Senior managers say new regulation creates competition and leadership barriers

New rules on senior management responsibilities risk deterring talented future leaders from taking top roles in the sector, according to research from regulatory consultants Bovill.

Related topics:  Finance News
Rozi Jones
3rd November 2017
barrier warn time delay
"There is a real risk that these regimes could lead to a brain drain, where top talent no longer aspires to take up senior positions in financial services companies."

Left unaddressed, this could threaten the future competitiveness of regions where levels of personal accountability are higher, according to the company.

The FCA's rules make senior managers directly accountable for their firms’ regulatory breaches, and ensures those with bad records cannot continue to work in the industry.
 
The FCA closes its consultation today on extending the Senior Managers and Certification Regime to cover investment firms in the UK. The regulations introduced in March last year currently apply to banks and insurers. The FCA intends to roll the rules out to cover the remainder of the sector in 2018.

44% of senior managers across the UK, US, Hong Kong and Singapore believe it will be difficult to attract quality candidates to leadership positions in regimes with high levels of personal liability.

But despite the worries, the research found broad industry recognition of the need for the new rules. 50% of senior managers believe the level of regulatory scrutiny on them is appropriate, with a further one in ten feeling it is actually too low.

Ben Blackett-Ord, Chief Executive at Bovill, said: “A decade from the start of the financial crisis, and a shift in regulatory focus from the institution to the individual is apparent. But we must also be alert to unintended consequences of the new rules affecting senior management. There is a real risk that these regimes could lead to a brain drain, where top talent no longer aspires to take up senior positions in financial services companies.
 
“There are clear concerns about the personal risk associated with these roles. For the sector to thrive we need to make sure financial services continues to attract the bright and the ambitious. If unaddressed, in regions with higher levels of individual responsibility this could impede growth and innovation and stymie industry diversity.

“It is reassuring to see that leaders accept and understand why scrutiny of their accountability is higher than ever before. But it is also evident that the potential leaders of tomorrow in the financial services industry are being deterred by what they view as the “lasting record” nature of the new regulations, where judgement errors could bar them from working in the industry again.
 
“Only time will tell whether the Senior Managers and Certification Regime can deliver what it aims to achieve.”

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