Hogan Lovells 2024 Election Impact and Congressional Outlook Report
HM Treasury has published the response to its July 2022 consultation and call for evidence on payments regulation and the systemic perimeter. HMT proposes the following next steps: extend the scope of the Bank of England’s supervisory perimeter to “reflect a more holistic assessment of systemic risk across the payments sector”; reform the Payment Systems Regulator’s system access framework; consider further the application of the Senior Managers and Certification Regime to payments after the planned broader review of the SM&CR. The response also acknowledges the steps being taken to increase the powers of the FCA and PSR to deal with retained EU law for payments and towards replacing the Payment Services Regulations 2017 and the Electronic Money Regulations 2011.
In recognition of the significant transformations across the payments landscape since the Banking Act 2009, the government confirms in its response that it is committed to taking forward the reforms described below to the Bank’s systemic perimeter. The changes will need to be enacted by primary legislation ‘at a future legislative opportunity’, so the government will issue a further policy statement setting out its legislative approach. The government notes that it will be for the Bank itself, as the competent authority, to set out how it intends to supervise the reformed perimeter after the relevant legislation is published.
This means that instead of focusing on an entity’s form, regulation should reflect the risk posed by an entity’s activities and its relationship to other market participants and the wider economy (an approach widely welcomed by respondents to the government’s 2020 Payments Landscape Review).
Entities should be examined and recognised as systemically important by HMT directly on a case-by-case basis, and against clear criteria, ensuring that any reformed systemic perimeter would remain reserved only for those payments entities that – through any deficiencies in their design or any disruption to their operations – had the potential to threaten the UK’s financial stability or have wider economic consequences.
Points of interest from the consultation response include:
The source of risk would be in relation to the provider itself, not its relationship with an already-recognised payment system, as the Banking Act currently operates. This is similar to the approach to enable the recognition of future systemically important stablecoins used as a means of payment (‘digital settlement assets’) in the Financial Services and Markets Act 2023 (FSMA 2023).
The aim here is to provide clarity on the scope of Part 5 in light of the new, specific critical third parties regime established under FSMA 2023.
Points of interest from the consultation response include:
This would allow the Bank to source relevant data from unsupervised, non-systemic firms operating within relevant payment chains. There is existing precedent for these powers in the FSBRA’s sections 64 and 81, which enable the PSR to effectively ‘keep markets under review’ as part of its general functions.
Points of interest from the consultation response include:
This would include codifying its powers in legislation, and making clear which aspects of a recognised entity’s operations the Bank may exercise its broad supervisory powers over. It would also include clarifying its power to set limits on a business activity where appropriate to manage financial stability or serious economic risk, and its ability to mandate a firm’s location within the UK.
Points of interest from the consultation response include:
This includes a requirement to establish a memorandum of understanding between the regulators, the need for a clear transition process and a Treasury-held power to disapply relevant regulator rules. Broadly, the consultation proposed extending the agreed-upon approach for systemic digital settlement assets, under which the Bank would lead on prudential matters, and the FCA on conduct. In cases of insolvency, systemically important PSPs or EMIs would migrate from the Payments and Electronic Money SAR overseen by the FCA and into the Financial Market Infrastructure SAR overseen by the Bank.
Points of interest from the consultation response include:
The aim here would be to hold the Bank’s supervision of payments accountable to equivalent or similar standards and rules as for its remit over central counterparties and systemic central securities depositories, as legislated for under FSMA 2023. This would include a secondary innovation objective, renewed regulatory principles and ways in which HMT, Parliament and stakeholders could scrutinise the Bank’s supervisory approach.
Points of interest from the consultation response include:
There was unanimous support from respondents to the government’s intentions to provide the FCA and the PSR with relevant powers over their respective retained EU law for payment services, as part of the approach to application of the Future Regulatory Framework (FRF) Review to their payments mandates. The government has subsequently laid the Electronic Money, Payment Card Interchange Fee and Payment Services (Amendment) Regulations 2023 to provide these powers to the FCA and the PSR following the Chancellor’s July 2023 Mansion House speech.
HMT has also subsequently announced the first two tranches of its Smarter Regulatory Framework programme for UK financial services, coming out of the FRF Review. The Payment Services Regulations 2017 (PSRs 2017) and the Electronic Money Regulations 2011 (EMRs 2011) are in tranche 2, on which the government intends to make significant progress by the end of this year. The government will provide further detail on its approach to replacing these Regulations in response to its January 2023 call for evidence (which closed in April) later in 2023.
