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FSA fines non-advised mortgage firm £28k; bans bosses

by: Mortgage Solutions
  • 24/11/2011
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FSA fines non-advised mortgage firm £28k; bans bosses
The FSA has fined non-advised mortgage firm Fastmoney £28,000 and banned its directors for failing to ensure that "vulnerable" customers who took out mortgages and bridging loans were treated fairly.

The FSA has banned Fastmoney owner and director, Simon Latham, and former chief executive, Stuart Mason, from performing significant influence functions in the future.

Latham has also been fined £17,500.

Fastmoney, based in Newcastle-under-Lyme in Staffordshire, arranged regulated mortgage contracts, including regulated bridging loans, on a non-advised basis for retail customers.

Between August 2005 and March 2010, Fastmoney arranged 370 regulated mortgage contracts and 18 regulated bridging loans for customers.

The FSA found deficiencies in Fastmoney’s non-advised sales process that the regulator said put its customers at risk of taking out mortgage contracts that they did not fully understand.

The FSA considered the firm’s failings to be particularly serious, because its customers were typically financially unsophisticated people with an adverse credit history.

In some cases, customers needed to obtain a loan urgently to avoid having their homes repossessed. As a result of their circumstances, the impact of poor financial decisions was magnified.

The FSA uncovered these deficiences during a supervisory visit after which the firm was referred to enforcement.

In particular, the FSA found that Fastmoney failed to:

  • establish a non-advised sales process that ensured customers took out an appropriate mortgage and were treated fairly
  • ensure sales staff were competent, adhered to non-advised sales scripts and avoided giving personal recommendations to customers
  • present all options to the customer in a fair and unbiased way, without recommending a specific product based on its own judgment
  • ensure customers understood all the details of their product, particularly those who took out bridging loans
  • disclose clearly the cost of its services

In addition, the FSA said that Latham and Mason failed in their oversight of the business, with Latham delegating responsibilities to Mason, who did not have the necessary knowledge, skill or understanding of the regulatory system to deal with.

Both failed to supervise, monitor and train staff adequately and to identify and mitigate risks posed by the business, such as potentially inappropriate sales of bridging loans and inadequate disclosure of fees.

The FSA has required Fastmoney to appoint a skilled person to assess the extent of any customer detriment which may have been caused by the firm’s failings and pay customer redress if appropriate. That process is ongoing.

The fines imposed upon Fastmoney and Latham have been reduced by 30%, from £40,000 and £25,000 respectively, owing to the firm and owner agreeing to settle at an early stage.

Tom Spender, head of retail enforcement at the FSA, said: “Firms and their senior management cannot absolve themselves from responsibility for a mortgage sale because they have chosen to sell on a non-advised basis.

“They must ensure communications with customers are clear, fair and not misleading and that they do not sell a product that is inappropriate for that customer.

“This is particularly important where those customers are vulnerable, in arrears or facing repossession – it is unacceptable to target such customers and offer products such as bridging loans without giving proper consideration to the firm’s obligation to treat customers fairly.”

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