About a-team Marketing Services
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry

A-Team Insight Blogs

FCA Focus on Non-Financial Misconduct Amplifies Case for Comms Surveillance

Subscribe to our newsletter

By Oliver Blower, Chief Executive Officer of VoxSmart.

Leading City compliance professionals have been bombarded with reasons to enhance their employee communications surveillance capabilities over recent months, with fresh headlines making the case on an almost daily basis. 

Recently, yet another story broke around the threat posed by insider trading, with ex-Goldman Sachs analyst Mohammed Zina jailed for 22 months after he was found guilty of nine counts of insider trading and fraud. Moreover, wrongdoers set on exploiting access to confidential information for their personal financial gain appear to be growing increasingly creative.  

Beyond insider trading, watchdogs’ ongoing investigation into instant messaging-related record-keeping failures has cost ill-prepared financial institutions billions in financial penalties over recent years – a crackdown that shows no sign of abating in 2024. If these issues weren’t convincing enough, perhaps the Financial Conduct Authority’s (FCA) latest investigation will be.  

Last month, the FCA kicked off its crackdown on so-called non-financial misconduct, including but not limited to workplace harassment. This came in response to the regulator having received nearly 200 allegations of non-financial misconduct over the previous two years, as of April 2023.  

Ultimately, the regulator is seeking to gain a clearer understanding of how financial institutions across the City approach accusations of workplace harassment. The probe will see a range of financial institutions including banks and brokers subject to a host of questions on how they deal with issues such as sexual harassment, bullying, and discrimination. The FCA requires responses to the compulsory survey to include incidents that occurred while staff were at the office and – critically – when working from home or offsite. In a letter, the watchdog said: ‘Should allegations or evidence of non-financial misconduct become known, we expect a regulated firm to take them seriously, have the internal procedures to investigate them promptly and fairly, and to take appropriate action when allegations are upheld’.  

The bit that may alarm firms that do not possess communications surveillance technology is the part around having ‘the internal procedures to investigate [incidents] promptly and fairly’. There is little use in having a formal complaint procedure in place if no record of the alleged harassment was kept by the company in the first place. 

Can such an investigation be considered fair?  

Of course, with some degree of remote working the norm in the post-pandemic world, the number of harassment allegations referring to instances that occur outside of the office is likely to be much greater than in previous decades. The bulk of these incidents will naturally occur via phone, instant messaging platforms, or video calls.  

With this in mind, it seems paramount that financial institutions in the UK and further afield have adequate technology in place to ensure employee communications are transparent, both to satisfy authorities and – most importantly – to ensure staff are as protected as possible against harassment, be it online, over the phone, or face to face. 

While voice capture and communication surveillance technology platforms are primarily concerned with ensuring regulatory compliance with financial misconduct and record-keeping rules, companies shouldn’t overlook their benefits concerning non-financial misconduct. Indeed, as financial regulators turn up the heat on workplace harassment, these peripheral advantages could prove vital to a firm’s workplace culture and reputation. 

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Best practice approaches to trade surveillance for market abuse

Breaches of market abuse regulation can lead to reputational damage, eye-watering fines and, ultimately, custodial sentences of up to 10 years. Internally, market abuse triggers scrutiny of traders and trading behaviours; externally it can undermine confidence in markets and cause financial instability. This webinar will discuss market abuse of different types, such as insider trading...

BLOG

NICE Actimize ARCHIVE-X Offers Single Source Regulatory Record Keeping

NICE Actimize has released ARCHIVE-X, a cloud-based, all communications archiving and records management solution that provides buy-side, sell-side and online trading platforms with one solution to support regulatory requirements for communications archiving and records management. The aim is to help financial institutions achieve more robust records lifecycle management and reduce compliance risk by archiving all...

EVENT

TradingTech Briefing New York

Our TradingTech Briefing in New York is aimed at senior-level decision makers in trading technology, electronic execution, trading architecture and offers a day packed with insight from practitioners and from innovative suppliers happy to share their experiences in dealing with the enterprise challenges facing our marketplace.

GUIDE

Regulatory Data Handbook 2024 – Twelfth Edition

Welcome to the twelfth edition of A-Team Group’s Regulatory Data Handbook, a unique and useful guide to capital markets regulation, regulatory change and the data and data management requirements of compliance. The handbook covers regulation in Europe, the UK, US and Asia-Pacific. This edition of the handbook includes a detailed review of acts, plans and...