FMA censures CTRL Investments for breaching client suitability and outsourcing requirements
The Financial Markets Authority (FMA) censured CTRL Investments Limited (CTRL Investments) for contravening the conditions of its licence conditions in relation to client suitability checks and outsourcing. The censure serves as a timely reminder for derivatives issuers (and other FMA license holders) to review their ability to demonstrate to the regulator that they have assessed client suitability and have conducted sufficient due diligence on providers before outsourcing any of its functions.To get more news about ctrl investments review, you can visit wikifx.com official website.
Who needs to read it? Why?
Licensed derivatives issuers should consider the censure and, more broadly, the FMA’s focus on whether derivatives issuers are complying with their licence obligations generally.
Other holders of FMA licenses including managed investment scheme managers, financial advice providers, discretionary investment management service providers and even financial markets supervisors (ie corporate trustees) should also consider whether the FMA could have similar concerns in relation to their systems and processes for outsourcing.
Client suitability
Licensed derivatives issuers must, as a condition of their licence, ask retail investors to provide information about their knowledge, experience and understanding of the relevant derivative for the purpose of considering whether the derivative is suitable for the individual. Where an investor does not provide the information or does not have the ability to understand, the issuer must not enter into the derivative with the investor.
The FMA found instances of CTRL Investments providing the investor with a warning statement where the investor could not demonstrate the necessary skills and knowledge, as opposed to not entering into the trade.
Outsourcing
Licensed derivatives issuers must, where they choose to outsource essential processes and systems, satisfy themselves that a third-party provider can perform the service to the standard required which enables the issuer to meet their licence obligations. All derivatives issuers must also have legally binding agreements with those third-party providers.
CTRL Investments outsources its account management, sales and onboarding functions to a third-party provider. However, the FMA considered that it could not demonstrate why it was satisfied the provider was capable of providing the services or that there was a legally binding agreement between the parties.
Our view
The censure of CTRL Investments acts as notice to all derivatives issuers of the FMA’s focus on whether derivatives issuers are meeting their licence obligations.
In particular, derivatives issuers can expect the FMA’s focus to be on the medium and high risk areas identified by the FMA in its 2020 Derivatives Sector Risk Assessment (Assessment). In the Assessment, the FMA identified, among other things, that there was a high risk that issuers were not taking reasonable steps to determine whether derivatives are suitable for retail investors and a medium to high risk that the oversight of outsourced functions may be inadequate.
We encourage all derivatives issuers to consider whether they can demonstrate that they are complying with the client suitability and outsourcing requirements as well as the other areas of concern identified by the FMA in its Assessment.