FCA calls on insurance intermediaries to better manage conflicts of interest when dealing with small business clients
27 May 2014 03:45 PM
Inherent conflicts
within insurance intermediaries are not being properly managed, a review by the
Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has found. After looking at seven of the
largest intermediaries who serve small business clients, the FCA has concluded
that in some firms, control frameworks and management information have not
developed at the same pace as business models.
Research into the understanding
of small business customers also demonstrated that few understood that there
was a possibility for their insurance intermediary to be
conflicted.
Clive Adamson, director of
supervision at the FCA, said:
"Small businesses are
experts in their particular field but are often not experienced in buying
insurance. That is why they need to be able to trust their insurance
intermediary to act in their best interests. If there are conflicts of interest
that are not identified or properly managed, that trust is put at
risk."
Insurance intermediaries can
play a number of roles in the distribution chain, sometimes acting as agent for
the insurer as well as the customer. These different obligations and the
way intermediaries are remunerated create the potential for conflicts of
interest that need to be actively managed.
The FCA focused its review on
small business customers as they have more complex insurance needs than retail
clients but are not always more sophisticated buyers of insurance. As a result,
small businesses often rely on insurance intermediaries for advice. The FCA
wanted to establish how the flow of revenue from insurers or other sources to
intermediaries could affect how customers were treated. It found
that:
- there was increased risk of
conflicting interests where firms fulfilled multiple roles in the distribution
chain and acted as agent for both the customer and insurer in the same
transaction;
- the control framework and
management information in some firms had not developed in line with changes in
the size and complexity of the business;
- some intermediaries relied on
disclosure as the main way to address conflicts of interest rather than having
effective control frameworks in place;
- disclosure provided to customers
was sometimes very generic and unlikely to meet their information needs or
enhance theirunderstanding; and
- conflicts of interest were not
always effectively mitigated in relation to add-on insurance or services,
premium finance or where the cost of insurance is borne by a third
party.
Consumer research also revealed
that small businesses are not aware of the differing roles intermediaries can
perform. Many (68%) believed that intermediaries acted as their agent when
selecting and placing their insurance. Further, a large majority (86%) of
small business policyholders expected their insurance intermediary to search
for more than one quote, which was not consistent with placement processes
within some intermediary firms.
The FCA is concerned that if
conflicts are not properly managed there is the risk that decisions are made in
the interest of firms rather than their small business customers. This could
result in some small businesses over-paying or buying products they don’t
need.
Whilst the FCA’s review
focused on larger firms, all intermediaries should take note of the findings
and ensure any conflicts are appropriately managed. The regulator will be
working closely with the industry to communicate the results of the review and,
with the firms involved, will use appropriate regulatory tools to address
specific issues.
Notes for
editors
- The
thematic review into Commercial insurance intermediaries - Conflicts of
interest and intermediary remuneration.
- On 1 April 2013 the FCA became
responsible for the conduct supervision of all regulated financial firms and
the prudential supervision of those not supervised by the Prudential Regulation
Authority (PRA).
- The FCA has an overarching
strategic objective of ensuring the relevant markets function well. To support
this it has three operational objectives: to secure an appropriate degree of
protection for consumers; to protect and enhance the integrity of the UK
financial system; and to promote effective competition in the interests of
consumers.
- Find out more information about the
FCA.
-