FSA: Banks should be "very frightened"
FSA: Banks should be "very frightened"
Friday 13th March 2009
Banks should be "very frightened" of the FSA, the chief executive said in a speech outlining the City watchdog's new tougher stance.Hector Sants told delegates at a Reuters Newsmakers event that the Financial Services Authority (FSA) will take on a more "intrusive and direct" role in the future and threw down the gauntlet to the industry.
"There is a view that people are not frightened of the FSA," he said.
"I can assure you that this is a view I am determined to correct. People should be very frightened of the FSA."
The FSA, which has been on a recruitment drive to expand its regulatory activities, is changing in response to the crisis, Mr Sants added.
"In the future we will seek to make judgements on the judgements of senior management and take actions if in our view those actions will lead to risks to our statutory objectives. This is a fundamental change.
"It is moving from regulation based only on observable facts to regulation based on judgements about the future."
Mr Sants said the FSA will need to balance tougher regulation with the need to encourage innovation and warned reducing risk too much could stifle economic growth.
The FSA will also be focusing on 'outcomes testing' - for example, 'mystery shopping' and 'branch visits' that judge services from a customer point of view rather than detailed reviews of high-level management information.
Adam Phillips, the acting chairman of the Financial Services Consumer Panel, welcomed this move. "The FSA's new commitment to focus on outcomes is long overdue we have argued for some time that the FSA's supervisors need to see how things look from the point of view of the customers dealing with firms, rather than relying on what firms tell the regulator," he said.
The watchdog needs to undergo a transformation, Mr Sants said, but it is on track to deliver better regulation.
"The FSA has been seared by recent events but it is tougher and better as a result. The FSA has grown up," he concluded.

Related News
JD Wetherspoon toasts surprise rise in revenue - 13/03/09
Pub chain JD Wetherspoon has bucked the trend of the faltering drinks industry by posting a 6
Pub chain JD Wetherspoon has bucked the trend of the faltering drinks industry by posting a 6
Wen determined to meet downturn with stimulus - 13/03/09
Chinese premier Wen Jiabao has said his government has the economic "ammunition" to follow up its stimulus package with further spending
Chinese premier Wen Jiabao has said his government has the economic "ammunition" to follow up its stimulus package with further spending
Ambitious Darling faces uphill G20 struggle - 13/03/09
Britain hopes to persuade the G20 to commit to more regulation at the finance ministers' summit tomorrow
Britain hopes to persuade the G20 to commit to more regulation at the finance ministers' summit tomorrow
Wall Street rally boosts FTSE 100 - 13/03/09
A surge on the US stock markets lifted the FTSE 100 this morning, propelling the index 62 points higher by 08:35 GMT
A surge on the US stock markets lifted the FTSE 100 this morning, propelling the index 62 points higher by 08:35 GMT
Crime of the century: Madoff pleads guilty - 12/03/09
Bernard Madoff has pleaded guilty to 11 criminal charges over the largest financial fraud in history
Bernard Madoff has pleaded guilty to 11 criminal charges over the largest financial fraud in history
News Article Search
Quick Apply
News Archive


