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Recent regulatory developments of interest to all financial institutions. See also our sector specific updates in the Related Materials links.
Following a seasonal break, the next update will be published on 19 April 2021.
HM Treasury has announced that technical discussions on the text of the memorandum of understanding (MoU) on UK-EU regulatory cooperation in financial services have concluded. HM Treasury states that formal steps need to be undertaken on both sides before the MoU can be signed but that it expects that that this can be done expeditiously. The text of the final version of the MoU has not yet been published.
The UK and the US have held the first meeting of the Joint Committee established under the UK-US bilateral agreement on insurance and reinsurance prudential measures.
During this first Joint Committee meeting under the agreement, participants on both sides discussed progress made toward timely implementation of the agreement, including the removal of collateral and local presence requirements for reinsurers and the provisions on group supervision measures. In addition, the parties affirmed their commitment to the agreement and to close coordination between the two sides as implementation continues. Consistent with the agreement, both sides continue to encourage relevant authorities to refrain from taking any measures that are inconsistent with any provisions of the agreement.
The Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing (Amendment) (High-Risk Countries) Regulations 2021 (SI 2021/392) have been published, together with an explanatory memorandum. The Regulations came into force on 26 March 2021.
The Regulations insert a new Schedule 3ZA into the Money Laundering, Terrorist Financing and Transfer of Funds (Information on the Payer) Regulations 2017 (MLRs 2017), which sets out a list of high-risk third countries. The Regulations also change the definition of a "high-risk third country" in regulation 33(3)(a) of the MLRs 2017 from a country that has been defined as such by a European Commission delegated act to a country specified in the new Schedule 3ZA, and they make a consequential amendment to regulation 39(4).
The Regulation also revoke the retained EU law version of Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2016/1675 which set out the list of third countries identified by the European Commission as high risk. This list has been superseded by the new list set out in Schedule 3ZA.
HM Treasury has updated its advisory notice on money laundering (AML)and terrorist financing (CTF) controls in higher risk jurisdictions. This notice replaces all previous notices issued by HM Treasury on the subject. The revised notice follows two statements published by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) on 25 February 2021, identifying jurisdictions with strategic deficiencies in their AML/CTF regimes.
HM Treasury has published a draft version of the Capital Requirements Regulation (Amendment) (EU Exit) Regulations 2021, together with a draft explanatory memorandum. These Regulations amend the UK Capital Requirements Regulation (UK CRR) to provide that exemptions for commodities dealers will continue to apply until 1 January 2022. This is the date on which the new UK Investment Firms Prudential Regime will come into effect.
The Regulations are intended to come into force on the 22nd day after the day on which they are laid before Parliament.
The Bank of England (BoE) has published the financial policy summary and record (FPSR) of the meeting of its Financial Policy Committee (FPC) on 11 March 2021. Announcements made in the FPSR relate to topics including:
The annex to the FPSR lists the FPC policy decisions that remain in force. These relate to the CCyB rate, mortgage loan to income ratios and mortgage affordability.
The Work and Pensions Committee of the House of Commons published Protecting pension savers - five years on from the pension freedoms: Pension scams. This is the first report under the Committee's three-part inquiry into the impact of the pension freedoms introduced in 2015 on pension savers. The first report concerns pension scams and focuses on Project Bloom, the multi-agency initiative set up in 2012 to combat pension scams. In February 2021, the Committee issued a call for evidence on the second stage of its inquiry. This will look at accessing retirement products.
The FCA and the Pensions Regulator have published an updated version of their guide for employers and trustees on providing support with financial matters without needing to be subject to FCA regulation. The purpose of the guide is to provide a non-exhaustive explanation of the type of assistance that employers and pension trustees may provide to help employees, without needing to be authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000. It also provides details of actions that could trigger a requirement for authorisation, such as helping scheme members towards certain FCA-regulated products or helping them make decisions on their pension in a way that would likely be considered as providing financial advice.
The FCA consulted on a revised version of the guide as part of its guidance consultation (GC20/1) on advising on pension transfers. It has published a feedback statement relating to GC20/1, setting out the feedback received to the proposed revisions to the guide and its policy decisions in response to that feedback.
The FCA has published finalised guidance, FG21/3, on advising on pension transfers. The guidance is aimed at firms providing advice on the conversion or transfer of pension benefits and relevant advice on where any transferred funds may be invested. It is intended to help firms to understand how to apply FCA rules and guidance when giving defined benefit (DB) transfer advice. The guidance came into effect immediately, as it is based on existing rules.
