FSCS postpones £30m interim levy on investment advisers

Laura Miller
clock

The Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS) has said it no longer expects to raise an interim levy on investment advisers for the 2013/14 period.

The move follows a review of the number of claims coming in to the service and the timing of compensation payments, the FSCS said. In November the FSCS had said that the advice community was likely to be billed a £30m interim levy early this year, mainly covering the cost of the Catalyst Investment group failure, which was declared in default in October. At that time the FSCS said it faced a shortfall of £29.5m on investment intermediation, a deficit largely caused by compensation payments due to clients of Catalyst, which were sold bonds worth more than £50m backed by the collapsed A...

To continue reading this article...

Join Professional Adviser for free

  • Unlimited access to real-time news, industry insights and market intelligence
  • Stay ahead of the curve with spotlights on emerging trends and technologies
  • Receive breaking news stories straight to your inbox in the daily newsletters
  • Make smart business decisions with the latest developments in regulation, investing retirement and protection
  • Members-only access to the editor’s weekly Friday commentary
  • Be the first to hear about our events and awards programmes

Join

 

Already a Professional Adviser member?

Login

More on Regulation

FCA proposes to cut down on data reporting for firms

FCA proposes to cut down on data reporting for firms

Part of regulator’s programme to ‘reduce burden’

Isabel Baxter
clock 16 April 2025 • 2 min read
FCA pumps £3.7m into advice/guidance boundary review work

FCA pumps £3.7m into advice/guidance boundary review work

Come as the regulator proposes to increase fees by 2.5%

Isabel Baxter
clock 08 April 2025 • 3 min read
Open letter slamming FCA email policy sent to regulator and government

Open letter slamming FCA email policy sent to regulator and government

'Alarming lack of consultation'

Beth Brearley
clock 20 March 2025 • 2 min read