For financial institutions looking to become directly authorised as investment firms by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), it can be difficult to know exactly which permissions are necessary to apply for. It is important to get this right, as the FCA has placed increased focus on firms maintaining only the permissions that are required for their business model. In this installment of our FCA approval series for early-stage FinTechs, the FCA authorisation process is deconstructed to highlight the various permissions needed by investment firms before they start trading.
When firms apply for FCA authorisation, the regulator will deeply scrutinize the firms’ business plans and investigate whether the permissions applied for are appropriate.
The FCA permissions investment firms hold can also have implications on the prudential category they fall into, impacting the number of capital firms are required to hold and determine whether the firm will be subject to the recently introduced Investment Firms Prudential Regime (IFPR). For example, a firm limiting its business to arranging and advising on certain investments may be categorised as Article 3 MiFID Exempt.
This will depend on the firm’s business model, but here are some of the common FCA permissions investment firms need:
Advising on investments
Advising an investor to buy or sell financial instruments (i.e. shares in a listed company) based on a consideration of their personal circumstances
Arranging (bringing about deals in investments)
This covers arrangements that have the direct effect of concluding a transaction
Making arrangements with a view to transactions in investments
This has a broad scope – a firm may be carrying out this activity even if it is providing only part of the facilities for bringing about a transaction
Dealing in investments as an agent
Instructing the buying and selling of investments on behalf of investors
Dealing in investments as principal
Either where the firm trades using its own capital or where it stands between the buyer and seller on a matched principal basis i.e. the firm matches buy and sell orders to be carried out simultaneously
Managing investments
Managing portfolios on a discretionary basis i.e. buying and selling of investments without the client approving each transaction
Safeguarding and administering assets (without arranging)
Acting as custodian of the property – most firms would apply for the arranging permission instead (below) due to the increased regulatory obligations and scrutiny that come with holding client assets
Arranging the safeguarding and administration of assets
Arranging for another firm to act as custodian of the property
Client Type
For each of the FCA permissions, firms will need to specify the client types they are seeking permission to engage. There are three distinct categories:
Retail
The default category for any client, retail clients are afforded the highest level of protection
Professional
There are two subcategories here ‘per se professional’ (e.g. another regulated investment firm or a large corporate) or a retail client can opt up to ‘elective professional’ status if they satisfy certain criteria around their knowledge, experience, and prior investment activities
Eligible counterparty
Ordinarily financial institutions, insurers, pension funds, or governments. These clients are excluded from the majority of investor protection requirements
While the FCA has recently stated that its standards are going to be increasing, this guide should help investment firms navigate the intensive assessment process.
It is important that firms are prepared for the high level of scrutiny their financial and business models will be under while applying to the FCA. A single well-intentioned but misguided statement in a business plan, or an error in any accounting forecasts, can quickly put an application on the back foot and lead to delays or even rejection.
Consistency is key when providing all the required documents. Prior to submitting the application, ensure all the information given across the business plan, the FCA forms, and the senior manager application packs are consistent with the permissions applied for. At this stage, the firm should also identify the risks (to the firm, the market, and its customers) arising from the FCA permissions it is seeking to hold.
After submitting the application for FCA authorisation, the FCA will almost certainly have additional queries and will usually ask these across several rounds of questioning. The questions could span across multiple areas, including the business model and financials, the customer journey, systems and controls to combat financial crime, the suitability of individuals applying to be senior managers, or any other aspect of the firm’s application. At this stage, firms will also need to be prepared to explain how the regulated activities will be carried on reconciling with the permissions proposed to be held.
After questioning, the FCA will review the permission profile selected during the application.
We are an award-winning compliance consultancy that provides financial services firms with expert compliance resources and capabilities to manage projects across all regulatory areas. For more information about our services and how we can help, contact us today on 0207 436 0630 – or email info@thistleinitiatives.co.uk.