Following their December 2019 consultations, the FCA (PS21/3), the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) (PS6/21) and the Bank of England (BoE) have published a joint feedback statement, policy statements and supervisory materials setting out their final rules and guidance on operational resilience. The FCA has also updated its webpage on operational resilience.
The authorities are introducing new operational resilience framework for firms and financial market infrastructures (FMIs). Under this framework, firms and FMIs are required to identify the important business services that, if disrupted, would impact the authorities' objectives. Firms and FMIs are required to set an impact tolerance for each of their important business services and take actions to meet specified standards relating to operational resilience.
The new rules introduced by the framework will come into effect on 31 March 2022. The authorities have set out a timetable for the implementation of the framework, which will consist of a one-year implementation period, ending on 31 March 2022, and a three-year transitional period, ending on 31 March 2025. During the implementation period, firms and FMIs should identify their important business services and set impact tolerances. They should also develop and put into effect a strategy or plan setting out how they will comply with the authorities' requirements and expectations.
By the end of the transitional period, firms and FMIs should have in place sound, effective, and comprehensive strategies, processes, and systems enabling them to address risks to their ability to remain within their impact tolerance for each important business service.
Following its December 2019 consultation in CP30/19, the PRA has published feedback and a policy statement, PS7/21, on outsourcing and third party risk management. The PRA has made some revisions to its final policy, including:
Appendix 1 contains the supervisory statement on outsourcing and third party risk management (SS2/21), which firms are expected to comply with by 31 March 2022. Outsourcing arrangements entered on or after 31 March 2021 should meet the expectations in SS2/21 by 31 March 2022. Firms should review and update legacy outsourcing agreements entered into before 31 March 2021 at the first appropriate contractual renewal or revision point to meet the expectations in SS2/21 as soon as possible on, or after, 31 March 2022.
For the avoidance of doubt, the PRA states that it considers that it is no longer proportionate for firms to make every effort to comply with the indicative timeline and process for reviewing their material (i.e. critical or important) legacy outsourcing arrangements, as set out in paragraphs 15 and 16 of the European Banking Authority (EBA) Outsourcing Guidelines. Likewise, firms are not expected to inform the PRA if they have not met the timeline set out in the EBA Outsourcing Guidelines. The PRA has made this decision due to the disruption and reprioritisation caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and changes to the UK, EU, and global regulatory landscape in this area, and in consideration of responses to CP30/19.
The PRA is planning a follow-up consultation setting out detailed proposals for an online portal which all firms would need to populate with certain information on their outsourcing and third party arrangements.
The PRA and the FCA have sent a joint Dear CEO letter on the transition from LIBOR to risk-free rates (RFRs). In the letter, the PRA and the FCA set out a list of priority areas where further action by firms is necessary to prepare for the cessation of LIBOR. This follows the FCA's statement on 5 March 2021 announcing the dates that panel bank submissions for all LIBOR settings will cease.
The PRA and the FCA will monitor firms' progress and may take supervisory action where they see insufficient progress, or incidents of poor risk management or governance of transition, including in respect of the expectations set out in the letter. The regulators state that responsible senior managers functions (SMFs) should satisfy themselves that all appropriate actions are being taken to ensure an orderly transition and that this transition should form part of the performance criteria for determining responsible SMFs' variable remuneration.
The BoE has published the minutes of the February 2021 meeting of the Working Group on Sterling RFRs. Among other things, the working group discussed comments by the PRA at a recent meeting of the senior advisory group (SAG). The PRA's comments include:
The FCA confirmed to the working group its alignment with the approach the PRA presented at the SAG meeting. It warned that firms should consider the increasing conduct risks associated with continued offering of LIBOR products especially where liquidity in these products was likely to deteriorate. It would challenge firms where it believed they should be doing more to shift business away from LIBOR. It and the PRA would act on intelligence where syndicates were not moving away from GBP LIBOR and the FCA had already discussed this with some participants of a syndicate deal that closes in Q2 2021.
The PRA has published a policy statement, PS5/21, on the 2021/22 management expenses levy limit (MELL) for the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS). In PS5/21, the PRA sets out feedback to the responses it received to its consultation paper on the MELL, published jointly with the FCA in January 2021 (PRA CP4/21 / FCA CP21/2). The responses did not raise issues that require the proposals to be altered and so the PRA is proceeding on the basis of the proposals it consulted on. The FSCS MELL will apply for the financial year ending 31 March 2022.
The FCA published its response to feedback in Handbook Notice 86.
