Most Investment Firms in Ireland Fail Suitability Review

Tuesday, 29/08/2017 | 16:20 GMT by Colin Firth
  • The review examined investment firms' approach to the suitability process and their readiness for MiFID II.
Most Investment Firms in Ireland Fail Suitability Review
Finance Magnates, Central Bank of Ireland

Ahead of the implementation of the stricter MiFID II regulations in January 2108, the Central Bank of Ireland has carried out a suitability-themed review of the investment firms in the country. The review is the process by which the bank checks that firms are ensuring that their clients' investments are aligned to their own investment objectives.

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The review by the bank was focused at the information gathering stage of the suitability process, and firms' Compliance to the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA ) on certain aspects of MiFID suitability requirements.

The report highlighted the vulnerable areas in where the firms were failing to adopt good practices that increase the overall operational risk in the system. The majority of the firms assessed were found wanting.

The findings of the bank were:

  • Firms could not demonstrate that the documented suitability policies and procedures were implemented in practice.
  • Client take-on application forms did not contain specific fields for the collection of required information and/or were found to be incomplete i.e. fields left blank.
  • Not all firms could demonstrate that they had effective governance structures and appropriate tools to successfully implement and assess suitability. A number of firms relied on client self-assessment of knowledge, experience and financial situation and failed to counterbalance self-assessment with an independent objective assessment.
  • Dependencies on basic IT systems for the management of suitability processes increased the likelihood of human error and did not facilitate second line controls carrying out monitoring.
  • Governance structures for the identification and treatment of vulnerable clients were absent or ineffective.

Regarding MiFID II preparedness, it was discovered that the top investment firms are in the process of implementing MiFID II regulations and have completed detailed gap analysis.

The report also suggested the firms review their suitability framework and implement the regulations and procedures within the firm. It said that firms should take up the good practices listed in the report in order to successfully implement MiFID II regulations, ensuring their readiness when the regulations kick in.

Ahead of the implementation of the stricter MiFID II regulations in January 2108, the Central Bank of Ireland has carried out a suitability-themed review of the investment firms in the country. The review is the process by which the bank checks that firms are ensuring that their clients' investments are aligned to their own investment objectives.

Register now to the London Summit 2017, Europe’s largest gathering of top-tier retail brokers and institutional FX investors

The review by the bank was focused at the information gathering stage of the suitability process, and firms' Compliance to the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA ) on certain aspects of MiFID suitability requirements.

The report highlighted the vulnerable areas in where the firms were failing to adopt good practices that increase the overall operational risk in the system. The majority of the firms assessed were found wanting.

The findings of the bank were:

  • Firms could not demonstrate that the documented suitability policies and procedures were implemented in practice.
  • Client take-on application forms did not contain specific fields for the collection of required information and/or were found to be incomplete i.e. fields left blank.
  • Not all firms could demonstrate that they had effective governance structures and appropriate tools to successfully implement and assess suitability. A number of firms relied on client self-assessment of knowledge, experience and financial situation and failed to counterbalance self-assessment with an independent objective assessment.
  • Dependencies on basic IT systems for the management of suitability processes increased the likelihood of human error and did not facilitate second line controls carrying out monitoring.
  • Governance structures for the identification and treatment of vulnerable clients were absent or ineffective.

Regarding MiFID II preparedness, it was discovered that the top investment firms are in the process of implementing MiFID II regulations and have completed detailed gap analysis.

The report also suggested the firms review their suitability framework and implement the regulations and procedures within the firm. It said that firms should take up the good practices listed in the report in order to successfully implement MiFID II regulations, ensuring their readiness when the regulations kick in.

About the Author: Colin Firth
Colin Firth
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