to the
inclusion of this information in the GLEIS may be, however, sizable.
The current work aims to collect comprehensive information on users’ needs on sectoral
classification(s), review existing sources for such classification(s) and gather additional
elements needed for a preliminary analysis of costs and benefits associated to the competing
options for including sector information in the LEI reference data. The information collected
will support a recommendation for the LEI ROC in the course of 2018 on whether to create a
subsequent work stream to focus more concretely on competing options for associating sector
information to the LEI, either inside or outside the GLEIS, or to take no specific actions.

6.4. Individuals
On 30 September 2015, the LEI ROC published a statement clarifying the conditions under
which individuals acting in a business capacity are eligible to obtain LEIs. As envisaged in this
document, the ROC is considering whether LEI eligibility could be extended to other types of
individuals, such as those licensed or authorised by a financial regulator.

7. Possibilities for supporting the expansion of the system


The numerous LEI uses already adopted have supported a rapid expansion of the LEI, with over
1 million LEIs issued in some 5 years to entities in over 200 countries. This is illustrated by the
fact that issuance remains concentrated in jurisdictions that have a number of regulatory uses
already in force for some time, especially the United States (over 151,000 LEIs at the end of
2017, or 15% of issued LEIs) and the European Union (over 667,000 LEIs at the end of 2017,
or 68% of issued LEIs). Although 118 jurisdictions have each less than 100 LEIs, the large
number of jurisdictions with at least 1 LEI shows that the GLEIS and its network of LOUs are
able to issue LEIs almost anywhere in the world. The main jurisdictions where LEIs have been
issued to date can be found in Graph 1 below. More detailed data, including an interactive map,
can be found on the GLEIF website.68
Although the LEI still covers only a small fraction, maybe up to 0.5%, of the few hundred
millions of eligible entities69, coverage is significantly higher for the entities that have been the
primary focus of regulatory uses issued so far, as illustrated in the box below. Graph 2 below
also shows the rapid increase in LEI numbers triggered by regulatory requirements, lately the
implementation of MIFID II on 3 January 2018 in the European Union.

68 https://www.gleif.org/lei/search
69 Assuming there could be between 200 and 400 millions of eligible entities. There are 125 million formal Micro, Small, and
Medium Enterprises in the 132 economies reviewed in World Bank/IFC, Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises, Around
the World: How Many Are There, and What Affects the Count? 2010,
http://www.ifc.org/wps/wcm/connect/9ae1dd80495860d6a482b519583b6d16/MSME-CI-
AnalysisNote.pdf?MOD=AJPERES. Some data vendors identify around 200 million entities, but may use a different
definition including any distinct business location.

33
Graph 1: Main jurisdictions where LEIs have been issued as of 31 January 2018 (based on the legal address of
the entity, as a percentage of the total number of LEIs) - Source: GLEIF

Graph 2: Evolution in the number of LEIs from the second quarter of 2012 to the last quarter of 2017 (Sources:
GLEIF and Bank of England)

34
In this box, we summarize some of the available information about the LEI coverage provided
by LEI ROC member authorities drawing on national/regional databases. A high LEI coverage
is key for the ability to use the LEI to support the analysis of existing exposures. While these
data necessarily focus only on some geographical areas and/or some types of entities, and
should not be interpreted as providing a comprehensive picture of LEI coverage across
reference populations, they nonetheless provide some indications on recent trends and on areas
where initiatives to expand the use of LEI could be investigated.
The Centralised Securities Database (CSDB), which collects information on all individual
securities relevant for the statistical purposes of the European System of Central Banks (ESCB),
allows tracking the LEI coverage among issuers of securities. The CSDB records data on around
6 million of live debt securities and shares, as of November 2017. Of these, half are issued by
entities having an LEI, a percentage growing to 80% when considering the EU only.
Percentages in terms of amount outstanding and market capitalization are slightly higher
(around 58% and 93% respectively for the whole world and the EU). Reflecting the lower LEI
coverage among smaller issuers, the LEI coverage in terms of number of issuers is around 8%,
rising to 16% in the EU (Table 1, upper panel).
Coverage ratios significantly increased in 2017, with a notable acceleration in the last few
months as the entry into force of some EU regulatory requirements requiring the use of the LEI
was approaching. Growth rates in coverage ratios between January and November were at least
in double digits for three quarters of the breakdowns considered in Table 1. Based on the CSDB
figures, the LEI covers at least securities with a total value of EUR 95 trillion worldwide as of
November 2017 (+25% since the end of January 2017).
In sectoral terms, coverage is very high in terms of outstanding amounts and market
capitalization for all sectors, in both the euro area and the EU: in the former area, it is almost
complete for credit institutions and general government, and around 90% for non-financial
corporations (NFCs) and other financial corporations. As several EU laws require, currently or
in the near future, the use of LEI for issuers of financial instruments under predefined
conditions, the sectoral coverage may also reflect the type of securities issued by each sector
and whether these require the identification of the issuer with an LEI or not based on EU
regulations. For the rest of world, LEI coverage is significantly lower, which may in part reflect
different regulatory requirements. In terms of instruments, around 80% of the instruments
recorded in the CSDB with an issuer missing an LEI are traceable to a non-EU issuer, mostly
NFCs and financial corporations different from banks. For market capitalization and
outstanding amounts, missing coverage is almost entirely due (96%) to non-EU issuers, in this
case spread mostly among non-EU NFCs and general governments.

35
Table 1: LEI Coverage for securities issuers (source: European Central Bank)
Growth Growth Growth
LEI Number Amounts
End- Number rate in rate in
outstanding
rate in
Coverage CR since of CR since CR since
November ratio (CR)
of end- Instrum end- and market end-
2017 Issuers January January capitalisatio January
for: ents
2017 2017 ns 2017
Euro Area
Total 15.8% 31.1% 90.2% 3.4% 94.2% 29.0%

EU Total 16.4% 47.0% 80.2% 3.4% 93.4% 30.6%


All sectors*
RoW Total 5.5% 27.7% 23.3% 18.2% 47.4% 17.9%
World
Total 8.4% 35.6% 50.6% 11.0% 57.8% 22.5%

Sectoral breakdowns
Euro Area
Total 11.3% 35.6% 10.6% 33.2% 89.8% 0.2%

Non Financial EU Total 12.4% 58.6% 10.3% 44.0% 90.6% 1.4%


Corporations
RoW Total 2.7% 38.3% 3.0% 27.0% 57.2% 17.9%

World Total 5.3% 49.0% 4.4% 32.7% 63.2% 13.9%


Euro Area
Total 21.3% 76.0% 71.0% 175.0% 98.0% 167.3%

General EU Total 23.1% 84.0% 74.1% 177.7% 98.0% 236.6%


Government
RoW Total 12.6% 17.2% 27.1% 12.7% 13.0% 88.5%

World Total 13.5% 23.2% 30.6% 26.0% 33.6% 176.2%


Euro Area
Total 65.4% 11.3% 98.3% 1.1% 98.9% -0.2%

Credit EU Total 61.6% 12.2% 85.9% 0.2% 95.5% -0.8%


Institutions
RoW Total 24.0% 57.1% 44.5% 60.5% 80.2% 4.2%

World Total 33.1% 27.7% 77.2% 11.9% 85.9% 2.2%


Euro Area
Total 34.2% 29.6% 97.2% 1.5% 90.6% 15.7%

Other financial EU Total 34.7% 40.2% 96.6% 2.1% 89.2% 11.8%


entities**
RoW Total 16.1% 9.1% 41.2% 5.6% 52.7% 10.7%

World Total 20.5% 18.7% 65.2% 4.8% 60.3% 10.3%

* Excluding Households, Non profit institutions serving households and investment funds (both MMFs
and non MMFs).
**This includes all entities belonging to the financial sectors, with the exception of credit institutions (reported
separately above) and investment funds.
RoW is non-EU Rest of World.

36
EU Regulation may have particularly favoured the expansion of the LEI among issuers of debt
securities and shares ensuring the possibility to map, to a large extent, existing exposures to
LEI data. Data drawn from the German Central Credit Register allow investigating a different
set of entities, borrowers with large exposures and loans of 1 million euro or more according to
German regulatory rules and European regulation on “Large Exposures”. In this case, data show
that the LEI coverage of the about 305,000 legal entities with an outstanding exposure as of
December 2017 is slightly above 6%, mirroring the similar percentage for non-financial
corporations, which are almost 95% of the borrowers (Table 2). Financial sector entities have
higher coverages as expected (almost complete for credit institutions, between 20 and 25 % for
other financial institutions) while the ratio is below 2% for the public sector.
Table 2: LEI coverage for borrowers headquartered in Germany (source: Deutsche Bundesbank)

Borrowers with loans in total public credit financial other non


December 2017 without sector instituti services financial financial
individuals ons institutions sector companies
Number of borrowers
(current reporting period),
304,935 6,617 1,582 456 9,304 286,976
headquartered in Germany
Number of borrowers with a
LEI (current reporting period),
18,937 145 1,519 126 2,137 15,010
headquartered in Germany

Data drawn from the Portuguese business registry provides some evidence on coverage across
industrial classifications, showing that one third of the entities with an LEI (around 2,000 as of
April 2017) were financial firms, one third operates in other services (mostly commerce and
transportation) and one fourth in manufacturing. Based on bilateral contacts of Banco do
Portugal with some of these firms, the main reason for requiring a LEI was still linked to
regulation (either exchange rate or interest rate swap contracts connected with financing
operations or payments in foreign currencies were mentioned). Quite surprisingly, the number
of companies with an LEI is evenly distributed across four different classes of company size
(large, medium, small, micro) and the modal class (29% of the total) is the micro size class
(balance sheet total lower than 2 million euros, in line with the European Commission
Recommendation 2003/361/EC), as shown in Graph 3 below.

37
Graph 3: Portuguese companies with an LEI: Breakdown by size (source: Bank of Portugal)

The regulatory uses already adopted but that have not yet entered into force as well as the
additional uses already in preparation described in this report will help ensure the continued
progression of coverage and demonstrate the commitments by ROC members to reap the
benefits of this innovation.
Based on the experience of the early adopters, the ROC wishes to highlight two options to
support the further expansion of the system.

7.1. Regulators may require that only LEIs with current reference data be
used
As of 31 January 2018, approximately 16% of the registered legal entities that have been issued
a LEI have a “lapsed” registration status. This happens when the entity has failed to verify the
continued accuracy of its reference data for more than one year and to pay the associated fee
for covering the LOU’s cost for validating the information provided. However, as of 31 January
2018, the proportion of entities with a “lapsed” status is 35% when considering only the entities
with LEIs issued more than one year earlier (i.e., before 31 January 2017), even though renewal
rates have been increasing slightly in the course of 2017. The GLEIS continues to include
information on these entities in the global database, for transparency and to support data history,
as their LEIs may have been used in the past.
However, competent regulators may require70 that LEIs with lapsed reference data not be used
in regulatory reporting or more generally by market participants, as the associated reference

70 As stated by the LEI ROC in its progress report of November 2015, “any reference to the LEI should be understood as
restricted to current LEIs, that is those that are ‘issued’, “pending archival” or ‘pending transfer’”. See
http://www.leiroc.org/publications/gls/roc_20170509-1.pdf (last paragraph) for more details. The LEI ROC welcomes any
actions that would encourage the use of current LEIs within the limits of their regulatory mandates. The LEI ROC
recognizes that individual regulators have sovereignty over whether, when, and how to implement any LEI-related rules in
their jurisdictions and the examples below are not intended to compel regulators to write their LEI-related rules in any
particular manner.

38
data may not be up-to-date anymore. In addition, the lack of current information entails several
risks:
- The “lapsed” status may in fact correspond to an entity that has ceased its activity or
merged with another but failed to inform the managing LOU71 and this event has not,
or not yet, been detected by the LOU. This may result in market participants using two
different LEIs for what has become the same legal entity (the LEI of the merged entity,
and the LEI of the successor entity). Even when market participants are aware of the
merger, there may not be consensus as to which LEI is kept, for instance in reverse
mergers.
- There is a risk, over time, that name changes are not recorded and that a second LEI
may be assigned to the same entity, jeopardizing the exclusivity of the legal entity within
the GLEIS.
Any use of LEIs with lapsed reference data would also affect the funding of the GLEIS, which
is necessary to support the free availability of LEIs for users, and the governance and processes
ensuring the quality of LEI data, including data quality checks and responding to challenges
from users. This could also affect the decrease in fees that may result from wider adoption of
LEIs.
Regulators may interpret that any reference to the LEI in their rules and regulations to be
understood as restricted to current LEIs, that is those that are “issued” or “pending transfer”72.
Several actions may result in an increase in current LEIs:
 ROC members and other regulators may wish to provide the same clarification in rules
governing the use of the LEIs, and more generally to consider the language toolkit
examples presented in Annex 2 when referring to the LEI or GLEIS to better assure that
legal entities do not use lapsed, annulled, cancelled or otherwise non-current LEIs in
their reporting. Several regulators have already provided this clarification.73 In addition,

71 Thus preventing the LOU to assign the correct status of “retired” or “merged”, and in the latter case to provide information
on the successor entity.
72
An LEI with a registration status “pending_archival” may also be considered as current when the same LEI is not published
with an “issued” registration status by another LOU, which may happen in rare cases. The “pending_archival” status means
that an LEI has been ported to a different LOU, which is about to publish it as “issued”, with potentially more current
reference data.
73 For example, concerning the reporting of derivatives in the European Union, ESMA specifies in its Trade Repositories
(TR) Q&A 10(b) that counterparties shall identify themselves in EMIR reports with an LEI issued and duly renewed and
maintained according to the terms of any of the endorsed LOU of the GLEIS (see
http://www.esma.europa.eu/system/files/2015-1485_qa_xiv_on_emir_implementation_october_2015.pdf p. 67-68). In
addition, according to ESMA TR Q&A 20b, the EU Trade Repositories supervised by ESMA are instructed to validate the
LEIs in the EMIR reports, this includes not only format validations (based on the character length) but also content
validations against the GLEIF database to ensure that the code reported is included in the database. In the specific case of
the LEI of the reporting counterparty/delegated reporting entity, the TRs are requested to check that the code used is a valid
and duly maintained LEI, in other words the registration status of a given LEI cannot be “lapsed” due to lack of payment
of the maintenance fee. TRs should reject the reports that fail their validation checks prescribed in the Q&A. (see
http://www.esma.europa.eu/system/files/2015-1485_qa_xiv_on_emir_implementation_october_2015.pdf, p. 78-79).
However, the rules governing the reporting to the CFTC allows an entity to report a lapsed LEI, and unless the entity’s LEI
reference data has changed, does not require an entity to annually renew its LEI: § 45.6(e)(1) of Title 17 of the Code of
Federal Regulations (Reporting of level one reference data) states the following: “All subsequent changes and corrections
to level one reference data previously reported shall be reported to issuer, by means of self-registration, third-party
registration, or both, as soon as technologically practicable following occurrence of any such change or discovery of the
need for a correction.” Issuer here is the LEI utility that has issued the LEI (meaning LOU).

