Reed Smith Client Alerts

Key takeaways

  • On 25 September 2023, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) published consultation papers setting out a number of proposed measures aimed at improving diversity and inclusion (D&I) in the sector.
  • While the consultation was broad in scope, this client alert will focus on the proposed changes to the treatment of non-financial misconduct, including proposals to provide more comprehensive guidance on the integration of non-financial misconduct considerations into:
    • the FCA’s Conduct Rules found in the COCON sourcebook;
    • firms’ assessment of the fitness and propriety of their staff in accordance with the FIT sourcebook; and
    • guidance on the Suitability Threshold Condition in the COND sourcebook.

作者: Romin Dabir Patrick Rappo Rosanne Kay Bethan Harris

Building column on a government building with a beautiful blue sky.

Regulatory backdrop

The updated guidance on non-financial misconduct is timely given the recent controversy surrounding the ‘Fit and Proper’ test in light of sexual assault and harassment allegations against hedge fund manager Crispin Odey. A Financial Times report published in July found that Mr Odey had been accused of misconduct by 13 women over the course of 25 years but was still considered to meet the ‘Fit and Proper’ standard required of senior management at financial services firms.

The FCA’s policy on enforcement action taken against individuals who have engaged in non-financial misconduct has long been an area of ambiguity. In 2021, the Upper Tribunal upheld a decision by the FCA to ban director and financial advisor Jon Frensham following his conviction for a sexual grooming offence. It was the first time that the Upper Tribunal had been asked to consider a case where the FCA was seeking a prohibition order against an individual based on that individual’s conviction for a criminal offence that was unrelated to the individual’s regulated activity and did not involve dishonesty.

In making its decision, the Upper Tribunal remarked that Mr Frensham’s conviction alone would not, in its view, have justified the prohibition order: It was necessary to consider whether Frensham’s non-professional misconduct also amounted to professional misconduct in order for regulatory action to be justified. Frensham’s behaviour in breaching the conditions of his bail and failing to be open and transparent with the FCA meant that this test was satisfied.

In 2022, the FCA appeared to go against the approach taken by the Tribunal in Frensham when it banned Ashkan Zahedian, the sole director of an authorised consumer credit firm, from working in financial services after a criminal conviction for a violent non-work-related offence.

As a result, it is clear that the new proposals will provide some much-needed clarity regarding the approach of the FCA to enforcement action taken against individuals who have engaged in non-financial misconduct, as well as some guidance on their expectations of firms when it comes to notifying the regulators of such incidents.