1
Application and Definitions
1.1
Unless otherwise stated, this Part applies to:
- (1) the FSCS;
- (2) UK banks;
- (3) credit unions;
- (4) Northern Ireland credit unions;
- (5) building societies; and
- (6) an overseas firm that:
- (a) is not an incoming firm; and
- (b) has a Part 4A permission that includes accepting deposits.
1.2
Chapter 23 applies to a UK branch of an incoming firm that is a credit institution.
1.3
This Part also applies to a firm which used to have a Part 4A permission to accept deposits but which has ceased to have a Part 4A permission to accept new deposits, or which is subject to a requirement not to accept new deposits, and which is not a member of a non-UK scheme.
1.4
Unless otherwise stated, in this Part, the following definitions shall apply:
means cash, deposits and low-risk assets which can be liquidated within a period not exceeding seven business days.
[Note: Art. 2(1)(12) of the DGSD]
means management expenses which are not attributable to any particular class.
means a levy, forming part of the management expenses levy, to meet the base costs in the financial year of the compensation scheme to which the levy relates.
means one of the classes to which the FSCS allocates levies in accordance with the rules of the compensation scheme.
means the class which consists of DGS members.
has the meaning given in 43.1.
has the meaning given in the Dormant Account Scheme Part.
means a valid claim made in respect of a civil liability owed by a DGS member to the claimant.
means the date on which a determination is made by the PRA, the FSCS or a judicial authority that deposits held by a DGS member are unavailable deposits such that the DGS member is in default.
means 23.7(2), 23.8(2) and 23.9.
means the person to whom the FSCS is required to pay compensation, as set out in Chapter 6.
means the Financial Services Compensation Scheme established under section 213 of FSMA.
compensation sticker and poster rules
means 23.4, 23.5, 23.6, 23.7(1) and 23.8(1).
means a firm’s systems for satisfying 13.4 to 13.9.
means the part of an eligible deposit that does not exceed the coverage levels set out in Chapter 4.
[Note: Art. 2(1)(5) of the DGSD]
has the meaning given in the Dormant Account Scheme Part.
has the meaning given in the Dormant Account Scheme Part.
means:
- (1) in relation to a credit union, any share of a class defined as a deferred share by section 31A of the Credit Unions Act 1979;
- (2) in relation to a building society, any share of a class defined as deferred shares for the purposes of section 119 of the Building Societies Act 1986.
means:
- (1) a credit balance which results from funds left in an account or from temporary situations deriving from normal banking transactions and which a credit institution is required to repay under the legal and contractual conditions applicable, including a fixed-term deposit and a savings deposit, but excluding a credit balance where:
- (a) its existence can only be proven by a financial instrument as defined in MiFID II, unless it is a savings product which is evidenced by a certificate of deposit made out to a named person and which exists in a Member State on 2 July 2014;
- (b) its principal is not repayable at par; or
- (c) its principal is only repayable at par under a particular guarantee or agreement provided by the credit institution or a third party;
- (2) a share in a building society, excluding a deferred share;
- (3) a share in a credit union, excluding a deferred share; or
- (4) a share in a Northern Ireland credit union, excluding a deferred share.
[Note: Art. 2(1)(3) of the DGSD]
means the compensation scheme for compensating persons in respect of deposits.
deposit guarantee scheme regulations
means the Deposit Guarantee Scheme Regulations 2015 (SI 2015/486).
means the holder or, in the case of a joint account, each of the holders, of a deposit.
[Note: Art. 2(1)(6) of the DGSD]
means a base costs levy imposed by the FSCS on DGS members.
means the costs incurred:
- (1) in paying compensation under the deposit guarantee scheme;
- (2) under section 214B or section 214D of FSMA; or
- (3) by virtue of section 61 of the Banking Act 2009;
(including the costs of paying interest, principal and other costs of borrowing to pay such costs).
means a levy imposed by the FSCS on DGS members to meet DGS compensation costs.
means a DGS compensation costs levy, a DGS management expenses levy or a legacy costs levy.
means a levy imposed by the FSCS on DGS members to meet management expenses and which is made up of one or more of a DGS base costs levy and a DGS specific costs levy.
means:
- (1) a UK bank;
- (2) a building society;
- (3) a credit union;
- (4) a Northern Ireland credit union; or
- (5) an overseas firm that is not an incoming firm and has a Part 4A permission that includes accepting deposits.
means management expenses attributable to the deposit guarantee scheme other than base costs, which the FSCS has incurred or expects to incur.
