FCA warns firms to do more to protect consumers from fraud
The UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) today published key findings of a review of firms’ fraud controls and complaint handling.
While the review found examples of good practice, the regulator was also disappointed with the way some firms supported customers who were the victims of fraud.
In the first six months of 2023 over 116,000 people reported falling victim to APP fraud, where someone is tricked into sending money to a fraudster posing as a genuine payee. With more people potentially vulnerable due to cost-of-living pressures, and fraud methods evolving, it is critical that firms continually evaluate their approach and have robust frameworks in place to detect fraud, as well as effective support for victims when it happens.
The review found:
- Firms can do more to strengthen their systems designed to detect and prevent fraud.
- There is not enough focus on delivering good consumer outcomes in many firms.
- Some firms could do more to improve the support they offer to victims of fraud.
- Poor complaint handling, including firms often taking too long to respond. Customers were provided with decision letters that were sometimes unclear, confusing, or included unhelpful and, on occasion, accusatory language.
- Firms are not fully considering characteristics of customer vulnerability when making decisions about fraud claims and complaints.
The FCA is already working with firms in its review to strengthen their approach. The regulator expects all payment service providers to use the findings to inform what more they can do to detect, manage and reduce fraud and losses more effectively. Customer treatment must also be improved, including how complaints are handled, to deliver consistently good consumer outcomes in line with the Consumer Duty.
Fighting financial crime is a key priority in the FCA strategy and it has a number of tools to tackle it, including; being tough at the gateway, taking assertive supervision and enforcement actions and communicating directly with consumers through the ScamSmart campaign to warn them of the risks of fraud.