FMA: full pedal ahead, and a bit of tacking
FMA: full pedal ahead, and a bit of tacking
20 February 2017 | PUBLICATION
The Financial Markets Authority has refreshed its foundation Strategic Risk Outlook (SRO), published in 2015. It plans to steam ahead on its current course, with some slight repositioning to deal with emerging risks.
Emerging trends
The FMA has put a number of “developing themes” on its “risk radar” in the updated SRO:
• retail investor uptake of
more complex or risky products – e.g. banks’ increased
use of subordinated unsecured debt instruments or people
classifying themselves as wholesale investors to access
sophisticated products but lacking the requisite knowledge
to make informed decisions
• items currently beyond the
FMA’s control but which bear on its regulatory mandate –
e.g. core product areas of bankers and insurers, FX trading
and certain services offered by overseas
entities
• helping investor decision-making when the
current accommodating interest rate environment
ends
• cyber resilience and data
security
• demographic change – FMA plans to work
with other agencies to improve the advice available to those
nearing the point of retirement
• wholesale market
conduct, and
• market infrastructure.
Many of these
risks reflect the various impacts of technological change.
The FMA reasserts its support for innovation and considers
that its regulatory settings are flexible enough to allow it
to respond quickly to new opportunities in a timely manner,
pointing to its timely licensing of peer-to-peer lenders and
crowd-funding platforms.
Current priorities reaffirmed
The FMA’s top seven priorities are:
• governance and culture
• conflicts of
interest and how they are managed
• capital market
growth and integrity
• investor
decision-making
• sales and advice
• effective
frontline regulation, and
• the FMA’s own
effectiveness and efficiency.
When to intervene
Factors the FMA takes into account when
deciding to intervene include:
• how many customers or
investors may be affected and the severity of that
effect
• the money at stake
• the probability of
the potential harm, or whether it has already
happened
• the level of financial capability of the
victims – the lower this is the more likely it is that the
FMA will get involved
• whether intervention is within
the FMA’s remit and whether the outcome with justify the
cost.
Last year
The FMA notched up a reasonably successful enforcement record last year, according to the just released Conduct Outcomes Report for 2016 which shows that 70% of its completed investigations resulted in sanctions other than court action.
These included banning orders against four directors and the removal of 28 firms from the Financial Services Providers Register.
Of the proceedings which went to court; 60% are still active, 20% resulted in a court judgment, 10% were settled and 10% have been discontinued.