Financial Services and Markets Bill Debate

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Department: HM Treasury
Baroness Altmann Portrait Baroness Altmann (Con)
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My Lords, I too congratulate the noble Lord, Lord Sharkey, on his amendment. I agree with his explanation of why parliamentary scrutiny is so important and his interesting explanation of the choice of words he has used in his amendment. I accept that later on, as my noble friend Lady Noakes said, we will debate parliamentary scrutiny once again, but in my view it is absolutely vital that we in this House recognise the dangers coming at us from various legislation that is taking away Parliament’s future ability to oversee and scrutinise important legislation.

I also understand what my noble friend Lord Trenchard said about the importance of allowing competition. However, we must not lose sight of the fact that what is sometimes called regulation may of course be inconvenient for the financial services providers and hamper the ability for innovation and free-for-alls to try different things, but it is also relevant to think of regulation as consumer protection. These are rules that will stop financial services companies taking advantage of consumers.

Asymmetry of information in financial matters is obviously something we are all too aware of, but just doing away with regulation, rushing to get rid of all the EU regulations without proper scrutiny and saying that the Financial Conduct Authority must work to a deadline, otherwise it will drag its heels, misses the point. If there is a forced deadline that precludes scrutiny and consideration of what these regulatory changes will mean for the general public or even more informed investors, without considering those risks, one has to ask whether it is resourced enough to do that. If not, which most of us would probably suggest is the case, what other elements of its duties will not be attended to while it is rushing to perform this job to an artificial deadline? It is a massive task—I respect that.

We need to take seriously the thrust of the remarks by the noble Lord, Lord Sharkey. I also look forward to hearing my noble friend’s remarks about the Government’s own amendments.

Lord Naseby Portrait Lord Naseby (Con)
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My Lords, I was one of the 34 who took part in the debate on secondary legislation, and I previously had the privilege of being on the Public Accounts Committee for some 12 years.

The debate on those two reports was an absolute watershed. Here is a golden opportunity to ensure that this Bill, which is so fundamental to the growth of our country, particularly the City of London, at a particular time can be pioneering. I am sorry to load that on to my noble friend; at any other time it might not be loaded on to her.

The key elements are there: secondary legislation basically means that those of us here in Parliament, in both Houses, have an opportunity to debate any changes made to a Bill. If I had to take issue with the noble Lord, Lord Sharkey, it is that he has in his amendment, at proposed new paragraph (b), the word “significant”. One company’s “significant” might be insignificant to another, and vice versa, so I do not think that is quite the right word to use.

We will go through this Bill in detail. Others have made their points, but for me—I did previous work with two quoted companies and a friendly society in the role of chairman—this is an opportunity. We must recognise that growth for our country is fundamental. That fundamentality is, to a fair degree, influenced by the Bill before us.

Baroness Bowles of Berkhamsted Portrait Baroness Bowles of Berkhamsted (LD)
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My Lords, for the purposes of Committee I declare my interests in the register, in particular as a non-executive director of the London Stock Exchange.

I will comment only briefly in this debate because, as others have said, it touches on some issues that run throughout the Bill. This is a matter of great importance: how we transpose the legislation and get the benefits of that transposition into UK law. If we have the flexibility, we ought to be able to use it, but financial services are our largest-earning industry, and I believe it is right that Parliament has to be able to keep track of what is going on and why when there are changes, and, as has already been pointed out, to have its attention drawn to significant changes.

If this amendment comes round again on Report, I would also like to see in it a report on the resulting change to the regulatory perimeter. Quite a lot of change is already going on and it is not necessarily something that we have had our eye on. Some of this change will be entirely at the behest of the regulators rather than in the hands of government. We will come across this later. It was always clear with EU legislation—maybe irritatingly so, in some instances—that the regulator “shall” do something, which did not give it any room for manoeuvre if it thought something did not need to be done. It looks like we will give our regulators the bits of wriggle room and the flexibility that we want, but it is wholly right that there should a report back to draw to the attention of our House and those who scrutinise this the intended difference in the regulatory perimeter, among other things, so that we can watch it and see how it goes.

I will return to the regulatory perimeter in many ways, because one of the problems is that once something is inside that perimeter, a whole truckload of things that were not really necessary might come along. AIFMD might be a good example of that. It is a whole load of extra reporting: where has it gone, what has happened to it, and has it done anything?

At the same time, if bad things are going on, you want there to be some kind of powers of intervention. It should not be a whole caboodle, with lots of rules and regulations and reporting on one hand but nothing on the other. We need to be able to do the things that are in the middle and bridge that gap. Given the way the edges of what is or is not a financial service are getting more and more blurred, what with the big tech industries and so on as well as the more nimble fintechs, we need that ability to ensure that where there is harm there is a route for action, without it having to mean that the whole kitchen sink of reporting is thrown at it across the board.

