In its second new rule in a month the FSA requires that long positions that use so-called contracts for difference must be included and made public when holdings reach 3 percent or more. These instruments, known as CFDs, account for about 30 percent of electronic trading on the London Stock Exchange.
Last month the FSA enacted a new rule that forces investors to disclose short positions of more than 0.25 percent in companies involved in rights offers.
The new rules are aimed to increase transparency.