Investment - Articles - 70 percent cut in capital rules red tape


The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) is proposing streamlining the rules on the types of funds investment firms must hold to absorb losses and maintain financial resilience during periods of stress.

 The proposals do not change the rules about how much capital firms must hold but focus on simplifying and consolidating the existing rules about what qualifies as regulatory capital.

 The current regulatory capital rules were designed for banks, making them complex and not tailored to investment firms’ business models. There are large sections which are not relevant to the vast majority of firms, and others we have made simpler. These changes would reduce the volume of legal text by 70%.

 This is part of the FCA’s work to make sure its rulebook works better for the UK market and to remove unnecessary burdens on firms, bolstering growth and investment. It is part of the actions the FCA set out to support growth in its letter to the Prime Minster.

 The proposals are part of the FCA’s wider strategy to help support growth and underpin the continued competitiveness of the UK’s world-leading financial services.

 Now the FCA proposes removing the EU-derived rules and to make them clearer and more accessible, reducing the time and resources firms spend interpreting and applying the requirements.

 The measures do not propose a change to the level of capital firms are required to hold, and the FCA does not expect firms to change their capital arrangements as a result.

 Simon Walls, interim executive director of markets, said: “We are always trying to be a smarter regulator, and part of that agenda is reducing unnecessary burdens on firms. The aim here is to make the rules around how firms hold their capital simpler for the vast majority of firms. We want the revised framework to be proportionate, effective, and aligned with the needs of investment firms while maintaining high standards of financial resilience and consumer protection. Our proposals support the ambitions that we have set in our new strategy and in the commitments we made to the Prime Minister to streamline regulation and reduce regulatory burden while supporting the growth and competitiveness of the UK.”

 
 • Read the full Definition of capital for FCA investment firms consultation paper.
 • Read the FCA’s strategy.
 • Read the FCA’s letter to the Prime Minster on growth.
  

Back to Index


Similar News to this Story

Jittery start to the week focus on oil, housing and earnings
FTSE set for soft open as US futures push higher. Housebuilders under pressure as buyer momentum cools. Oil ticks higher as Middle East risk premium l
Debt regret 1 in 5 say they spend too much on everyday items
Just over a fifth (21%) of adults in the UK are feeling financial regret over their spending habits, with pressures felt particularly strongly by youn
Wall Street at fresh highs amid deal or no deal uncertainty
FTSE 100 flat as US/Iran tensions de-escalate again. Brent crude at $92, 20% below the 2026 peak. US futures stable after record-close on Wall Street.

Site Search

Exact   Any  

Latest Actuarial Jobs

Actuarial Login

Email
Password
 Jobseeker    Client
Reminder Logon

APA Sponsors

Actuarial Jobs & News Feeds

Jobs RSS News RSS

WikiActuary

Be the first to contribute to our definitive actuarial reference forum. Built by actuaries for actuaries.