Randy Priem
Coordinator of the markets and post-trading unit + Finance professor
Financial Services and Markets Authority
Brussels, Belgium
Post-trade regulatory expert (MiFIR, EMIR, CSDR, etc.) and professor in finance.
About me
Randy Priem is a finance professor at UBI Business School (Middlesex University London) and Antwerp Management School, where he teaches financial management, financial law, and FinTech courses. He is also a guest professor at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, where he obtained his PhD. In addition, he is the coordinator of the markets and post-trading unit at the Belgian Financial Services and Markets Authority (FSMA), where he supervises the Belgian trading venues, multilateral trading facilities, and central securities depositories. He is a member of various standing committees and working groups at the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA), such as the markets standing committee, the data standing committee, the European supervisory policy committee, the post-trading working group, the CCP policy committee, and the DLT working group. He further represents the FSMA at the Steering Group of the Committee on Payments and Market Infrastructures (CPMI) – International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) and is a member of the IOSCO CDS task force and the IOSCO benchmarks task force. He is a member of six EMIR colleges of central counterparties, four CCP resolution colleges, and also represents the FSMA at the Target2-Securities cooperative oversight college. He often represents Belgium as a national expert at the European Council when new legislation is drafted and was a member of the Belgian presidency when the European Market Infrastructure Regulation (EMIR) was revised.
My organisation
Speaker sessions (1)
Thursday, 5 September 2024
09:00 - 09:40
All safe? The latest and what’s next in CCP recovery and resolution
- Clearing
- Collateral and liquidity
- Regulation
Setting the cost-splitting rules for rare but potentially disastrous problems at the clearinghouses is a delicate balance. The discussion is age-old, but could real changes lie ahead? What should clearing members and their market-participant clients know?