01/09/2011

Credit Unions Protected From PMS-style Crash

Northern Ireland's credit unions will be offered more protection under a new form of regulation, the Financial Services Authority (FSA) has said.

In changes that are being made in the wake of the collapse of the Presbyterian Mutual Society, the regulation of all 177 credit unions will pass from the Department of Enterprise to the FSA and will therefore fall under the compensation scheme, which underwrites savers' accounts up to £85,000.

HM Treasury and the FSA yesterday published a joint consultation paper on the future regulation of Northern Ireland credit unions (NICUs).

These proposals aim to enhance consumer protection across all NICUs, and align both the prudential and consumer standards of NICUs with those of credit unions in other parts of the United Kingdom.

NICUs will be regulated by the FSA, brought under the protection of the Financial Services Compensation Scheme and within the jurisdiction of the Financial Ombudsman Service.

These measures will provide NICU members with increased protection and peace of mind, as the Government strongly believes financial services consumers in Northern Ireland should have the same rights as those in the rest of the UK.

The Government is committed to promoting mutuals across the UK financial services sector. As mutuals, credit unions play a major role in the overall financial services sector in Northern Ireland, a statement said.

Mark Hoban MP, Financial Secretary to the Treasury, said: "Members of Northern Ireland Credit Unions don't have the same rights and can't access the same products as members of credit unions in the rest of the United Kingdom.

"It is time for this to change. We have asked the FSA to regulate them and thereby strengthen the rights of members of credit unions in Northern Ireland.

"This is a further sign of our commitment to strengthen financial mutuals and foster diversity in financial services throughout the whole of the United Kingdom," he said, adding that the paper builds on a consultation issued by HM Treasury in March 2010. This previous consultation set out proposals for the regulatory reform of NICUs.

It proposed the transfer of regulation to the FSA and the future transfer of the registration function from Northern Ireland.

Regulation of NICUs will transfer from the NI Department of Enterprise, Trade and Investment (DETI) to the FSA on 31 March 2012.

(BMcC/CD)

Related Northern Ireland Business News Stories
Click here for the latest headlines.

18 September 2001
Airline bosses in crisis talks with Transport Secretary
UK Transport Secretary Stephen Byers has met with airline bosses to discuss the damage that last week’s terrorist attacks in the US has caused to the industry.
20 May 2004
Minister proposes Credit Union rules modernisation
Enterprise Minister, Barry Gardiner today set out policy proposals for updating Northern Ireland’s policy on Credit Unions and Industrial and Provident Societies. Mr Gardiner said it was essential for such unions and societies to have a modern regulatory and policy framework which enables them to function without unnecessary hurdles.
14 December 2005
Yes Car Credit to close
The Yes Car Credit business is to close, with the loss of 820 jobs, it has been announced. The company’s owner, Provident Financial, said that the business was “no longer viable”.
22 June 2005
US-based financial services group announces NI centre
Invest NI has secured an investment which will see Wombat, the US-based financial services group, establish its global centre of software engineering excellence in Northern Ireland. Wombat’s software transfers stock exchange data to remote trading floors in banks at high speed, improving the efficiency and accuracy of automated trading systems.
21 November 2001
‘Financial illiteracy’ sees consumers lose out
A new report from the National Association of Citizens’ Advice Bureaux (NACAB) has highlighted how consumers are losing more than £10 billion-a -year through the purchase of financial products unsuitable for their needs.