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Tuesday 27 February 2024 7:31 am  |  Updated:  Tuesday 27 February 2024 4:53 pm

FCA set to name firms under investigation in plans to beef up enforcement

By: Charlie Conchie

City Editor

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Top City groups have rounded on the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) again today as a consultation on its controversial plans to ‘name and shame’ firms under investigation comes to a close.
The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA)has faced fury over its plans to 'name and shame' firms

The Financial Conduct Authority is planning to publicly name the companies it is investigating in a bid to deter firms from breaking the rules and strengthen its enforcement action on the City.

In a consultation paper published today, the FCA said it is planning to set out a new approach to “public interest” that will name firms under investigation to strengthen deterrence and encourage witnesses and whistleblowers to come forward.

The move comes amid a wider push to improve the pace and transparency of its investigations and marks a step change from the current approach in which probes are rarely disclosed to the public.

“By being more transparent when we open and close cases we can enhance public confidence by showing that we are on the case,” said the watchdog’s co-chief of enforcement, Therese Chambers.

“At the same time, we will amplify the deterrent impact of our work by enabling firms to understand the types of serious failings that can lead to an investigation, helping them to change their own behaviour more quickly.”

Greater transparency will also “drive greater accountability for us as an enforcement agency”, Chambers added.

Chambers and co-head Steve Smart have looked to beef up enforcement action since starting in the role last June after a slide in enforcement action by the FCA.

Just eight fines issued last year, the lowest in the FCA’s decade long history, the FT reported.

Read more

Two solicitors linked to Post Office scandal charged with misconduct

One contract was even an extension of the Horizon deal with the Post Office itself, worth £63m.

However, the measures have come under fire from some quarters today for potentially damaging the reputation of companies before they are found guilty of any wrongdoing.

“Announcing an investigation before it has assembled the necessary evidence can also be extremely damaging to a firm, its staff, and its customers,” said Simon Morris, a financial services Partner with law firm CMS. “It could wipe millions off a company’s value, or even destroy its business, which a later announcement of ‘no case to answer’ will hardly repair.”

The measures seem “more about trumpeting its work than giving out useful information,” he added.

Some 65 per cent of the watchdog’s investigations currently close without action, the FCA’s co-head of enforcement Steve Smart has said, who joined the regulator last year from the National Crime Agency.

As part of the changes today, the FCA said it will also close cases where no outcome is achievable more quickly. 

FCA officials have blamed some of the lack of action in recent years on the backlog created by the covid pandemic, which has clogged up potential action and convictions.

A consultation on the plans is now open until 16th April.

Read more

Ovo to cough up £10.4m for exposing vulnerable customers to harm

Stephen Fitzpatrick is the billionaire founder of Ovo Energy.

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