EFTA01449311.pdf
dataset_10 PDF 129.0 KB • Feb 4, 2026 • 1 pages
30 July 2013
Exchange Rate Perspectives: FX and the Financial Transaction Tax
FX and the Financial Transaction Tax
e In February 2013, the European Commission published a detailed proposal
of a Financial Transaction Tax (FTT) to be implemented based on an
'enhanced cooperation' agreement between 11 participating EU member
states.
a The proposal will tax transactions in securities at 0.1% of notional value
and derivatives at 0.01%. The FTT will be levied on all transactions
involving financial institutions where one of the counterparties is
established in a participating member state and/or where the financial
instrument is issued in a participating member state.
The FTT would have wide ranging implications for the FX industry. While
FX spot transactions will not be taxed, forwards, swaps, NDFs and options
may be taxed. Transactions in these products would be taxed at the rate
for derivatives.
In its current form, the FTT would dramatically increase transaction costs
for FX market participants. This could result in the effective closure of the
non-spot FX market in participating member states.
• The FTT would translate into substantial costs for the real economy. It
would be passed on to end users of FX derivatives, reducing corporate
competitiveness and acting as a tax on extra-EMU exports. The FTT would
also drain liquidity from markets, impair market efficiency and widen bid-
offer spreads.
The design of the FTT may be incompatible with existing global efforts in
financial reform. By discouraging forms of financial intermediation, the FTT
appears to run counter to the goals of US and European legislation, which
are designed to encourage greater clearing and margining of transactions
in order to reduce credit risk.
The Bottom Line
On 22nd January 2013 the European Council gave the go ahead to 11 EU member
states to negotiate a Financial Transaction Tax (FTT).' The European Commission
originally proposed an EU-wide FTT in September 2011. The three stated
objectives of the FIT were to avoid the fragmentation of the internal market for
financial services, enhance the contribution of the financial services sector to the
tax base and discourage financial transactions inconsistent with efficient market
functioning.
After EU finance ministers failed to reach unanimous agreement on the original
proposal, it was decided that progress would be made through a limited group of
Austna. Belgium. Estonia, France Germany. Greece, Italy, Portugal, Slovakia Slovenia. Spain
' A number of Eurozone states. Including France and Italy. have already introduced financial transaction
taxes at a national level. The goal of the European Commission was to hvmonize these efforts and
prevent an uncoordinated mutt-approach system in Eurozone financial markets.
Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. Page 5
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CONFIDENTIAL SDNY_GM_00250845
EFTA01449311
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