This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . The next check for changes will be
You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.theguardian.com/business/2025/jan/08/bank-of-england-plans-to-let-insurers-make-riskier-investments-as-regulations-eased
The article has changed 5 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
Bank of England plans to ease ‘burden’ on lenders as regulations eased | |
(32 minutes later) | |
Central bank has been rowing back on rules introduced after financial crisis, saying some appear to have been ‘overcooked’ | Central bank has been rowing back on rules introduced after financial crisis, saying some appear to have been ‘overcooked’ |
The Bank of England plans to slash the “reporting burden” on UK banks and allow insurers to make riskier investments without initial approval, as it comes under government pressure to ease regulations introduced after the financial crisis. | The Bank of England plans to slash the “reporting burden” on UK banks and allow insurers to make riskier investments without initial approval, as it comes under government pressure to ease regulations introduced after the financial crisis. |
Sam Woods, a deputy governor at the Bank who leads its regulatory arm, the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA), said the central bank has been rowing back on rules that appeared to be “overcooked”, suggesting they may have gone too far and harmed the financial sector. | Sam Woods, a deputy governor at the Bank who leads its regulatory arm, the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA), said the central bank has been rowing back on rules that appeared to be “overcooked”, suggesting they may have gone too far and harmed the financial sector. |
However, Woods, who was speaking to members of the House of Lords financial services regulation committee, insisted he did not want to see a regulatory “race to the bottom”. | However, Woods, who was speaking to members of the House of Lords financial services regulation committee, insisted he did not want to see a regulatory “race to the bottom”. |
Both the PRA and fellow City regulator the Financial Conduct Authority have come under renewed pressure to support UK growth by easing rules on the financial services sector. In November, the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, ordered the watchdogs to encourage more risk-taking across the industry. | Both the PRA and fellow City regulator the Financial Conduct Authority have come under renewed pressure to support UK growth by easing rules on the financial services sector. In November, the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, ordered the watchdogs to encourage more risk-taking across the industry. |
The former Tory government introduced rules that would force the City watchdog to consider whether its regulations were promoting growth and competitiveness among companies, rather than simply protecting consumers. | The former Tory government introduced rules that would force the City watchdog to consider whether its regulations were promoting growth and competitiveness among companies, rather than simply protecting consumers. |
The drive has included removing the cap on banker bonuses and softening capital requirements as part of new so-called Basel 3.1 rules. But Woods said further reforms were afoot, including for banks, which have long complained about the level of compliance they face in the UK. | The drive has included removing the cap on banker bonuses and softening capital requirements as part of new so-called Basel 3.1 rules. But Woods said further reforms were afoot, including for banks, which have long complained about the level of compliance they face in the UK. |
“We’ve already cut reporting on the insurance side by a third,” Woods said. “We do want to look at what scope there is to reduce the reporting burden on the banks. And that’s something, again, we’ll come forward on this year.” | “We’ve already cut reporting on the insurance side by a third,” Woods said. “We do want to look at what scope there is to reduce the reporting burden on the banks. And that’s something, again, we’ll come forward on this year.” |
Meanwhile, the insurance sector could be given the green light to invest in riskier assets without formal prior approval. | Meanwhile, the insurance sector could be given the green light to invest in riskier assets without formal prior approval. |
The Bank is planning a new mechanism, “a matching adjustment accelerator”, to ease processes for insurance companies, which need to make rapid investment decisions but often need authorisation before putting money into certain assets. “So the idea is like a sandbox. They should be able to go ahead, come to us later for approval,” Woods said. | The Bank is planning a new mechanism, “a matching adjustment accelerator”, to ease processes for insurance companies, which need to make rapid investment decisions but often need authorisation before putting money into certain assets. “So the idea is like a sandbox. They should be able to go ahead, come to us later for approval,” Woods said. |
However, Woods insisted the PRA was not trying to usher in an era of light-touch regulation. “I do think that we should avoid a race to the bottom, [but] I don’t think that that is what parliament has asked us to do,” he said. | However, Woods insisted the PRA was not trying to usher in an era of light-touch regulation. “I do think that we should avoid a race to the bottom, [but] I don’t think that that is what parliament has asked us to do,” he said. |
Sign up to Business Today | Sign up to Business Today |
Get set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morning | Get set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morning |
after newsletter promotion | after newsletter promotion |
Woods said it was an opportunity to review regulation that came into force after the 2008 financial crisis. | Woods said it was an opportunity to review regulation that came into force after the 2008 financial crisis. |
“We’ve built up all of this machinery over the last 10 or 15 years. Are there some places where it’s a bit overcooked? Are there some places where it’s a bit overlapping, some places where it’s a bit complex, where, if we were making that [decision] again with our new objective, we’d do it differently? | “We’ve built up all of this machinery over the last 10 or 15 years. Are there some places where it’s a bit overcooked? Are there some places where it’s a bit overlapping, some places where it’s a bit complex, where, if we were making that [decision] again with our new objective, we’d do it differently? |
“And in many cases, the answer to that question will be ‘yes’. And that’s what we’re focused on.” | “And in many cases, the answer to that question will be ‘yes’. And that’s what we’re focused on.” |