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FCA bans CF30 over false RDR registration

The UK's Financial Conduct Authority has levied a fine of £19,900
on Ewan King, an independent financial advisor who held a
legitimate CF30 licence but who fabricated two 'statements of
professional standing' which are essential for anyone who wishes
to be a retail investment advisor. He pretended to have acquired
these from the Chartered Insurance Institute, one of the
so-called accredited bodies or ABs that dole out such
qualifications. King's world collapsed in June when his firm - he
held a contract with Intrinsic Financial Services as an appointed
representative - told the FCA about his fabrications and the
regulators withdrew his CF30 status. He had failed the
examinations.
Section 66 Financial Services and Markets Act 2000, as amended,
provides that the Authority may take action against a person if
it appears to the FCA that he is guilty of misconduct. The FSA
made use of this and of s56, which allows it to ban someone from
financial services. King is the first IFA to be caught lying
about his RDR qualifications.
Ruth Martin, the managing director of the Chartered Institute for
Securities & Investment, one of the largest ABs, recently told a
conference that all of her chartered members had to complete
their 35 hours' worth of CPD irrespective of where they worked,
i.e. irrespective of whether their field was retail advice or
something else such as operations. For un-chartered members, she
said that the CISI recommended the 35-hour minimum but did not
yet insist on it.
Chartered Institute for Securities & Investment is responsible
for press responses, submissions to regulators, government and
others on issues affecting the securities industry and its
members.