On March 7, 2017, it will be one year since the U.K. Financial Conduct Authority's senior managers and certification regime came into force, heralding a new era of personal accountability in the financial sector.

A central feature of the SMCR — which currently applies to banks and insurers but is due to be extended to all financial services firms next year — is a new statutory "duty of responsibility." In force since May 2016, the new duty makes those holding a "senior management function" liable to enforcement action if a breach occurs on their watch. While the FCA, like its predecessor, has long declared itself committed to holding members of senior management to account and to pursuing more cases against individuals, establishing personal culpability for oversight failings has historically been an uphill struggle — as illustrated in 2012 by the then FSA's defeat in the case of UBS banker John Pottage. The introduction of the new regime set out to make such hurdles a thing of the past.

Click here to continue reading

Originally published by Law360

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.