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Financial
Risk Outlook states that business continuity threats must be treated
as a high priority.
The UK’s Financial Services Authority
(FSA) has published its ‘Financial Risk Outlook 2005’,
which details the risks that it sees facing the financial sector
and its customers. The Outlook sets out the background against which
the FSA sets its priorities for the year, which will be detailed
in the Authority's business plan to be published next week.
The Financial Risk Outlook highlights
a number of priority risks including the need for people to take
greater individual responsibility for long-term financial provision,
the popularity of some consumer products that are very complex,
and the need for rigorous risk management by firms of complex and
relatively illiquid instruments. The 92-page Outlook also considers
three variations on a central scenario of sound domestic and global
economic performance in the year ahead.
FSA Chairman Callum McCarthy said: "Over
the last year, UK firms and consumers have benefited from a relatively
benign economic environment. Over the next year, most commentators
expect this to continue, with a slowdown in the property market,
more moderate growth in household consumption, relatively low interest
rates and growth in business investment. We take this as the central
scenario case against which the FSA is planning.
"Despite this central case, there
are important long and short term risks which firms and their customers
need to address. People are having to take increased responsibility
for their pensions and other long-term financial arrangements. The
products designed to meet these needs are sometimes difficult to
understand and explain. They are being sold by an industry undergoing
significant structural change. The financial industry, too, is dealing
with more complex instruments that produce operational, credit and
liquidity risks.
"The Outlook illustrates the high
degree of uncertainty around the generally positive economic outlook.
It is important that firms allow for these uncertainties in their
plans and that the current environment does not lead to complacency."
Amongst the other priority risks
identified in the Financial Risk Outlook 2005 are:
* Changes in the distribution of retail financial services and the
introduction of basic advice for the sale of stakeholder products.
There is a risk that the benefits arising from greater competition
and accessibility to advice could be impeded if compliance standards
are allowed to slip;
* The need for firms to manage financial and operational risks carefully
to keep up with the pace of financial innovation;
* At a time of low yields and in the current benign economic environment,
the danger that firms may relax controls or may enter into excessively
speculative investments; and
* Threats to business continuity, including terrorist threats.
The level of forthcoming regulatory initiatives
from international sources is such that the FSA has also produced
its first International Regulatory Outlook. This details the array
of international regulatory initiatives that will affect UK firms
and consumers.
Read
Financial Risk Outlook 2005

•Date:
20h January 2005 • Region: UK •Type:
Article •Topic:
Financial sector
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