TY - BOOK AU - Avgouleas,Emilios AU - Avgouleas,Emilios AU - Chiu,Iris H-Y AU - Corcoran,Patrick AU - Ferrarini,Guido AU - Gerner-Beuerle,Carsten AU - Giudici,Paolo AU - Kulms,Rainer AU - Langenbucher,Katja AU - Macchiavello,Eugenia AU - Marjosola,Heikki AU - Marjosola,Heikki AU - Sciarrone Alibrandi,Antonella AU - Seretakis,Alexandros TI - Digital Finance in Europe: Law, Regulation, and Governance T2 - European Company And Financial Law Review - Special Volume SN - 9783110749472 AV - KJE2188 .D54 2021 U1 - 346.408202854678 23 PY - 2021///] CY - Berlin, Boston : PB - De Gruyter, KW - Capital market KW - Law and legislation KW - European Union countries KW - Financial services industry KW - Internet banking KW - LAW / Securities KW - bisacsh N1 - Frontmatter --; Editorial --; Table of Contents Emilios --; Governing the Digital Finance Value-Chain in the EU: MIFID II, the Digital Package, and the Large Gaps between! --; Marketplace Lending as a New Means of Raising Capital in the Internal Market: True Disintermediation or Reintermediation? --; Digital Offerings and Mandatory Disclosure: A Market-Based Critique of MiCA --; Algorithmic Trading and the Limits of Securities Regulation --; Responsible AI Credit Scoring - A Lesson from Upstart.com --; Building a Single Market for Sustainable Finance in the EU-Mixed Implications and the Missing Link of Digitalisation --; Digital Financial Markets and (Europe's) Private Law - A Case for Regulatory Competition? --; Security Tokens and the Future of EU Securities Law: Rethinking the Harmonisation Project; Issued also in print N2 - Global finance is in the middle of a radical transformation fueled by innovative financial technologies. The coronavirus pandemic has accelerated the digitization of retail financial services in Europe. Institutional interest and digital asset markets are also growing blurring the boundaries between the token economy and traditional finance. Blockchain, AI, quantum computing and decentralised finance (DeFI) are setting the stage for a global battle of business models and philosophies. The post-Brexit EU cannot afford to ignore the promise of digital finance. But the Union is struggling to keep pace with global innovation hubs, particularly when it comes to experimenting with new digital forms of capital raising. Calibrating the EU digital finance strategy is a balancing act that requires a deep understanding of the factors driving the transformation, be they legal, cultural, political or economic, as well as their many implications. The same FinTech inventions that use AI, machine learning and big data to facilitate access to credit may also establish invisible barriers that further social, racial and religious exclusion. The way digital finance actors source, use, and record information presents countless consumer protection concerns. The EU's strategic response has been years in the making and, finally, in September 2020 the Commission released a Digital Finance Package. This special issue collects contributions from leading scholars who scrutinize the challenges digital finance presents for the EU internal market and financial market regulation from multiple public policy perspectives. Author contributions adopt a critical yet constructive and solutions-oriented approach. They aim to provide policy-relevant research and ideas shedding light on the complexities of the digital finance promise. They also offer solid proposals for reform of EU financial services law UR - https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110749472 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9783110749472 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/document/cover/isbn/9783110749472/original ER -