Several respondents noted a longer-term desire for the government to eventually migrate payments regulation and regulator rulemaking into FSMA 2000. The response states that the government intends to ‘carefully consider the merits of this approach as part of building a Smarter Regulatory Framework’.
For more on developments relevant to payments contained in the Chancellor’s Mansion House speech and related publications, take a look at this Engage article: ‘Payments aspects of UK Mansion House reforms’.
More broadly on the application of the FRF Review to the FCA and PSR’s respective payments mandates, the government had proposed that:
The government has now legislated to extend these accountability frameworks and regulatory objectives to the FCA and PSR as part of FSMA 2023.
The government committed to launching a review into the Senior Managers & Certification Regime (SM&CR) as part of the Edinburgh Reforms announced in December 2022. A government call for evidence on the current SM&CR legislative framework was launched in March 2023, together with a joint discussion paper from the PRA and the FCA considering the regime’s regulatory framework, and both reviews closed in June. The Treasury will consider responses received in conjunction with the regulators and plans to set out next steps ‘in due course’. For more on this, take a look at our Engage article ‘UK SMCR: HMT Call for Evidence and FCA/PRA Discussion Paper’.
Industry’s views on the extension of the SM&CR to both recognised systemic payments entities and authorised PSPs and EMIs have already been sought via the payments regulation and the systemic perimeter consultation. The response provides that the government will set out next steps regarding the future, consulted-on extensions to the Bank or FCA’s remit over payments after the conclusion of its broader SM&CR review.
The government is also planning to reform the PSR’s payment system access framework (as consulted on in the 2022 consultation and supported by respondents) as a priority via secondary legislation using powers provided to HMT under FSMA 2023. This will mean revoking the access framework within Part 8 (regulations 102-104) of the PSRs 2017, leaving the PSR to apply its framework within Part 5 of the Financial Services (Banking Reform) Act 2013 (FSBRA) in all cases. The government notes that the PSR already imposes a requirement for POND (proportionate, objective, and non-discriminatory) access criteria under its General Direction 2. It expects the PSR to continue this approach and to consider - following revocation of the PSRs 2017 regime - how to reflect POND principles in cases of dispute over indirect access. The government will set out more detail on its approach to achieving these reforms when it publishes a draft statutory instrument in Parliament.
The rest of the government’s proposed reforms to FSBRA relating to the PSR will require primary legislative change, and it will return to them in a policy statement once a future primary legislative vehicle is determined. Those proposals were to:
On the government’s proposal to provide the PSR with a capacity to fine designated entities, ahead of any legislative change the government states that it will carefully consider how the PSR may be allowed to use this power in proportion to its narrower scope compared to the FCA, including as to how those in receipt of fines may appeal requests where needed (including to whom).
Regarding the proposal to introduce a process for the PSR to provide redress for affected service users, the government recognises that there is a wider policy question to be considered as to whether the right outcome is to provide the PSR itself with means for compensating victims where it has intervened, or if clearer and potentially more stringent requirements on system operators to provide their own means of redress would be more effective and proportionate. The government will consider this further in consultation with the PSR and industry before deciding whether to progress legislative reforms to enable redress for users of payment systems.
The reforms to the Bank’s systemic payments perimeter will need to be enacted by primary legislation ‘at a future legislative opportunity’, so the government’s immediate next step will be to issue a further policy statement setting out its legislative approach (although timing on this is currently unclear). The government notes that it will be for the Bank itself, as the competent authority, to set out how it intends to supervise the reformed perimeter after the relevant legislation is published.
The reforms to the PSR’s payment systems access framework will be fast-tracked via secondary legislation using powers conferred on HMT by FSMA 2023. As the rest of the proposed reforms to FSBRA relating to the PSR will require primary legislation, the government will return to them in a policy statement once a future primary legislative vehicle is determined.
Further consideration of the proposed extension of the SM&CR to payments is being postponed until after the government’s broader SM&CR review.
The PSRs 2017 and the EMRs 2011 are in tranche 2 of HMT’s Smarter Regulatory Framework programme, on which the government intends to make significant progress by the end of this year. It will provide further detail on its approach to replacing these Regulations in response to its January 2023 call for evidence later in 2023.
If you would like to discuss any aspects of HM Treasury’s consultation response, please get in touch with us.
Authored by Roger Tym and Virginia Montgomery.