Following its December 2019 call for input, the FCA has published a feedback statement , FS21/7, on open finance. The FCA sees open finance as an opportunity to build on the concept of open banking and allow consumers and SMEs to access and share their data with third party providers (TPPs). It involves extending open banking-like data sharing and third-party access to a wider range of financial sectors and products. The feedback statement summarises the responses received by the FCA to its call for input, setting out comments received on the issues of maximising the potential of open banking and open finance, as well as the FCA's draft principles for open finance.
Our separate briefing on the FCA's feedback statement will shortly be available on Hogan Lovells Engage.
The FCA has published Handbook Notice 86, which sets out changes to the FCA Handbook made by the FCA board on 25 March 2021. It also sets out changes made by the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) board on 25 March 2021. The Handbook Notice reflects changes made to the Handbook by the following instruments:
The House of Commons Treasury Committee has published a letter sent to the Committee by Andrew Bailey, BoE Governor. The letter was written in response to the Committee's request for Mr Bailey to clarify certain statements made during an oral evidence session in February 2021 relating to the Committee's inquiry into the FCA's regulation of London Capital & Finance plc (LC&F). In the letter, Mr Bailey sets out, among other things, the lessons that he learnt from the FCA's failings in regulating LC&F. The letter also addresses certain statements made in the evidence session that appeared to contradict the account of events given by Dame Elizabeth Gloster. The Committee has also published a letter from Dame Elizabeth setting out her views on these statements.
Following its consultation in CP20/17, the FCA has published a policy statement, PS21/4, on extending its annual financial crime reporting obligation (REM-CRIM) to include firms carrying on regulated activities that potentially pose a higher money laundering risk. The FCA confirms that it will bring the following entities within the scope of the REP-CRIM obligation:
The FCA has also removed two activities from the REP-CRIM reporting obligation, which it considers are outside of the scope of the MLRs: home finance mediation and making arrangements with a view to transactions in investments.
The FCA has also made directions under regulation 74A of the MLRs 2017 directing cryptoasset exchange providers and custodian wallet providers to comply with the REP-CRIM obligation. The instrument and the directions both came into force on 30 March 2022.
Firms being brought into scope are required to submit their first REP-CRIM within 60 business days after their first accounting reference date falling after 30 March 2022.
The FCA has issued a statement and published a letter of concerns in relation to an application by a firm to implement a scheme of arrangement under Part 26 of the Companies Act 2006. While the letter relates to a specific scheme application, Annex 2 to the letter sets out the FCA's general approach to its evaluation of arrangements proposed by FCA-regulated firms. This approach includes consideration as to whether a proposed scheme is compatible with FCA rules, including the Principles for Businesses. In particular, the FCA assesses the compatibility of schemes of arrangement with Principle 6 (treating customers fairly), Principle 7 (customers' information needs) and Principle 8 (managing conflicts of interest).
Following consultation, the FOS has published its 2021/22 plans and budget. Alongside the 2021/22 plans and budget, the FOS has published the final version of the Fees Manual (Financial Ombudsman Service Case Fees 2021/2022) Instrument 2021 (FOS 2021/1). This instrument was made by order of the FOS board on 22 March 2021 and by order of the FCA board on 25 March 2021. It came into force on 1 April 2021.
The following two Decisions of the EEA Joint Committee that amend Annex IX (Financial Services) to the EEA Agreement to incorporate various pieces of EU financial services legislation into the EEA Agreement have been published in the Official Journal of the European Union:
The European Supervisory Authorities (ESAs) have published a Joint Committee Report on the assessment of the application of the ESAs' guidelines on complaints-handling. In the report, the ESAs consider the application of the guidelines published by the European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority (EIOPA) in June 2012 and December 2013 on complaints-handling by insurance undertakings and insurance intermediaries respectively, as well as the joint guidelines for the securities and banking sectors published by ESMA and the EBA in June 2014. The report refers to these guidelines collectively as the guidelines on complaints-handling.
The ESAs conclude that the guidelines have contributed to achieving the purposes for which they were developed and have resulted in better outcomes for consumers. They conclude that there is no need to revise the guidelines at this stage or to continue the assessment of the guidelines by approaching firms directly for their views.
The EBA has published a consultation paper on draft regulatory technical standards (RTS) on the disclosure of the investment policy by investment firms under the Investment Firms Regulation (IFR). Article 52 of the IFR requires investment firms other than small and non-interconnected firms to publicly disclose information on their investment policy. Article 52(3) mandates the EBA to develop draft RTS specifying templates for these disclosures.
Annex I to the draft RTS contains templates and tables for the purpose of the disclosure of information on firms' investment policies. Annex II contains detailed instructions, which provide legal references and guidance concerning specific positions for these templates and tables.
The deadline for responses to the consultation is 1 July 2021.
Authored by Yvonne Clapham