[ccpw id="5"]

Home.forex news reportFCA Doubles Down on Financial Promotions: Flags About 20,000 Ads in 2024

FCA Doubles Down on Financial Promotions: Flags About 20,000 Ads in 2024

-


The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has flagged nearly 20,000 financial promotions in 2024, which were then “withdrawn or amended.” The figure almost doubled compared to the previous year’s flagged ads.

Misleading Financial Ads Are Growing

In the announcement today (Friday), the British regulator highlighted concerns with crypto assets, debt solutions, and claims management company promotions. Amid the regulatory action, 9,197 promotions for claims management companies, mostly related to housing disrepair and motor finance claims targeted at vulnerable consumers, were withdrawn.

“Over the past year, we have seen a growing number of misleading and illegal financial promotions,” said Lucy Castledine, Director of Consumer Investments at the FCA. “We have stepped up our efforts in response to make sure that financial promotions are clear, fair, and accurate.”

The regulator also urged social media platforms to identify and prevent illegal financial promotions proactively. However, whether such platforms, including Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, TikTok, and others, will take any action remains to be seen.

The FCA pointed out that last year it launched targeted actions against the so-called ‘finfluencers,’ who promote financial literacy and also products on social media. It even “interviewed under caution” 20 such people.

“We expect firms to take the necessary steps to meet standards and will continue to work with other bodies, including social media platforms, to prevent illegal promotions being pushed at consumers.”

FCA Tightening Rules for Financial Firms

The FCA tightened its rules around financial promotions in 2023, mandating firms to prove their competence in understanding the products they promote. Previously, any firm authorised by the FCA could approve ads for unregulated firms.

Last year, the regulator also introduced Consumer Duty rules to the financial services industry. These rules are meant to protect customers but also increase companies’ compliance costs. Now, the regulator is considering easing some of these Consumer Duty rules.

Recently, the British watchdog fined a CFDs broker, Infinox, for failure in transaction reporting, which was its first enforcement action under the UK Markets in Financial Instruments Regulation (MiFIR).

This article was written by Arnab Shome at www.financemagnates.com.



Source link

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

LATEST POSTS

easyMarkets Wins ‘Broker of the Year 2024’ and TradingView’s ‘Best of the Best’

easyMarkets a trusted name in trading excellence, is proud to announce that it has been awarded ‘Broker of the Year 2024’ and TradingView’s Best...

USD/CAD Price Analysis: Tariff Reprieve Boosts Canadian Dollar

The Canadian dollar has gained sharply since Trump paused an expected 25% tariff. Economists expect slower job growth in the US and Canada. Unemployment might increase...

Why is XRP Going Up Today: Ripple Whales Accumulate 520 Million Tokens

Ripple whales are drawing attention in the latest XRP news due to their continued buying activity. Recent data indicates that large investors, commonly referred to as...

ECB's de Guindos: Inflation to start converging to 2% target in the spring

Services inflation remains the top concernA prudent approach to monetary policy is neededMeanwhile, ECB chief economist Lane is also out with some comments as...

Follow us

0FansLike
0FollowersFollow
0SubscribersSubscribe

Most Popular

spot_img