39
several jurisdictions have started implementing validation rules, by which market
participants will be required to validate LEIs against the official database of LEIs,74 and
the ROC encourages the expansion of these validations.
 As explained in section 2.2, the new Master Agreement between the GLEIF and LOUs
provides that contracts between LOUs and legal entities support the provision of
accurate and up-to-date information by registrants. In particular, these contracts should
provide that the legal entity should provide true, full and authentic information, review
the accuracy of this information at least once annually and promptly submit any
changes, all this for the life of the entity, unless the entity choses to abandon any use of
the LEI and terminates the contract without porting its LEI to another LOU. This
provision builds on existing GLEIS principles that LOUs have the responsibility to
encourage necessary updating.
 The database published by the GLEIF (see section 2.3) and new functionalities to
support online verifications may also facilitate the detection of non-current LEIs.
 LOUs have been improving their practices to facilitate renewals, such as sending early
reminders or maintaining several contact persons to mitigate rotation in the personnel
of the entity.
 The GLEIS has also been working on the improved detection of entities that have truly
become inactive. The CDF 1.0 already acknowledges that the “retired” registration
status may not only result from the reporting by the entity itself of the cessation of
business, but also that “the managing LOU determines by public sources that the legal
entity has been dissolved or ceased to operate (and the LOU seeks to confirm this status
through all available channels)”. The CDF 2.1 issued by GLEIF is putting more
emphasis on this responsibility by LOUs. The LEI ROC consultation document on
corporate actions and data history is also exploring how sources other than the entity
could be used to detect entities that have become inactive and failed to report this
information.
 Incentives for entities to renew their LEIs: The more parties that use the LEI, the greater
the incentive for entities to keep their LEIs current. For instance, the Basel Committee
on Banking Supervision highlights the need for LEIs to be current as a condition for
banks to use the LEI to support customer due diligence (see section 5.4). The addition
of level 2 data highlights that a lapsed record is also an incomplete record, which does
not benefit from the data enhancements that occurred since the last renewal.
 Better data on lapsed LEIs: ROC members have conducted preliminary analyses of
lapsed LEIs used in regulatory reporting to identify the characteristics of such entities
(such as size, sector, and volume of reportable activities), which could help lead to more
effective measures to encourage renewals.

74 For instance, according to ESMA draft technical standards on MiFIR, investment firms that wish to trade in financial
instrument traded in the EU are required to obtain an LEI and ensure that the reference data related to their LEI is renewed
according to the terms of any of the accredited LOUs of the GLEIS. In Canada, OSC Rule 91-507 Section 28.1 states: Each
local counterparty to a transaction required to be reported under this Rule that is eligible to receive a legal entity identifier
as determined by the Global LEI System, other than an individual, must obtain, maintain and renew a legal entity identifier
assigned to the counterparty in accordance with the standards set by the Global LEI System.

40
 Increased competition and economies of scale following more widespread LEI issuance
have led to lower LEI fees, which may encourage more renewals. Similarly, higher
renewal rates would help reduce the GLEIF fee in the future.

7.2. Standard setters and jurisdictions may consider adopting an LEI


strategy that meets their needs
There are merits in the various authorities considering the actions of others when assessing the
costs and benefits of the LEI. Different rules requiring the LEIs may, in fact, cover in part the
same population. Assessing a measure in isolation from other domestic or foreign rules also
requiring the use of LEIs and covering some of the same population of legal entities could lead
to an overestimate of the cost of the LEI coverage needed to implement a given use of the LEI.
Formulating an explicit strategy may be even more necessary when large scale uses of the LEI
start to be considered, where the LEI would be used, for instance, in credit registries, in wire
transfers, or more generally to identify counterparties of financial institutions to facilitate a
more consistent reporting of international exposures across institutions or support the faster
evaluation by third parties of the exposures of an institution in resolution.
Several types of strategies can support LEI expansion, for example:
i) Increase in the number of rules and regulations requiring the LEI, and in the number of
jurisdiction adopting such rules
The first rules requiring the LEIs have tended to focus on more sophisticated market
participants. The progressive expansion of such rules, and the growing number of jurisdictions
that adopt them, will already ensure a steady increase of LEIs numbers over the next few years,
as evidenced by the estimates in Annex 1. Such expansion could be coordinated in some areas
with the support of international standard setting bodies, as illustrated earlier in this report. This
will in turn increase the benefits from the network effect of LEI coverage, and contribute to
reduce the unitary cost of the LEI, thus paving the way for larger scale uses of the LEI.
ii) Adoption of the LEI as a universal identifier by some jurisdictions
Jurisdictions may envisage using the LEI as a universal identifier for domestic entities, in
addition to already existing identifiers, and at least one jurisdiction is currently considering such
a move. The LEI can for instance help overcome the existence of several domestic identifiers
covering different types of entities, offer the benefits of an internationally recognised identifier
or allow countries to leverage on the infrastructure developed by the GLEIS.
For jurisdictions envisaging such adoption, entities obtaining an LEI would range from several
hundred thousand to several millions. The price of obtaining and maintaining the LEI is an
important consideration in such strategies, and any analysis should factor in the economies of
scale of such adoption as well as other costs for entities (e.g., administrative costs for entities
obtaining/renewing the LEI, and other costs such as technological systems upgrades for users).
For instance, the GLEIF budget is expected to remain relatively stable even if millions of LEIs
are issued, everything else being equal, but the GLEIF fee is expected to then drop to a few
dollars per LEI. The GLEIF fee structure may also in the future recognise the contribution of
jurisdictions adopting the LEI for all their entities.

41
Economies of scale would also affect the pricing of LOUs. Combined with increased
competition, the recent growth in the number of LEIs has led to a significant reduction in the
LEI fee: while the fee used to be in the range of USD 200 for the initial issuance fee and USD
100 for the annual maintenance fee, in the case of private sector LOUs that are active in 50
countries or more, such issuers now have fees generally in the range of USD 75 to 120 for the
initial issuance and USD 50 to 100 for the annual maintenance. Some websites have started
providing comparative price information.75
iii) Voluntary adoption of the LEI by market participants
Market participants also have an active role to play in promoting the adoption of the LEI. They
can themselves voluntarily adopt the LEI, or request that their counterparties have an LEI.
Several global systemically important financial institutions have chosen that all entities within
their group would have an LEI and thus contributed to the expansion of LEI coverage. The
ROC and GLEIF will consider how to encourage further such adoption.
Other approaches can also support LEI expansion: for instance, as described in more details in
Annex 2, authorities may incentivise LEI adoption by offering to report the LEI instead of
providing the data that can be found in the GLEIS. The LEI is indeed a way to reduce
duplicative reporting and leverage information that is available from another source. Annex 1
also provides examples of authorities requesting that the LEI be systematically reported to them
or disclosed to market participants when the entity subject to reporting or disclosure has an LEI,
thereby expanding the benefits of the adoption of the LEI by legal entities, especially where
these entities are not directly within their regulatory remit.
The GLEIF has also a specific role to play in promoting private sector uses of the LEI. For
instance, several segments of the industry have expressed interest in looking at the LEI to
support trade and trade finance. Illustrations of the benefits of the LEI in trade finance are
described in a McKinsey paper The LEI: the value of unique counterparty ID, prepared in
cooperation with the GLEIF.76
iv) Facilitating more widespread LEI issuance
Lower LEI fees are expected to encourage more widespread LEI issuance, especially for small
and medium enterprises and in emerging markets and developing economies. While the ROC
and GLEIF are not involved in determining the level of the LOU fee, competition is one of the
GLEIS high level principles and FSB recommendation 20 on the LEI states that the funding
system should be based on an efficient non-profit cost recovery model. The GLEIF will audit
under the Master Agreement the implementation by LOUs of the cost-recovery principle.
A potential avenue for a further reduction in fees is for LOUs to increase automation, for
instance automated verification against the national business registries, although this is not
possible in all jurisdictions. Actions by public authorities to allow automated access would help
reduce the cost of verification of the information on legal entity and thereby may also help
reduce the unit cost of an LEI.

75 For instance, the website https://lei.codes/ provides comparative price information, but this website is not endorsed by the
LEI ROC or the GLEIF and we have not verified its accuracy or completeness.
76 https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/financial-services/our-insights/the-legal-entity-identifier-the-value-of-the-unique-
counterparty-id

42
The registration agent model is also supporting LEI expansion. The LOU-agent arrangements,
whereby the agent is able to collect the documentation and fee from entities to support LEI
issuance by the LOU, can also facilitate more widespread issuance, reduce costs and increase
competition: for instance banks may initiate tenders to select a few LOUs to work with, for the
issuance of LEIs to their customers. Under the agent model, LEI issuance costs may also benefit
from economies of scale given that banks already collect documentation from their customers
for their own Know-Your-Customer (KYC) requirements (see also section 5.1.1 on how the
LEI can support KYC). This may also help reduce the administrative burden for registrants.
The collection of data on parent entities also helps, as for instance a large banking group
registered an LEI for all its subsidiaries (some 770 entities). Better highlighting the benefits of
the disclosure of complete relationships in the LEI system, where appropriate (see example on
correspondent banking in section 5.4) would support LEI growth.
Mapping LEIs to other identifiers would increase value for end-users, facilitate interactions
with other systems, support data validation and data quality, and perhaps as well save costs for
users, to the extent this can avoid maintaining multiple times common reference data such as
the name and address. The ROC encouraged the GLEIF to support mapping between the LEI
and other identifiers, subject to conditions in line with the GLEIS Governance Principles, such
as free availability and data quality (including challenge process and updates). Precautions
should be taken by the GLEIF to ensure the GLEIS does not appear to favour some market
participants over others. The GLEIF and SWIFT published in February 2018 a mapping
between the Business Identifier Code (BIC) and the LEI.77
The broad approaches described above are not mutually exclusive or limitative and can be
combined or used in succession. They are meant to assist jurisdictions and standard setters to
develop the strategy that will better meet their needs, taking into account the differences in the
legal and regulatory frameworks in which they are operating, the mandates and objectives
governing their actions, as well as the structures and economic conditions of the different
jurisdictions, markets and sectors where the LEI can be used.

77 https://www.gleif.org/en/newsroom/press-releases/gleif-and-swift-introduce-the-first-open-source-bic-to-lei-relationship-
file-to-allow-for-interoperability-across-multiple-id-platforms

43
Annex I - Summary table of actions that are final or where a draft has been published

IMPORTANT NOTE: the information in this report is provided to the best of the knowledge of the ROC, in a summary form, and is not
intended as legal advice. Only the official publications of the relevant jurisdictions should be relied upon.

For column (“LEI is”)

Optional : The LEI is purely optional other identifiers are allowed even if the relevant entity has an LEI

Requested : The LEI is mandated only if the relevant entity already has one

Required : The entity is required to obtain an LEI


NA : other uses, for instance when the LEI is provided for information
Required/requested : the LEI is required for some entities and requested for others

An Excel version of the table is available on the LEI ROC website (https://www.leiroc.org/lei/uses.htm).

1
Requireme
Groups being number of Implementation by Wording and source of requirement to
Reg ID Master/Base Regulation Local Reg ID Action Summary Description LEI is: Link to source nt to keep
involved LEIs (Description): keep the LEI current
LEI current

AR01 Banco Central de la Republica Supervision of financial institutions: Financial institutions regulated by the 80 07.Aug.15 http://www.bcra.gov.ar/pdfs/comytexord/a5642.p No
Argentina, COMUNICACIÓN “A” Central Bank of Argentina are required to obtain an LEI (banks and non-banks df and
5642 of 7 October 2014 and financial institutions including financial companies). http://www.bcra.gov.ar/pdfs/comytexord/b11029.
COMUNICACIÓN “B” 11029 of 8 pdf
June 2015
AU01 ASIC Derivative Transaction Derivative reporting Identification of counterparties in OTC derivative reporting A few Oct. 2014 to Oct. 2015 http://www.comlaw.gov.au/Details/F2015C00262 No
Rules (Reporting) 2013 thousands
(F2015C00262 )
AU02 RG 223 Guidance on ASIC Securities transaction reporting: Identification of the client that originated an Option among Aug.13
market integrity rules for order in the reporting of information about securities transactions from a market several other
competition in exchange participant to a market operator. identifiers
markets
AU03 NIL ASIC Derivative Transaction Derivative transaction clearing: introducing a mandatory central clearing Australian and foreign Requested https://www.legislation.gov.au/Details/F2015L019 Unknown
Rules (Clearing) 2015 regime in Australia for over-the-counter (OTC) interest rate derivatives financial institutions 60
(F2015L01960) denominated in Australian dollars (AUD interest rate derivatives), and in US
dollars, euros, British pounds and Japanese yen (G4 interest rate derivatives).
The clearing mandate applies to Australian and foreign financial institutions that
meet the clearing threshold. The LEI is requested for the identification of entities
meeting the clearing threshold or opting in or out of the status of clearing entities.

AU04 APRA Reporting Standard ARS Banking supervision: LEIs are requested for instance for twenty largest Requested 01.Jan.19 http://www.apra.gov.au/adi/PrudentialFramework/
221.0 Large Exposures exposures and all those exposures exceeding or equal to 10% of Tier 1 Capital. Documents/Final%20Reporting%20standard%20-
Concerning government-related entities: twenty largest exposures and all those %20ARS%20221.0%20Large%20Exposures.pdf
exposures exceeding or equal to 5% of Tier 1 Capital.
The rule instructs to report the LEI of the counterparty for each exposure or the
LEI of the principal counterparty if the exposure is to a group of connected
counterparties. Otherwise, report N/A if the counterparty or principal counterparty
has no LEI
BR1 RFB Normative Instruction No. Business registry Unknown
1,634 the CNPJ (National Registry of Legal Entity), which includes information on
entities of interest to the federal, state, the Federal District and the municipalities
will include the LEI for entities that have this identifier
CA01 ONTARIO SECURITIES Derivative reporting: Identification of each counterparty (and reporting agent if Clearing agency, Required 16000- 31.Oct.14 http://www.osc.gov.on.ca/en/SecuritiesLaw_rule_ Yes Section 28.1 requires that each local
COMMISSION RULE 91-507 applicable), clearing agency, clearing member, broker/clearing intermediary and clearing member, 20000 20160512_91-507_derivatives-data- counterparty, other than an individual and those
TRADE REPOSITORIES electronic trading venue to a transaction in the recordkeeping and reporting of a broker, trading venue, reporting.htm; not eligible to receive an LEI, that is party to a
AND DERIVATIVES DATA derivative transaction subject to the reporting requirements reporting & non- transaction that is required to be reported to a
REPORTING Applies in Ontario, Manitoba and Quebec reporting designated trade repository obtain, maintain and
counterparties, agent renew an LEI, regardless of whether the local
reporting the counterparty is the reporting counterparty. 28.1 --
transaction
- Maintenance of an LEI means ensuring that the
reference data associated with the LEI assigned to
the local counterparty is updated with all relevant
and accurate information in a timely manner. ---
Renewal of an LEI means providing the associated
Local Operating Unit with acknowledgement that
the reference data associated with the LEI
assigned to the local counterparty is accurate.

