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The necessary shift to compliance outputs

Without mentioning a single rule or regulatory principle and only one section of a statute, Neil Herbert of HR Comply offers up a very passable summary of what the UK's financial conduct regulator expects of the retail sector.
Without mentioning a single rule or regulatory principle and
only one section of a statute, Neil Herbert of HR Comply offers
up a very passable summary of what the UK's financial conduct
regulator expects of the retail sector. Compliance officers at
private wealth firms could do far worse than to circulate this
among their front-line staff.
Keeping the wings on: what if your firm were an
aeroplane?
The UK's Financial Conduct Authority has been very vocal about
the fact that it is no longer looking at box-ticking and
controls. The regulator is now more interested in ‘outputs’ in
terms of how good compliance activity translates into 'market and
client behaviour', in addition to the quality of advice that
banks and wealth managers give their customers.
The wealth management sector recently had the relative ‘comfort’
of the Retail Distribution Review – a prescriptive and reassuring
series of boxes to tick. They merely had to ensure that everybody
eligible had done 35 hours of continuous professional development
(CPD) and had an up-to-date Statement of Professional Standing
(SPS) and that was that. It is very clear now that such
box-ticking will no longer suffice.
Wholesale and investment banking firms have never had the comfort
of such prescriptive guidelines regarding 'training and
competence' (T&C) as the retail and private client sector.
Firms in this sector may now find that they have even further to
go to meet the FCA’s new expectations.
The FCA’s focus is now on the 'overall experience' that a firm
gives its customers – in other words, results. This includes the
way the compliance team, its T&C effort and the firm's
broader compliance culture strive to make that experience a good
one. The FCA, therefore, is looking at the quality of asset
management and advice that the firm affords the customer, along
with its 'market conduct'.
Keeping the wings on
An appropriate analogy here is with aircraft maintenance
engineers and their routine inspection of the wings in
circumstances where the air transport safety legislators have not
bothered to specify the kind of checks that they want in detail.
Instead of performing 100 legally mandatory checks on an aircraft
wing, the engineer has to consider the actual 'customer
experience'. He may have ticked all the boxes on his own
self-compiled list, but if the wings fall off during a flight he
will still be penalised for ruining the 'customer experience'. To
take the analogy further, this is in circumstances where the
aviation authorities have provided only a sketchy impression of
what they think might make the wings fall off - there is just a
vague direction that the engineers must display appropriate
conduct and the highest standards at all times!
To regulate the industry the FCA has launched a new supervisory
model that is pre-emptive and judgement-based rather than
reactive. This obliges firms to deal with underlying causes of
trouble rather than mere symptoms and is focused more on firms
'doing the right thing' rather than merely complying with
specific rules. The FCA says that firms do not usually 'go wrong'
because they fail to comply with the rules but because there are
fundamental flaws in their business models, cultures or business
practices.
At a practical level, then, the FCA has made it clear that it is
focusing on the 'outputs' and not the 'inputs'. What are those
outputs? They include – let us lapse for a moment into
regulator-speak for this – the achievement of appropriate
customer outcomes and the highest ethical performance of all
customer-facing staff, with those staff being technically
competent to advise and provide the most suitable advice in any
given scenario and with regard to each individual client.
Watching for changes in the regulator's facial
expression
The FCA has often indicated that 'appropriate customer outcomes'
depend heavily on firms having internal cultures that view the
interests of their customers as paramount. Cultural leadership
has to come from the top. The senior management of every firm
must enshrine the right culture in clearly described business
practices that ordinary people can understand easily and, once
established, the culture must inspire every layer of management
whenever someone has to make a judgement about what is acceptable
and what is not.
The problem with all of this is that it is relatively arbitrary.
Without clear rules or benchmarks, how can firms ensure that they
are satisfying the expectations of the regulator? Increasingly it
seems, the FCA is lashing out against both firms and individuals
according ot its own subjective judgements and agenda rather than
by black and white regulatory rules or guidelines.
For example in recent enforcements against ‘market abuse’ the FCA
has relied upon s118(5) Financial Services Act, dealing
with trading activity that gives a false impression of the
supply, demand and price of investments. The FCA does not,
however, impose comparative quantum caps concerning how much of a
bond or stock can be held. This leaves the whole process of
pricing bonds (particularly in relatively narrowly traded
markets) open to claims of market abuse at the whim of the FCA.
With careers and reputations at stake, who would be a
market-maker in these circumstances?
Determining acceptable levels of conduct
The greatest challenge facing compliance and risk people is to
try to determine the acceptable levels of conduct in the multiple
market, investment and client sectors that the FCA regulates.
There have been many recent references in FCA speeches or press
releases about the need for senior management or compliance
people to be aware of everything that happens on their watch.
Much rhetoric and recent legislation has been directed at holding
these senior individuals accountable for any of their staff’s
misconduct and shifting the burden of evidence to being one of
‘unless you can prove you did something to stop it, you are as
guilty as the perpetrators themselves’. Realistically speaking,
in large organisations with huge trading floors and wealth
management desks, this is simply impossible.
The recent response of the industry has been to recruit more and
more compliance staff, and this has driven up both demand and
salaries. There continues, however, to be little evidence that
the issue of 'conduct risk' is being addressed at its root. Not
enough boards are putting conduct risk at the top of their
agenda, with the resultant absence of conduct and compliance
strategies being imposed from the top down.
How to solve an undefined problem?
Regulators around the world are giving the management and
mitigation of conduct risk a high priority, yet no universally
agreed definition of conduct risk exists. In response therefore,
compliance officers, risk managers, senior management – and,
crucially in my view, human resources departments as well – need
to establish what ‘good’ looks like for their organisation. They
then need to put in place the systems, controls and
infrastructure to effectively manage and attain that standard.
What firms can do is implement the highest levels of scrutiny.
They must 'benchmark' client and market behaviour along with
conduct. They must then provide the means to monitor, assess and
enforce such behaviour through appropriate policy, process and
technological infrastructure.
A focus on conduct, quality and suitability of advice, and the
maintenance of market integrity must influence behaviour. Yet in
my experience, eight out of ten firms are focusing on compliance
inputs (what they have done) instead of outputs (what the effect
of those actions really is). If this situation persists, sooner
or later the wings are bound to fall off.
Neil Herbert is the director of HRComply. To find him, go to
www.hrcomply.co.uk