Public trust in the professional standards of the financial services industry has been decimated by the eruption of the global financial crisis in 2007, followed by a series of other scandals, including the well-publicised rigging of Libor. But gradually, thanks to a concerted effort by industry and government, the damage done to the industry’s reputation is beginning to mend. One indicator of this is the recent Chartered Banker Professional Standards Board (CB:PSB) Progress Report 2015, which revealed that its own pioneering new industry qualifications, such as the Foundation and Leadership Standards, aimed at regaining public confidence and professional pride in the sector, have shown remarkable progress. A key report survey found that the creation of the standards, combined with growing public understanding and knowledge of them, had helped 41% of UK adults in 2014 to have “some or high confidence and trust in the banking industry” compared with 31% in 2013. Greater industry pick-up and recognition of the standards has also seen the amount of banking employees who feel a “lot of pride” in their profession doubling over the past 12 months. (See below the main article for more details on the report.) It is an encouraging trend and one that the ACT can take huge pride in, given CEO Colin Tyler’s position on the CB:PSB’s advisory panel.
This commitment to enhancing professional standards in financial services is no one-off, either. Indeed, over the past three years, the ACT has played a fundamental and often unseen role in helping to restore trust and standards throughout the financial sector. Among the projects that it has been involved in are the Hogg Committee that advised on Libor, the Fair and Effective Markets Review (FEMR), the Lambert report that established the Banking Standards Board, and supporting the Asset & Liability Management Association’s first qualification.
We want the right people to come into financial markets and need to encourage them by showing them more examples of good practice
“There are quality people in the financial market with the right behaviour and good integrity,” Tyler observes. “We had a bit of a knock from the financial crisis. The reputation and functioning of the market was damaged and from that there was a demand for cultural change and more competent behaviour. We have been an important player in developing that change.” As a representative of the ‘buy side’ of the market, the ACT’s work on the Hogg Committee was particularly pivotal. The committee was set up to recommend a new administrator for Libor following the rate-rigging revelations of 2012. Tyler sat on the committee alongside chair Baroness Hogg and other major financial leaders, such as Martin Wheatley, chief executive of the Financial Conduct Authority. Set up in 2013, the committee eventually selected securities exchange operator NYSE Euronext as the new Libor administrator.
“There had been a number of examples of poor selling and I was approached to sit on the committee,” Tyler recalls. “At the ACT, we have a reputation for quality, being ethical in our approach and considered in our thinking. Where we can, we will contribute in trying to develop best practice elsewhere, such as in Libor. We brought that knowledge and understanding of how to develop better ethical behaviour to the committee.” John Grout, ACT policy and technical director, adds: “We saw an important need to benchmark the rate element of bank credit risk. Our role was to be the rational observer from the user group that we represent, which is from the financial, customer and supply side of the economy. We can do this in a way that the busy treasurer of a multinational can’t do. We bring a viewpoint, expertise and awareness that people deeply embedded in the financial services sector don’t have.” www.cbpsb.org="" />Click here for the full report.
The Fair and Effective Markets Review (FEMR) issued a consultation in 2014, seeking views on the fairness and effectiveness of the fixed income, currencies and commodities markets. The ACT’s policy and technical team attended meetings with two of the three review chairs, with FEMR also attending a discussion with treasurers in the ACT’s offices. Several treasurers also attended a round table at the Bank of England. The ACT provided a written response that emphasised:
David Craik is a freelance business journalist