CA02 Multilateral Intrument 96- Final Rule Derivative reporting: Identification of each counterparty (and reporting agent if Clearing agency, Required 29 July 2016 6 Paragraphs 27 and 28 of theMultilateral Intrument 96-Yes A person that is eligible to receive a legal entity
101 Trade Repositories and applicable), clearing agency, clearing member, broker/clearing intermediary and clearing member, 101 Trade Repositories and Derivatives Data identifier as determined by the Global LEI System,
Derivatives Data Reporting electronic trading venue to a transaction in the recordkeeping and reporting of a broker, trading venue, Reporting- other than an individual, that is a local
derivative transaction subject to the reporting requirements reporting & non- https://www.bcsc.bc.ca/Securities_Law/Policies/Polic counterparty to a derivative required to be
Applies in Alberta, British Columbia, Newfoundland and Labrador, Northwest reporting y9/Group/?group=96%20101 reported under this Instrument, must (a) before
Territories, Nova Scotia, Nunavut, Prince Edward Island and Yukon counterparties, agent executing a transaction, obtain a legal entity
reporting the identifier assigned in accordance with the
transaction requirements imposed by the Global LEI System,
and (b) for as long as it is a counterparty to a
derivative required to be reported under this
Instrument, maintain and renew the legal entity
identifier referred to in paragraph (a).
Requireme
Groups being number of Implementation by Wording and source of requirement to
Reg ID Master/Base Regulation Local Reg ID Action Summary Description LEI is: Link to source nt to keep
involved LEIs (Description): keep the LEI current
LEI current

CA03 RULE 2800C IIROC Notice 14-0250 on the Fixed income transaction reporting: IIROC Dealer Members must Required for dealer Requested Less than 1 November 2015 http://www.iiroc.ca/Documents/2014/1e5d1c52- Unknown
TRANSACTION master regulation confidentially report details of all fixed income transactions to IIROC, including members, dealer 300 fd61-4e93-b16f-abc26e72234c_en.pdf
REPORTING FOR DEBT the LEI (if the entity has one) of the reporting Dealer Member and of the trade member as a
SECURITIES counterparty if that counterparty is another IIROC Dealer Member, Bank, Inter- counterparty, trading
Dealer Bond Broker (IDBB), or Alternative Trading System (ATS). If the venue, clearing
counterparty is a customer, the LEI of the customer may be provided optionally house; Optional for
their customers
CA04 National Instrument 45-106 NIL Securities regulation: entities who rely on exemptions to file a prospectus to Securities issuers Requested 30.Jun.16 http://www.albertasecurities.com/Regulatory%20I No
distribute securities are required to file a report with the relevant Canadian nstruments/5233703-CSA_Notice_NI_45-106.pdf
securities commissions which include the LEI of the issuers if they have one

CA05 National Instrument 94-102 Derivatives reporting - cleared derivatives customers of cleared Required 3 July 2017 http://www.osc.gov.on.ca/en/SecuritiesLaw_csa_ Yes (covers a subset of the population already
Derivatives: Customer The identification of the customer of a clearing intermediary would include the derivatives 20170119_94-102_customer-clearing.htm covered by other regulation on LEI uses for
Clearing and LEI of the customer (if the customer is eligible to obtain an LEI as determined by derivatives reporting, which require a current LEI)
Protection of Customer the Global Legal Entity Identifier System).
Collateral and Positions
and Related Companion
Policy
CH01 NIL Financial Market Infrastructure Derivative transaction reporting: Identification of reporting entities and Parties involved in Required ((in Entered into effect 1 - German Yes For certain reported LEIs, a "valid" LEI is required
Act (FMIA) reporting counterparties, in certain instances: identification of (i) non-reporting derivative certain January 2016 o Act (FMIA):
counterparties, (ii) clearing member of reporting counterparty, (iii) CCPs transactions instances, LEI https://www.admin.ch/opc/de/classified-
requested / compilation/20141779/index.html
other identifiers o Ordinance (FMIO):
allowed) https://www.admin.ch/opc/de/classified-
compilation/20152105/index.html
- English (unofficial translations)
o Act (FMIA):
https://www.admin.ch/opc/en/classified-
compilation/20141779/index.html
o Ordinance (FMIO):
https://www.admin.ch/opc/en/classified-
compilation/20152105/index.html

CH02 NIL FINMA Circular 2018/2 (Duty to Securities transactions reporting: Identification of beneficial owner (for legal Parties involved in Requested As from 1 January https://www.finma.ch/en/~/media/finma/dokumen
report securities transactions) entities, foundations, collective investment schemes) securities (other 2018 te/dokumentencenter/myfinma/rundschreiben/fin
transactions identifiers ma-rs-2018-02.pdf?la=en
CN01 Measures for the Registration of Pledged receivables: Institutional pledgors or pledgees of the Registration Institutional pledgeors Option among 01.Dec.17 For Chinese: No
Pledged Receivables (Revised), System of Pledged Receivables should provide identifiers such as business and pledgees in the several other http://www.pbc.gov.cn/goutongjiaoliu/113456/113
Order of the People’s Bank of registration number, uniform social credit code, LEI. Registration System identifiers 469/3407871/index.html
China, 2017 No 3 of Pledged For English:
Receivables http://www.pbc.gov.cn/english/130721/3421031/i
ndex.html
EU01 Article 16(3) of the EBA EBA RECOMMENDATION ON Banking supervision: Competent authorities in Member States should require Credit and financial Required 31 March 2014 to 31 https://www.eba.europa.eu/documents/10180/5611 Unknown
Regulation THE USE OF LEGAL ENTITY that all credit and financial institution in the European Union subject to reporting institutions December 2014 73/EBA-REC-2014-
IDENTIFIER (LEI) - obligations under Regulation (EU) No 575/2013 obtain an LEI and use it to fulfil depending on the 01+%28Recommendation+on+the+use+of+the+Legal
EBA/REC/2014/01 - 29 January their reporting obligations institution +Entity+Identifier%29.pdf
2014 -
EU02 Regulation (EU) No Banking supervision: reporting to EBA of data on Large exposures, as well as Counterparties of Requested Mar.14 http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-
680/2014 - ITS on identifying entities within the consolidated group. The EBA Q&A of 7 March 2014 credit and financial content/EN/TXT/?uri=OJ%3AJOL_2014_191_R_
supervisory reporting of admits that the LEI field can be left empty when an LEI is not available, provided institutions and group 0001 Annex III, F 40.01 column 010 and Annex I,
institutions the alternative code field is used entities of credit and C 06.02 column 025 (information on affiliates)
financial institutions Consolidated version as of 9 November 2017:
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-
content/EN/TXT/?qid=1522174960870&uri=CEL
EX:02014R0680-20180301
https://www.eba.europa.eu/single-rule-book-
qa?p_p_id=questions_and_answers_WAR_ques
tions_and_answersportlet&p_p_lifecycle=0&p_p
_state=normal&p_p_mode=view&p_p_col_id=col
umn-
1&p_p_col_pos=1&p_p_col_count=2&_question
s_and_answers_WAR_questions_and_answersp
ortlet_jspPage=%2Fhtml%2Fquestions%2Fview
ti j & ti d WAR
Requireme
Groups being number of Implementation by Wording and source of requirement to
Reg ID Master/Base Regulation Local Reg ID Action Summary Description LEI is: Link to source nt to keep
involved LEIs (Description): keep the LEI current
LEI current

EU03 Article 16 of EIOPA's EIOPA's Guidelines on the use Supervision of the insurance and institutions for occupational retirement Insurance institutions Required 5,000- By 30 June 2015 for https://eiopa.europa.eu/Publications/Guidelines/L No
Founding Regulation (EU) of LEI provision (IORP) sectors and institutions for 6,000 institutions subject to EI_GLs_EN_ORI.pdf
No 1094/2010 [EIOPA-BoS-14-026] National competent authorities in Member States should request that all occupational (insurance) Solvency II;
insurance institutions and institutions for occupational retirement provision retirement provision ; By 30 June 2016 for
(IORP) under their supervision obtain an LEI, that the LEI be consistently used (IORP) 140,000 to other institutions.
for national reporting, and used for reporting to EIOPA. 250,000
Guidelines are subject to comply or explain; they are not regulatory or (IORP)
implementing technical standards. I.e. in accordance with Article 16(3) of the
EIOPA Regulation competent authorities and financial institutions shall make
every effort to comply with guidelines and recommendations.
EU04 DIRECTIVE 2009/138/EC COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING Insurance Supervision Participating Requested 4,000 Entry into force of https://eur- No
(Solvency II Framework) REGULATION (EU) 2015/2450 The LEI to be used in priority (if existent) as an Identification code of the insurance and (Solvency Regulations lex.europa.eu/eli/reg_impl/2015/2450/oj;
of 2 December 2015 laying undertaking. reinsurance II reporting 2015/2450: 1 January and
down implementing technical undertakings, insurance) 2016; https://eur-
standards with regard to the The LEI is to be used in priority (if existent) to identify all undertakings in the insurance holding 2015/2452: 20 January lex.europa.eu/eli/reg_impl/2015/2452/oj
templates for the submission of scope of the group in the meaning of Article 212(1)(c) of Directive 2009/138/EC. companies, mixed 2016.
information to the supervisory financial holding
authorities according to Directive companies or mixed
2009/138/EC of the European activity insurance
Parliament and of the Council holding company

COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING
REGULATION (EU) 2015/2452
of 2 December 2015 laying
down implementing technical
standards with regard to the
procedures, formats and
templates of the solvency and
financial condition report in
accordance with Directive
2009/138/EC of the European
Parliament and of the Council
EU05 Regulation (EU) No COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING Derivative transactions reporting: Identification of the entities involved in a Parties involved in Required 350000 http://eur- Yes Yes for reporting entity.Q&A for Regulation (EU)
648/2012 (EMIR- European REGULATION (EU) No derivative contract (counterparties; beneficiary; broking entity; CCP; clearing derivative lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=OJ: No 648/2012 (EMIR) clarifies that an LEI issued
Market Infrastructure 1247/2012 of 19 December member; entity submitting a report) and of the underlying of a derivative contract. transactions: L:2012:352:0020:0029:EN:PDF by, and duly renewed and maintained according
Regulation) 2012, as amended by Trade Repositories supervised by ESMA are instructed to validate the LEIs used counterparties, ESMA validation rules to be applied by Trade to the terms of, any of the endorsed pre-LOUs
COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING in regulatory reporting, including format validation and validation against the beneficiary, clearing Repositories: https://www.esma.europa.eu/press- should be used to identify the counterparties.
REGULATION (EU) 2017/105 of GLEIF database. TRs should reject the reports that fail their validation checks. member, CCP, news/esma-news/esma-updates-emir-validation- Under the validation rules (version 1 March 2018)
19 October 2016 While other codes were allowed in the initial version of regulation of the broker, reference rules. for the counterparty other than the reporting
(Text with EEA relevance) regulation 1247/2012, where an LEI was not available, a Q&A brought a entity, reporter etc. ESMA consultation on review of standards for
entity, field shall be populated with a valid LEI
clarification, and the regulation 2017/105 deleted the reference to other codes, reporting:
included in the GLEIF database maintained by the
effective 1 November 2017. http://www.esma.europa.eu/system/files/esma-
Central Operating Unit. The status of the LEI shall
2014-
be "Issued", "Lapsed", "Pending transfer" or
1352_consultation_paper_on_the_review_of_em
ir_reporting_standards_under_article_9_0.pdf "Pending archival". Lapsed LEIs are not allowed
Regulation 2017/105: http://eur- for the reporting counterparty.
lex.europa.eu/legal- The Q&A (q4) states:" While issuers of financial
content/EN/TXT/?uri=celex:32017R0105. instruments should ensure that their LEI is
Q&A: renewed according to the terms of any of the
https://www.esma.europa.eu/sites/default/files/lib accredited Local Operating Units of the Global
rary/esma70-1861941480- Entity Identifier System,
52_qa_on_emir_implementation.pdf under Article 3(2) of RTS 23 operators of trading
EU06 Directive 2011/61/EU of the ESMA Guidelines on reporting Identification of managers of alternative investment funds (AIF) as well as managers of Requested 7000 I f ti d i ti t d ti
Aug.14 http://www.esma.europa.eu/content/Guidelines- No
European Parliament and obligations under Articles 3(3)(d) prime broker, companies in which the AIF has a dominant influence, certain alternative investment reporting-obligations-under-Articles-33d-and-241-
of the and 24(1), (2) and (4) of the counterparties, five largest sources of borrowed cash or securities, when an LEI funds (AIF) as well as 2-and-4-AIFMD-0
Council of 8 June 2011 on AIFMD is available prime broker,
Alternative Investment companies in which
Fund Managers (AIFMD) the AIF has a
dominant influence,
certain
counterparties, five
largest sources of
borrowed cash or
securities,
Requireme
Groups being number of Implementation by Wording and source of requirement to
Reg ID Master/Base Regulation Local Reg ID Action Summary Description LEI is: Link to source nt to keep
involved LEIs (Description): keep the LEI current
LEI current

EU07 Regulation (EC) No Commission Delegated Identification of credit rating agencies in the reporting of fees charged to their Credit rating agencies Required 40 Q1 2016 http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal- No
1060/2009 Regulation (EU) 2015/1 of 30 clients content/EN/TXT/?qid=1428494389130&uri=CEL
September 2014 supplementing EX:32015R0001 (Annex I, field 2 of tables 1 to 4)
Regulation (EC) No 1060/2009
of the European Parliament and
of the Council with regard to
regulatory technical standards
for the periodic reporting on fees
charged by credit rating
agencies for the purpose of
ongoing supervision by the
European Securities and
Markets Authority Text with EEA
relevance
EU08 Regulation (EC) No Commission Delegated Credit rating agencies regulation Identification of (i) credit rating agencies; (ii) Credit rating Required if Maximum March 2016 http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal- No
1060/2009 Regulation (EU) 2015/2 of 30 entities for which credit ratings have been issued (iii) in case of the subsidiary of agencies; entities entity is eligible 50,500 content/EN/TXT/?qid=1428495271399&uri=CEL
September 2014 supplementing a rated parent, the parent entity; (iv) in case of credit ratings on structured being rated; (but (multiple EX:32015R0002
Regulation (EC) No 1060/2009 finance instruments, the identification of the originator. Originator of the alternatives counts for
of the European Parliament and structured finance envisaged until entities
of the Council with regard to instruments being LEI available / rated by
regulatory technical standards rated more widely several
for the presentation of the used) agencies)
information that credit rating
agencies make available to the
European Securities and
Markets Authority Text with EEA
relevance
EU09 Regulation (EC) No REGULATION (EU) 2015/3 Financial market regulation Identification of the issuer of structured finance Issuer of structured Required - 1 January 2017 http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal- No
1060/2009 (supplementing Regulation (EC) instruments finance instruments content/EN/TXT/?qid=1428504312070&uri=CEL
No 1060/2009) EX:32015R0003
EU10 Regulation (EU) No Commission Delegated Financial market regulation Obligation for European trading venues and Issuer of financial Required At least 03.Jan.18 http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal- No
600/2014 MiFIR & Regulation (EU) 2017/585 of 14 systematic internalisers to supply financial instruments reference data, including instruments 7000 content/EN/TXT/?uri=uriserv:OJ.L_.2017.087.01.
DIRECTIVE 2014/65/EU July 2016 supplementing the LEI of the issuer of financial instruments that are subject to transaction (securities 0368.01.ENG&toc=OJ:L:2017:087:TOC
MIFID II Regulation (EU) No 600/2014 of reporting obligations under Art. 26 MiFIR admitted to
the European Parliament and of trading on
the Council with regard to a regulated
regulatory technical standards market)
for the data standards and
formats for financial instrument
reference data and technical
measures in relation to
arrangements to be made by the
European Securities and
Markets Authority and
competent authorities (Text with
EU11 Regulation (EU) No Commission Delegated Transaction reporting in financial instruments: identification of the investment Investment firms and Issued LEIs 03.Jan.18 http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal- Yes for Commission Delegated Regulation 2017/590
600/2014 MiFIR & Regulation (EU) 2017/590 of 28 firms and their clients subject to transaction reporting obligation under Art. 26 their clients involved Required (if the content/EN/TXT/?uri=uriserv:OJ.L_.2017.087.01.044 investment specifies that investment firms responsible for
DIRECTIVE 2014/65/EU July 2016 supplementing MiFIR[2]. in financial instrument entity is eligible 9.01.ENG&toc=OJ:L:2017:087:TOC firms execution of transactions should ensure that they
MIFID II Regulation (EU) No 600/2014 of Regulation EU 600/2014; the reporting obligation applies to: “a) financial transactions for an LEI/if the ESMA Guidance on transaction reporting, order are identified in the transaction report
the European Parliament and of instruments which are admitted to trading or traded on a trading venue or for client is a legal record keeping and clock synchronisation under submitted pursuant to their transaction
the Council with regard to which a request for admission to trading has been made; (b) financial entity) MIFID II: https://www.esma.europa.eu/press- reporting obligation using validated, issued and
regulatory technical standards instruments where the underlying is a financial instrument traded on a trading news/esma-news/esma-provides-guidance- duly renewed LEIs.
for the reporting of transactions venue; and (c) financial instruments where the underlying is an index or a transaction-reporting-order-record-keeping-and-
to competent authorities (Text basket composed of financial instruments traded on a trading venue. The
clock
with EEA relevance. ) obligation shall apply to transactions in financial instruments referred to in points
(a) to (c) irrespective of whether or not such transactions are carried out on the
trading venue.

