UK. FCA chairman hails ‘significant improvement’ in DB advice

The chairman of the Financial Conduct Authority has hailed significant improvement in the defined benefit transfer advice market following a “systematic and intensive” supervision drive.

Speaking at a Treasury select committee meeting yesterday (November 4) Charles Randell praised improvement in the pension advice sector, a market which has been the subject of heavy scrutiny by the regulator in recent years.

Mr Randell said the FCA had undertaken a “systematic and intensive” supervision programme with firms with defined benefit transfer advice permissions to assess their advice, involving an “enormous number” of file reviews.

He said: “At the early stages of those exercises we found that the level of unsuitable advice was concerning. “We have seen in the more recent reviews we have done that the levels of unsuitable or unacceptable advice or advice that can’t be explained has been coming down significantly. “So we have seen a significant improvement in the quality of advice.”

In June the FCA revealed more than 700 advice firms had relinquished their defined benefit transfer permissions after intervention from the regulator. As part of its clampdown in the market the FCA said it had collected transfer data from 3,000 firms, and of these provided “detailed feedback” to more than half of them.

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