means a levy, forming part of the DGS management expenses levy, to meet the DGS specific costs in the financial year of the deposit guarantee scheme to which the levy relates.
means Directive 2014/49/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 16 April 2014 on deposit guarantee schemes (recast).
has the meaning given in section 10 of the Dormant Bank and Building Society Accounts Act 2008.
means the entitlement of a person to establish a branch or provide services in an EEA State other than that in which they have their relevant office in accordance with the Treaty as applied in the European Economic Area; and subject to the conditions of the CRR and CRD.
has the meaning given in Chapter 2.
means an incoming firm that is a credit institution of an EEA State that has adopted the euro or that does not convert into their national currency the amount referred to in Article 6(1) of the DGSD, pursuant to Article 6(5) DGSD.
means a single, consistent view of:
- (1) an account holder’s aggregate deposits with a firm limited to accounts that contain or may contain eligible deposits to which the account holder is not absolutely entitled; or
- (2) a depositor’s aggregate eligible deposits with a firm limited to accounts that are not active
and which contains the information required by 12.9.
means:
- (1) up to and including 31 December 2016, a list in the form set out in Section A of Annex 3 to this Part; and
- (2) from 1 January 2017, a list in the form set out in Section B of Annex 3 to this Part.
means the area established by the EEA agreement.
means a scheme or arrangement (including the deposit guarantee scheme) for the payment of compensation in respect of eligible deposits, which was established in the EEA State which is, with regard to a particular institution, the home Member State.
means a scheme or arrangement (including the deposit guarantee scheme) for the payment of compensation in respect of eligible deposits, which was established in the EEA State which is, with regard to a particular institution, the host Member State.
describes the status of a firm following a determination that its deposits are unavailable deposits.
means an information sheet containing the categories of information set out in the template in Annex 1 to this Part.
has the meaning given in section 22(4) of FSMA.
means an account opened in the name of two or more persons or over which two or more persons have rights that are exercised by means of the signature of one or more of those persons.
[Note: Art. 2(1)(7) of the DGSD]
means the costs incurred prior to 3 July 2015 by the FSCS:
- (1) in paying compensation; or
- (2) under section 214B or section 214D of FSMA; or
- (3) by virtue of section 61 of the Banking Act 2009;
(including the costs of paying interest, principal and other costs of borrowing to pay such costs).
means a levy imposed by the FSCS to meet legacy costs.
means
- (1) in England and Wales, a local authority within the meaning of the Local Government Act 1972, the Greater London Authority, the Common Council of the City of London or the Council of the Isles of Scilly;
- (2) in Scotland, a council within the meaning of the Local Government etc. (Scotland) Act 1994;
- (3) in Northern Ireland, a district council within the meaning of The Local Government Act (Northern Ireland) 1972;
- (4) an authority equivalent to (1), (2) or (3) located in a country outside the UK.
means items falling into the first or second category of Table 1 of Article 336 of the CRR.
[Note: Art. 2(1)(14) of the DGSD]
has the meaning given in section 223(3) of FSMA.
means the mandatory contributions described in Article 10(4) of the DGSD.
micro, small and medium-sized enterprises
means micro, small and medium-sized enterprises as defined with regard to the annual turnover criterion referred to in Article 2(1) of the Annex to Commission Recommendation 2003/361/EC .
has the meaning given in Article 1(2) of the money laundering directive.
means Directive 2005/60/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 26 October 2005 on the prevention of the use of the financial system for the purpose of money laundering and terrorist financing.
means in relation to a member of a personal pension scheme or an occupational pension scheme or the widow or widower or surviving civil partner of a member of such a scheme, benefits the rate or amount of which is calculated solely by reference to the schemes assets which (because of the nature of the calculation) must necessarily suffice to provide the benefits which fall within section 181 of the Pensions Scheme Act 1993 and section 99 of the Pensions Act 2008, each as amended by section 29 of the Pensions Act 2011.
means a body corporate whose business consists solely of acting as a nominee holder of investments or other property.
means a scheme established pursuant to the DGSD in an EEA State other than the UK.
means a firm which is either a society registered under the Credit Unions (Northern Ireland) Order 1985 or a society registered under the Industrial and Provident Societies Act (Northern Ireland) 1969 as a credit union.
