| |
FSA
to make an example of groups breaching rules
The Financial
Services Authority will "make an example" of companies and individuals
that breach its regulations, its chairman has warned.
Signalling there would be no let-up in the crackdown n market abuse, Callum
McCarthy said making samples of wrongdoers was the only way to get the
regulator's message across and change corporate behaviour.
He indicated that the record £17m fine imposed on Royal Dutch/Shell
for overstating its oil reserves set a
new benchmark for the level of fines that would be levied on leading companies
that failed to discharge their responsibilities to investors.
In an interview published this month, the FSA chairman tells The Financial
Regulator, a trade magazine, that "management at all levels needs
to be sensitised to the problem" of conflicts of interest inherent
in the financial world. "Our task is to ensure that the message associated
with any enforcement action gets across with sufficient clarity."
Providing a case was serious, had been examined properly, and the alleged
wrongdoers had had opportunity to explain their actions, "then it
should be possible to make an example of them".
Mr McCarthy went on to say the FSA was "keen to speed up the enforcement
process" to make sure misbehaviour was swiftly identified and punished.
The interview was conducted before the latest legal challenges against
the FSA by Sir Philip Watts, former chairman of Royal Dutch/ Shell, and
Legal & General -which many in the City see as part of a broader backlash
against the FSA's get-tough policy. But it provides a clear insight into
the FSA's thinking and attitude going into these battles.
Mr McCarthy said "we want to change behaviour" and the only
way to do this was to hold people to account for their actions.
However, he said the overall message would not get across if the FSA was
seen to be dealing with a new case every day. So it had to be selective
and focus on a few high profile cases.
He said that the biggest problem with financial services was not lack
of competition but the shortage of information that savers and investors
could understand. "At the moment I do not think the industry does
this well."
He highlighted the need -given the boom in house prices - for people to
"understand the difference between borrowing in a low inflation as
opposed to a high-inflation environment."
Mr McCarthy said that the FSA believed it had "a very strong case
against certain individuals" for collusion in the split-capital trusts
scandal.
However, he defended the FSA's decision to consider settling the case,
saying that it would otherwise take "a great deal of time for victims
to get any consolation or compensation".
Mr McCarthy said that the recent Citigroup bond coup raised "important
issues" with regard to developing markets that were "efficient,
orderly and clean" and added that if he were a finance minister from
a nation issuing the bonds, he would "take a very dim view of it"
|
|