Financial Conduct Authority (FCA)
Pricing equilibrium to settle within 'next few months': A-Plan CEO Kelly Ogley
A-Plan CEO Kelly Ogley told Post she expects the market will 'reach an equilibrium' on pricing in the next few months following Financial Conduct Authority reforms.
FCA 'considering' Corbin & King BI judgment impact
The Financial Conduct Authority is considering the impact of the recent legal judgment in the case between restaurant group Corbin & King and Axa.
Intelligence: Post's complaints matrix shows the products that let consumers down during the pandemic
Complaints data from the Financial Conduct Authority and the Financial Ombudsman Service helps to create greater transparency and accountability for insurance firms. As Post brings together the most comprehensive set of complaints data from 2014 onwards,…
Regulators quizzed on authorisations and competitiveness by Lords committee
Prudential Regulation Authority CEO Sam Woods has said there is “probably” scope to authorise a greater number of insurance entities in response to questions from a House of Lords select committee about the proportionality of regulation faced by market…
Three key findings from the 'Transitioning To Usage-Based Insurance' webinar
Jonathan Swift, content director for Insurance Post, recently hosted the webinar: ‘Transitioning To Usage-Based Insurance’, in which a panel of experts discuss how usage-based insurance could be core to insurers while future-proofing their ability to…
FCA presses on with plans to scrap bonuses as it revises pay proposals
The Financial Conduct Authority has pressed on with plans to bring an end to performance-based bonuses for staff, prompting condemnation from the trade union Unite.
Intelligence: Raising the AR bar
The insurance industry should not kid itself that it has no issues in its use of appointed representatives but, according to specialists, the FCA consultation should not strike fear into well-run businesses, writes Emmanuel Kenning.
Analysis: Online Safety Bill changes hailed but no room for complacency
Proposals to add paid for advertising and the offence categories of fraud and financial crime to the Online Safety Bill have been welcomed by the insurance industry but as yet there are no guarantees on the final product.
Blog: Stepping into the unknown
Aude Saint-Paul, director at Simon Kucher and Partners, considers how the Financial Conduct Authority price walking ban will change customers’ behaviours, and what opportunities and challenges it has in store for insurers.
FCA bolsters authorisations teams in effort to speed up approval process
The Financial Conduct Authority has added 95 staff in an effort to speed up its authorisations process against a backdrop of possible strike action.
Partners&’s Phil Barton calls for a new commitment to giving quality advice
In the aftermath of the Supreme Court’s business interruption ruling, brokers must now ditch the transactional practices of the past for an advice-led approach to rebuild the marketplace’s reputation, argues Phil Barton, CEO of Partners&.
Brokers defend record amid insurance probe into 'failing' market for flats and tower blocks
Amid regulatory scrutiny brokers have accepted there are insurance challenges for flats but sought to defend their role when approached by Post.
Hunt begins for next FCA chair
HM Treasury has appointed Richard Lloyd as interim chair of the Financial Conduct Authority, with effect from 1 June 2022, as the search for Charles Randell’s successor begins.
Editor's comment: Celebration or commiseration
We are a family that is big on marking the passing of time – birthday, anniversaries and well just any excuse to get together really – good job too with no less than six family birthdays in January alone.
Analysis: Weighing up the FCA’s consumer duty rules
Compliance experts address what the FCA’s new consumer duty proposals will mean for the insurance sector, whether the industry is ahead of the curve and if the changes will be value for money
FCA staff vote yes to strike action if no deal reached with Rathi
Financial Conduct Authority staff who are members of Unite have voted to support strike action in an initial ballot with the union warning CEO Nikhil Rathi not to wage "war" and that "the ball is in FCA’s court now".
DLG CEO Penny James appointed chair of FCA practitioner panel
Penny James, Direct Line Group CEO, has been named chair of the Financial Conduct Authority’s practitioner panel.
FCA issues fair value warning amid government's flats insurance review order
The Financial Conduct Authority has written Dear CEO letters to insurers and brokers, putting pricing models, product fair value and commission in the spotlight after the government ordered a review into the "failing" insurance market for leaseholders.
Michael Gove orders review into ‘failing’ insurance market for leaseholders
The government has called on the Financial Conduct Authority to start a probe into the “crippling costs” of insurance premiums for residents of blocks of flats as it hit out at the current unacceptable situation.
Insurance in the vanguard on consumer duty, says FCA’s Matt Brewis
The Financial Conduct Authority sees insurance as ahead of the game on consumer duty after the work on pricing and value in recent years, the regulator’s director of insurance and conduct specialists Matt Brewis has indicated.
FCA lacks ‘precision’ and regulators need greater accountability, inquiry hears
London Market trade body representatives have told a Lords’ inquiry that the regulator’s ‘one size fits all’ approach to insurance must change and more accountability is needed.
Biba takes aim at weight of regulation and broker FSCS costs
The British Insurance Brokers’ Association has put regulatory and Financial Services Compensation Scheme reform in the crosshairs as it called for a cut in insurance premium tax in its manifesto.
FCA faces staff vote on strike action
Financial Conduct Authority staff are voting on whether to take industrial action at the regulator.
Analysis: Covid BI disputes rage on a year after Supreme Court judgment
The final bill for coronavirus-related business interruption claims could yet run much higher than the £1.3bn paid out so far depending on how issues left unanswered are resolved in the months – and possibly years – ahead.