Investment firms are required to ensure that the reference data related to their
LEI is renewed according to the terms of any of the accredited Local Operating
Units of the GLEIS.
Investment firms are required to obtain the LEI of their clients, validate the format
and content of the LEI code against ISO 17442 and the global LEI database
maintained by the Central Operating Unit. Investment firms cannot provide a
service that would trigger the obligation of an investment firm to submit a
Requireme
Groups being number of Implementation by Wording and source of requirement to
Reg ID Master/Base Regulation Local Reg ID Action Summary Description LEI is: Link to source nt to keep
involved LEIs (Description): keep the LEI current
LEI current

EU12 Regulation (EU) No Commission Delegated Financial market regulation Order record keeping requirements for EU trading Members or Required 03.Jan.18 http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal- No Would be required under the current text if
600/2014 MiFIR & Regulation (EU) 2017/580 of 24 venues: identification of members or participants in the venue, non-executing participants in trading (same as content/EN/TXT/?uri=uriserv:OJ.L_.2017.087.01. governance principles of the GLEIS required it
DIRECTIVE 2014/65/EU June 2016 supplementing brokers and clients that submit orders. venues, non- above for 0193.01.ENG&toc=OJ:L:2017:087:TOC
MIFID II Regulation (EU) No 600/2014 of executing brokers clients) ESMA Guidance on transaction reporting, order
the European Parliament and of and clients that record keeping and clock synchronisation under
the Council with regard to submit orders MIFID II: https://www.esma.europa.eu/press-
regulatory technical standards news/esma-news/esma-provides-guidance-
for the maintenance of relevant transaction-reporting-order-record-keeping-and-
data relating to orders in clock
financial instruments (Text with
EU13 Regulation (EU) No (i) Commission Delegated Financial market regulation Execution venues must publish data on the quality Execution venues purely 03.Jan.18 No
600/2014 MiFIR & Regulation (EU) 2017/575 of 8 of execution of transactions – the execution venues to be identified by LEI or optional/other https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-
DIRECTIVE 2014/65/EU June 2016 supplementing Market Identifier Code. identifiers content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX%3A32017R0575
MIFID II Directive 2014/65/EU of the Investment firms must publish data on the identity of top five execution venues allowed even if http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-
European Parliament and of the for each class of financial instruments – the execution venues to be identified by the entity has content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX:32017R0576
Council on markets in financial LEI or Market Identifier Code. an LEI
instruments with regard to
regulatory technical standards
concerning the data to be
published by execution
venues on the quality of
execution of transactions (Text
with EEA relevance. )
(ii) Commission Delegated
Regulation (EU) 2017/576 of 8
June 2016 supplementing
Directive 2014/65/EU of the
European Parliament and of the
Council with regard to regulatory
technical standards for the
annual publication by
investment firms of
information on the identity of
execution venues and on the
EU14 Regulation (EU) No Commission Delegated Financial market regulation Third country firm applying for the provision of Third country firm Requested 3 January 2018 (Draft http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal- No
600/2014 MiFIR Regulation (EU) 2016/2022 of investment services or performance of activities in the EU shall submit to ESMA applying for the RTS submitted to content/EN/TXT/?qid=1521651657434&uri=CELEX:32
14 July 2016 supplementing their LEI provision of European Commission 016R2022
Regulation (EU) No 600/2014 of investment services on 30 June 2015) http://www.esma.europa.eu/system/files/2015-
the European Parliament and of or performance of esma-1006_-
the Council with regard to activities in the EU _mifid_ii_final_report_on_mifid_ip_technical_standa
regulatory technical standards rds.pdf
concerning the information for
Draft RTS under Article 46(7) of MiFIR
registration of third-country firms
and the format of information to
be provided to the clients (Text
with EEA relevance )
ESMA/2015/1006 (Based on
Regulation (EU) No 600/2014
EU15 EU Regulation on market COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING Financial market regulation MAR aims at enhancing market integrity and Required http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal- No
abuse (MAR) REGULATION (EU) 2016/523 of investor protection. To this end MAR updates and strengthens the existing Issuers, emission Implementation by 3 content/EN/TXT/?uri=uriserv:OJ.L_.2016.088.01.001
10 March 2016 laying down framework by extending its scope to new markets and trading strategies and by allowance market July 2016 9.01.ENG&toc=OJ:L:2016:088:TOC
implementing technical introducing new requirements. For reporting of Managers’ dealing: identification participants, auction
standards with regard to the of issuer, emission allowances market participants, auction platform, auctioneer platforms,
format and template for or auction monitors concerned by the reporting and public disclosure of the auctioneers or
notification and public disclosure transactions conducted by their managers auction monitors
of managers' transactions in
accordance with Regulation
(EU) No 596/2014 of the
European Parliament and of the
Council
Requireme
Groups being number of Implementation by Wording and source of requirement to
Reg ID Master/Base Regulation Local Reg ID Action Summary Description LEI is: Link to source nt to keep
involved LEIs (Description): keep the LEI current
LEI current

EU16 NIL Financial market regulation: Identification of issuers whose securities are Issuers whose Required (if 7,000 Implementation by 1 http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal- No
COMMISSION DELEGATED admitted to trading on regulated markets securities are eligible to an Jan. 2017 content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX:32016R1437
REGULATION (EU) 2016/1437 The LEI is the unique identifier for all issuers to be used by official appointed admitted to trading on LEI)
of 19 May 2016 supplementing mechanism to report information to the European Electronic Access Point regulated markets
Directive 2004/109/EC of the (EAAP) operated by ESMA to facilitate the search for regulated information on
European Parliament and of the issuers, such as financial and audit reports, payments to governments, home
Council with regard to regulatory member state, inside information, major shareholding notifications and more
technical standards on access to generally information required to be disclosed by issuers under Art. 3 of Directive
regulated information at Union 2004/109/EC.
level
EU17 Regulation (EU) No COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING Financial market regulation: Identification of (1) Central Securities Depositories (1) Central Securities Required 40 CSDs; 31 March 2017 for http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal- Yes The Q&A specifies that: "The notary function is a
909/2014 of the European REGULATION (EU) 2017/394 of (CSDs), CSD participants, settlement banks, issuers, (2) CSD participants’ Depositories (CSDs), (except use (2), 26,000 entry into force of content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=CELEX:32017R0394 core service provided by a CSD. The CSD has a
Parliament and of the 11 November 2016 laying down clients (legal persons) where known to the CSD CSD participants, optional CSD COMMISSION &from=EN#.pdf responsibility to verify that it has the correct
Council of 23 July 2014 on implementing technical settlement banks, participants IMPLEMENTING Q&A: credentials in place for issuers that wish to issue
improving securities standards with regard to issuers, (2) CSD ; REGULATION (EU) https://www.esma.europa.eu/sites/default/files/lib securities into its system. The CSD should verify
settlement in the European standard forms, templates and participants’ clients 7,000 2017/394 rary/esma70-708036281-2_csdr_qas.pdf that the LEI is for the correct entity, and that it is
Union and on central procedures for authorisation, (legal persons) where issuers Some LEI related current (i.e. the status of the LEI shall be either
securities depositories review and evaluation of central known to the CSD provisions may have a
“Issued”, “Pending Transfer” or “Pending
securities depositories, for the later date.
archival”)."
cooperation between authorities
of the home Member State and
the host Member State, for the
consultation of authorities
involved in the authorisation to
provide banking-type ancillary
services, for access involving
central securities depositories,
and with regard to the format of
the records to be maintained by
central securities depositories in
accordance with Regulation
(EU) No 909/2014 of the
European Parliament and of the
Council

EU18 Directive 2002/87/EC of the Commission Delegated Financial conglomerate supervision: reporting of significant transactions Financial Requested http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal- No
European Parliament and Regulation (EU) 2015/2303 of between group entities, and of significant risk concentration by counterparties conglomerates and content/EN/TXT/?uri=uriserv:OJ.L_.2015.326.01.
of the Council of 16 28 July 2015 supplementing and groups of interconnected counterparties, geographical areas, economic their significant 0034.01.ENG
December 2002 on the Directive 2002/87/EC of the sectors, currencies, identifying the names, company register numbers or other counterparties
supplementary supervision European Parliament and of the identification numbers of the relevant group companies of the financial
of credit institutions, Council with regard to regulatory conglomerate and their respective counterparties, including LEI, where
insurance undertakings technical standards specifying applicable
and investment firms in a the definitions and coordinating
financial conglomerate the supplementary supervision
of risk concentration and intra-
group transactions

EU19 EU Regulation on market COMMISSION DELEGATED Financial market regulation For reporting of suspicious transactions and orders Report entities and Requested Implementation by 3
abuse (MAR) REGULATION (EU) 2016/957 of to authorities: identification of (i) the reporting entity and (ii) the suspected entity suspected entities of July 2016 http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-
9 March 2016 supplementing (as part of the prevention of insider dealing, market manipulation or attempted suspicious content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=CELEX:32016R0957
Regulation (EU) No 596/2014 of insider dealing or market manipulation) transactions &from=EN
the European Parliament and of
the Council with regard to
regulatory technical standards
for the appropriate
arrangements, systems and
procedures as well as
notification templates to be used
for preventing, detecting and
reporting abusive practices or
i i d t ti
Requireme
Groups being number of Implementation by Wording and source of requirement to
Reg ID Master/Base Regulation Local Reg ID Action Summary Description LEI is: Link to source nt to keep
involved LEIs (Description): keep the LEI current
LEI current

EU20 NIL European Banking Authority Bank supervision - regulatory reporting: requirement for LEI codes pre- Required https://www.eba.europa.eu/documents/10180/17
XBRL Filing Rules Taxonomy registered with the European Banking Authority (EBA) by the relevant National 39059/EBA+XBRL+Filing+Rules+v4.1.pdf
v.4.1 of 11 August 2015 Supervisory Authorities (NSA) to be used as entity identifier in 2nd level
EBA/XBRL/2015/06 remittance (ie reporting from the NSA to EBA) (introduced in V.2 of March 2014).

EU21 Regulation (EU) No COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING Financial market regulation: Identification of settlement internalisers Settlement Required April 2019 (first report http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-
909/2014 of the European REGULATION (EU) 2017/393 of internalisers submitted within 10 content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=CELEX:32017R0393
Parliament and of the 11 November 2016 laying down working days from the &from=EN#.pdf
Council of 23 July 2014 on implementing technical end of the first quarter
improving securities standards with regard to the following 10 March
settlement in the European templates and procedures for 2019)
Union and on central the reporting and transmission of
securities depositories information on internalised
settlements
EU22 REGULATION (EU) 2015/2365 Securities Financing Transactions Regulation (SFTR) will require: Parties to the security Required expected: Q3 2018 http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-
Master OF THE EUROPEAN all securities financing transactions (SFTs) to be reported to recognised trade financing transactions content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=CELEX:32015R2365
PARLIAMENT AND OF THE repositories; and the beneficiaries &from=EN
COUNCIL of 25 November 2015 the disclosure by investment funds of their use of SFTs and total return swaps of the rights and related draft regulations published in March
on transparency of securities (TRS) to investors in pre-investment documentation and regular reports; and obligations arising 2017:
financing transactions and of express consent from, and disclosure of risks to counterparties entering into therefrom https://www.esma.europa.eu/sites/default/files/lib
reuse and amending Regulation rights of use and title transfer collateral arrangements in relation to securities. rary/esma70-708036281-
(EU) No 648/2012 (Text with 82_2017_sftr_final_report_and_cba.pdf
EEA relevance)

EU23 Regulation (EU) No Commission Implementing Regulation on Wholesale Energy Market Integrity and Transparency Parties involved in Option among http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal- No
1227/2011 (REMIT) Regulation (EU) No 1348/2014 (REMIT) - data reporting implementation instruction for wholesale energy wholesale energy several other content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX:32014R1348
of 17 December 2014 on data contracts both in relation to the supply of electricity and natural gas and for the contracts identifiers
reporting implementing Article transportation of those commodities. LEI is one of the identifiers used to report Q&A: https://documents.acer-remit.eu/questions-
8(2) and Article 8(6) of standard and non-standard contracts for the supply of electricity or natural gas answers-on-remit/
Regulation (EU) No 1227/2011 Organised Market Places should register with the Agency for the Cooperation of
of the European Parliament and Energy Regulators (ACER) with at least one of the following codes which are
of the Council on wholesale relevant for transaction reporting: Legal Entity Identifier (LEI) code, Market
energy market integrity and Identifier Code (MIC). For market participants, the Q&A states that "any EIC, BIC,
transparency Text with EEA GS1 or LEI code used for reporting purposes must be provided with the
EU24 Regulation (EU) No Commission Implementing Securities regulation - prevention of market abuse: The text requires an LEI Issuer or operator of Required http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal- No
596/2014 (MAR) Regulation (EU) 2016/378 of 11 for the the entities described in the next column. This applies when market the trading venue content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=CELEX:32016R0378
March 2016 laying down operators of regulated markets and investment firms and market operators identifier, Underlying &from=EN
implementing technical operating an MTF or an OTF notify the competent authority of the trading venue issuer of Derivatives
standards with regard to the of any financial instrument for which a request for admission to trading on their and Securitised
timing, format and template of trading venue is made, which is admitted to trading, or which is traded for the first Derivatives related
the submission of notifications to time. fields
competent authorities according
to Regulation (EU) No 596/2014
of the European Parliament and
of the Council (Text with EEA
EU25 REGULATION (EU) AKA "Anacredit" Regulation Credit registry: Article 9 - Identification of counterparties - 1.For the purpose of Reporting agents Required for No new 1 September 2018 https://www.ecb.europa.eu/stats/money_credit_b
2016/867 OF THE reporting pursuant to this Regulation, reporting agents and NCBs shall identify (banks) and their reporting LEIs anking/anacredit/html/index.en.html
EUROPEAN CENTRAL counterparties using: (a) an LEI, where such an identifier has been assigned; or counterparties (legal agents, expected. guidelines: http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-
BANK of 18 May 2016 on (b) if no LEI has been assigned, a national identifier, as further detailed in Annex entities only) requested for Reporting content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=CELEX:32017O0038
the collection of granular IV. counterparties agents &from=EN
credit and credit risk data already
(ECB/2016/13) have one
for EBA
EU26 Directive 2014/65/EU of the COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING Securities regulation - Commodity derivatives and emission allowances Reporting entity, Required 3 January 2018 http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-
European Parliament and REGULATION (EU) 2017/1093 Investment firms trading in commodity derivatives or emission allowances or position holder, content/EN/TXT/?qid=1522780107052&uri=CEL
of the Council of 15 May of 20 June 2017 laying down derivatives thereof outside a trading venue shall provide competent authorities ultimate parent, EX:32017R1093
2014 on markets in implementing technical with the breakdown of their positions and the positions of their clients and the Q&A:
financial instruments standards with regard to the clients of those clients until the end client is reached, using the LEI for the https://www.esma.europa.eu/sites/default/files/lib
format of position reports by entities describedin the next column. rary/esma70-872942901-28_cdtf_qas.pdf
investment firms and market
operators(Text with EEA
relevance)
Requireme
Groups being number of Implementation by Wording and source of requirement to
Reg ID Master/Base Regulation Local Reg ID Action Summary Description LEI is: Link to source nt to keep
involved LEIs (Description): keep the LEI current
LEI current