an account is not active if it:
- (1) is a dormant account; or
- (2) is an account for which the firm has received formal notice of a legal dispute or competing claims to the proceeds of the account; or
- (3) is an account owned or controlled by a person whose name appears on the “Consolidated list of financial sanctions targets in the United Kingdom” that is maintained by HM Treasury or which is otherwise subject to restrictive measures imposed by national governments or international bodies.
has the meaning given in article 3(1) of the Regulated Activities Order.
has the meaning given in article 3(1) of the Regulated Activities Order.
means freehold, heritable or leasehold property (or the equivalent in another country), including land, which was, is, or is intended to become the depositor’s only or main residence.
includes a government, central administrative authority, provincial authority, regional authority, municipal authority or local authority.
means a single, consistent view of a depositor’s aggregate eligible deposits with a firm which contains the information required by 12.9, but excludes from view those accounts included in the exclusions view.
means a report from a firm’s board of directors confirming that the firm’s SCV system satisfies the SCV requirements.
means the requirements on firms set out in Chapter 12.
means a firm’s system for satisfying the SCV requirements.
means a local authority with an annual budget of up to EUR 500,000.
small self-administered scheme
means an occupational pension scheme of a kind described in article 4(4) and 4(5) of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Carrying on Regulated Activities by Way of Business) Order 2001 (SI 2001/1177).
has the meaning given in article 3(1) of the Regulated Activities Order.
means the information required under 44.2.
means the amount of available financial means which the deposit guarantee scheme is required to reach, which is 0.8% of the amount of covered deposits (excluding temporary high balances) of DGS members.
means, in relation to a depositor who is an individual, that part of an eligible deposit in excess of the coverage level set out in 4.2 which meets the additional criteria set out in 10.2.
[Note: Art. 6(2) of the DGSD]
means the portion of an eligible deposit up to and including the coverage level provided for in 4.2, identified in accordance with Chapter 13 and 12.9.
means a deposit that is due and payable but has not been paid by a DGS member under the applicable legal or contractual conditions where either:
- (1) (in accordance with the deposit guarantee scheme regulations) the PRA, or the FSCS in the case of a credit union or a Northern Ireland credit union, has determined that in its view the DGS member appears to be unable for the time being, for reasons which are directly related to its financial circumstances, to repay the deposit and has no current prospect of being able to do so; or
- (2) a judicial authority has made a ruling for reasons which are directly related to the DGS member’s financial circumstances and the ruling has had the effect of suspending the rights of depositors to make claims against it.
[Note: Art. 2(1)(8) of the DGSD]
1.5
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 1.5
Export chapter as
2
Eligibility
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 2.1
2.2
The provisions in this rule determine whether a deposit is an eligible deposit:
- (1) A deposit is an eligible deposit only if it is held by:
- (a) a UK establishment of a DGS member; or
- (b) a branch of a DGS member established in another EEA State under an EEA Right.
- (2) A deposit is held by a UK establishment or a branch if it is assigned by the firm to an account of that UK establishment or that branch.
- (3) A deposit is, subject to the other rules in this Chapter, an eligible deposit if it is held by a firm which:
- (a) had a Part 4A permission to accept such deposits at the time the deposit was accepted but no longer has permission to accept eligible deposits, or is subject to a requirement preventing it from doing so; and
- (b) is not now a member of a non-UK scheme which protects such deposits.
- (4) The following are not eligible deposits:
- (a) a deposit made by another credit institution;
- (b) own funds;
- (c) a deposit arising out of a transaction in connection with which there has been a criminal conviction for money laundering;
- (d) a deposit by a financial institution;
- (e) a deposit by an investment firm;
- (f) a deposit the holder and any beneficial owner (as defined in regulation 6 of the Money Laundering Regulations 2007) of which have not, at the compensation date had their identity verified in accordance with regulation 9 of the Money Laundering Regulations 2007 (or equivalent EEA requirements)
- (g) a deposit by an insurance undertaking or a reinsurance undertaking;
- (h) a deposit by a collective investment undertaking;
- (i) a deposit by a pension or retirement fund (but excluding deposits by personal pension schemes, stakeholder pension schemes and occupational pension schemes of micro, small and medium-sized enterprises);
- (j) a deposit by a public authority, unless it is a small local authority;
- (k) a debt security issued by the DGS member and any liabilities arising out of own acceptances and promissory notes.