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Lord Stevenson of Balmacara Portrait Lord Stevenson of Balmacara (Lab)
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As usual, I have forgotten where I was in my perorations, so the Committee might get a few words that it has heard already, which can be ignored. I think I was talking about the requirement in the 1882 legislation that all bills of sale have to be completed on a particularly complex standard form, and then registered with the High Court, which, of course, uses a paper-based record system. The sanctions for failing to comply with any of its documental requirements would be out of scope if current consumer protections applied, and lenders are understandably loath to amend them.

It costs about £45 to register a bill of sale with the High Court, and another £50 to search it. That does not happen very often, because you cannot search by vehicle registration number or any other useful form; it is just a simple list of all the registered cases.

I think most people would agree that the Law Commission makes the case very well for the repeal of the Victorian bills of sale legislation. What is so disappointing about all this is that, originally, the Treasury seemed to share that view. In a Ministerial Statement in February 2017, the Government accepted

“the overarching thrust of the recommendations”,—[Official Report, Commons, 7/2/17; col. 6WS.]

albeit warning that they would not proceed until they had further reflected on some of them. The reflection took the form of a limited consultation with stakeholders, which received 25 responses, after which the Treasury decided not to take forward the draft Law Commission Bill. The principal reason given was that several of the 25 respondents felt that some of the consumer protection proposals in the draft Bill prepared by the Law Commission did not go far enough. It is almost difficult to believe that.

That remains the position. I have tried to keep the pressure on: I took over the Law Commission Bill as a Private Member’s Bill. I got 10th place in the ballot one year, but then lost the Bill because of a snap election called by, I think, Mrs May—I forget now who was Prime Minister. However, I have had meetings; in 2019 I was kindly joined by the noble Lord, Lord Young of Cookham, and the then Economic Secretary to the Treasury, John Glen, but to no avail. In his last letter to me, he accepted that there was consumer detriment taking place but, as numbers of logbook loans were falling, he said he believed

“that the rationale of the Government’s decision not to proceed with legislative reform in this area still stands”.

John Glen is now promoted and in the Cabinet, and I am where I am. However, I respectfully disagreed with him then and still do today. Only a few months ago, I was written to out of the blue—they must have got my name from the news about the Bill when it was first introduced—by people who had been scammed, aided by logbook loan legislation. An elderly couple had put all their hard-earned savings into a motor home, which they wanted to use for their retirement. Just when they had completed the purchase and the renovations, spending almost as much again as they had on buying the vehicle, they discovered that it had mysteriously acquired an outstanding logbook loan, and they lost the vehicle and their capital. This is the sort of thing that happens.

I look forward to the Minister’s response today, and I remain willing to attend further meetings if she thinks that might help move this issue forward. I know from discussions with StepChange that consumer detriment is still happening in this area. I agree with the FCA, which I spoke to earlier in the week, that the credit squeeze, inflation and the energy cost crisis is going to make the return of logbook loans—and, indeed, many other forms of high-cost credit—as inevitable as it is undesirable. If accepted, my amendment would give the FCA the tools it needs to assist the many people affected by this egregious legislation—albeit I still believe that the right solution is for the Government to commit now to repeal the Victorian legislation as soon as reasonably practicable.

Lord Naseby Portrait Lord Naseby (Con)
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My Lords, I am not going to repeat what my noble friends Lady Noakes and Lord Trenchard have said, but I certainly think that His Majesty’s Government—I am a very loyal member of the governing party—need to recognise that this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity in this Bill. Therefore, for me, the driving force should be to ensure that in doing what we are doing—I accept that it is important to mention designated activities—we should be driven by the need for growth for our economy, good competition and innovation. Those things are so key to the future of this country, the City and the whole of the financial services area that we need to be a little bit careful. I think that my noble friend Lady Noakes’ proposal is a perfectly valid one. The Government can have another look at it, but I do not think that it is necessary.

Baroness Bowles of Berkhamsted Portrait Baroness Bowles of Berkhamsted (LD)
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My Lords, I have some questions which arise from what the noble Baroness, Lady Noakes, said. If we want to go back to before the EU had the single market in financial services, we need to know how it worked with short selling. Unfortunately, I do not know how it all worked in the UK back then. When we started to do, or were forced into doing, the short selling regulation, I was told repeatedly from all sides in the UK that we did not need it but that naked short selling was banned. A lot of the concern was about short selling when you had not actually located where you would be able to get the share from for delivery. After the regulation was done, you had to know where you were going to get it, and it was a little firmer. However, I was assured that the wording was more or less the same as was applied, so how did we apply it? We did not have a designated activity regime.

There may be lots of little snippets around in financial services where you just need a simple rule like that—that you cannot do naked short selling but covered short selling is fine—without having lots of regulation, reporting and things around it. How are we going to do this? Would we do a designation just for a one-line piece of information? This is a genuine question, because absurdities begin when you have to invoke something that then requires complex rules. As soon as you go beyond the simple principle of no naked short selling, it will become a much bigger thing, as the European regulation did. There are other drivers for that, and it may be that more than just not doing naked short selling is necessary. My question is, within this designated activities regime, how do you do just one simple, little thing?