EU27 Regulation (EU) No COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING Securities regulations: recordkeeping by central counterparties (CCPs) Clearing member, Optional (in 10 January 2013 https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-
648/2012 of the European REGULATION (EU) No beneficiary of a most cases: content/EN/TXT/?qid=1521640956839&uri=CEL
Parliament and of the 1249/2012 contract (if not a LEI, interim EX:32012R1249
Council on OTC of 19 December 2012 counterparty), party entity identifier
derivatives, central laying down implementing that transfered a (20
counterparties and trade technical standards with regard contract, security that alphanumerical
repositories to the format of the records to be is the underlying digits), BIC (11
maintained by central asset in a derivative alphanumerical
counterparties according to contract; digits) or client
Regulation (EU) No 648/2012 of interoperable CCP code (50
the European clearing one leg of alphanumerical
Parliament and of the Council on the transaction digits).
OTC derivatives, central
counterparties and trade
repositories
EU28 Directive 2014/59/EU of the COMMISSION DELEGATED Resolution: recordkeeping of designated financial contracts by certain LEI where available Requested 14 October 2016 https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-
European Parliament and REGULATION (EU) 2016/1712 financial institutions in certain financial groups, to facilitate access to to identify the content/EN/TXT/?qid=1521643966638&uri=CEL
of the Council establishing of 7 June 2016 information by competent authorities and resolution authorities. reporting counterparty EX:32016R1712
a framework for the supplementing Directive Institutions subject to maintenance of information (as listed in Art 1(1) of and the other
recovery and resolution of 2014/59/EU of the European Directive 2014/59): (b) financial institutions that are established in the Union counterparty of the
credit institutions and Parliament and of the Councilwhen the financial institution is a subsidiary of a credit institution or investment financial contract
investment firm establishing firm, or of a company referred to in point (c) or (d), and is covered by the
a framework for the recoverysupervision of the parent undertaking on a consolidated basis in accordance with
and resolution of creditArticles 6 to 17 of Regulation (EU) No 575/2013; (c) financial holding companies,
institutions and investment firms
mixed financial holding companies and mixed-activity holding companies that are
with established in the Union; (d) parent financial holding companies in a Member
regard to regulatory technical
State, Union parent financial holding companies, parent mixed financial holding
standards specifying a minimum companies in a Member State, Union parent mixed financial holding companies;
set of the information onFinancial contracts covered: (a) securities contracts, including: (i) contracts
financial for the purchase, sale or loan of a security, a group or index of securities; (ii)
contracts that should be options on a security or group or index of securities; (iii) repurchase or reverse
contained in the detailed records
repurchase transactions on any such security, group or index; (b) commodities
and the circumstances in whichcontracts, including: (i) contracts for the purchase, sale or loan of a commodity
the or group or index of commodities for future delivery; (ii) options on a commodity
requirement should be imposed or group or index of commodities; (iii) repurchase or reverse repurchase
(Text with EEA relevance) transactions on any such commodity, group or index; (c) futures and forwards
contracts, including contracts (other than a commodities contract) for the
purchase, sale or transfer of a commodity or property of any other description,
service, right or interest for a specified price at a future date; (d) swap
agreements, including: (i) swaps and options relating to interest rates; spot or
other foreign exchange agreements; currency; an equity index or equity; a debt
index or debt; commodity indexes or commodities; weather; emissions or
inflation; (ii) total return, credit spread or credit swaps; (iii) any agreements or
transactions that are similar to an agreement referred to in point (i) or (ii) which is
the subject of recurrent dealing in the swaps or derivatives markets; (e) inter-
EU29 Directive 2014/65/EU of the COMMISSION DELEGATED Securities regulation - record keeping for investment firms engaged in high clients; investment required 3 January 2018 https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-
European Parliament and REGULATION (EU) 2017/589 of frequency algorithmic trading firms to which orders content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX%3A32017R0589
of the Council 19 July 2016 supplementing Information relating to every initial decision to deal and incoming orders from are submitted
Directive 2014/65/EU of the clients should include the LEI of the client, where the client is a legal entity. The
European Parliament and of the LEI shall also be used for the investment firm to which the order was transmitted.
Council with regard to regulatory
technical standards specifying
the organisational requirements
of investment firms engaged in
algorithmic trading (Text with
EEA relevance)
Requireme
Groups being number of Implementation by Wording and source of requirement to
Reg ID Master/Base Regulation Local Reg ID Action Summary Description LEI is: Link to source nt to keep
involved LEIs (Description): keep the LEI current
LEI current

EU30 Regulation (EU) No COMMISSION DELEGATED Securities regulation - reference data to be provided for the purpose of issuer of the required 3 January 2018 https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-
600/2014 of the European REGULATION (EU) 2017/583 of transparency calculations underlying bond of content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX%3A32017R0583
Parliament and of the 14 July 2016 supplementing LEI should be reported for the issuer of the underlying bond of interest rate interest rate
Council on markets in Regulation (EU) No 600/2014 of derivatives and for the reference entity of credit derivative (single name CDS or a derivatives and for
financial instruments the European Parliament and of derivative on a single name CDS) the reference entity of
the Council on markets in credit derivative
financial instruments with regard
to regulatory technical standards
on transparency requirements
for trading venues and
investment firms in respect of
bonds, structured finance
products, emission allowances
and derivatives (Text with EEA
rele ance)
EU31 Regulation (EU) No European Security and Markets Financial market regulation:report on settlement fails CSD and certain CSD required draft https://www.esma.europa.eu/press-news/esma-
909/2014 of the European Authority (ESMA) Final Report LEIs of the CSD are part of the information to be reported in settlement fails participants news/esma-issues-technical-standards-
Parliament and of the Draft regulatory technical report by CSDs to competent and relevant authorities and in reports on settlement-discipline-under-csdr
Council of 23 July 2014 on standards on settlement settlement fails to be made public.
improving securities discipline under the Regulation LEIs of the settlement participants among the top 10 participants with highest
settlement in the European No 909/2014 of the European rates of settlement fails (based on the number of instructions, and based on
Union and on central Parliament and of the Council of value), for participants identified by LEI are also to be reported by CSDs to the
securities depositories 23 July 2014 on improving competent authorities and relevant authorities.
securities settlement in the
European Union and on central
securities depositories and
amending Directives 98/26/EC
and 2014/65/EU and regulation
EU32 Directive 2013/36/EU of the COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING Banking supervision - (calculation of capital requirements) identification of counterparties for information Version as amended by regulation 2017/1486:
European Parliament and REGULATION (EU) 2016/2070 entities for supervisory benchmarking portfolios http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-
of the Council of 26 June of 14 September 2016 laying LEIs is used in the regulation, along with other identifiers, to identify content/EN/TXT/?qid=1522778931206&uri=CEL
2013 on access to down implementing technical counterparties in low default portfolio, on which institutions should report EX:02016R2070-20170920
the activity of credit standards for templates, information, but not in the reporting by those institutions
institutions and the definitions and IT-solutions to be
prudential supervision of used by institutions when
credit institutions and reporting to the European
investment firms Banking Authority and to
competent authorities in
accordance with Article 78(2) of
Directive 2013/36/EU of the
European Parliament and of the
EU33 Directive (EU) 2015/2366 of Commission Delegated Payment services providers payment institutions, requested 13 July 2017 http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal- No
the European Parliament Regulation (EU) 2017/2055 of LEI should be provided, where available, for the identification of payment e-money institutions, content/EN/ALL/?uri=uriserv:OJ.L_.2017.294.01.
and of the Council of 25 23 June 2017 supplementing institutions, e-money institutions, their agents and distributors, in the notification their agents and 0001.01.ENG
November 2015 on payment Directive (EU) 2015/2366 of the process between competent authorities of the home and of the host Member distributors
services in the internal European Parliament and of the States for payment institutions intending to exercise the right of establishment
market Council with regard to regulatory and the freedom to provide services on a cross-border basis within the European
technical standards for the Union.
cooperation and exchange of
information between competent
authorities relating to the
exercise of the right of
establishment and the freedom
to provide services of payment
institutions (Text with EEA
EU34 Regulation (EU) 2017/1129 of Securities regulations - prospectus issuers, offerors and required 21 July 2019 https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal- no
the European Parliament and of Identification of issuers, offerors and guarantors in the prospectus to be drawn guarantors content/EN/TXT/?qid=1522169553743&uri=CEL
the Council of 14 June 2017 on up, approved and published when securities are offered to the public or admitted EX:32017R1129
the prospectus to be published to trading on a regulated market.
when securities are offered to The requirement of a prospectus does not apply for certain types of securities,
the public or admitted to trading and in certain circumstances, such as offers of securities to the public with a a
on a regulated market, and total consideration in the Union of less than EUR 1 000 000, which shall be
repealing Directive calculated over a period of 12 months, offers of securities addressed solely to
2003/71/ECText with EEA qualified investors, or to fewer than 150 natural or legal persons per Member
relevance. State, other than qualified investors.
Requireme
Groups being number of Implementation by Wording and source of requirement to
Reg ID Master/Base Regulation Local Reg ID Action Summary Description LEI is: Link to source nt to keep
involved LEIs (Description): keep the LEI current
LEI current

EU35 Directive 2014/65/EU of the Commission Implementing Securities regulations - suspension or removal of financial instruments issuers required 3 January 2018 https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal- no
European Parliament and Regulation (EU) 2017/1005 of LEI of the issuer should be provided in the publication and communication to the content/EN/TXT/?qid=1522173831891&uri=CEL
of the Council on markets 15 June 2017 laying down relevant competent authority by a trading venue operator of its decision to EX:32017R1005
in financial instruments implementing technical suspend or remove the financial instrument and related derivatives from trading;
standards with regard to the and of its decision to lift a suspension of a financial instrument and related
format and timing of the derivatives. Teh same applies for publication and communication by Competent
communications and the Authorities of such action, and for communications to ESMA and other
publication of the suspension competent authorities of their decisions on to follow a suspension, a removal or a
and removal of financial lifting of a suspension.
instruments pursuant to Directive
2014/65/EU of the European
Parliament and of the Council on
markets in financial instruments
(Text with EEA relevance. )
EU36 Regulation (EU) No COMMISSION DELEGATED Securities regulations - Central securities depositories (CSDs) Central securities required 30 March 2017 http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal- no
909/2014 of the European REGULATION (EU) 2017/392 An application for authoritisation by an applicant CSD shall include the LEI of the depositories content/EN/TXT/?uri=uriserv:OJ.L_.2017.065.01.
Parliament and of the of 11 November 2016 applicant CSD. 0048.01.ENG
Council of 23 July 2014 on supplementing Regulation (EU)
improving securities No 909/2014 of the European
settlement in the European Parliament and of the Council
Union and on central with regard to regulatory
securities depositories technical standards on
authorisation, supervisory and
operational requirements for
central securities depositories
(Text with EEA relevance)
EU37 Regulation (EU) No Draft Implementing Technical Financial market regulation - cooperation between authorities on market any person requested draft https://www.esma.europa.eu/sites/default/files/lib no
596/2014 (MAR) Standards on forms and abuse connected with the rary/final_report_on_its_cooperation_mar.pdf
procedures for cooperation The form for a request for assistance requires to include the LEI, if applicable, to transaction or order
under Article 24 and 25 of describe the identity of any person connected with the transaction or order
Regulation (EU) No 596/2014 on
market abuse
EU38 Article 35 of EIOPA's EIOPA's initiative on pensions Reporting requirements, Supervision Institutions for Requested 140,000- Q3 2019 https://eiopa.europa.eu/Pages/News/EIOPA-is- No
Founding Regulation (EU) data: Institutions for occupational retirement provision (IORP). occupational 250,000 significantly-enhancing-European-pensions-
No 1094/2010; provisions of Decision of the Board of retirement provision statistics.aspx
Directive (EU) 2016/23412 Supervisors on EIOPA's regular The reporting requirements shall apply to: (IORP) https://eiopa.europa.eu/Publications/Protocols/D
(IORP Directive). information requests towards (i) all NCAs being responsible for the supervision of arrangements or activities ecision%20on%20Consultation%20Paper_EIOP
NCAs regarding provision of subject to Directive (EU) 2016/2341, which are Members of the Board of A-CP-17-005.pdf
occupational pensions Supervisors of EIOPA, and
information (ii) the EEA EFTA Members of the Board of Supervisors of EIOPA to the extent
[EIOPA-BoS/18-114] to which Directive (EU) 2016/2341 is binding on them.

