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Wednesday 26 June 2019 10:42 am

Nicky Morgan: Asset managers should expect more scrutiny after Woodford scandal

By: August Graham

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LONDON, ENGLAND - JULY 05: British Education Secretary Nicky Morgan leaves number 10 Downing Street following a Cabinet meeting on July 5, 2016 in London, England. Conservative MPs will begin the process of deciding their next leader and therefore UK Prime Minister with the first round of voting today. (Photo by Jack Taylor/Getty Images)

The chair of the Treasury Committee, Nicky Morgan, has said she expects the asset management sector to face more oversight after Neil Woodford’s flagship fund was suspended earlier this month.

Morgan said that her committee would get behind increased scrutiny from the Financial Conduct Authority in the wake of the scandal.

Read more: FCA chief Andrew Bailey says Woodford debacle a failure of rules not regulation

Woodford froze his £3.7bn flagship fund earlier this month, leaving investors unable to take their money out.

“Given what has happened in the last weeks, I would expect the scrutiny to increase, and the committee would certainly support the FCA if it was to do so,” Morgan told a group of investors this morning.

The MP also reiterated her calls for Woodford to drop his management fees while the fund is suspended.

“Is it fair to market an open fund to retail customers, but then no longer allow them to withdraw their money?” she asked.

“And yet they keep on charging the fee at the same rate, regardless.”

Morgan said that a decade after the financial crisis, the sector must put customers first.

Read more: Hargreaves Lansdown execs to defer bonuses amid Woodford fund troubles

“The reputation of the financial services industry … was dragged through the gutter after the financial crisis,” she said. To regain trust the industry “needs not only to be on the side of the consumer, it must be seen to be.”

The Woodford scandal “further erodes trust” in the sector, she added.

Read more

FCA seeks injunction against Neil Woodford over ‘unauthorised’ investment advice

Neil Woodford and Woodford Investment Management have been handed a £46m fine by the FCA

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