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

UK FSA Sends Out Yet Another Reminder of 31 December Deadline for SCV Compliance

Subscribe to our newsletter

The UK Financial Services Authority (FSA) has this week sent out another letter (there have been a fair few sent out over the course of this year) to firms’ compliance offices in order to remind them of the 31 December 2010 deadline for compliance with the incoming Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS) Single Customer View (SCV) reforms. The industry response to the reforms, which will significantly impact the customer data management teams of deposit taking institutions in the UK, thus far has been decidedly lacklustre and this letter is, no doubt, another attempt by the FSA to spur firms into action.

The reform is all part of the UK’s attempt at meeting the wider G20 goal of improving customer protection and is designed to facilitate “faster payout” of compensation in the event that a deposit taker is unable to meet the claims of depositors. All deposit takers in the UK are required under the reforms to be able to prepare the SCV, but those with less than 5,000 accounts held by eligible claimants need not have an electronic SCV, although they will still need to be able to provide the SCV on request, in another format.

As noted in the FSA letter: “With effect from 31 December 2010, all deposit takers, including those that have opted out of the electronic verification process are required to be able to generate an SCV file within 72 hours of a request being received from the FSA or FSCS. All deposit takers are required to be able to produce an SCV file from 31 December 2010, but those with less than 5,000 accounts held by eligible claimants need not have an electronic SCV.”

According to the estimates published by the FSA and drawn up by consulting firm Ernst & Young last year, the total cost to a large bank of the data cleansing process in order to be able to produce these reports will be between £191 and £243 million.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Measuring results from client onboarding solutions

Getting client onboarding right is critical to retaining customers, winning new business and avoiding regulatory penalties, but are banks getting it right? And how can they judge their performance and solve problems on a rolling basis? Answering these questions, the webinar will discuss how banks can measure results from client onboarding solutions, what they should...

BLOG

ace Seeks to Disrupt the Very Idea of ‘Digital’ for Financial Institutions

For more than a decade, financial institutions have been told to go digital. Data strategies have been written, platforms migrated to the cloud, and front-end experiences wrapped in slick apps. But for Niamh Kingsley, founder of ace, that conversation is already out of date. Her new firm, launched in November as a specialist post-digital advisory...

EVENT

TradingTech Summit London

Now in its 15th year the TradingTech Summit London brings together the European trading technology capital markets industry and examines the latest changes and innovations in trading technology and explores how technology is being deployed to create an edge in sell side and buy side capital markets financial institutions.

GUIDE

Regulatory Reporting Handbook – First Edition

Welcome to the inaugural edition of A-Team Group’s Regulatory Reporting Handbook, a comprehensive guide to reporting obligations that must be fulfilled by financial institutions on a global basis. The handbook reviews not only the current state of play within the regulatory reporting space, but also looks ahead to identify how institutions should be preparing for...