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The CASS alarm bells continue to ring
The FSA's latest pronouncements about CASS make it all the more likely that insurance intermediaries will press for 'risk transfer' in their terms of business agreements with insurers to avoid CASS altogether.
Read moreDouble immunity - the PRA and FCA will remain untouchable
On reading reports recently about criticism of the FSA's handling of an unauthorised investment scheme which left 800 investors £11.5 million out of pocket
Read more"Unacceptable" HMRC under fire from Treasury Select Committee
The House of Commons' Treasury Select Committee (the "Committee") recently released its report entitled "Administration and effectiveness of HM Revenue and Customs" (the "Report").
Read moreThose who live in glass houses... UK's anti-bribery controls to be subject to UN peer review
Timing is everything. Just as the Bribery Act 2010 beds in, it has been announced that the UK will be subject to peer review under the UN Convention against Corruption.
Read moreUnravelling trust transactions – the party’s still on in Jersey
I previously reported on the English Court of Appeal’s decision in the combined appeals of Futter v Futter and Pitt v Holt which clarified (or so we thought) the approach to setting aside transactions for mistake under English law.
Read moreGoing backwards? Retrospective legislation can bite!
Retrospective legislation is a particularly hot topic at the moment.
Read moreGuardian beefs up its privacy code
Guardian News & Media, owner of the Guardian and Observer, has revised its internal editorial guidelines and beefed up the sections that protect privacy.
Read moreAbove board, or backroom deals?
The National Audit Office ('NAO') has recently recommended (see HM Revenue & Customs 2010-11 Accounts) that HMRC should ensure that a clear separation should exist between the negotiation and approval of large tax settlements in order to maintain public confidence in the appropriateness of all such settlements.
Read moreFOS believes respondent firms should be seen but not heard
Tucked at the end of Ombudsman News edition 95 in a little Q&A section about recent queries to its technical advice desk is a bold statement about the FOS' reluctance to hold oral hearings.
Read moreAutomatic numberplate recognition: is it legal?
A report in the Guardian last week reminds readers of the strong likelihood that local police forces have tracked their movements with the use of automatic numberplate recognition (ANPR).
Read moreReporting the family courts - new guide published
A valuable guide has just been published which sets out the law governing access to, and reporting of, the family courts.
Read moreCOP that! HMRC propose a new contractual disclosure facility
On 20 July 2011, HMRC published a discussion document entitled: Civil Investigation of Fraud – Contractual Disclosure Facility.
Read moreCMCs - why not cut out the middle man?
A joint note from the MoJ, FSA, FOS and FSCS issued last week sets out the role that CMCs play in financial services complaints and highlighted the potential drawbacks of engaging a third party in the complaints procedure.
Read moreA "tenuous claim to privacy": Hutcheson v News Group
Can you expect to keep a second family private? That was the ambitious hope of celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay's father-in-law, Chris Hutcheson.
Read moreRDR: To delay or not to delay, that is the question
The Treasury Select Committee recommended in its recent report that the implementation of RDR be delayed for one year (until January 2014).
Read moreHMRC 'refresh' their litigation and settlement strategy
As tax practitioners will be aware, HMRC's Litigation and Settlement Strategy ('LSS') is the framework within which HMRC seeks to resolve tax disputes through civil procedures.
Read moreEIS and VCT promotions: suitability not guaranteed
The FSA's explicit warning about Enterprise Investment Scheme (EIS) and Venture Capital Trust (VCT) financial promotions will do little to help financial advisers defend complaints about such investments if FOS makes a habit of disregarding their 'preferential tax status'.
Read moreReporting the Courts: a view on postponement orders
The principle of open justice has been ardently promoted in our society for many years, as was confirmed by Lord Hewart in R v Sussex Justices, ex parte McCarthy who said that “it is not merely of some importance but it is of fundamental importance that justice should not only be done, but should manifestly and undoubtedly be seen to be done”.
Read moreNews Corp/BSkyB – a blow to an independent competition regime
In my letter to the editor in today's Financial Times, I reported on the dangers of mixing politics with regulation.
Read moreInsurance intermediaries must take care with CASS
The FSA's avowed intention to zero in on insurance intermediaries' client money systems and controls should set alarm bells ringing.
Read moreDetails of the new inquiry into press regulation and phone-hacking
It had been thought that the Prime Minister had pledged to set up two separate inquiries: one into phone-hacking and one into press regulation more generally.
Read moreNew approaches to funding tax litigation
There are times when, however hard an advisor tries, a settlement with HMRC is simply not possible.
Read moreFSA wealth management review deadline only a month away
By 9 August, wealth managers must respond to the FSA's Dear CEO letter to confirm they are currently meeting the FSA's suitability requirements for client portfolios and mitigating the risk of future non-compliance.
Read morePublic inquiries into privacy and press regulation
BBC Radio 4's PM programme's 'Privacy Commission' has finished hearing evidence and will presumably be publishing its report shortly.
Read moreAccountability without liability
Last week the FSA laid the foundations of the FCA with the publication of "The Financial Conduct Authority - Approach to Regulation".
Read moreFOS does not breach human rights
The FOS' compliance with fundamental principles of justice was thrown into the spotlight by last week's ECHR decision in the cause célèbre case of Heather Moor & Edgecomb Limited (HME) v UK (FOS).
