
FSA fines two firms for advice failings in sales of geared traded endowment policies
The Financial Services Authority (FSA) has today fined Knowlden Titlow Financial Services Ltd GBP35,000 and Derrick Hales Financial Planning Ltd GBP10,500 for failures relating to the sale of geared traded endowment policies. The FSA also cancelled the permission for Derrick Hales and Kathleen Hales.
These are the first enforcement cases to arise from a targeted programme of work by the FSA examining the advice and sales processes of firms recommending geared traded endowment policies.
The FSA identified that Knowlden Titlow failed to:
In addition to the fine, Knowlden Titlow has agreed to stop selling geared traded endowment policies and to contact all customers sold potentially unsuitable policies, offering redress where appropriate.
Derrick Hales Financial Planning failed to:
Derrick Hales Financial Planning has agreed to stop selling these polices, undertake a past business review to identify the extent to which customers may have been given unsuitable advice and, where applicable, assess and make good any loss suffered and to provide further training and compliance support to staff.
The FSA has also cancelled the permission of both Derrick Hales and Kathleen Hales to perform the role of compliance officer and the role of partner, respectively, as they both failed to act with due care and diligence in ensuring that Derrick Hales Financial Planning complied with FSA rules and principles.
Jonathan Phelan, FSA Head of Retail Enforcement, said:
"Geared traded endowment policies are complex investments. We found with both firms that their advisers did not understand how these products work, nor could they show us they had a clear grasp of the risks involved. This made it impossible for them to properly advise customers whether the policies were suitable for them.
"These two cases are the first to arise from a recent programme of work we have done into the geared traded endowment policy market, and we will be taking further appropriate action to deal with the examples of bad practice that we uncovered in other firms."