[Note: Art. 4(3), 4(6), 5(1), 5(2)(a) and 14(1) of the DGSD]
2.3
A firm, must at least annually, take reasonable steps to confirm that a depositor that it has classified as a small local authority continues to be a small local authority, using the exchange rate prevailing on the 3 July immediately preceding the date on which any confirmation is undertaken.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 2.3
3
Circumstances in Which the FSCS Pays Compensation in Respect of Eligible Deposits
3.1
This Chapter applies only to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 3.1
3.2
The FSCS must pay compensation in accordance with this Part in respect of an eligible deposit if it is satisfied that the eligible deposit is a deposit with either:
- (1) a DGS member which is in default; or
- (2) a firm which is in default and which:
- (a) had a Part 4A permission to accept such deposits at the time the deposit was accepted but no longer has permission to accept eligible deposits, or is subject to a requirement preventing it from doing so; and
- (b) is not a member of a non-UK scheme which covers such deposits.
4
Limits on Compensation Payable
4.1
This Chapter applies only to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 4.1
4.2
The maximum compensation sum payable for the aggregate eligible deposits of each depositor is £75,000, save that additional compensation may be payable in cases to which 4.3 applies.
[Note: Art. 6(1) of the DGSD]
[Note: Regulation 7A of the deposit guarantee scheme regulations provides for a transitional maximum compensation level of £85,000 until 31 December 2015 for depositors who were, or would have been, eligible for compensation before 3 July 2015 and are eligible for compensation on and after 3 July 2015.]
4.3
The maximum compensation sum payable for a temporary high balance is £1,000,000, save that no limit shall apply to the compensation payable for a temporary high balance arising from a payment in connection with personal injury or incapacity.
[Note: Art. 6(2) of the DGSD]
5
Calculating Compensation
5.1
This Chapter applies only to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 5.1
5.2
Compensation shall be calculated by reference to eligible deposits held on the compensation date.
[Note: Art. 7(4) of the DGSD]
5.3
The limit provided for in 4.2 applies to the aggregate eligible deposits placed by a depositor with the same credit institution, irrespective of the number of accounts, the currency, or the location within the EEA.
[Note: Art. 7(1) of the DGSD]
5.4
The share of each depositor of a joint account shall be considered separately in calculating the limits provided for in 4.2 and 4.3, except where 5.5 applies. In the absence of contrary provision, the joint account shall be divided equally among the depositors to the nearest penny.
[Note: Art. 7(2) of the DGSD]
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 5.4
5.5
Deposits in an account to which two or more persons are entitled as members of a business partnership, association or grouping of a similar nature, without legal personality, must be aggregated and treated as if made by a single depositor for the purpose of calculating the limits provided for in 4.2 and 4.3.
[Note: Art. 7(2) of the DGSD]
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 5.5
5.6
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 5.6
5.7
Where several persons are absolutely entitled to a beneficial interest in a deposit, and some of them are persons whose own deposits would not be eligible deposits, the FSCS must adjust the amount of the overall deposit to eliminate the part of it which, in the FSCS’s view, relates to those beneficiaries’ interest in the overall deposit.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 5.7
5.8
Liabilities of the depositor against the DGS member shall not be taken into account when calculating the compensation sum.
[Note: Art. 7(4) of the DGSD]
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 5.8
5.9
Except where the compensation sum arises from a temporary high balance, the FSCS shall reimburse interest owed on eligible deposits which had accrued, but has not been credited, at the compensation date. The limit provided for in 4.2 shall not be exceeded by the payment of any such interest.
[Note: Art. 7(7) of the DGSD]
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 5.9
Export chapter as
6
Paying Compensation
6.1
This Chapter applies to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 6.1
6.2
The FSCS must pay any compensation to the depositor, with the following exceptions:
- (1) where the FSCS is required to make payments on behalf of a non-UK scheme in accordance with the deposit guarantee scheme regulations;
- (2) where the FSCS must instruct a non-UK scheme to make payments on its behalf in accordance with 27.3;
- (3) where the FSCS is required to make payments to a person other than the depositor in accordance with section 214B or section 214D of FSMA or section 61 of the Banking Act 2009;
- (4) where the depositor directs that any compensation be paid to another person, the FSCS may pay the compensation as directed by the depositor;
- (5) where the account holder is not absolutely entitled to the eligible deposit:
- (a) if another person (A) is absolutely entitled to the eligible deposit, A is the person entitled to compensation in respect of the deposit, and accordingly the FSCS must pay any compensation to A (or, where A (or a person who has authority to act on behalf of A) directs that any compensation be paid to another person, the FSCS may pay the compensation as directed by A (or a person who has authority to act on behalf of A), provided that A has been identified or is identifiable before the compensation date; and
- (b) if no person is absolutely entitled to the eligible deposit, the FSCS must pay any compensation in accordance with such of 6.3, 6.4, 6.5 and 6.6 as applies.
