Issuers of retail debt securities listed on EU regulated markets must prepare their annual financial reports using the European Single Electronic Reporting Format (ESEF) for financial years beginning on or after 1 January 2020.

The Reporting Obligation

The Transparency Directive imposes annual and half-yearly financial reporting obligations on issuers of debt securities with denominations per unit of less than ?100,000 (i.e. retail, rather than wholesale, debt securities) listed on an EU regulated market (such as Euronext Dublin's regulated market).

Article 4 of the Transparency Directive also requires those issuers (regardless of whether their registered office is in the EU or in a third country) to prepare their annual financial reports, which include their annual financial statements, using the ESEF for financial years beginning on or after 1 January 2020.

The ESEF requirement impacts the format, rather than the content, of those annual reports, but does not apply to the half-yearly reports. The ESEF requirement is designed to ensure that annual reporting takes place in a single, structured, electronic format so that the financial statements are machine-readable.

Reporting Formats and Resources

The Transparency Directive tasked ESMA with assessing possible electronic reporting formats, testing those formats, and drafting regulatory technical standards (RTS) to specify the ESEF.

ESMA's RTS setting out the detailed technical requirements for annual financial reports prepared using the ESEF were published in the Official Journal in May 2019, and are supported by an ESEF Reporting Manual, video tutorials and an example of an annual financial report prepared in the ESEF format. Technical amendments to the ESEF RTS were published in the Official Journal in December 2019, and further technical amendments were proposed by ESMA in June 2020, in each case following changes to the relevant IFRS taxonomy. These amendments do not impact the overall obligation on issuers of retail debt securities listed on regulated markets to use the ESEF for financial years beginning on or after 1 January 2020.

Who is exempt from the ESEF requirement?

  • Wholesale issuers
    Article 8(1) of the Transparency Directive provides that Article 4 (referred to above) does not apply to issuers exclusively of debt securities admitted to trading on a regulated market with denominations per unit of at least ?100,000 (or equivalent in another currency) (i.e. wholesale issuers).
  • Issuers listed on an exchange-regulated market
    As the Transparency Directive does not apply to issuers with debt securities listed on an exchange-regulated market, such as the Global Exchange Market (GEM) of Euronext Dublin, those issuers do not have to comply with the new ESEF requirement.

This article contains a general summary of developments and is not a complete or definitive statement of the law. Specific legal advice should be obtained where appropriate.