What are its aims?
The Bank and the FCA operate the DSS, pursuing three overarching aims:
- Facilitate innovation: promote a safe, sustainable and efficient financial system. We are enabling the application of new technology to the trading and settlement of securities.
- Protect financial stability: limits will facilitate safe scaling of business that mitigates risks to financial stability without undermining innovation.
- Protect market integrity: the regulatory approach will continue to provide for the integrity and cleanliness of UK financial markets.
When developing the DSS, a guiding principle has been to ensure the regulatory guardrails put in place are proportionate to the risks posed by business models. This is to ensure regulation does not inhibit innovation to protect financial stability. There are three main examples of this:
1. Limits
These innovative technologies are untested in important financial markets at significant scale in the UK and globally. Consequently, live activity in the DSS will be subject to specific limits that have been carefully calibrated based on market analysis for the different asset types in scope of the DSS.
2. Modified and flexible legal regime
A modified legal regime, including a flexible set of rules introduced by the Bank, will be in place for the duration of the DSS. This allows the Bank and the FCA to remove legal obstacles and barriers that prevent the use of developing technologies and to adapt those in light of the activities in the Sandbox.
3. Glidepath design
The DSS has been designed so that participants can scale their business with access to higher limits as they demonstrate their compliance with the regulatory requirements at each gate (see 'Stages and gates of the DSS for a sandbox entrant' table below). At the end of the DSS, the intention is that interested participants will have the opportunity to transition to a new permanent regime if the technology is successfully adopted. The experience inside the DSS and feedback from the participants will help shape that regime.
The DSS is due to run until 8 January 2029 but may be extended by HM Treasury through legislation if more time is necessary to transition to a new regulatory regime.