PFS creates Consumer Duty guide for advisers

To help IFAs understand the FCA’s expectations for the incoming regulation

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The Personal Finance Society (PFS) has created a good practice guide on the Financial Conduct Authority’s (FCA) Consumer Duty for personal finance firms.

The Consumer Duty began with a campaign by the Financial Services Consumer Panel to create a statutory ‘duty of care’ in January 2017.

There are not many new rules under the Consumer Duty – instead, it lists four outcomes, against which firms should judge their impact on consumers. They are price and value, consumer understanding, products and services, and consumer support.

Matthew Connell, director of policy and public affairs at the PFS said: “In many ways, financial advisers have been at the forefront of care for their clients – there is no greater discipline for a professional than sitting in front of a client for an annual review and explaining how their investments have performed.

“The Consumer Duty recognises the unique position advisers have in assessing value for clients, saying ‘the adviser can often also have the clearest oversight of the customer’s overall position and an overview of the total proposition’.

“Our good practice guide sets out the regulator’s expectations and is designed to start a conversation about how advisers can discharge the Consumer Duty in a practical and achievable way.”

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