After a ruling in the High Court issued by Lord Justice Carnwarth, thousands of policy holders of Equitable Life could now receive compensation from the Government. A four part report titled "A Decade of Regulatory Failure" published in 2008 by the Ombudsman, Ann Abrahams, found " serial maladministration" and recommended compensation be reached through an independent tribunal.
Equitable Life: a decade of regulatory failure (HC 815),
Friday, 16 October 2009
Thursday, 15 October 2009
FSA outlines its approval and interview process for significant influence functions
The Financial Services Authority (FSA) has written to the CEOs of 5,000 regulated firms to reinforce how its intensive regulatory approach applies to approving and supervising senior personnel performing significant influence functions (SIFs).
The City regulator said that under its new approach to supervision, it would not be happy to rush approvals in a couple of days, and would expect to take part in the short-list stage for large institution appointments.
The City regulator said that under its new approach to supervision, it would not be happy to rush approvals in a couple of days, and would expect to take part in the short-list stage for large institution appointments.
Wednesday, 14 October 2009
Lloyd's slashes cash for Scottish charities
Lloyds Banking Group said it was to cut its charitable foundation's funding, worth at least six million pounds a year due to the financial crisis.
Sources at the foundation said that it was inevitable some charities would be forced to withdraw key services.
Sources at the foundation said that it was inevitable some charities would be forced to withdraw key services.
Impact of Bank easing ' may never be known
Charles Bean, the deputy governor of the central bank told the London Society of Chartered Accountants that the impact on the economy of the Bank of England's multi billion pound scheme of quantitative easing will probably never be known.
He also commented on the recession, saying that the British economy has probably hit bottom, despite fears at the beginning of the year that this recession would continue to deepen.
He also commented on the recession, saying that the British economy has probably hit bottom, despite fears at the beginning of the year that this recession would continue to deepen.
Tuesday, 13 October 2009
The APB issues new ISAs (UK and Ireland)
On 13 October the Auditing Practices Board (APB) published 33 new International Standards on Auditing (UK and Ireland) (ISAs (UK and Ireland)); A new International Standard on Quality Control (UK and Ireland) 1 (ISQC (UK and Ireland) 1); and, a revised Statement of the Scope and Authority of APB Pronouncements. These are all available on the APB website.
PwC report says £43 billion fiscal gap needs to be closed by 2015/16
A report by PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), "Dealing with (even more) debt", was published on 12 October. The report says that "£43 billion fiscal gap needs to be closed by 2015/16". The full text of the report is available on the PwC website.
Scotsman op-ed by ICAS' Chief Executive
There is an editorial piece in the Scotsman on 13 October 2009 by Anton Colella, the ICAS Chief Executive. It is called "Bonus review will not mean the end of risk-taking bankers".
Monday, 12 October 2009
Planned tax rules could undermine building industry, say accountants
In response to the Treasury consultation: False Self-employment in Construction,The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Scotland says that onerous new tax rules on construction workers and those who engage them could seriously undermine an industry that has been amongst the hardest hit by the recession.
"We are astonished that these proposals have come forward during a recession, since we believe the net result of adopting them would be an increase in unemployment.This is clearly undesirable, and we recommend that the proposals be abandoned. The proposals are flawed, can easily be circumvented and are unlikely to work properly."states Derek Allen, ICAS Director of Taxation.
"We are astonished that these proposals have come forward during a recession, since we believe the net result of adopting them would be an increase in unemployment.This is clearly undesirable, and we recommend that the proposals be abandoned. The proposals are flawed, can easily be circumvented and are unlikely to work properly."states Derek Allen, ICAS Director of Taxation.
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