
MiFID
Markets in Financial Instruments Directive: EU framework governing trading in financial instruments, recommended for legislative alignment with REMIT under SWD(2026)147.
Last refreshed: 4 June 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
What does MiFID-REMIT alignment mean for EU gas and power derivatives desks?
Timeline for MiFID
identified for legislative alignment with REMIT to reduce cross-authority compliance burden
European Energy Markets: GMTF calls EU gas markets 'functioning well'- What is MiFID and does it cover European gas and power trading?
- MiFID (Markets in Financial Instruments Directive) is the EU framework governing financial trading, including derivatives. It covers financial derivatives on gas, power and emissions allowances but not physical wholesale energy trades, which fall under REMIT. The two regimes create parallel reporting obligations for desks running both legs.Source: EVREF:3879
- What did the Gas Market Task Force recommend about MiFID in June 2026?
- The GMTF's SWD(2026)147 (2 June 2026) recommended legislative alignment between MiFID and REMIT to reduce compliance duplication for energy derivatives desks, and called for enhanced algorithmic-trading monitoring. The recommendation has no binding force and requires a Commission proposal to become law.Source: EVREF:3879
- Why do energy traders have to comply with both MiFID and REMIT?
- The two regulations cover different legs of the same trade. REMIT governs physical wholesale gas and power markets; MiFID governs financial derivatives on those underlyings. A desk that hedges a physical gas position with a financial futures contract falls under both regimes simultaneously, creating two separate reporting and surveillance obligations.Source: Background knowledge
- When will MiFID and REMIT be merged or aligned in EU law?
- The GMTF issued an alignment recommendation in June 2026, but legislation requires a Commission proposal followed by Council and Parliament adoption. The earliest practical effect is likely 2027 or later.Source: EVREF:3879
Background
MiFID — the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive — is the EU's principal legislative framework for trading in equities, bonds, derivatives and structured products across the single market. First adopted in 2004 and substantially revised as MiFID II in 2018, it governs pre- and post-trade transparency, best-execution obligations, position limits, and algorithmic-trading controls for investment firms and trading venues operating in EU member states. ESMA, the European Securities and Markets Authority, issues binding technical standards and enforces position-limit regimes under MiFID II.
Energy derivatives — including natural gas futures, power contracts and emissions allowances — sit in a dual-regulatory zone. Physical wholesale trades in gas and electricity are covered by REMIT (the EU Regulation on Wholesale Energy Market Integrity and Transparency, now amended to give ACER direct sanctioning powers). Financial derivatives on those same underlyings are covered by MiFID. This creates divergent reporting standards, different surveillance architectures, and compliance complexity for cross-commodity desks running physical and financial legs simultaneously. The Gas Market Task Force (GMTF) — the joint DG Energy, ACER and ESMA body mandated under the Clean Industrial Deal — identified MiFID-REMIT legislative alignment as a priority recommendation in its staff working document SWD(2026)147, published 2 June 2026, alongside a call for enhanced algorithmic-trading monitoring .
The practical effect of alignment, when legislated, would be a consolidated reporting obligation for energy derivatives that currently require separate filings under each regime. For desks holding cross-commodity positions across MiFID and REMIT reporting boundaries, the surveillance uplift will ADD infrastructure cost in exchange for reduced compliance duplication. The GMTF recommendation does not carry binding force; legislative action requires a Commission proposal and Council/Parliament adoption, meaning the earliest practical effect is H2 2026 at the soonest and more likely beyond 2027.