HK01 section 63(2) of the Interim reporting requirements Derivative transaction reporting: collecting, keeping and maintaining details of Requested if 05.08.2013; http://www.hkma.gov.hk/media/eng/doc/key- Yes HKMA stated to LEI ROC that Reporting firms are
Banking Ordinance for OTC derivative transactions certain OTC derivatives transactions by banks (interest rate swap and non- the entity has amendments made in information/guidelines-and- required to provide the HKTR any updates or
deliverable forward). The interim regime is expected to be replaced by a new one September 2014 to the circular/2013/20130628e2.pdf changes of their own LEIs as well as to verify the
regime in 2015. HKTR reference status of the LEI(s) of their counterparties
manual to remove the regularly to ensure the LEI submitted to the trade
flexibility of reporting repository are up-to-dated. The HKTR performs
identify codes other regular check in the trade repository system to
than LEI for transacting
verify the status of the LEIs of the reporting firms.
parties that are TR
members

IN01 Section 45(W) of the RBI Reserve Bank of India OTC derivatives Participants in OTC Required Several stages https://rbidocs.rbi.org.in/rdocs/notification/PDFs/ Yes "Lapsed LEIs will not be deemed valid for Trade
Act, 1934 Notification RBI/2016-17/314 LEI will be implemented for all participants in the Over-the-Counter (OTC) derivative markets depending on the NOTI3143399AEE12E684FCF9FEEA7E03E0E9 Repository (TR) reporting".
FMRD.FMID markets for Rupee Interest Rate derivatives, foreign currency derivatives and market participants 064.PDF#.pdf
No.14/11.01.007/2016-17 credit derivatives in India, in a phased manner between August 2017
Introduction of Legal Entity and March 2018
Identifier for OTC derivatives
markets
IN02 Reserve Bank of India Bank supervision - large exposures: RBI will require banks to make it Corporate borrowers Required To be determined in https://www.rbi.org.in/Scripts/BS_PressReleaseD unknown
Instruction mandatory for corporate borrowers having aggregate fund-based and non-fund instructions to be isplay.aspx?prid=41855
based exposure of ₹ 5 crore and above from any bank to obtain LEI registration published by end-
and capture the same in the Central Repository of Information on Large Credits October 2017
(CRILC). The objective is to facilitate assessment of aggregate borrowing by
corporate groups, and monitoring of the financial profile of an entity/group.
Requireme
Groups being number of Implementation by Wording and source of requirement to
Reg ID Master/Base Regulation Local Reg ID Action Summary Description LEI is: Link to source nt to keep
involved LEIs (Description): keep the LEI current
LEI current

JP01 NIL Financial Instruments and Derivative transaction reporting: : With regard to trade reporting requirements Parties involved in Requested Over 500 Financial Instruments and Exchange Act Unknown
Exchange Act (FIEA) for OTC derivatives, when relevant counterparty holds LEI, it is requested to OTC derivative counterpart http://www.japaneselawtranslation.go.jp/law/detai
report such LEI under the Financial Instruments and Exchange Act and the transactions ies l/?id=2355&vm=04&re=01&new=1
Cabinet Office Ordinance on the Regulation of OTC Derivatives. Cabinet Office Ordinance on the Regulation of
OTC Derivatives, etc.
http://www.japaneselawtranslation.go.jp/law/detai
l/?id=2450&vm=04&re=01&new=1

LU01 Circular CSSF 15/627 of 3 Financial market regulation Luxembourg Requested some CIRCULAR CSSF 15/627 of 3 December 2015 No
December 2015 The LEI of all Luxembourg domiciled undertakings for collective investment domiciled 16,700 http://www.cssf.lu/fileadmin/files/Reporting_legal/
subject to the law of 17 December 2010 (“UCI law”), specialised investment undertakings for funds and SOC_Banques_OPC/Guidelines_U1_1_reportin
funds (SIFs) subject to the law of 13 February 2007 (“SIF law”) and investment collective investments sub-funds, g.pdf
companies in risk capital (“SICARs”) subject to the law of 15 June 2004 (“SICAR not all of
law”) should be included the U 1.1 reporting, field 2040, if these UCIs have been which may
allocated an LEI. have an
LEI
MX01 NIL Banco de Mexico Circular Financial institutions and their counterparts According to deadlines to be set Credit institutions, Required implementation http://www.banxico.org.mx/sistema- Yes Circular 14/2015 as modified in 2017 states that:
14/2015, as modified by Circular by Banco de Mexico. For derivatives, deadlines set in MX02 trusts, brokerage deadlines to be set financiero/informacion-general/codigo-lei- "Each Financial Entity, when concluding any of the
24/2017 of 27 December 2017 houses, investment referencia-banco-m001.html Transactions, must have a current LEI Code issued
funds and other in its name, as well as collect from the
financial institutions corresponding Counterpart the LEI Code issued in
and their counterparts its name and verify that the latter is in force at
the time of conclusion of the referred
Operation." (unofficial translation)

MX02 NIL Banco de Mexico Circular Derivative transactions: Requires that the financial entities (i.e. credit Participants to Required (i) 1 June 2018 for http://www.banxico.org.mx/disposiciones/normati Yes LEIs "must be in force at the time of the
25/2017 of 27 December 2017 institutions, brokerage houses) and other paticipants of the derivatives market derivative markets financial entities va/circular-4-2012/%7B6EE9E8EF-F839-1A10- respective Derivative Transactions"
have a current LEI code in order to enter into derivatives transactions investment funds, 87D6-9B0C2EC4A008%7D.pdf
regulated multiple-
purpose financial
institutions and general
deposit warehouses
("almacénes generales
de depósito")
(ii) 1 August 2018 for
financial entities that
are counterparties of
entities in (i) (i.e. (i)
plus insurance
companies, investment
fund operators,
investment companies
specialized in
retirement funds, non-
regulated multiple
purpose financial
companies, credit
unions, development
agencies and foreign
financial entities )
iii) 3 September 2018
for other counterparties
that are trusts or
national legal entities,
when the sum of the
Requireme
Groups being number of Implementation by Wording and source of requirement to
Reg ID Master/Base Regulation Local Reg ID Action Summary Description LEI is: Link to source nt to keep
involved LEIs (Description): keep the LEI current
LEI current

RU01 Federal Law No 86-FZ dated Bank of Russia Ordinance No. 4104- OTC derivatives and repo: All OTC derivatives and repo operations must be reported to Credit organizations, Required 1000-2000 After July 1, 2015 the http://www.cbr.ru/analytics/?PrtID=na_vr&docid=132No
10.07.2002 On the Central Bank U, Dated 16 August 2016, On the trade repository. Trade repository will decline to register the operation if the reporting broker-dealers, asset register of OTC
of the Russian Federation (Bank types of agreements concluded not does not contain the LEI of the reporting party. managers, depositories, transactions must contain
of Russia) on organised platforms, the book runners, private LEIs of counterparties.
Federal Law No 39-FZ dated information on which must be (replaces Bank of Russia Ordinance No. 3253-U, Dated 30 April 2014, On the Procedure pension funds, After July 1, 2015 new
22.04.1996 On Securities reported to repository, persons, for Maintaining the Register of Agreements Concluded on Terms of a Master Agreement investment funds, trade entries to the register
Market that must report such information, (Single Agreement), Timeframes for Providing Information Necessary for Maintaining organisers, clearing were rejected by the
process, composition, form and the Said Register and Information therefrom, and Submitting the Register of organisations, trade repository if they
terms of reporting to repository, Agreements Concluded on Terms of a Master Agreement (Single Agreement) to the insurance companies do not contain LEIs of
additional requirements to the Central Bank of the Russian Federation (Bank of Russia)) that engage in OTC parties.
process of maintaining the register derivatives trading.
of agreements by the repository,
process and terms of reporting by
the repository and also process,
composition, form and terms of
reporting by the repository to the
Bank of Russia
RU02 Federal Law No 39-FZ dated Federal Law No 39-FZ dated Securities regulation The concerned entities Required 500-700 01.08.2014 http://pravo.gov.ru/proxy/ips/?docbody=&nd=102040No
22.04.1996 On Securities Market 22.04.1996 On Securities Market The list of securities owners must contain international identification code of entities are nominee holders of
that perform the record keeping of securities ownership (nominee holders). securities, depositories,
including foreign
entities.
SG01 Securities and Futures (Reporting of Derivative transaction reporting: identification of the entities described in the next reporting entities, Required 31.10.2013 http://www.mas.gov.sg/~/media/MAS/Regulations%
Derivatives Contracts) Regulations column. counterparties, clearing 20and%20Financial%20Stability/Regulations%20Guid
2013 entity of interest rate ance%20and%20Licensing/Securities%20Futures%20
derivatives contract or and%20Fund%20Management/Regulations%20Guida
credit derivatives nce%20and%20Licensing/Regulations/Reporting%20
contract traded in Regs.pdf
Singapore or booked in
Singapore
UK01 Bank of England Act 1998 Sterling Money Market Daily Monetary policy, statistics: The LEI is requested for the submitting organisation for Counterparties and Generally http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/statistics/Documen No
Reporting sterling money market reporting. LEI is also requested for the reporting agent and also reporting agents to required, but ts/reporters/defs/instructions_smm.pdf
(SMMD) counterparty identification. Counterparty identification coverage is determined by Sterling Money Market requested where
MiFIDII. Also includes provisions for branch identifcation. Transactions available for non-
Reporting institutions will be required to provide the LEI where available until the financial
implementation of MiFID II. counterparties
until 3 January
2018
UK02 NIL Loan level data collection for buy to Monetary policy, bank supervision, statistics (lending): The LEI is requested for the submitting firm, Requested as Q3 2017 for phase 1 data model: No
let lending reporting entity. LEI is requested where available for the borrower. intermediary default preferred http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/statistics/Documen
option. ts/reporters/defs/BTLdatamod.pdf
Technical documentation:
http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/statistics/Documen
ts/reporters/defs/BTLtechdoc.pdf
US01 Dodd–Frank Wall Street Securities and Exchange Securities regulation - Asset management: Rules Implementing Amendments Each investment Requested 1,351 Mar.12 “Rules Implementing Amendments to the Investment No
Reform and Consumer Commission 17 CFR Parts 275 to the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 adviser that is Advisers Act of 1940; Final Rule,” 76 FR 42950, July
Protection Act and 279 Rules required to file Form 19, 2011. https://www.sec.gov/rules/final/2011/ia-
ADV. 3221.pdf

US02 17 CFR Part 4 and 17 CFR Parts 275 Financial market regulation: Requested • 4,092 Data field as of December 17 CFR Part 4 and 17 CFR Parts 275 and 279, No
and 279, “Reporting by Investment Reporting by investment advisers (registered or required to register with the SEC) to private 2012, reported beginning “Reporting by Investment Advisers to Private
Advisers to Private Funds and private funds with private fund regulatory assets under management of at least $150 funds; and March 2013 Funds and Certain Commodity Pool Operators
Certain Commodity Pool Operators million. Reporting entities include "large hedge fund advisers" (those with $1.5 billion in • 394 and Commodity Trading Advisors on Form PF;
and Commodity Trading Advisors AUM attributable to hedge funds) "large liquidity fund advisers" (those with at least $1 parallel Joint Final Rules,” 76 Fed. Reg. 71128,
on Form PF; Joint Final Rules,” billion in combined AUM attributable to liquidity funds and registered money market funds. November 16, 2011.
funds), and "large private equity advisers" (those with at least $2 billion in AUM https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2011-11-
attributable to private equity funds). Reporting also is required by certain commodity 16/pdf/2011-28549.pdf
Form PF (Paper Version).
pool operators and commodity trading advisors. (Form PF)
https://www.sec.gov/rules/final/2011/ia-3308-
formpf.pdf
Requireme
Groups being number of Implementation by Wording and source of requirement to
Reg ID Master/Base Regulation Local Reg ID Action Summary Description LEI is: Link to source nt to keep
involved LEIs (Description): keep the LEI current
LEI current

US03 17 CFR Part 45, “Swap Data Derivative transaction reporting: identification of each counterparty to any swap counterparty to any Required 40000 31 Dec .2012 (applies 17 CFR Part 45, “Swap Data Recordkeeping and
Recordkeeping and Reporting subject to the jurisdiction of the CFTC in all recordkeeping and reporting swap subject to the also to non-expired swaps Reporting Requirements; Final Rule,” 77 Fed.
Requirements; Final Rule,” jurisdiction of the CFTC entered into before that Reg. 2136, January 13, 2012.
date) https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2012-01-
13/pdf/2011-33199.pdf
17 CFR Part 46, “Swap Data Recordkeeping and
Reporting Requirements: Pre-Enactment and
Transition Swaps; Final Rule,” 77 Fed. Reg.
35200, June 12, 2012.
http://www.cftc.gov/idc/groups/public/@lrfederalr
egister/documents/file/2012-12531a.pdf

US04 COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING Derivative transaction reporting: Identification of filing counterparty in the annual filing Requested Same as 01.Mar.14 “Commodity Options; Final Rule and Interim
COMMISSION of physically delivered commodity options exempted from the reporting above (Form US03 Final Rule,” 77 Fed. Reg. 25320, April 27, 2012.
17 CFR Parts 3, 32, and 33 TO). http://www.cftc.gov/idc/groups/public/@lrfederalr
egister/documents/file/2012-9888a.pdf
“Agency Information Collection Activities:
Proposed Collection, Comment Request: Form
TO, Annual Notice Filing for Counterparties to
Unreported Trade Options; Notice,” 77 Fed. Reg.
74647, December 17, 2012.
https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2012-12-
17/pdf/2012-30227.pdf; Form TO:
https://www.cftc.gov/sites/default/files/idc/groups/
public/@newsroom/documents/file/cftcformto.pdf
Relief from the Reporting Requirements of §
32.3(b)(1) of the Commission’s Regulations, and
Certain Recordkeeping Requirements of §
32.3(b), for End Users Eligible for the Trade
Option Exemption CFTC Staff No Action Letter
US05 17 CFR Part 242. Financial market regulation: Consolidated tracking system or consolidated Participants to capital Customer if the Various compliance 17 CFR Part 242, “Consolidated Audit Trail; Final
613 (Regulation NMS, audit trail system to capture customer and order event information for orders in markets Industry dates ranging from one Rule,” 77 Fed. Reg. 45722, August 1, 2012.
Consolidated Audit Trail) national market system securities Member has or to three years after https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2012-08-
acquires the publication in the 01/pdf/2012-17918.pdf;
LEI for its Federal Register https://www.catnmsplan.com/. Order Approving the
Customer. National Market System Plan Governing the
Industry Consolidated Audit Trail, Release No. 34-79318
Members:
(November 15, 2016) [Release No. 34-79318].
Required to
https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2016-11-
submit the LEI
23/pdf/2016-27919.pdf
of the Industry
Member if such
LEI has been
obtained.
US06 National Association of Insurance supervision: 31.Mar.13 2013 NAIC Annual Statement and 2014 Quarterly No
Insurance Commissioners Identification of mortgagers, counterparties, depositories, issuers of stock and Statement Filing Guidance for the Legal Entity
(NAIC) 2013 NAIC Annual bonds in which the insurance company is investing, for reporting to the Identifier (LEI) Electronic Only Column in the
Statement and 2014 Quarterly supervisor. Investment Schedules,” NAIC Blanks (E) Working
Statement Filing Guidance for Group, 2012-30BWG, August 11, 2012.
the Legal Entity Identifier (LEI) http://www.naic.org/documents/2012-
Electronic Only Column in the 30BWG_Modified.pdf
Investment Schedules
FAQ:
http://www.naic.org/documents/education home le
US07 Dodd–Frank Wall Street 17 CFR Parts 15, 17, 18 and 20 Derivative transaction reporting: Trader identification/market participant data Parties involved in Requested 36000 2 phases: 01.10.2015 1 17 CFR Parts 15, 17, 18 and 20, “Ownership and
Reform and Consumer (The final rules on Ownership for the reporting of certain trading accounts active in designated contract markets derivative (may Feb. 2016 Control Reports, Forms 102/102S, 40/40S, and
Protection Act and Control Reports and Forms or swap execution facilities. Form 102 requires the reporting party to provide the transactions overlap (entered into force on 71; Final Rule,” 78 Fed. Reg. 69178, November
102/102S, 40/40S, and 71) LEI (if any) of the reporting party and of various other parties reportable on the CFR part 1.10 2014) 18, 2013. Link to Source:
form, such as account owners, controllers, and originators. 45) https://www.cftc.gov/sites/default/files/idc/groups/
public/@lrfederalregister/documents/file/2013-
Requireme
Groups being number of Implementation by Wording and source of requirement to
Reg ID Master/Base Regulation Local Reg ID Action Summary Description LEI is: Link to source nt to keep
involved LEIs (Description): keep the LEI current
LEI current

