In mid-February, the Bundestag passed a new law designed to preserve financial stability and minimise costs for taxpayers should a central counterparty (CCP) fail. One purpose of recovery and resolution work is to prevent moral hazards arising that then increase the probability of a crisis. As such, this legislation is primarily aimed at increasing the resilience of the private sector and the CCP ecosystem. The Act can thus be seen as a sensible and consistent continuation of EMIR and as the final piece of the puzzle in the implementation of the G20 reforms of 2009. After all, one of the great lessons of the financial crisis was to place CCPs at the centre of financial market regulation in order to increase financial market stability. CCPs are the risk managers in the market because, on the one hand, they eliminate counterparty risk and, on the other, they ensure that, in the event of a crisis, the costs remain within the CCP system and are not passed on to the taxpayer.