Industry Surveys
Global Financial Hubs Ramp Up Regulation Spending Following Crisis

Global financial regulators have dramatically increased their expenditure by 59.4 per cent over the past seven years as governments try to crackdown on financial foul play since the financial crisis, latest research by wealth manager Kinetic Partners reveals.
Global financial regulators have increased their expenditure by
59.4 per cent over the past seven years as governments try to
crack down on financial foul play since the financial crisis,
latest research by advisory firm Kinetic Partners
reveals.
The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the UK Financial
Conduct Authority (FCA) and the Securities and Futures Commission
of Hong Kong (SFC) had a combined expenditure of approximately
$2.4 billion ($1.4 billion) in 2012/13 - over $900 million more
than the total expenditure before the financial crisis in 2006/07
of nearly $1.5 billion.
A look at the breakdown shows that the SFC recorded the biggest
increase over the period - up 120.2 per cent to $152.5 million in
2012/13 from $69.25 million during 2006/07. The US was second
with a 61.9 per cent increase, while the UK and FCA finished last
with a 48.4 per cent rise. The FCA spent $870.30 million in
2012/13, up from $586.37 million in 2006/07.
"The focus on effective regulation in the financial markets is no
surprise following the 2008 crisis. The public is demanding that
government agencies take greater steps to protect the public
interest, which requires regulators to expand both the reach and
efficiency of their monitoring activities,” said Julian Korek,
chief executive at Kinetic Partners.
The survey also reveals that the size of the penalties is rising
substantially. In the US, the average size of each penalty
increased by 36 per cent between October 2008 and September 2013
while in the UK it increased from $0.75 million at the end of
2008/09 to $2.06 million at the end of 2012/13.
Recent LIBOR-related scandals are the reason for the steep
increases in penalties. “Although 2012/2013 may be an outlier as
far as regulatory activity, this spike nevertheless reinforces
the trend that regulators are increasingly looking to bring
severe action against big-ticket violations,” the report
said.
Most of the spending took place on hiring more staff and
technology, the survey adds. It revealed that the number of
regulatory staff increased by 36.4 per cent from 2006/07 to
2012/13 across all three agencies.
“This not only requires more sophisticated tools, but also more
feet on the ground. Regulators are demanding that firms have
detailed policies, controls and monitoring such that if employees
stray outside of these, it should be clear that they have
committed a serious offence,” Korek added.