US08 Municipal Securities Rulemaking Financial market regulation: registration of all MSRB-regulated entities Optional/other 1,765 10.Aug.14 Exchange Act Release No. 34–71616; File No.
Board (MSRB) Rule A12 (brokers, dealers, municipal securities dealers and municipal advisors) identifiers MSRB SR-MSRB-2013-09 (February 26, 2014).
(Form A 12) allowed even if registrants https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro/msrb/2014/34-
entity has an (120 71616.pdf; http://www.msrb.org/Rules-and-
LEI provided Interpretations/SEC-Filings/~/media/Files/SEC-
LEI) Filings/2013/MSRB-2013-09-Federal-Register-
Approval.ashx;
http://www.msrb.org/~/media/Files/Regulatory-
Notices/Announcements/2014-05.ashx?n=1
Guidance on the MSRB Municipal Advisor
Registration Process, MSRB Regulatory Notice
2014-10, May 12, 2014.
http://www.msrb.org/~/media/Files/Regulatory-
Notices/Announcements/2014-10.ashx?n=1
MSRB Registration Manual for Dealers and
Municipal Advisors, July 2014.
http://www.msrb.org/msrb1/pdfs/MSRB-
Registration-Manual.pdf.
LEI listed on checklist:
http://www.msrb.org/msrb1/pdfs/MSRB-
Registration-Checklist-Form-A-12.pdf

US09 Dodd–Frank Wall Street 17 CFR Parts 230, 239, 270, Financial market regulation Identification of the reporter and of securities held Reporter and of Requested 125 16 April 2016 17 CFR Parts 230, 239, 270, 274 and 279,
Reform and Consumer 274 and 279 (FORM N-MFP) by the reporter or subject to repo, in the monthly reporting by Money Market securities held by the reporting “Money Market Fund Reform; Amendments to
Protection Act Funds (MMF) (Form N-MFP) reporter or subject to entities, as Form PF; Final Rule,” 79 Fed. Reg. 47736,
report of August 14, 2014. Link to Source.
30.09.2017
.
US10 Regulation C, modified by 12 CFR Part 1003 (Banks and Financial market regulation Reporting of the LEI and parent LEI by the home mortgage Required to be 6700 to Regulation C was https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2015/ Yes
Dodd–Frank Wall Street banking- BUREAU OF Financial Institution, and universal loan identifier that includes the LEI of the lenders that report collected in 10000 published on October 10/28/2015-26607/home-mortgage-disclosure-
Reform and Consumer CONSUMER FINANCIAL home mortgage lender, generally HDMA 2018 and 28, 2015, with technical regulation-c
Protection Act PROTECTION:Home Mortgage reported to corrections on
Disclosure) regulators September 13, 2017,
beginning 1 and implementation
US11 Dodd–Frank Wall Street 17 CFR Parts 232, 240, 249, Credit rating agencies: The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) There are 10 Paragraph (b) Effective date: https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2014-09- No
Reform and Consumer and 249b, “Nationally adopted amendments to existing rules and new rules that apply to credit rating NRSROs registered of Rule 17g-7 15.06.2015 15/pdf/2014-20890.pdf
Protection Act Recognized Statistical Rating agencies registered with the SEC as nationally recognized statistical rating with the Commission. requires an
Organizations; Final Rule,” 79 organizations (“NRSROs”). Paragraph (b) of § 240.17g-7 generally requires an NRSRO to
Fed. Reg. 55078, September 15, NRSRO to disclose credit rating histories for certain of its credit ratings. The disclose, with
2014 information that must be disclosed about the credit rating includes the LEI of an respect to
obligor rated by the NRSRO or of an issuer whose securities or money market credit rating
instruments are rated by the NRSRO, if the LEI is available. If it is not available, histories for
then the NRSRO must disclose the Central Index Key (CIK) number of the certain of its
obligor or issuer, if available. ratings, the LEI
of an obligor
rated by the
NRSRO or of
an issuer
whose
securities or
money market
instruments are
rated by the
NRSRO, if the
LEI is available.
If it is not
available, then
the NRSRO
must disclose
the CIK number
of the obligor or
issuer (as
applicable), if
available.
Requireme
Groups being number of Implementation by Wording and source of requirement to
Reg ID Master/Base Regulation Local Reg ID Action Summary Description LEI is: Link to source nt to keep
involved LEIs (Description): keep the LEI current
LEI current

US12 Dodd–Frank Wall Street 12 CFR Part 43, 12 CFR Part Financial market regulation: securitized assets Identification of the obligor of The obligor of loans Requested Unknown 24 Dec 2016 12 CFR Part 43, 12 CFR Part 244, 12 CFR Part No
Reform and Consumer 244, 12 CFR Part 373, 12 CFR loans or asset held or to be held by an open market collateralized loan obligation or asset held or to be 373, 12 CFR Part 1234, 12 CFR Part 246 and 24
Protection Act Part 1234, 12 CFR Part 246 and (CLO), in the information provided to potential investors held by an open Part 267, “Credit Risk Retention; Final Rule,” 79
24 Part 267 market collateralized Fed. Reg. 77602, December 24, 2014. Link to
loan obligation (CLO) Source.

US13 12 CFR Part 371 - Recordkeeping 12 CFR Part 371 Deposit insurance and resolution: require insured depository institutions (IDIs) that are Certain insured Required for TBD 01.10.2017 https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2017-07- yes "In order for an LEI to be
Requirements for Qualified subject to Part 371 that have total assets of $50 billion or more and IDIs that are depository institutions
records entities 31/pdf/2017-15488.pdf properly maintained, it must be kept
Financial Contracts (QFC) affiliates of financial companies that are subject to the U.S. Treasury QFC recordkeeping (IDIs), certain IDI
with total assets current and up to date according to the
rule to use an LEI to identify themselves. If those entities do not already have an LEI, subsidiaries, QFC of $50 billion or standards established by the Global LEI
they must obtain one for recordkeeping purposes. counterparties, and more and IDIs Foundation."
immediate and ultimate that are affiliates
Smaller IDIs that are subject to Part 371 would be required to use an LEI only if they parents (some required of financial
already have an LEI. All IDIs subject to Part 371 would be required to identify all QFC to report their LEI and
companies
counterparties that have LEIs by their LEI, if those counterparties already have an LEI. others requested if one
subject to the
These smaller IDIs and counterparties will not be required to get an LEI if they do not is available) U.S. Treasury
already have one. QFC rule;
requested for IDI
records entities
with total assets
US14 Dodd–Frank Wall Street 17 CFR Part 242.900 Derivative transaction reporting: Identification of persons involved in security- Persons involved in Required for $ At least TBD (reporting to begin 17 CFR Part 242, “Regulation SBSR—Reporting Yes
Reform and Consumer (Regulation SBSR) based swaps that are reported to security-based swap data repositories security-based swaps participants in 3500 on the later of two and Dissemination of Security-Based Swap
Protection Act (registered SDRs) that are reported to registered conditions precedent) Information; Final rule,” 80 Fed. Reg. 14564,
security-based swap SDRs March 19, 2015. Link to Source.
data repositories

US15 Federal Reserve’s General Federal Register, Vol. 80, No. Financial market regulation and bank supervision: identification of all Financial institutions Requested 3,981 31 December 2015 http://www.federalreserve.gov/reportforms/forms/F Yes
Regulatory Reporting 127 /38202 (July 2, 2015) banking and non-banking reportable entities in forms FR Y-6, FR Y-7 and F Y Sept. 2015 (Final R_Y-620151231_i.pdf
Authority 10.[3] Top tier entities are already required to report their LEI since 2014. approval 2 July 2015) http://www.federalreserve.gov/reportforms/forms/F
R_Y-720151231_i.pdf
Annual Report of Holding Companies; Annual Report of Foreign Banking http://www.federalreserve.gov/reportforms/forms/F
Organizations; Report of Changes in Organizational Structure for Bank holding R_Y-1020161014_i.pdf
companies (BHCs) and savings and loan holding companies (SLHCs)
(collectively, holding companies (HCs)), securities holding companies, foreign
banking organizations (FBOs), state member banks unaffiliated with a BHC,
Edge Act and agreement corporations, and nationally chartered banks that are
not controlled by a BHC (with regard to their foreign investments only).
US16 Dodd–Frank Wall Street 17 CFR Parts 200, Financial market regulation: registered investment companies SEC adopted Funds and their Required (for Approximat Form N-PORT has a “Investment Company Reporting Modernization;
Reform and Consumer 210, 230, new rules and forms, and amendments to existing rules and forms, to modernize registered investment the registrant ely 3100 compliance date of Adopted Rule,” 81 Fed. Reg. 81870.
Protection Act 232, 239, 240, 249, 270, 274 the reporting and disclosure of information by registered investment companies. company, and the funds), registrants June 1, 2018 for larger https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2016-11-
Newly adopted reporting forms require or request LEIs. The SEC adoption will counterparties, and Requested (including entities (fund 18/pdf/2016-25349.pdf
require each fund to report the LEI of: (i) the registered investment company, and issuers of (for issuers, approximat complexes with assets
(ii) each series (i.e., the fund). The adopted forms also request the LEI, if any and investments held by counterparties, ely 17000 under management of
as applicable, of various counterparties, issuers of investments held by the the funds, service and service series $1 billion+) and a
funds, and various service providers of the fund. providers of the fund providers) thereof) compliance date of
plus June 1, 2019 for
potentially smaller entities. Form
a N-CEN has a
substantial compliance date of
number of June 1, 2018.
LEIs for
issuers,
counterpart
ies, and
service
providers
US17 NIL 18 CFR Part 35 (FEDERAL Energy Market Regulation: The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Electric market Required in Draft published on 29 “Collection of Connected Entity Data From
ENERGY REGULATORY (FERC) proposes to have electric market participants report their “Connected participants some parts and September 2015 Regional Transmission Organizations and
COMMISSION, DEPARTMENT Entities” using LEIs. According to the proposed rule, FERC proposes “that Requested “if Independent System Operators,” 80 Fed. Reg.,
OF ENERGY) regional transmission organizations (RTOs) and independent system operators the entity has 58382, September 29, 2015. Link to Source.
(ISOs) require their market participants to obtain LEIs, and to report their own LEI one” in other
and the LEI of each of their Connected Entities, if the Connected Entity has parts
obtained one.”
Requireme
Groups being number of Implementation by Wording and source of requirement to
Reg ID Master/Base Regulation Local Reg ID Action Summary Description LEI is: Link to source nt to keep
involved LEIs (Description): keep the LEI current
LEI current

US18 Dodd–Frank Wall Street 17 CFR Part 45 (Amendments toDerivatives reporting: The amendments introduced to the rule already described in this The LEI of the SDR to 2017 http://www.cftc.gov/idc/groups/public/@newsroom/
Reform and Consumer Swap Data Recordkeeping and table under US03 relate to cleared swaps. The LEI of the Swap Data Repository (SDR) to which the DCO documents/file/federalregister061416.pdf
Protection Act Reporting Requirements for which the Derivatives Clearing Organization (DCO) reported clearing swaps replacing the reported clearing swaps
Cleared Swaps) original swap and the original swap SDR, clearing swap SDR, the SDR to which the replacing the original
clearing swaps are reported swap and the original
US19 Dodd–Frank Wall Street Securities and Exchange Securities regulation - Asset management: Form ADV and Investment Custodians for Requested 01.Oct.17 “Form ADV and Investment Advisers Act Rules;
Reform and Consumer Commission 17 CFR Parts 275 Advisers Act Rules; Final Rule separately managed Final Rule,” 81 FR 60418, September 1, 2016.
Protection Act and 279 Rules accounts and private https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2016/
funds that are not 09/01/2016-20832/form-adv-and-investment-
broker-dealers or are advisers-act-rules and
broker dealers but do https://www.sec.gov/rules/final/2016/ia-4509.pdf
not have an SEC
registation number.
Each investment
adviser that is
deemed a "relying
adviser" on a filing
adviser's Form ADV.
US20 FFIEC Form 031/041/051 - This report is required by law: 12 Banking supervision: An institution must provide its LEI on the cover page of the Call All state member Requested if an 6,142 30.09.2016 https://www.ffiec.gov/forms031.htm Yes
Quarterly Consolidated Reports U.S.C. § 324 (State member banks); Report only if the institution already has an LEI. The LEI must be a currently issued, banks, state entity already potential Page 16 of the Call Report Instructions:
of Condition and Income 12 U.S.C. §1817 (State nonmember maintained, and valid LEI, not an LEI that has lapsed. An institution that does not have nonmember banks, has an LEI LEIs based https://www.fdic.gov/regulations/resources/call/crin
banks); 12 U.S.C. §161 (National an LEI is not required to obtain one for purposes of reporting it on the Call Report. national banks and on the st/2016-09/916Inserts093016.pdf
banks); and 12 U.S.C. §1464 savings associations information
(Savings associations). in the
Federal
Register
Notice
US21 FFIEC Form 101 - Quarterly This report is required by law: 12 Banking supervision: An institution must provide its LEI on the cover page of the FFIEC [Banking organisations Requested if an 50 potential 30.09.2016 https://www.ffiec.gov/forms101.htm
Regulatory Capital Reporting for U.S.C. § 161 (National banks), 12 101 report only if the institution already has an LEI. The LEI must be a currently issued, subject to advanced entity already LEIs based Page 5 of the FFIEC 101 Instructions:
Institutions Subject to the U.S.C. § 324 and 12 U.S.C. § 1844(c) maintained, and valid LEI, not an LEI that has lapsed. An institution that does not have capital adequacy has an LEI on the https://www.ffiec.gov/pdf/FFIEC_forms/FFIEC101_20
Advanced Capital Adequacy (State member banks and BHCs, an LEI is not required to obtain one for the purposes of reporting it on the FFIEC 101 framework] The information 1609_i.pdf
Framework respectively), 12 U.S.C. § 1817 report. following entities in the
(Insured state nonmember meeting criteria listed Federal
commercial and savings banks), 12 in the FFIEC Form 101 Register
U.S.C. § 1467a(b)(2) (Savings and instructions: national Notice
loan holding companies), 12 U.S.C. banks, State member
§ 1844(c), 12 U.S.C. §§ 3106 and banks, BHCs, Insured
3108(a), 12 U.S.C. § 5365, 12 CFR state nonmember
252.153(b)(2) (Intermediate commercial and savings
holding companies), and 12 U.S.C. § banks, Savings and loan
1464 (Savings associations). holding companies,
Intermediate holding
companies, and Savings
associations

US22 FFIEC Form 102 - Market Risk This report is required by law: 12 Banking supervision: A market risk institution must provide its LEI on the cover page of [Banking organisations Requested if an 44 potential 31.12.2016 https://www.ffiec.gov/forms102.htm
Regulatory Report for U.S.C. § 161 (National banks), 12 the FFIEC 102 report only if the market risk institution already has obtained an LEI. The subject to the market entity already LEIs based Page 5 of the FFIEC 102 Instructions:
Institutions Subject to the U.S.C. § 324 and 12 U.S.C. § 1844(c) LEI must be a currently issued, maintained, and valid LEI, not an LEI that has lapsed. A risk capital rule)The has an LEI on the https://www.ffiec.gov/pdf/FFIEC_forms/FFIEC102_20
Market Risk Capital Rule (State member banks and Bank market risk institution that does not have an LEI is not required to obtain one for following entities information 161028_i_draft.pdf
holding companies, respectively), purposes of reporting it on the FFIEC 102 report. meeting criteria listed in the
12 U.S.C. § 1467a(b) (Savings and in the FFIEC Form 102 Federal
loan holding companies), 12 U.S.C. instructions: National Register
§ 1817 (Insured state nonmember banks, State member Notice
commercial and savings banks), and banks, Bank holding
12 U.S.C. § 1464 (Savings companies, savings and
associations). loan holding
companies Insured
Requireme
Groups being number of Implementation by Wording and source of requirement to
Reg ID Master/Base Regulation Local Reg ID Action Summary Description LEI is: Link to source nt to keep
involved LEIs (Description): keep the LEI current
LEI current

