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Posts Tagged ‘financial system’

FSA Penalties Sky Rocket

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

In hiCopany Penalties, Banking Systems introductory statement, Lord Turner, chairman of the FSA, said that since mid 2007, confidence in the global banking system has suffered a dramatic collapse and clearly this has implications for finance ministries, central banks and regulators.

Lord Turner said:

“The year 2008-09 has been an extremely difficult one for regulators across the world. Looking at the year as a whole, I believe the FSA has dealt successfully with the immediate crisis, and taken actions to ensure that we build a more stable financial system for the future.”

In his report the FSA chief executive Hector Sants summed up the year by saying:

“It is critical to understand that the individual firm problems we have seen emerge in the last year had their origins in the boom, and were not reversible in the current market conditions. Our objectives in the past 12 months have been to minimise the impact of these weaknesses and to lay the foundations of a more effective and better regime for the future. I believe we have made good progress in extremely difficult conditions in pursuit of these goals.

“I hope we have begun the process of rebuilding confidence in the system and the regulator by demonstrating that we are an organisation that is willing to learn and that we have the ability to change radically. I believe enduring and respected organisations are forged in times of adversity and that this will ultimately be seen as such a time for the FSA.”

The key element of radical change has been the implementation of the Supervisory Enhancement Programme.

In this respect the key points are:

  • The increase in the supervisory staff from 526 to 703
  • The FSA began changing the authorisation process for Significant Influence Functions (SIFs) to ensure it was judging the competence and regulatory knowledge of senior people at firms as well as their probity
  • The FSA reorganised and strengthened its risk identification and mitigation capacity
  • The FSA revised its supervisory risk assessment framework to include greater focus on business models
  • The FSA increased its engagement with auditors and investors to emphasise their role in the oversight of firms.

Appendices to the report, also published today on the FSA website, provide further statistical information on the FSA’s work during the year.

This includes:

  • The FSA’s enforcement division closed 302 investigations during the year resulting in 371 outcomes. Of these, 243 concluded with the use of powers (such as prohibition, financial penalties and variations of permissions) and 128 without the use of powers. 30 of these 128 outcomes were private warnings.
  • The FSA levied £27.3 million in financial penalties during the year compared to £4.4 million last year and prohibited a record 58 individuals from carrying out regulated activities compared to 30 the year before. This reflects the FSA’s more proactive approach to enforcement – the credible deterrence philosophy – set out last year.

Of the 59 targets the FSA set itself for 2008/09, 39 were delivered on schedule. Of the other 20, 10 were re-planned but still delivered in the 2008/09 financial year and 10 are still to be delivered.

  • The number of regulated firms decreased from 28,325 to 27,340.
  • The number of approved persons decreased from 172,077 to 166,420.

Page 79 of the Report sets out details of the remuneration of FSA Board members

Adair Turner’s total remuneration for the period 20/09/08-31/03/09 was £246,546, made up of salary of £219,000 and benefits totalling £27,346. Hector Sants’ total remuneration was £623,170 (2007/08: £661,948). This comprised salary of £478,000 and other benefits totalling £145,170. He declined to take his bonus award of £130,000.

UK Financial System Facing A Long Road To Recovery

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

It was at the summit on Global Leadership at the London Business School that John Kingan, top dog at UK Financial Investments, Anshu Jain of Deutshe Bank, Stephen Hester, Chief Exec of RBS and Julian Franks, Professor of Finanace at LBS, all arrived at the same conclusion that a full recovery of the financial system was a long way off, despite the recent improvements.

“No one can say a system is mended when the bulk of bank lending is dependent on huge government guarantees and where the government is the main shareholder,” said Mr Kingman, who said that the banking crisis had moved on, going on to say, “when the crisis is shaken off, it will not be a question of going back to 2006. The banks will operate under a very different regulatory regime. They must also re-learn lessons of how to manage themselves and in particular how to manage risk.”

Mr Hester confirmed that changes were already underway at RBS after the recent overhaul of the bank’s senior management and that he “was turning upside down” the usual traditions of the bank and introducing a “syndication of leadership, rather than focusing the power with  the people at the top.

Xavier Rolet, chief exec of the London Stock Exchange and previously of Lehman Brothers said, “Regulators around the world are doing more than comparing notes. They are looking at systemic risk. Necessity is creating a new environment from which will come a more homogeneous world.”

While Professor Franks added “If we have global banks we need global regulation.”

While this certainly mans a tightening of regulations for banks, we can expect to see a large rise in the use of credit checks as banks and other financial lenders aim to ensure that loans and mortgages that they are providing are offered to the correct people who are less likely to fall into arrears and increase the need for repossession or the use of debt collection.

   
 
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