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Let's talk antitrust: Discussing recent cases and emerging competition issues
Recent cases and judgments have shone a light on some emerging themes and trends that companies will want to consider as part of their risk management framework.
United Kingdom | Publication | februari 2024
On 30th January 2024, the Bank of England (the Bank) and Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) published Policy Statement PS1/24 which sets out a revised approach to enforcement for both PRA firms and financial market infrastructure firms. It followed Consultation Paper CP9/23 published in May 2023. There is now a new consolidated Bank enforcement approach which sign-posts the range of enforcement powers at the Bank’s disposal and draws together the previous enforcement statements of policy into a consolidated document.
The revised policies came into effect on the day on which PS1/24 was published and there are a number of incoming changes, including: (i) a new option for early cooperation called the Early Account Scheme (the EAS or Scheme), with the availability of a new enhanced settlement discount of up to 50%; and (ii) changes to the approach to financial penalties for firms and individuals. We summarise these changes below.
In terms of the potential impact of the changes, the EAS and enhanced settlement discount are being introduced to expedite the initial information gathering stage of an investigation and to incentivise earlier admissions. However, as participation in the EAS is voluntary, whether or not firms and individuals will decide to opt into the scheme remains to be seen. Particularly relevant factors to the weighing up of the relative risks and benefits of participating in the Scheme for firms will likely be the requirement for a senior manager attestation and the interplay of the EAS with multi-party and multi-regulator investigations where relevant. With regards to the changes to the financial penalty calculations, the PRA has said that it cannot rule out that the size of the financial penalty may increase for certain firms, although it has said that the other parts of its penalty policy not subject to change as part of PS1/24 will allow it to continue to ensure financial penalty calculations are proportionate and fair.
The PRA has introduced the EAS, which compels the production by the subject of the investigation of a detailed factual account of the matters under investigation (the Account), and for those that participate in the EAS there is also the availability of an enhanced settlement discount of up to 50% in respect of fulsome cooperation during the EAS and early admissions of breaches. At a high level this operates as follows:
In addition to introducing the EAS and the enhanced settlement discount, the PRA has: (i) amended its policy on financial penalties imposed on firms by introducing a matrix which sets out the starting point for penalties linking to the firm’s impact categorisation; and (ii) updated the methodology for calculating fines for individuals and thresholds at which individuals may be able to apply for a reduction of a fine on the basis of serious financial hardship (SFH).
(i) Firms
The PRA has a five-step framework for penalty calculation. It has amended one part of this framework for penalties relating to firms – namely, the methodology for identifying a starting point for calculating the fine (the Step 2 starting point). The previous policy typically determined the Step 2 starting point figure by using the firm’s total revenue or revenue in respect of one or more areas of its business, then applied a percentage of the firm’s annual revenue to determine the base figure for the penalty calculation. The percentage would reflect the PRA’s assessment of the seriousness of the breach.
CP9/23 explains that a core part of the PRA’s supervisory risk assessment is the potential impact assessment, which assesses the significance of a firm on the stability of the UK financial system. This ‘potential impact’ reflects a firm’s potential to affect adversely the stability of the system by failing, coming under operational or financial stress, or because of the way in which it carries out its business. The PRA divides all firms into ‘categories’ of potential impact, which is a holistic supervisory assessment. In line with this, the PRA is replacing the Step 2 figure with a matrix, setting out the ranges for the penalty starting point by reference to the firm’s impact categorisation and the seriousness of the breach. This matrix is below:
Firm category at the time of the relevant breach(es) | Seriousness | |||
Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | ||
1 | £25-75 million | £75-125 million | > £125 million | |
2 | £15-45 million | £45-75 million | > £75 million | |
3 | £1-7 million | £7-15 million | > £15 million | |
4 | £1 million | £1-2 million | > £2 million |
Where a firm has not been assigned a category of impact, then the PRA will determine which firm category is appropriate.
(ii) Individuals
With regards to individuals, the PRA has amended the penalty calculation so that relevant income (for the purposes of determining a starting point) is based on the duration of the breach, rather than using the individual’s annual income in the tax year preceding the date when the breach ended, and has raised the SFH thresholds to broaden eligibility. The new thresholds for SFH include a capital threshold based on Office for National Statistics data for individual wealth in Great Britain.
As noted above, as participation in the EAS is voluntary, whether or not firms and individuals will decide to opt into the scheme remains to be seen. An added dimension to the weighing up of the relative risks and benefits of participating in the EAS for firms is that they will need to provide the senior manager attestation as part of the EAS process, a proposal criticised by several respondents at consultation stage, but which the PRA retained in the final policy, on the basis that it views a senior manager attestation as a “key safeguard”. In response to comments to CP9/23, the Bank provided further clarification as to the requirements and scope of the attestation, which has been welcomed. However, given that ultimately signing an attestation exposes a senior manager to the risk of regulatory action should the attestation later found to be incorrect, firms participating in the EAS will need to have a robust and transparent governance process around the preparation of the Account to enable the senior manager in question to be able to make the attestation required.
Whilst the PRA has said that the EAS may, in appropriate circumstances, be used in multi-party investigations of firms and individuals, the use of the EAS here is likely be more complex, although the PRA will consider the production of information collectively from members of the same corporate group on a case-by-case basis. In investigations being conducted jointly with another regulator, if the PRA permits use of the EAS, this will apply only to the PRA’s investigative processes and will not bind the other regulator or law enforcement agency, which will likely also be an important factor for an investigation subject to consider when deciding whether to opt in to the Scheme as they could find themselves settling with the PRA under the EAS, with all of the work and financial spend this entails producing the Account, but still subject to other ongoing regulatory investigations on the same subject matter.
With regards to the changes to the financial penalty calculations, it will take a little time for the impact of these changes to filter through to investigations – the penalty regime in place before 30th January 2024 will apply to misconduct before that date, and the new penalty regime will only apply to misconduct from that date onwards. Some respondents to CP9/23 stated that they thought that the changes to the methodology for the calculation of PRA firm penalties would increase the size of penalties imposed against a firm when compared to previous penalties imposed. The PRA believes that in aggregate there is unlikely to be a material uplift in penalties. However, it says that it cannot rule out that the size of the financial penalty may increase for certain firms. This may be a case of swings and roundabouts but those in the highest bracket clearly have most to gain from the increased discount available under the EAS. It will be interesting to see whether the FCA decides to make similar enforcement changes in the months to come to mirror the PRA’s new approach.
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Recent cases and judgments have shone a light on some emerging themes and trends that companies will want to consider as part of their risk management framework.
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