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Head of financial watchdog says critical report is not fair

Financial Conduct Authority chief executive Nikhil Rathi as defended the organisation after the report by MPs and peers.

By contributor By Rob Freeman, PA
Published
The Financial Conduct Authority offices
The Financial Conduct Authority offices (PA)

The chief executive of the UK’s financial watchdog has said criticism of the organisation by a group of MPs and peers is not fair.

A cross-party parliamentary group, comprising 30 MPs and 14 peers, presented a report on the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) to Parliament on Tuesday.

It condemned the FCA as “incompetent” and “dishonest” and warned the body needs an urgent overhaul.

But chief executive Nikhil Rathi defended the FCA, saying it was dealing with “record numbers of financial crime prosecutions” and had become one of the world’s “most evolved consumer protection regimes”.

Speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Money Box programme, he said: “We will always stay focused on improving our operational performance, but I don’t think it would be fair to characterise the position as nothing has happened.”

He said the balance of promoting growth, including changes to allow more companies to list in the UK, and consumer protection “requires a debate”.

“That does mean that over time a few more things will go wrong, but the risk appetite in the economy needed to adjust to support the growth that the economy needs.”

Mr Rathi said the FCA, whose job is to regulate the conduct of around 42,000 financial businesses in the UK, published more data and was subjected to Parliamentary scrutiny more than “any other regulator in the world”.

The report drew from the testimony of 175 individuals including former employees, scam victims and whistleblowers.

“The picture painted is not pretty,” it concluded.

“The FCA is seen as incompetent at best, dishonest at worst. Its actions are slow and inadequate, its leaders opaque and unaccountable.”

The evidence gathered suggests that the watchdog is “not fit for purpose”, with issues “rooted in the way the organisation is being led, conflicts of interest and the culture that the successive leadership teams have created”, the report read.

The report outlined a number of suggested reforms including the introduction of a supervisory council to assess the authority’s effectiveness, changes to funding, a “no tolerance” policy for lack of integrity and changes to the way senior leadership is appointed.

It concluded that urgent action needs to be taken to address the concerns, or there is a risk that “stakeholders’ patience is exhausted” and discussions will shift from reforming to replacing the organisation entirely.

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