Compliance
Compliance Corner: UBS, Financial Conduct Authority

The latest compliance issues in wealth management around the world.
UBS has been fined £27.6
million ($36.6 million) by the UK regulator, the Financial
Conduct Authority, for failings relating to 135.8 million
transaction reports between November 2007 and May 2017.
The Zurich-listed bank failed to ensure that it provided complete
and accurate information in relation to approximately 86.67
million reportable transactions, the FCA said in a statement
yesterday. It also erroneously reported 49.1 million transactions
to the FCA, which were not, in fact, reportable. Altogether, over
a period of nine and a half years, UBS made 135.8m errors in its
transaction reporting, breaching FCA rules, the regulator
said.
The FCA also found that UBS failed to take reasonable care to
organise and control its affairs responsibly and effectively in
respect of its transaction reporting. These failings related to
aspects of UBS’s change management processes, its maintenance of
the reference data used in its reporting and how it tested
whether all the transactions it reported to the FCA were accurate
and complete, it said.
"Firms must have proper systems and controls to identify what
transactions they have carried out, on what markets, at what
price, in what quantity and with whom. If firms cannot
report their transactions accurately, fundamental risks arise,
including the risk that market abuse may be hidden," Mark
Steward, FCA executive director of Enforcement and Market
Oversight, said.
UBS agreed to resolve the case and so qualified for a 30 per cent
discount on the overall penalty. Without this discount, the FCA
would have imposed a financial penalty of £39,427,795, the
regulator added.