MOU with Dubai Financial Services Authority
27 February 2007
MOU with Dubai Financial Services Authority
The Securities Commission has signed a memorandum of understanding with the Dubai Financial Services Authority.
The MOU sets out arrangements for the two regulators to cooperate and share information in relation to enforcement of securities law.
The Commission has a number of other bilateral MOUs with overseas regulators. It is also a signatory to the Multilateral MOU of the International Organisation of Securities Commissions (IOSCO).
The aim is to strengthen cooperative networks to help counter cross border securities fraud.
Chairman Jane Diplock signed the agreement in Dubai yesterday. Mr David Knott, Chief Executive of the DFSA, signed for the DFSA.
Today Jane Diplock is in Doha in her role at Chairman of the Executive Committee of IOSCO. She will address the inaugural Regulators Summit of the Gulf Cooperation Council.
February 26, 2007
DFSA signs MoU with New Zealand Securities Commission
Dubai, 26 February 2007: The Dubai Financial Services Authority (the DFSA) today entered into a Memorandum of Understanding with the New Zealand Securities Commission (NZSC).
The MoU was signed by Mr. David Knott, Chief Executive of the DFSA and Ms Jane Diplock, Chair of the NZSC. The signing coincided with a visit to the region by Chairman Diplock in her capacity as Chair of the Executive Committee of the International Organisation of Securities Commissions (IOSCO).
Mr. Knott said, “Under Jane Diplock’s leadership the New Zealand Securities Commission is recognized as being at the forefront of IOSCO’s efforts to foster international cooperation among securities regulators. The DFSA is similarly committed and both the DFSA and the NZSC are signatories to the IOSCO Memorandum of Understanding, an initiative that has set the benchmark for cross-border investigative assistance.
“There is potential for business links between financial firms in New Zealand and the Dubai International Financial Centre and, with the growth of the DIFC and growing participation from Asia Pacific, these links will become increasingly significant making the NZSC an important relationship for the DFSA.”
The signing of today’s broader bilateral MoU has put in place arrangements for cooperation and information sharing between the two regulators. It recognizes that both regulators rely on the quality of regulatory standards administered in the other’s jurisdiction.
ENDS