Budget 2016: FCA to regulate claims management companies

fca-flexes-muscles

The government has transferred responsibility for regulating claims management companies to the Financial Conduct Authority after accepting the recommendations of the independent review into the regulation of CMCs.

Today's (16 March) Budget said the new regulatory regime will be tougher and will ensure CMC managers can be held personally accountable for the actions of their businesses.

The ABI last November called for the FCA to regulate CMCs.

ABI director general Huw Evans said in response to the Budget announcement: "Moving the regulator to the FCA, as the ABI has asked, is absolutely the right thing to do and a major reform."

"[The announcement] should go a long way in driving the cowboy operators out of town and helping to ensure honest customers don't end up footing the bill for their dodgy practices," Evans said.

Zurich UKGI CEO Vibhu Sharma said tighter regulation of CMCs would create a level playing field with the rest of the industry.

"For too long customers have been subject to unnecessary harassment from rogue businesses seeking to extort money from the industry," Sharma said.

Graeme Trudgill, British Insurance Brokers' Assocition executive director, added: "This decision is a giant step forward in reducing fraud and creating a fair approach to regulation and we look forward to seeing the publication of the detailed plans."

ABI to propose fee cap

ABI motor and liability policy adviser Ben Howarth added the trade body will respond to the Ministry of Justice fees consultation suggesting a cap on personal injury CMC fees.

The MoJ in February proposed capping fees charged by claims management companies handling mis-sold payment protection insurance claims.

"The weight of evidence that has come out of Carol Brady's review [of CMC regulation] and the scale of problems she has identified and which the government has acknowledged by saying the FCA should take it on - that all points to the fact that action needs to be taken on CMC fees as well," Howarth said.

Government urged to adequately fund FCA

LV general insurance claims director Martin Milliner urged government to ensure the FCA is properly resourced to regulate CMCs.

"The FCA needs more funding and resourcing than the Claims Management Regulator received under the Ministry of Justice," he said.

With greater powers there should be greater enforcement and the FCA should introduce larger fines and have the ability to criminalise the behaviour of rogue CMCs that are the heartbeat of our compensation culture," Milliner added.

He also suggested CMC directors and senior managers should be subject to the Senior Insurance Managers Regime.

Also announced in the Budget was a 0.5% increase to insurance premium tax.

Only users who have a paid subscription or are part of a corporate subscription are able to print or copy content.

To access these options, along with all other subscription benefits, please contact info@postonline.co.uk or view our subscription options here: http://subscriptions.postonline.co.uk/subscribe

You are currently unable to copy this content. Please contact info@postonline.co.uk to find out more.

Five charged over collapse of law firm Axiom Ince

The Serious Fraud Office has charged five men, including two solicitors, with offences including fraud, forgery and the destruction of documents, following the collapse of the law firm Axiom Ince and alleged improper use of more than £60m of client money.

Labour’s £1.6bn pothole plan falls short

Insurers have reacted to Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander’s announcement of a 50% increase in funding for resurfacing roads, observing more cash will be required to end the damage done to cars by potholes.

Q&A: Lauren France, DWF Law

After being named Unsung Hero of the Year at the British Insurance Awards 2024, DWF's specialist manager and deputy head of organised fraud Lauren France talks about the work being done to combat fraud, what threats are on the horizon, and how new injuries are cropping up in personal injury claims.

Making sure Father Christmas is covered

Insurance Post editor Emma Ann Hughes has made a list of Santa Claus’s risks and got the insurance industry’s leading lights to check it twice in order to recommend products plus services for the man tasked with delivering a holly, jolly Christmas this year.

Claims and Legal Review of Year Review 2024

Looking back at 2024, claims, adjusting and legal firm chiefs share how their organisations handled claims arising from named winter storms, worked towards becoming carbon net zero, the impact of claims costs starting to stabilise and why some found implementing artificial intelligence solutions trickier than expected.

Big Interview: Neil Gibson, Sedgwick

Neil Gibson, CEO of Sedgwick UK, reflects on his first year in the top job and shares his plans to grow Sedgwick in the UK by winning the sector’s war for talent and focussing on customer service outcomes.

Most read articles loading...

You need to sign in to use this feature. If you don’t have an Insurance Post account, please register for a trial.

Sign in
You are currently on corporate access.

To use this feature you will need an individual account. If you have one already please sign in.

Sign in.

Alternatively you can request an individual account here