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FSA hits firms with big fines for failings

The week unzipped

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Published Date: 18 May 2008
THE City watchdog has fined sofa retailer Land of Leather £224,000 for failings surrounding sales of payment protection insurance, which exposed 58,000 customers to the risk of being missold the cover.
The Financial Services Authority also fined sub-prime mortgage company Thinc Group £900,000 for not having records demonstrating they had given appropriate advice to at-risk borrowers.

Margaret Cole, FSA director of enforcement, said: "This case
demonstrates the importance of firms being able to prove to themselves and to the FSA, through proper records, that they are treating their customers fairly by doing everything necessary to make sure that they get suitable advice.

"The level of fine shows that we are determined to impose higher fines for serious failings in the retail market."

The firm's failings were particularly serious because its conduct could have had an adverse effect on customers, many of whom had adverse credit histories, the FSA added.

New saver offers

COVENTRY has increased the rate on its 50 Plus eSave account to 6.1%.

The online account, available exclusively to the over-50s, pays a fixed rate for 12 months with a minimum investment of £1.

Leeds and Yorkshire Building Societies have both launched new two-year fixed-rate bonds. Leeds's postal bond pays 6% in the first year and 7% in the second. The bond from Yorkshire offers a rate of 6.5% with a minimum deposit of £100.

Alliance & Leicester International has launched a limited-edition, one-year fixed-rate bond paying 6.65%, with a minimum balance of £50,000.

Mortgage rates cut

ABBEY has reduced its mortgage rates. Its two-year fixed rate is now 5.95% with a £995 arrangement fee, and the two-year tracker offers 5.97% with a £999 fee.

The three-year fixed rate is 5.87% with a £999 fee, and the five-year fixed rate is 5.75% with a £1,499 fee.

Nationwide has also cut rates. For homebuyers, the two-year fixed rates, one with a fee of £599 and one without a fee, have both dropped by 0.15% to 5.95% and 6.35% respectively.

The five-year fixed rate has fallen by 0.3% to 6.15% and has a fee of £599.

For those remortgaging, two-year fixed rates with and without a £599 fee have been reduced by 0.15% to 6.15% and 6.55% respectively.

The five-year fixed rate is now 5.95%, a 0.2% reduction, with a fee of £599.





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  • Last Updated: 17 May 2008 2:37 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
 
1

Evan Owen,

Snowdonia 18/05/2008 11:27:46
A bit rich this, the FSA costs us £millions rescuing Northern Rock, letting Equitable Life fall over and allowing the likes of Standard Life to leave us with mortgage shortfalls because they misled us. Yet the FSA isn't fined, publicly admonished or even had a wrist slapped.

The Fine Slapping Authority needs the money so it will fine even if nobody has actually lost any money, it can invent any 'Treating Customets Fairly' rubbish in order to build a case and justify its existence, and to get their hands on the money to pay their expensive salaries and fill their pension black hole, it is worse than the Mafia protection rackets, these firms should not be regualted because they have no idea what they are letting themselves in for. Many will go to the wall what with the cost of being regulated and the 'fines' imposed by the 'regulator' which is not fit for pupose.

FSA, burn it down:

http://www.ifasok.co.uk/Downloads/Burn%20it%20Down.pdf

 

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