The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and the German Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (Bundesanstalt für Finanzdienstleistungsaufsicht, or BaFin) signed an agreement to facilitate their supervision of internationally active firms and their oversight of markets.

At a meeting in Berlin, SEC chairman Christopher Cox and BaFin president Jochen Sanio executed a memorandum of understanding that provides clear mechanisms for consultation, co-operation, and exchanges of information between their agencies. The MOU sets forth the terms and conditions for the sharing of information about regulated entities and financial groups that operate in the US and Germany and, in view of the growing trend toward cross-border exchange affiliations, outlines a framework for cooperation in the oversight of markets in both countries.

“The SEC and BaFin share a commitment to keeping our markets open, fair and transparent in an ever-changing and increasingly global marketplace,” Cox said. “We must continue working together to facilitate the seamless and efficient regulation of internationally active firms in the United States and Germany. This arrangement helps the SEC and BaFin have access to the information necessary to supervise global securities firms and oversee markets.”

“There is already a tradition of cooperation between the SEC and BaFin. By signing this MOU we are now giving it an even wider framework. In times of increasing globalization, such agreements are very valuable — for the regulators of both countries and for the companies involved,” Sanio added.