European clients of UK financial services firms could still face disruption when the Brexit transition period expires on 31 December, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and Bank of England warn, in a joint letter to insurers.
The regulators urge insurers to
continue mitigation work to ensure that risk of disruption and instability are
kept to a minimum.
“Some market volatility and
disruption to financial services, particularly to EU-based clients, could
arise,” the regulators say. “Final steps by individual firms are required to
ensure their preparedness for the end of the transition period,” they add.
The FCA and the Bank of England’s
Prudential Regulation Authority say insurers should also take steps to check
their clients are ready for the end of the transition period.
“It is imperative that firms
continue to build on their preparatory work to ensure that they, and to the
extent possible their clients, are ready for a range of scenarios at the end of
the transition period,” the letter says.
Firms that intend to run off
outstanding EU liabilities, either through an EU run-off regime or by
transferring liabilities to an EU insurer, should finalise preparations, or put
in place contingency plans ahead of 31 December, the letter continues.
This is in line with Eiopa’s
expectations that were published earlier this month. It said firms should be
ready for the end of the transition period, with measures in place to prevent
unauthorised insurance activity and ensure continuity of cross-border business.
The UK regulators say insurers
and brokers should inform customers about the possible impact of the UK’s
withdrawal from the EU on insurance contracts. The FCA says customers that will
be affected by a reduction in, or cessation of, services should be treated
fairly and given sufficient notice.
The FCA highlights several
other areas that insurers may need to address. These include Part VII saving
provisions, data, EEA bank account closures, EEA passporting firms and the
temporary permissions regime. The latter kicks in at the end of the transition
period to allow EEA passporting firms to operate in the UK, pending
authorisation as third-country branches.
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