The FCA’s Consumer Duty represents what the regulator terms a “paradigm shift” in its expectations of firms. The Consumer Duty introduces a new Consumer Principle, which requires firms “to act to deliver good outcomes for retail customers”. In recognition of the barriers many consumers face to pursuing their financial objectives, the FCA wants to see firms deliver a higher standard of customer care and protection, and to go further to equip consumers to make effective decisions in their interests.
Following two consultation papers issued in 2021, the FCA published finalised guidance on 27 July 2022.
Firms are required to implement the rules for open products and services by the end of July 2023, and for closed books of business by the end of July 2024. The FCA has also set interim deadlines that firms must comply with, including for Boards to have agreed implementation plans by 31 October 2022, and for manufacturers to complete all necessary reviews for open products and/or services by the end of April 2023 and share relevant information with distributors.
The rules impact all firms which distribute or manufacture products and/or services to retail customers, and form a crucial part of the FCA's 2022-2025 strategy.
The wide-ranging proposals will require firms to review their product suite, communications and end-to-end customer journey, and to consider changes in areas including governance and accountability, MI and reporting, product design, pricing, distribution, servicing and staff training - all within a challenging implementation timeframe.
“We will make the Consumer Duty an integral part of our regulatory approach and mindset - including authorisation, supervision and enforcement priorities and processes.”
In May 2022, 1 in 4 of all UK adults had low financial resilience.
The FCA has been clear that it will take an ‘assertive’ approach to firms’ implementation of the new rules, and has strongly cautioned firms on their readiness to meet the Consumer Duty. Firms should take a risk-based approach to implementation, focusing initial work on the most complex and risky products, and pay particular attention to the strengthened requirements on governance and accountability.
Boards must take full responsibility for delivering Consumer Duty, maintaining oversight and challenging appropriately. The Consumer Duty should form part of the strategic planning for any financial services business in scope of the rules.
As the FCA’s implementation deadlines approach, look out for further PwC analysis and insights on how firms should be approaching implementing the Consumer Duty rules.