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77/07

12 July 2007

FSMA reform: Parliament approves regulatory reform of financial services

The Government today announced the successful passage through Parliament of the Regulatory Reform (Financial Services and Markets Act 2000) Order 2007. The Order will reduce a number of burdens currently placed on the FSA and business. These include removing some of the burdens placed on the FSA when consulting on guidance and lightening the authorisation requirements in relation to partnerships whose members change.

Economic Secretary to the Treasury, Kitty Ussher, commenting on the Order's successful passage through Parliament, says:

"This package of measures will reduce red-tape which will benefit the businesses the FSA regulates. Most significantly, a partnership will normally now be able to continue trading and remain authorised by the FSA following a change in its membership."

Notes to editors

1. Regulatory Reform Orders (RROs) enable the reform of primary legislation. RROs can iron out inconsistencies and amend problems in already enacted legislation without the need for a bill slot:

  • RROs must always remove or reduce some burdens, but
  • they can also apply new burdens, reapply existing burdens and remove inconsistencies and anomalies.

2. The Regulatory Reform (Financial Services and Markets Act 2000) Order 2007 came into force on 12 July 2007.

3. The amendments that would be implemented by the Order are:

  • Lightening the authorisation requirements in relation to partnerships whose members change;
  • Removing unnecessary consultation between the FSA and regulators in other countries in the European Economic Area;
  • Removing the obligation on the FSA to fulfil a number of procedural requirements associated with discontinuing or suspending the listing of a security;
  • Exempting the FSA from issuing a warning notice in cases where the cancellation of a sponsor's permission comes from the issuer or sponsor himself;
  • Extending the FSA's powers to waive or modify all of its rules in respect of authorised and unauthorised persons;
  • Reducing some of the burdens on the FSA when consulting on guidance; and
  • Permitting the FSA board to delegate the issuing of guidance.

4. Some of these measures came out of the 2-year review of FSMA undertaken by HM Treasury in 2003/4. Its purpose was to take stock of the new regulatory system after two years of its operation. During the review, various bodies representing the financial services industry complained about unnecessary or disproportionate consultation burdens placed on industry as a result of FSMA, and raised concerns about restrictions on the FSA's use of waivers and modifications to rules.

5. Media enquiries should be addressed to the Treasury Press Office on 020 7270 5238.

6. Non-media enquiries should be addressed to the Treasury Correspondence and Enquiry Unit on 020 7270 4558 or by e-mail to public.enquiries@hm-treasury.gov.uk

7. This press release and other Treasury publications and information are available on the Treasury website. If you would like Treasury press releases to be sent to you automatically by e mail you can subscribe to this service from the press release site on the website.

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