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Showing 41 to 50 of 765 search results for introduction of the Consumer Duty.
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Consumer Duty: Findings from our review of fair value frameworks
Read the findings of our review into firms’ approaches to fair value assessments under the Consumer Duty. -
Investing in outcomes: a regulatory approach to deliver for consumers, markets and competitiveness
Speech by Nikhil Rathi, FCA Chief Executive delivered at the Morgan Stanley European Financials Conference. -
Accepting pension transfer referrals from overseas advisers: UK authorised firms’ responsibilities
The FCA highlights the increased risks to consumers when overseas firms refer defined benefit scheme members to UK firms for pension transfer advice. -
Consumer Duty implementation: good practice and areas for improvement
What firms are doing well and what they could do better. -
New Chair appointments to FCA’s Markets Practitioner Panel, Practitioner Panel and Listing Authority Advisory Panel
The FCA has appointed Clare Woodman as Chair of the FCA Markets Practitioner Panel, Matt Hammerstein as Chair of the FCA Practitioner Panel, and Mandy Gradden as Chair of the Listing Authority Advisory Panel. -
About our data
The FCA publishes a wide range of data. Find out about the types of data available and how often it is published. -
A changing landscape: the FCA’s strategic priorities for the pensions sector
Speech by Edwin Schooling Latter, Director of Markets and Wholesale Policy at the FCA, delivered at Pensions and Benefits UK 2019. -
Your rights with financial services
Your rights as a consumer are protected by law. Find out what to expect from your providers, and where you can go if something goes wrong. -
Tackling the hard questions
Speech by Mark Steward, Director of Enforcement and Market Oversight at the FCA, delivered at the Thomson Reuters Annual Compliance & Risk Summit on 26 April 2016, in London. This is the text of the speech as drafted, which may differ from the -
FCA finds concerns over insurers’ valuation of written-off or stolen vehicles
The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has identified shortcomings in how some motor insurance firms are valuing written-off or stolen vehicles.