HomeBussinessFinancial Conduct Authority boss says MPs' criticism 'not fair'

Financial Conduct Authority boss says MPs’ criticism ‘not fair’

Date:

Related stories

Boxing Day footfall down on UK high streets despite discounts

Fewer consumers made the journey to high streets and...

TOMI installs high-tech decontamination system in UK By Investing.com

FREDERICK, Md. - TOMI Environmental Solutions, Inc. (NASDAQ: TOMZ),...

Ukraine war latest: Russia claims ‘several’ assassination attempts foiled

Athena Stavrou26 December 2024 13:35Putin’s Christmas Day attacks were...

Boxing Day sales: Shoppers staying away from High Street, early data suggests

Overall Boxing Day activity levels are down 10.6% across...
spot_imgspot_img

The boss of the UK’s financial watchdog has said criticism from MPs that it has failed to reform after years of scandal is “not fair”.

Nikhil Rathi, chief executive of the Financial Conduct Authority, said it is “tackling financial crime… on a scale that has never been done before in the UK”.

He was responding to a report from a cross-party group of MPs which said the FCA was “incompetent” and that its culture has “got worse rather than better”.

It also accused the FCA of failing to properly investigate the banks and other financial organisations it regulates, suggesting it may be too close to them.

The report published on Tuesday came in the wake of backlash against the FCA’s handling of the Neil Woodford investment scandal and other controversies such as its debanking report.

It referenced years of similar criticism from other reports, including a 2016 paper from the New City Agenda which said there was “a deep seated culture of box-ticking” at the FCA.

The report also hit back against the suggestion that the FCA had changed.

“It is imperative the reader doesn’t fall into the trap of thinking that the FCA… has already resolved the long list of problems the evidence that has been painstakingly gathered shows it has, because it hasn’t,” the report said.

However, in an interview with BBC Radio 4’s Money Box show, Mr Rathi defended the FCA against these claims and argued the regulator had improved.

“We will always stay focused on improving our operational performance, but I don’t think it would be fair to characterise the position as nothing has happened,” he said.

He added that the FCA is making “record numbers of financial crime prosecutions” and that it is “one of the most evolved consumer protection regimes in the world”.

The report goes on to state that the FCA may have been “captured”, meaning it is too aligned with banks and other financial organisations to act against them.

It argues there are “unmanaged conflicts of interest” within the FCA because of its role both to protect consumers and promote economic growth.

It suggested the watchdog should be stripped back to a regulator purely focused on consumer wellbeing – leaving the government to focus on economic growth.

It also suggested that the FCA’s leadership should be replaced “if necessary”, calling its current leaders “opaque and unaccountable”.

Mr Rathi said the issue of growth versus consumer protection “requires a debate”, but that Chancellor Rachel Reeves was pushing it to pursue growth.

He accepted that promoting growth can mean increasing risks for consumers, pointing to changes it made to allow more companies to list in the UK, such as on the London Stock Exchange.

“We were very transparent all the way through that discussion over the previous 18 months that this would bring more risk into the system, [but] it was judged that this was necessary,” he said.

“That does mean that over time a few more things will go wrong, but the risk appetite in the economy needed to adjust to support the growth that the economy needs.”

On the issue of accountability, Mr Rathi said the FCA appears before Parliament and select committees and publishes more data than “any other regulator in the world”.

A Treasury spokesperson told the BBC: “Many of the issues explored in the report have been extensively reviewed, and as a result the FCA has made a number of changes.”

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories

spot_img