
FCA Mission to Protect Consumers.
The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has today launched a consultation on its Mission, which is designed to provide a guiding set of principles around the strategic choices the FCA makes. It will inform the FCA’s strategy and day-to-day work over the coming years.
Key themes that the FCA will be consulting on include:
Comment
The FCA already has a statutory duty i.e. it is law under the Financial Services and Markets Act to protect consumers. We therefore, suggest this is a smokescreen to keep the Treasury Select Committee happy. Its predecessor, the FSA failed totally by not supervising banking groups and mortgage lenders adequately resulting the collapse of many banks and the credit crunch of the last decade. As a result, the FSA was split into two regulators the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and the remit for ensuring financial strength of banks passed back to the Bank of England via the newly created Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA). These two regulators “rebranded” are the old FSA in all but name.
Whilst it is a good thing for the regulator to “turn the microscope on itself”, in the combined 50 years that two directors have been involved in the financial services industry, not once has any regulator contacted either of them for feedback.