US23 FFIEC Form 009/009A - Country This report is required to be filed Banking supervision: A reporting institution must provide its LEI on the cover page of The following entities Requested if an 129 30.09.2016 https://www.ffiec.gov/forms009_009a.htm
Exposure Report/Country pursuant to authority contained in this report only if it already has an LEI. The LEI must be a currently issued, maintained, meeting criteria listed entity already potential Page 6 of the FFIEC 009/009A Instructions:
Exposure Information Report the following statutes: 12 U.S.C. §§ and valid LEI, not an LEI that has lapsed. If a reporting institution does not have an LEI, it in the FFIEC Form has an LEI LEIs based https://www.ffiec.gov/PDF/FFIEC_forms/FFIEC009_2
161 and 1817 (national banks), 12 is not required to obtain one for purposes of reporting it on this report. 009/009A instructions: on the 01609_i.pdf
U.S.C. § 1464(federal savings National banks, federal information
associations), 12 U.S.C. §§ 248(a), savings associations, in the
1844(c), and 3906 (state member state member banks Federal
banks and bank holding and bank holding Register
companies); 12 U.S.C. §§ companies, savings and Notice
1467a(b)(2) and 5412 (savings and loan holding
loan holding companies); 12 U.S.C. companies,
5365(a) (intermediate holding intermediate holding
companies); and 12 U.S.C. §§ 1817 companies, insured
and 1820 (insured state state nonmember
nonmember commercial and commercial and savings
savings banks and insured state banks and insured state
savings associations) savings associations

US24 FFIEC Form 016 - Annual Dodd- This report is required to be filed Banking supervision: On October 6, 2017, an initial Paperwork Reduction Act Federal The following entities Requested if an 128 31.07.2018 https://www.ffiec.gov/forms016.htm yes The LEI must be a currently issued, maintained,
Frank Act Company-Run Stress pursuant to authority contained in Register notice was published for the proposed new FFIEC 016, Annual Dodd-Frank Act meeting criteria listed entity already potential and valid LEI, not an LEI that has lapsed.
Test Report for Depository the following statutes: 12 CFR part Company-Run Stress Test Report for Depository Institutions and Holding Companies in the FFIEC Form 016 has an LEI LEIs based
Institutions and Holding 46 (OCC); 12 CFR part 252, subpart with $10-$50 Billion in Total Consolidated Assets, which will replace the U.S. banking instructions: State on the
Companies with $10-$50 Billion B (Board); 12 CFR part 325, subpart agencies’ three existing stress test reports for institutions with $10-$50 billion in assets. Member Banks, information
in Total Consolidated Assets C (FDIC). The proposal includes having reporting institutions provide their Legal Entity Identifier National Banks, Federal in the
on the report form, if they already have one. Under the proposal, the new FFIEC 016 Savings Associations, Federal
would first be used for reporting as of December 31, 2017, with the report on the stress State Nonmember Register
test results due July 31, 2018. Banks, State Savings Notice
Associations
(collectively,
“depository
institutions”), Bank
Holding
Companies’ (BHCs), and
Savings and Loan
Holding Companies’
(SLHCs)

US25 Fixing America's Surface Securities and Exchange Securities regulation: Corporate Issuers: FAST Act Modernization and Registered corporate The LEI is Proposing release was FAST Act Modernization and Simplification of
Transportation Act ("FAST Commission 17 CFR Parts Simplification of Regulation S-K: SEC proposed rule amendments to modernize issuers requested only published on October Regulation S-K: Proposed Rule, 82 FR 50988,
Act") 229,230,232, 239,240,249,270, if the registrant 11, 2017. November 2, 2017.
and simplify certain disclosure requirements in Regulation S-K and related rules
274 and 275 and its https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2017-11-
and forms. If adopted, the SEC proposal would require registrants to include in subsidiaries 02/pdf/2017-22374.pdf.
an exhibit to certain filings the LEI, if one has been obtained, of the registrant and already have
each subsidiary listed in the exhibit. one.

US26 COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING Acces to derivatives data by certain domestic and foreign regulators draft https://www.cftc.gov/sites/default/files/idc/groups/p
COMMISSION 17 CFR Part 49 The LEI is envisaged to be used in lists of entities regulated by Appropriate Domestic ublic/@lrfederalregister/documents/file/2017-
Proposed Amendments To Swap Regulators (ADR) and Appropriate Foreign Regulators (AFR), to help Swap Data 01287a.pdf
Data Access Provisions and Certain Repositories determine whether the ADR or AFR can access swap data.
Other Matters

ZA01 section 58 of the Financial Registrar of Securities Services - OTC derivatives TBD https://www.fsb.co.za/NewsLibrary/Press%20Releas
Markets Act (Act 19 of 2012) draft Trade Reporting Obligation Reportable information is expected to include the LEI e%20-
Board Notice %20Trade%20Reporting%20Obligations%20Board%2
0Notice.pdf
Annex 2

Language toolkit for referring to the LEI in laws and regulations to support interested
regulators

In response to requests from agencies seeking assistance as they begin to write or update their
own rules relating to the LEI, the LEI ROC is providing several language implementation
examples below. The language implementation examples reflect how some jurisdictions have
drafted LEI-related rules, and aim to provide specificity, while being sufficiently flexible to
avoid having to revise the rules or regulations in case of ongoing evolutions of the LEI system.
While consistency is desirable, especially on core aspects such as the definitions, the LEI ROC
has prepared this language toolkit for the consideration of LEI ROC members and other
regulators interested in using the LEI.
The LEI ROC recognizes that individual regulators have sovereignty over whether, when, and
how to implement any LEI-related rules in their jurisdictions, and the examples below are not
intended to compel regulators to write their LEI-related rules in any particular manner.
Differences exist in legal systems and regulatory regimes across jurisdictions, as evident
through the multitude of approaches that have been taken to date by regulators in writing their
LEI-related rules. The examples below do not encompass all possible regulatory options and
many alternative ways can be envisaged, and whether and how to use the examples below is at
the discretion of the relevant individual regulators and lawmakers.
1. Definitions
This section focuses on the basic concepts that underpin the GLEIS. A common understanding
of these concepts is paramount.
Global LEI System (GLEIS): international framework for the unique identification of legal
entities, as defined by the Global LEI System High Level Principles and recommendations of
the Financial Stability Board (FSB) contained in the 8 June 2012 FSB report, “A Global Legal
Entity Identifier for Financial Markets,” endorsed by the Leaders of the Group of Twenty (G20)
at Los Cabos, Mexico on 19 June 2012.
Legal Entity Identifier Regulatory Oversight Committee (LEI ROC): the group of public
authorities charged with the oversight of the Global LEI System, whose charter was endorsed
by the Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors of the Group of Twenty on 5 November
2012, or any successor thereof.
Global LEI Foundation (GLEIF): the not-for-profit organization established under Swiss law
by the Financial Stability Board on 26 June 2014 to serve as the central operating unit of the
GLEIS, or any successor thereof, which is overseen by the LEI ROC.
Legal Entity Identifier (LEI): a code for the unique identification of legal entities that (i) was
issued and is maintained by an operator, called local operating unit (LOU), which has a valid
endorsement by the LEI ROC or a valid accreditation by the GLEIF, (ii) meets the technical
requirements of the Global LEI System regarding the structure of the code, the content of the

1
reference data associated with the code, and the issuance and maintenance of the code78; and
(iii) is considered “current” under the rules of the Global LEI System7980.
2. Items to consider when drafting other requirements:
In addition to the definition of the LEI presented above and to make sure only current LEIs are
used in reporting, regulators may wish to consider whether any of the following approaches
merits inclusion in their own rules:
- A requirement for entities to update their reference and relationship data. For instance:
“All subsequent changes and corrections to the reference and relationship data
previously reported shall be reported to the relevant LOU, as soon as technologically
practicable following occurrence of any such change or discovery of the need for a
correction.”
- A requirement for entities to renew their LEI and associated reference and relationship
data. For instance, “An LEI and its reference and relationship data have to be regularly
renewed according to rules of the Global LEI System.”
- A requirement to validate the LEI against the official global LEI database maintained
by the GLEIF or its successor. Guidance may specify that the validation should not only
include format validations (based on the character length and check digit) and the
existence of the LEI in the database (which includes also annulled, duplicate and lapsed
LEIs for historical purposes) but also a verification that the LEI is current (registration
status “issued”, “pending archival” or “pending transfer”).
Regulators considering requiring the use of the LEI may wish to consider the following
approaches:
- A requirement for reporting entities that are eligible81 for LEI to obtain the LEI code.
For example, depending on jurisdictions, credit or financial institutions, pension funds
and insurance companies subject to prudential supervision; investment firms trading in
financial instruments; credit rating agencies; central securities depositories and
settlement internalisers.
- A requirement for entities eligible for LEI that are not directly subject to the reporting
requirements to be identified with LEI, where the legal framework allows this, for
instance based on the mandate to regulate markets. For example the clients; CCPs;

78 The reference to entirety of the technical requirements of the Global LEI System should be preferred to the reference to the
ISO17442:2012 standards, which only covers some, but not all requirements governing the code structure and reference
data, and does not include the further specifications by the LEI ROC and the GLEIF.
79 As stated by the LEI ROC in its progress report of November 2015, “any reference to the LEI should be understood as
restricted to current LEIs, that is those that are ‘issued’, “pending archival” or ‘pending transfer’”. See
http://www.leiroc.org/publications/gls/roc_20170509-1.pdf (last paragraph) for more details.
80 Under the rules of the Global LEI System, the legal entity reference and relationship data associated with an entity currently
must be renewed every year for the LEI to be considered “current.” Although only a small percentage of entities’ LEI
reference and relationship data is updated through the annual renewal process, requiring current LEIs (i) allows the entity
to confirm, and the LOU to verify, the absence of a change and to inform users of this confirmation; (ii) means that the
entity has committed under a contract with an LOU to inform the LOU of any change in the data associated with the LEI;
and (iii) provides funding to the LOU and the GLEIF, to support the free availability of LEIs for users, and the governance
and processes ensuring the quality of LEI data, including data quality checks and responding to challenges from users.
81 While legal entities are eligible to obtain an LEI, including individuals acting in a business capacity, some entities, such as
domestic branches, are not eligible to obtain an LEI.

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intermediaries and counterparties of the reporting entities; entities for which a credit
rating have been issued; issuers of financial instruments; participants in the CSD system
and settlement banks.
- A requirement for reporting entities not to provide a service that would trigger the
obligation to report a transaction entered into on behalf of another entity who is eligible
for an LEI, prior to the LEI being obtained from that entity.
It should be highlighted that the LEI is not restricted to entities from the financial sector. As
illustrated by the LEI ROC Progress Report many entities from outside the financial sector
already have obtained an LEI. Therefore the LEI can support a wide range of uses.
The LEI is a way to reduce duplicative reporting and leverage information that is available from
another source, including from the Global LEI System. Especially where regulators consider
that they cannot require the relevant entities to obtain an LEI, or cannot directly require entities
to report to the Global LEI System data that is optional in the Global LEI System, they may
incentivise further LEI adoption by allowing entities to report the LEI instead of providing the
data that can be found in the Global LEI System, regulators may wish to consider the example
below in their own rules:
“If a reporting party provides an LEI [as defined above] on Form XXXX, then the reporting
party is not required to report any of the information marked in the form [in italics] (e.g.: name
and address), provided such information is part of the reference or relationship data associated
with the relevant LEI in the Global LEI System. Furthermore, in the event the Global LEI
System is modified in the future to accept any of the information marked on the forms [in bold],
then the reporting party will not be required to report any of these fields, provided such
information is part of the reference or relationship data associated with the relevant LEI in the
Global LEI System [and the LEI is considered current under the rules of the Global LEI System
when the LEI is reported].”
The statement “provided such information is part of the reference or relationship data associated
with the relevant LEI in the Global LEI System [and the LEI is considered current under the
rules of the Global LEI System when the LEI is reported]” may be considered by regulators to
be particularly helpful for data that is optional in the Global LEI System (e.g., the associated
entity “fund_family” in CDF 2.1). This may ensure, subject to the analysis of the relevant legal
framework, that any reporting entity that would have failed, for instance, to correctly report or
update the optional data in the Global LEI System would still be subject to enforcement action.
3. Preamble and recitals
The purposes for using the LEI are very diverse as illustrated by the LEI ROC Progress Report.
Regulators may wish to consider whether to highlight any of the following features in the
preamble/recitals of laws and regulations using the LEI:
- The LEI is a global identifier: the LEI is available almost anywhere in the world. Entities
from over 200 jurisdictions have already obtained an LEI. Registration is possible in multiple
languages and the system supports multiple character sets, allowing for instance to record the
legal name of the entity in its original language, with transliteration into Latin characters. LEI
can facilitate coordination between regulators by harmonising the identification of legal
entities, and supporting for instance the aggregation or comparison of data on the same entity
to which several regulators have access.

3
- The LEI uniquely identifies entities: Two fundamental principles of the LEI code are:
 Uniqueness: an LEI is assigned to a unique entity. Once assigned to an entity, and even
if this entity has for instance ceased to exist, a code should never be assigned to another
entity. In case of a merger, the reference data of the LEI of the absorbed entity points to
the LEI of the successor entity.
 Exclusivity: a legal entity that has obtained an LEI cannot obtain another one. Entities
may port the maintenance of their LEI from one operator to another. The LEI remains
unchanged in the process.
- The LEI is a non-proprietary system that assures the availability of LEI data in the public
domain, without limits on use or redistribution. It is financed by fees paid by entities that
register in the system
- The LEI is not locked-in with a particular service provider: LEIs are issued by over 30
different issuers, called LOUs, which compete in the market. A registrant is free to register with
the operator of their choice. New issuers may join the Global LEI System by applying to be
accredited by the GLEIF. LEI issuers compete on price while being subject to the same data
quality requirements, overseen by the GLEIF.
- The Global LEI System has robust processes to support data quality:
 Self-registration: Only an entity eligible to receive an LEI or its authorized
representative may obtain an LEI code. The permission of the registrant to perform an
LEI registration on its behalf by a third party is considered to satisfy the requirements
of self-registration only if the registrant has provided explicit permission for such a
registration to be performed.
 The reference data has to be confirmed or certified by the entity seeking an LEI. Entities
are requested to periodically verify the continued accuracy of their reference data (e.g.,
at least through yearly certification). The Global LEI System publishes when the data
was last updated, and specifically signals LEIs and their reference and relationship data
that have not been recertified by the entity for more than one year.
 LOUs are required to check each entry against reliable sources (public official sources
such as a business registry, private legal documents) prior to publishing the LEI and
associated reference and relationship data. The level of validation is publicly available
(for instance, the reference data clearly signals cases where verification could only take
place against documents provided by the entity itself, for instance in the absence of an
official registry).
 Challenge process: any user can easily challenge the accuracy of the data on the website
of the GLEIF.
 The GLEIF runs a program to monitor data quality, including checks for duplicate LEIs,
other automated checks and the possibility to audit LOUs.
- The financing of the Global LEI System is based on cost recovery, and implementation of
cost-recovery by LOUs is overseen by the GLEIF, a non-for-profit foundation, and ultimately
overseen by the LEI ROC.

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