The FCA 2022/23 Business Plan and Strategy: competition

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Written by Hannah Jeckel
As explained in our post available here, the FCA has recently published its three year Strategy as well as its 2022/2023 Business Plan.
One of its three key commitments was to “promote competition and positive change”. In this post we set out a summary of the FCA’s plans across these two documents for improving competition in financial markets.
Promoting competition and positive change
The FCA notes that it plans to achieve this in three ways:
The FCA also noted that it planned to begin a programme of market studies on market data, beginning with trade data.
These proposals should also be set against the backdrop of the FCA’s proposed Consumer Duty and general push for consumer-focused reform (see further here) which are is intended to place an obligations on firms and improve consumer outcomes. These intended outcomes include consumers receiving fair price and quality; and receiving appropriate information to make decisions about suitable products and services.
Fair pricing and information remedies also often feature as part of the FCA’s competition-focused market studies and investigations (for example, the FCA’s general insurance pricing practices market study report which concluded some consumers were “not getting fair value”). Indeed, the FCA notes in its Strategy “…[f]irms should compete for customers on the basis of service, quality, price and innovation competition should encourage better outcomes for consumers”.
[f]irms should compete for customers on the basis of service, quality, price and innovation competition should encourage better outcomes for consumers