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

FSA Slaps Credit Suisse UK with a £5.95m Fine for Data Failings Regarding SCARPs

Subscribe to our newsletter

The UK Financial Services Authority (FSA) has fined Credit Suisse’s UK operations £5.95 million for failing to maintain accurate records for its structured capital at risk products (SCARPs) and risk related systems and controls failures. According to the regulator, the private bank had inadequate systems and controls in place in order to assess its customers’ risk appetite and therefore did not accurately judge their suitability for investment in SCARPs, which are complex financial products that provide income to customers but also expose them to the risk that they may lose all or part of their initial capital.

Between January 2007 and December 2009 Credit Suisse UK customers invested over £1 billion in SCARPs, but these customers may not have been told the full story with regards to the risk they were exposing themselves to, says the regulator. The FSA picked up the potential failures when it conducted an on site visit at the firm; a practice that the regulator is increasing in its bid to crackdown on firms’ risk management practices.

The FSA indicates that the failures have resulted in Credit Suisse UK breaching Principle 3 of the FSA’s handbook, relating to selling products to customers that were unsuitable for them. As a result, the private bank has since made a significant number of changes to its advisory processes and has enhanced the systems and controls in place to ensure the suitability of its advice to its customers, says the regulator. It has also agreed to carry out a past business review, overseen by an independent third party, in relation to SCARP purchases during the period identified. If a customer is found to have been advised to purchase an unsuitable product, redress will be paid to the customer by Credit Suisse UK to ensure that they have not suffered financially as a result. Hence the fine is only part of the financial cost of these failings for the firm.

On 14 June 2011, the FSA sent a ‘Dear CEO’ letter to the wealth management industry, following a review of the suitability of client portfolios in a sample of firms in the sector. As part of the review, the regulator identified what it called “significant, widespread failings”. The FSA considers suitability – and the ability to demonstrate it – a key area of risk in the wealth management industry and indicates that firms in this sector are seeing, and will continue to see, an ongoing and increasing focus on these issues.

Keeping tighter control over risk management assessments and instrument data with regards to client suitability all plays into the wider data management arena. By keeping up to date records and being able to produce them on demand to the regulator, firms could avoid the financial and reputational impact of fines such as these.

You can read the FSA’s full final notice to Credit Suisse UK on the regulator’s website here.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Managing Non-Financial Misconduct Under SMCR

Non-financial misconduct – encompassing behaviours such as bullying, sexual harassment, and discrimination is a key focus of the Senior Managers and Certification Regime (SMCR). The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has underscored that such misconduct is not only unethical but also poses significant risks to a firm’s culture and operational integrity. Recognizing the profound impact on...

BLOG

Leaders Scrutinise a Changing Industry at A-Team Group’s Annual Data Management Summit New York City

Experts and executives from across the financial data ecosystem gathered at A-Team Group’s Data Management Summit New York 2025 last week to discuss and probe the latest innovations, trends and strategies in our fast-moving industry. From data quality and artificial intelligence agents to modern data architectures and data products, a multitude of current topics were...

EVENT

Data Management Summit London

Now in its 16th year, the Data Management Summit (DMS) in London brings together the European capital markets enterprise data management community, to explore how data strategy is evolving to drive business outcomes and speed to market in changing times.

GUIDE

Data Lineage Handbook 2019

Welcome to our latest handbook on data lineage, a critical concern for data managers working to achieve regulatory compliance, deliver operational gains, and provide meaningful value to the business. The handbook covers the complete scope of data lineage, with a view to helping you win management buy-in and budget, decide whether to build or buy...