EURONEXT_Registration_Document_2017

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PRESENTATION OF THE GROUP

Company Profile

1.1.3 BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT As an exchange operator, Euronext’s operations and performance depend significantly on market and economic conditions in Europe, but also the United States, Asia and the rest of the world. Euronext is operating in a business environment that is best described as a complex non-linear system with dependencies on decisions of policy makers and regulators worldwide, with subsequent developments in the legal, regulatory and tax environment as well as the macroeconomic environment both in Europe and abroad. Competition On the corporate listing side, competition between exchanges for domestic issuers is rare. When a domestic issuer lists on another exchange, it tends to be on an American market rather than on another European stock exchange, in particular in respect of global companies and SMEs in the technology sector. As part of its Agility for Growth strategy, Euronext intends to attract issuers from new markets: ( i.e . Germany, Switzerland, Italy and Spain) and therefore will face the competition of local market operators. In 2017, Euronext has opened new offices in five European cities outside its core markets – in Frankfurt and Munich (Germany), in Milan (Italy), in Madrid (Spain) and in Zurich (Switzerland) – to assist Tech companies in developing their business on a greater scale through capital markets While competition in the cash trading market is relatively mature, in recent years Euronext has faced increased pressure on pricing and market share in equity options trading, in particular from new entrants to the market that have fee structures that are significantly lower than the Company’s fee structure and a reduced cost structure aligned with their narrower service offering. The competition for proprietary real-time market data is still limited as trading participants prefer to receive and use market data from the home exchange rather than using substitute pricing. However, Euronext is experiencing an increasing pressure, both from a regulatory (MiFID II) and competitive perspective (alternative trading platforms, including MTFs such as BATS who focus on the most liquid blue chip stocks). Nevertheless Euronext believes that diversity in a wide range of stocks is Euronext’s strength in this increasingly competitive environment and will help Euronext retain its position as preferred data source. In less time critical areas such as reference data – and particularly corporate actions and historical data – participants want a consolidated European feed from a single source. Euronext is not the only source of corporate actions or historical data so there is more competition in these areas. As for Market Solutions, the market for financial information technology is intensely competitive and characterised by rapidly changing technology and new entrants. Euronext has built the next

generation trading platform, Optiq™, and is well positioned to benefit from its state-of-the art stability and latency.

Regulated Markets Regulated markets are markets constituted in an EEA Member State’s territory that fulfilled the criteria of the MiFID. Regulated markets have higher disclosure and transparency requirements than multi-lateral trading facilities (“MTF”). Trading on regulated markets is subject to stricter rules than on other types of trading venues. A regulated market cannot operate without securing prior authorisation from its regulator(s). Authorisation is subject to compliance with organisational requirements pertaining to conflicts of interest, identification and management of operational risks, systems resilience, the existence of transparent and non- discriminatory trading rules, as well as sufficient financial resources. Multilateral Trading Facilities Multilateral trading facilities (“MTFs”) are primarily institutional investor-focused marketplaces offering trading in pan-European securities on low latency, low cost platforms and are usually operated by financial institutions (e.g. banks, brokerages) or operators of regulated markets. MTFs are also subject to less stringent disclosure, transparency and trading rules than regulated markets and have more discretion to operate and organise themselves. Euronext operates a number of MTFs, including its SME and midcap- dedicated marketplace Euronext Growth (formerly Alternext) (Belgium, France, Portugal), Euronext Access (formerly the Marché Libre) in Belgium and in France, BondMatch for institutional bond trading (France) and Euronext Block a pan-European equity block pool (United Kingdom). Systematic Internaliser The systematic internaliser (“SI”) regime was introduced by MiFID in 2007 which defines a SI as an investment firm which, on an organised, frequent systematic and substantial basis, deals on own account when executing client orders outside a regulated market, an MTF or an OTF without operating a multilateral system. SIs are bilateral trading platforms usually operated by banks or brokers and offering them the possibility to match client orders against their own capital, as an alternative to sending their orders to multilateral trading venues such as regulated markets or MTFs. SIs are subject to much lighter organisational, disclosure, and transparency requirements than regulated markets and MTFs. Over-the-Counter (OTC) In all asset classes, Euronext is faced with competition from unlicensed marketplaces operating over-the-counter (“OTC”)

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www.euronext.com

2017 REGISTRATION DOCUMENT

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