Read morePhone hacking scandal reaches a new plane
If, as seems likely, it proves true that the News of the World did indeed hack into the voicemail messages of the abducted teenager Milly Dowler, the phone hacking saga moves onto an entirely new plane.
Read moreDisclosure of documents in privacy litigation
What documents is a claimant entitled to demand from a media defendant in a privacy case?
Read moreIs it time to regulate MPs like other professionals?
I am delighted to announce that Sam Bishop, who joins RPC as a trainee in September, won ARDL's 2011 Marion Simmons QC Memorial Essay Prize.
Read morePromotion of competition at the centre of new FCA's remit
Last week the FSA published - "to inform public debate and facilitate stakeholder engagement" - the initial thinking behind how the new FCA, which is expected to be established by end-2012, will approach delivery of its objectives.
Read moreEstate 4 Limited v HMRC – proactivity can achieve results!
We are often asked by advisors to assist them in closing down long-running enquiries by HMRC.
Read moreRPC Practice Notes: guidance for the busy practitioner
In addition to regular updates on the latest tax news and case law developments, RPC Tax Take features Practice Notes written by specialist lawyers at RPC.
Read moreEight things you need to know about the Bribery Act
As we have already posted, the Bribery Act comes in force today.
Read moreBribery Act goes live today - but it's never too late
The birth of the Bribery Act 2010 today represents a new chapter in corporate criminal liability, but the requirements to have anti-bribery systems and controls in place should not surprise any FSA regulated firm.
Read moreThe world (of complaints handling and redress) according to FOS
Yesterday Natalie Ceeney, Chief Ombudsman, set out her vision for how the financial services complaints and redress system can be improved. Her speech came at an interesting time as the performance and powers of FOS are under scrutiny as never before.
Read morePartnership residence – a rallying cry!
An important decision of the First-tier Tribunal has been released in the case of Mark Higgins Rallying (a firm) v. Revenue & Customs [2011] UK FTT 340 (TC).
Read moreMortgage fraud against lenders: FSA's report on how lenders manage the risk
The FSA recently published a report on how lenders manage the risk posed by mortgage fraud.
Read moreCorporates facing criminal penalties need certainty when self-reporting
On Monday of this week I reported in the Financial Times the increasing reliance by the OFT on whistleblowers who come to the OFT through its leniency programme to reveal details of anti-competitive arrangements in exchange for immunity from civil fines and criminal penalties.
Read moreIndustry seeks to put FOS in its place - and FOS fights back
In recent weeks the performance and powers of the FOS have been under intense scrutiny with its own Annual Review, the BBA's judicial review of the PPI complaints rules and FSA announcements about award limits and rule changes.
Read moreAudit – a global market requires global thinking
The OFT has finally dared to lift the lid on the UK's audit market to peer inside what is likely to be a Pandora's box of complex issues.
Read moreFSA secures first conviction for boiler room fraud
The FSA recently secured its first criminal conviction for boiler room fraud. At Southwark Crown Court, David Mason pleaded guilty to:
Read moreLaw Society anti-bribery guide useful for non-lawyers
The Law Society has recently published a guidance note on the Bribery Act 2010 and how its member firms should comply with the Act.
Read moreTreasury plans reduction in burden of the Money Laundering Regulations by decriminalisation
HM Treasury has recently proposed amendments to the Money Laundering Regulations to encourage a risk based approach to anti money laundering compliance and thereby reduce the regulatory burden on SMEs.
Read moreLloyd's Managing Agents faced with four separate anti-bribery reporting obligations
The recent Lloyd's Market Bulletin on the Bribery Act is an excellent guide for Managing Agents, but it suggests that in the event of an incident of bribery (or even suspected bribery) the Managing Agents may need to make as many as four separate reports about their suspicions:
Read moreFinancial Services Bill – FOS naming and shaming could harm blameless businesses
The FOS, under proposed new legislation set out in yesterday’s draft Financial Services Bill, would be required to publish reports on its determinations into consumer complaints, naming and potentially shaming businesses involved.
Read moreJustice Secretary expresses concern over MPs defying injunctions
The Times has today reported that the Justice Secretary Ken Clarke yesterday told the Joint Committee on the Defamation Bill that he was concerned about the growing habit of using parliamentary privilege to defy court gagging orders.
Read moreNational Crime Agency: an FBI for the UK?
The recent speculation that the SFO would be wound up (as discussed in my earlier blog) has somewhat over-shadowed the plans for a National Crime Agency (NCA).
Read moreTiming is everything... but not in the fight against bribery and corruption!
With the implementation of the Bribery Act only two weeks away, absolutely the last thing that should have been of concern was the break up of the lead anti-corruption investigator and prosecutor, the Serious Fraud Office (SFO).
Read moreA former judge reflects on privacy injunctions
Mr Justice Eady's interview last month by Joshua Rosenberg -
Read moreResolving PPI complaints – pay them all, defend in Court or request a FOS hearing?
Barclays announced yesterday that it will reimburse all customers who complained about the sale of their PPI before 20 April in full (plus 8% interest) without any further investigation of the individual claims.
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