The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) is the UK’s financial services conduct regulator, established under the Financial Services Act 2012 and operating within the framework of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (FSMA). It regulates the conduct of around 42,000 firms and acts as prudential regulator for the majority of them, those not supervised by the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA). The FCA is operationally independent of government and funded by the firms it regulates.
The FCA’s statutory objectives
Section 1B of FSMA gives the FCA a single strategic objective: ensuring that the relevant markets function well. This is underpinned by three operational objectives: securing an appropriate degree of protection for consumers (section 1C), protecting and enhancing the integrity of the UK financial system (section 1D), and promoting effective competition in the interests of consumers (section 1E). The Financial Services and Markets Act 2023 introduced a secondary objective requiring the FCA to facilitate the international competitiveness and growth of the UK economy over the medium to long term.
The FCA’s powers
The FCA authorises firms and individuals, supervises them on a risk-based basis, and makes the rules contained in the FCA Handbook. Its enforcement toolkit includes financial penalties and public censure under section 206 of FSMA, prohibition orders against individuals under section 56, variation or cancellation of permissions, restitution orders, and criminal prosecution for offences including insider dealing under the Criminal Justice Act 1993 and unauthorised regulated activity under section 19 of FSMA. The FCA also approves and oversees senior managers under the Senior Managers and Certification Regime (SM&CR).
Who it affects
Every authorised UK firm and the individuals performing controlled or certified functions within them fall within the FCA’s remit, with the depth of supervision scaled to the firm’s size, complexity and potential to cause harm.
Related terms
FCA Handbook, PRA and SM&CR.