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Greensill, Archegos point to tougher 'non-bank' rules, says UK watchdog

Wed, 12th May 2021 18:29

By Huw Jones

LONDON, May 12 (Reuters) - The collapse of supply-chain
company Greensill and meltdown at hedge fund Archegos highlight
the need for better data on the growing role of "non-banks" in
finance, Britain's Financial Conduct Authority said on
Wednesday.

Regulators and central banks are increasingly taking a
closer a look at "non-banks," which have grown rapidly since
banks themselves became subject to far stricter rules after
bailouts of lenders in the 2008 global financial crisis.

The FCA is formally investigating Greensill, which lent
money to firms by buying their invoices at a discount, a type of
commercial lending that is not regulated in Britain.

"What this experience does show is that where there is
interaction with regulated activity, be it at a bank or capital
market, there is scope for us to further strengthen the
information that we are gathering," FCA CEO Nikhil Rathi told a
parliamentary hearing on Greensill.

The Archegos episode also raises questions about how family
office investment operations report transactions, Rathi said.
Archegos struggled after it was asked to meet a huge margin call
from its banks.

Rathi said the FCA and finance ministry are scrutinising two
sets of rules dating to the 1980s.

The first allows foreign financial firms to access Britain's
market without telling regulators, while the second allows a
regulated firm to give an "appointed representative" permission
to carry out financial activities, a mechanism used by
Greensill.

"At the very least we need to know what's going on in these
areas which are not formally regulated," Rathi said.

The appointed representative regime was only intended for
limited use but has been applied far more widely, Rathi said.

"That feels to me like we need to be looking much more
closely at systems and controls the principal has in place, and
potentially placing restrictions on the scale of business that
can be undertaken through this mechanism," he said.

(Reporting by Huw Jones; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)

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