Article 61

Amendments to Regulation (EU) No 909/2014


TL;DR This article outlines amendments to Regulation (EU) No 909/2014 and is focused on Digital Operations Resilience for Central Securities Depositories (CSDs). CSDs are required to identify, monitor and manage the risks posed by key participants in the securities settlement systems they operate, as well as service and utility providers. They must also establish, implement and maintain an adequate business continuity policy and disaster recovery plan, including ICT business continuity policy and ICT response and recovery plans, to ensure the preservation of their services and the fulfillment of their obligations in the case of disruptive events. The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) is responsible for developing draft regulatory technical standards to specify the operational risks and methods of testing, addressing and minimizing them.

Article 45 of Regulation (EU) No 909/2014 is amended as follows:

  1. paragraph 1 is replaced by the following:

    ‘1. A CSD shall identify sources of operational risk, both internal and external, and minimise their impact also through the deployment of appropriate ICT tools, processes and policies set up and managed in accordance with Regulation (EU) 2022/2554 of the European Parliament and of the Council (3), as well as through any other relevant appropriate tools, controls and procedures for other types of operational risk, including for all the securities settlement systems it operates.
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    (3) Regulation (EU) 2022/2554 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 14 December 2022 on digital
    operational resilience for the financial sector and amending Regulations (EC) No 1060/2009, (EU) No 648/2012, (EU) No 600/2014, (EU) No 909/2014 and (EU) 2016/1011 (OJ L 333, 27.12.2022, p. 1).’;

  2. paragraph 2 is deleted;

  3. paragraphs 3 and 4 are replaced by the following:

    ‘3.   For services that it provides as well as for each securities settlement system that it operates, a CSD shall establish, implement and maintain an adequate business continuity policy and disaster recovery plan, including ICT business continuity policy and ICT response and recovery plans established in accordance with Regulation (EU) 2022/2554, to ensure the preservation of its services, the timely recovery of operations and the fulfilment of the CSD’s obligations in the case of events that pose a significant risk to disrupting operations.
    4.   The plan referred to in paragraph 3 shall provide for the recovery of all transactions and participants’ positions at the time of disruption to allow the participants of a CSD to continue to operate with certainty and to complete settlement on the scheduled date, including by ensuring that critical IT systems can resume operations from the time of disruption as provided for in Article 12(5) and (7) of Regulation (EU) 2022/2554.’;

  4. paragraph 6 is replaced by the following:

    ‘6. A CSD shall identify, monitor and manage the risks that key participants in the securities settlement systems it operates, as well as service and utility providers, and other CSDs or other market infrastructures might pose to its operations. It shall, upon request, provide competent and relevant authorities with information on any such risk identified. It shall also inform the competent authorityas defined in Article 46 and relevant authorities without delay of any operational incidents, other than in relation to ICT riskany reasonably identifiable circumstance in relation to the use of network and information systems which, if materialised, may compromise the security of the network and information systems, of any technology dependent tool or process, of operations and processes, or of the provision of services by producing adverse effects in the digital or physical environment, resulting from such risks.’;

  5. in paragraph 7, the first subparagraph is replaced by the following:

    ‘7. ESMA shall, in close cooperation with the members of the ESCB, develop draft regulatory technical standards to specify the operational risks referred to in paragraphs 1 and 6, other than ICT riskany reasonably identifiable circumstance in relation to the use of network and information systems which, if materialised, may compromise the security of the network and information systems, of any technology dependent tool or process, of operations and processes, or of the provision of services by producing adverse effects in the digital or physical environment, and the methods to test, to address or to minimise those risks, including the business continuity policies and disaster recovery plans referred to in paragraphs 3 and 4 and the methods of assessment thereof.’.