Mar 21 – Doing Enough?

As a white male who has enjoyed the privilege of a university education, bank employment and never being out of work I am always unsure when I venture into thoughts on Equality and Inclusivity.  However, I did grow up within a mile of the “base” for Trainspotting and my first pub routinely saw deeper discussions […]

Feb 21 – Bailey’s grand defence

Why did I watch Andrew Bailey appear before the Treasury Select Committee?  Because he was being interviewed about his part in the London Capital & Finance failure and the report by Dame Elisabeth Gloster that apportioned blame on him for the failure of the FCA to use its authorisation and supervisory powers appropriately. This has […]

Feb 21 – A new regulatory worry

It was early November 2020 that Caroline Wayman, Chief Executive and Chief Ombudsman at the Financial Ombudsman Service, sat in front of the Treasury Select Committee to be challenged by Chair Mel Stride and other MPs on the Service’s work.  For anyone that has not watched or been involved in any of these sessions before, […]

Feb 21 – Doomed by failure

The FSCS has set its funding requirement for 2021/22 with the total amount to be invoiced rising to £1.04bn.  This is because the Life Distribution and Investment Intermediation class and the Investment Provision class have breached their threshold maximums. Total costs in those two sectors are £705m, with a maximum chargeable of £440m.  This triggers […]

Jan 21 – The Green Deal

The Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy (BEIS) is not one which readily trips off the tongue when considering where the major housing and mortgage market impacts will come from.  However, it is a key driving force in the areas of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and in promoting innovative technology in the wider financial services […]

Jan 21 – A new shiny FCA

The Treasury is currently consulting on the future financial services regulatory framework.  This is our “once in a generation” chance to shape who regulates our industry with focus on their objectives and how they are “managed and controlled”.  We have until 19 February to think through improvements needed. At the same time, the FCA is […]

Jan 21 – Closing the gap

The Association of Mortgage Intermediaries (AMI) recently partnered with Legal & General and Royal London to undertake a major consumer research project on consumer attitudes and their recollections of interactions in the protection market.  The research asked 5,000 consumers and 500 mortgage brokers about their knowledge and understanding, principally on life, critical illness and income […]

Dec 20 – Don’t bury your heads

It is almost six months since the FCA published its findings from exploratory work on lifetime mortgage lending on 17 June 2020.  In what has been a muddled year, where mentally it feels like it should be March yet we are nearing Christmas, it’s important that the significance of this regulatory review does not get […]

Dec 20 – Paying for poor advice

As a trade body head representing the mortgage intermediary community the last few months have been tough.  The isolation of Covid has not suited me well.  I am not looking for sympathy but it has changed our approach to lobbying and how we have to work to influence regulators, lenders and firms.  New tricks. At […]

Dec 20 – New routes to market

Before the ink has dried on the £17.9m fine imposed by the Competition and Markets Authority on Compare the Market for breaching competition law by imposing wide ‘most favoured nation’ clauses on providers of home insurance, they have announced a tie up to deliver execution only remortgages to consumers embracing a range of household mortgage […]