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UK, Switzerland to push ahead with financial services deal

By Andy Bruce

LONDON (Reuters) - Britain and Switzerland will press on with plans to strike a trade deal for their vast financial services industries, finance minister Rishi Sunak said on Wednesday ahead of talks with his Swiss counterpart.

The two countries are aiming for a mutual recognition deal in which they would accept the broad thrust of each other's financial rules - a type of arrangement that the European Union had rejected in Brexit talks with London.

Britain is keen to maintain the City of London's attractiveness as a global financial centre after full access to the EU, hitherto its biggest customer, ended last month.

"The UK and Switzerland are both global financial centres, with a shared commitment to high standards of regulation, market integrity and investor protection," Sunak said in a statement.

"Our ambition is to deliver one of the most comprehensive agreements of its kind in financial services as part of our plan to seize new opportunities in the global economy now we have left the EU."

The EU had rejected the City of London's request for mutual recognition in the trade deal it struck with Britain, instead insisting on equivalence - or a full alignment of rules - as the price for future financial market access.

Because Britain is no longer bound by EU rules since its full departure from the bloc on Dec. 31, British-based exchanges will once again offer trading in Swiss shares from Feb. 3.

In June 2019, Brussels blocked European Union investors from trading on Swiss bourses after a treaty row, with Switzerland then banning EU exchanges from trading Swiss shares.

Britain's finance ministry and exchanges said earlier this month that it may take time to rebuild volumes.

Wednesday's talks are expected to cover insurance, banking, asset management and capital markets, the British finance ministry said.

Sunak will also hold a roundtable on Wednesday with some of the biggest global banks, the finance ministry said.

(Reporting by Andy Bruce; editing by William James)

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