FCA cares about culture because this drives conduct: The Consumer Duty will encourage firms to analyse their culture and how that affects their conduct; Firms should offer the right environment for employees of all backgrounds to feel safe in challenging and speaking out.
Just 5% of crypto firms who applied to the FCA for registration showed that they understood anti-money laundering rules but half of those who engaged seriously with us were registered.
Facing up to our image problem
The culture of financial services organisations is often depicted in
binary terms: it is either dull and Jurassic or reckless and
scandalous.
The world of film and television focuses on the reckless and
scandalous trope as – frankly – it makes for more exciting viewing.
Before I came to the City, I thought I was entering a mystical world
where Porsches were delivered every February, there was no-expense
spared technology, and that if you work hard, success was guaranteed.
Even today, any aspiring banker watching the BBC’s series Industry
would be left with the impression that graduates spend more time
partying and plotting than working.
In the Wolf of Wall Street, the main protagonist is a hedonistic
stockbroker in his 20s whose main purpose is to con wealthy clients with
a ‘pump and dump’ strategy before he is eventually jailed.
In The Big Short, an eccentric hedge fund manager discovers that the
US housing market is based on sub-prime mortgages so he sets up a credit
default swap market to allow himself to short the property market.
All of these programmes and films depict that greed is the underlying
motivation of financial services professionals. Sadly, as you know, the
latter 2 films are actually based on true events and characters.
In fact, the only positive depiction of a financial services
professional I could find was that of George Bailey, the main character
in It’s A Wonderful Life. But that was released in 1946. It was a
loss-making flop for many years before becoming a classic.
So we can summarise that the culture of financial services is depicted in a negative light but what is culture anyway?
I think of culture as being the personality, habits and ethos of the organisation.
Mind your language
It has been said that culture is what you do when no one is looking.
But to be a leader means to shape your organisations’ culture rather than hiding behind HR.
I attended an event recently, where Rebecca Achieng Ajulu-Bushell, Chief Executive of 10,000 Black Interns,
spoke about the importance of senior people not imposing an inherited
culture that can create barriers to progress, even when they rose
through the ranks in that culture. She’s a very impressive 28 year old
and I would encourage you to look for her website.
The FCA expects senior leaders to nurture healthy cultures in the
firms they lead. Cultures that are purposeful. That have sound controls
and good governance. Where employees feel psychologically safe to speak
up and challenge. Where remuneration does not encourage irresponsible
behaviour that can ultimately damage the business and wider markets.
We recently took FCA issues Final Notice to former CEO for anti-money laundering failings">enforcement action against a former Chief Executive
who failed to steer senior management towards ensuring there was a
culture throughout the firm which valued robust adherence to its
regulatory responsibilities.
It ultimately meant that the firm didn’t make its anti-money
laundering (AML) controls a priority and the controls it did have were
ineffective.
One of the most direct ways managers and leaders can shape culture
from the start – and spot when it needs changing – is through language.
Have you noticed how if a boss uses a term, whether it is ‘pivot’,
‘leverage’ or ‘wet fish’, suddenly everyone in the workplace begins to
use pivot, leverage and wet fish?
That is because often the boss and those at C-suite level set the tone for culture.
But even bosses can find themselves swimming against a tide.
When I first came to the regulatory world 18 months ago, I was in for
a culture shock. Aside from the Tolstoyesque-list of acronyms, there
were language terms that seemed alien to me such as ‘private secretary’
and a ‘private office’ rather than an ‘EA’ and a ‘team’, or the term
‘commissioning’ work rather than ‘asking for stuff to be done’.
But I got some of my own terms adopted too. The name given to graphs
to track the speeding up of authorisations decisions and reduce our
backlog was called Glide Path. So I changed it to make it a Burn Down
Plan.
That change of language immediately brought in urgency and action. It
kick-started a much more detailed process which has ultimately seen us FCA authorisations update">halving our authorisations backlog. We have kept our standards high, rejecting 1 in 5 firms compared to 1 in 14 in the previous years.
When I started at the FCA, I found the custom of asking a question
and having to wait for the answer to be fact checked by several people
too slow – although I appreciate that accuracy is crucial.
I found that deploying the revolutionary technique of cutting down on
emails and walking around and talking to people more effective and
immediate.
Our role as a regulator is to lead by example and we do care about culture as it informs conduct and that is what we regulate.
So the final tool that I would urge you all to consider are our policies that I will touch on now.
The Consumer Duty will focus minds on culture
Perhaps one of the biggest policies we have unveiled in recent years
is one that will do the most to address conduct – and therefore culture:
the Consumer Duty..
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