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The head of the Financial Services Authority (FSA) admitted today that its handling of Northern Rock, the collapsed mortgage bank, had been unaccepatable as the regulator laid out a raft of plans to beef up its supervisory staff and put in place new procedures to prevent a repetition of the crisis.
In a highly anticipated internal review of its handling of the affair, the FSA conceded that the "quality, intensity and rigour" of oversight by its management had been inadequate.
It said that its supervisory teams had failed to follow up with Northern Rock on the vulnerability of its business model as the credit crisis took hold last summer.
Resources were inadequate and managers failed to ensure that all available "risk information" was seized upon to help to prevent an impending crisis, the regulator said.
Hector Sants, the FSA's chief executive conceded the watchdog's handling of the affair was "not carried out to a standard that is acceptable". But he added that had its supervision been better, the regulator still might not have prevented the Rock's ultimate downfall.
He said: "It is clear from the thorough review carried out by the Internal Audit team that our supervision of Northern Rock in the period leading up to the market instability of late last summer was not carried out to a standard that is acceptable, although whether that would have affected the outcome in this case is impossible to judge."
Northern Rock collapsed last year after the wholesale funding market — on which it was reliant for more than 75 per cent of its funding — dried up in the wake of the sub-prime mortgage crisis in America. It was thrown a £25 billion lifeline by the Government and earlier this year the bank was nationalised after lengthy attempts to sell it failed.
The FSA, along with the Bank of England and the Treasury, has been widely criticised for its failure to act quickly enough to fend off what became one of the most high-profile and embarrassing crises in UK banking history.
The City regulator said that it would introduce a new group of specialists to review the supervision of what it called "high-impact firms" with the number of staff monitoring each firm increased from previous levels.
It said the risk department of the FSA would be expanded and supervisory training would be upgraded, with the number of management involved in direct monitoring increased.
There will also be greater focus on liquidity, it said, particularly in the supervision of high-impact retail banks such as Northern Rock. The FSA had been criticised in the past for focusing too much on a bank's profit and loss accounts and not enough on its overall liquidity position which, in the case of Northern Rock and other retail banks, is a much better indicator of its overall health.
But the FSA stopped short of issuing an apology.
Yesterday, Michael Fallon, Conservative MP for Sevenoaks and a senior member of the Treasury Select Committee that grilled Mr Sants over the affair, had called for the regulator to say sorry for its role in the Rock's downfall.
He said that the report must contain the word "sorry" as well as a declaration of failure.
"They failed in their duty," Mr Fallon said. "There were too few people regulating a very large bank and they didn't pay enough attention to liquidity issues."
Mr Sants said: "Demonstrating our willingness to examine ourselves critically and learn lessons is central to giving the financial services industry and consumers confidence in the FSA, although, like any organisation, we cannot and do not claim infallibility, and we cannot, and should not, attempt to remove all risk from the system."
Mr Hants sought to describe the FSA's handling of the Rock as actions "at the extreme end of the spectrum", although one lawyer dismissed those claims as "rubbish".
Simon Morris, of CMS Cameron McKenna, the law firm said: "If a major firm regulated by FSA were to operate with such poor management oversight and such weak systems and controls, then FSA would have shut it down by now".
In a move widely seen as a attempt to deflect criticism over the affair, the FSA last week ousted Clive Briault, its retail chief and the man responsible for overseeing the regulation of the Rock.
No other senior regulator or politician has lost office because of the affair.
Earlier this month, the Government submitted a business plan for Northern Rock to the European Commission. In order to press ahead with the nationalisation, the Government has to show that the Rock will be drastically reduced in size and will not have any competitive advantage
British prime minister Gordon Brown said recently he expects to make progress “very soon” with the EU on the government’s restructuring plans for the nationalised
UK lender.
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The FSA is just a secondary cancer of the main cancer which is negligent and malignant government. The whole country is sinking under the weight of central government, local government, quangos, the employees of which are non productive and mostly useless, but they will vote Labour, for that is the hand that feeds them. For a financial regulatory body not to know that a major bank was borrowing short term on the money market to lend against long term mortgages is negligence of the highest order, yet the supervisors of this body remain in their jobs as do the politicians who appointed these useless beings.
Scott, Bangkok, Thailand
I can't agree enough with GD of Cambridge. As an ex Independant Financial Adviser, I know the FSA caused more problems than it solved.
All their 'solutions' did was to ensure that IFAs were tied up in increasing levels of red tape, which in turn just ensured that less and less people were actually advised particularly those who were less affluent - the ones that need advice more than anyone.
The Treating Customers Fairly iniative changed nothing except to cause more expense for firms. Imagine trying to tell a customer all about TCF - the reaction being that it's there because you weren't treating them fairly in the first place! What a great start to a relationship......
It's also interesting that the FSA came down so much harder on smaller firms - those that had to give really great service and advice or they would fail - than it did on the banks. It seemed to assume that the banks had much better internal regulation. Ha ha di ha ha. What a useless body they are!
Charlie, Bristol,
To what extent was the FSA's poor supervision of Northern Rock a result of political interference? Given it's location and importance in a labour heartland were the government more interested in protecting their own position and votes than that of the depositors and the reputation of the nations banking system as a whole.
Peter, Norwich, Norfolk, UK.
It wasn't the staffs fault but guess who's going to pay for this mess
LP North Shields
Larry, North Shields, England
The FSA is a joke. Straightening the deck chairs whilst the ship sinks is typical of its approach. Its latest gimmick is TCF Treating Customers Fairly. Another high profile campaign to ensure it is seen to be doing something to justify the millions spent on it each year by the taxpayer. In reality however it is a useless organisation, how many people has it prosecuted sucessfully, not many. What do you think the chances are that it will find and punish those traders who recently instigated the run on the HBOS banking group, don't hold your breath folks!
GD, cambridge, uk
It has not been just the Northern Rock that the FSA has failed to handle properly. The FSA has been knowingly neglectful in all their dealings I know. The FSA even ignore senior managers in banks when they inform them of very serious wrongdoings. There is no doubt that the FSA should be closed down and the staff prosecuted. I just wonder how long the city police is going to ignore this as "not in the public interest". Perhaps the FSA staff should be deported to USA for prosecution!
Sinan, London,
No it was not the government's fault and it was not the FSA's fault. It wasn't the managing directors fault it was the customers for investing in the bank!!
Richie, Cardiff, wales
So it was the FSA NOT the Government that was at fault!
sk, East Sussex,