[Note: Art. 7(3) of the DGSD]
6.3
If a person is:
- (1) a trustee (other than a bare trustee); or
- (2) the operator of, or the person carrying on the regulated activity of winding up, a stakeholder pension scheme (which is not an occupational pension scheme) or personal pension scheme,
the FSCS must treat that person’s entitlement to compensation in this capacity as separate from the entitlement to compensation in any other capacity, as if the two entitlements were held by different persons.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 6.3
6.4
If a deposit is held:
- (1) for the trustees of a small self-administered scheme, an occupational pension scheme of micro, small and medium sized enterprise, or the trustee or operator of, or the person carrying on the regulated activity of winding up, a stakeholder pension scheme (which is not an occupational pension scheme) or personal pension scheme;
- (2) for one or more members of a pension scheme (or, where relevant, the beneficiary of any member) whose benefits are money-purchase benefits,
the FSCS must treat the member or members (or, where relevant, the beneficiary of any member) separately as persons entitled to receive compensation.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 6.4
6.5
If any group of persons are:
- (1) co-trustees (other than bare co-trustees); or
- (2) operators of, or persons carrying on the regulated activity of winding up, a stakeholder pension scheme (which is not an occupational pension scheme) or a personal pension scheme
(or any combination thereof), the FSCS must treat them as a single and continuing person distinct from the person who may from time to time be the trustees, or the operators or persons winding up the relevant pension scheme.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 6.5
6.6
Where the same person is:
- (1) trustee for different trusts or for different stakeholder pension schemes (which are not occupational pension schemes) or personal pension schemes; or
- (2) the operator of, or the person carrying on the regulated activity of winding up, different stakeholder pension schemes (which are not occupational pension schemes) or personal pension schemes,
the FSCS shall treat that person’s entitlement to compensation in respect of each of these trusts or schemes as if they were entitlements of a different person.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 6.6
6.7
Where any of the provisions of 6.3, 6.5 or 6.6 apply, the FSCS must try to ensure that any amount paid to:
- (1) the trustee; or
- (2) the operator of, or the person carrying on the regulated activity of winding up, a stakeholder pension scheme (which is not an occupational pension scheme) or personal pension scheme
- is, in each case:
- (3) for the benefit of members or beneficiaries whose own deposits would be eligible deposits; and
- (4) no more than the amount of the loss suffered by those members or beneficiaries.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 6.7
6.8
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 6.8
6.9
In applying this Chapter to deposits held with a branch outside the UK of a DGS member, the FSCS must interpret references to:
- (1) persons entitled as personal representatives, trustees, bare trustees, operators of pension schemes or persons carrying on the regulated activity of winding up pension schemes; or
- (2) persons having a joint account or joint interest in a deposit or carrying on business in partnership,
as references to persons entitled, under the law of the relevant country or territory, in a capacity appearing to the FSCS to correspond as nearly as may be to that capacity.
6.10
- (a) A is a beneficiary under a bare trust;
- (b) the account holder is a nominee company which is holding money in the account for A;
- (c) A is a client in respect of money which the account holder is treating as client money of A in accordance with FCA rules, the SRA Accounts Rules 2011 or an equivalent regime; or
- (d) the FSCS is otherwise satisfied that A is absolutely entitled to the eligible deposit taking into account any information that the FSCS considers relevant.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 6.10
7
Form and Method of Compensation
7.1
This Chapter applies only to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 7.1
7.2
The FSCS may pay compensation in any form and by any method (or any combination of them) that it determines is appropriate including, without limitation:
- (1) by paying the compensation (on such terms as the FSCS considers appropriate) to a DGS member or an incoming firm which agrees to become liable to the compensation recipient in a like sum;
- (2) by paying compensation directly into an existing deposit account of (or for the benefit of) the compensation recipient, with a DGS member or an incoming firm (but before doing so the FSCS must take such steps as it considers appropriate to verify the existence of such an account and to give notice to the depositor of its intention to exercise this power);
- (3) where two or more persons are absolutely entitled to a deposit, by accepting communications from and/or paying compensation to any one of those persons where this is in accordance with the terms and conditions for communications and withdrawals of the eligible deposit.
7.3
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 7.3
8
Currency of Compensation
8.1
This Chapter applies only to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 8.1
8.2
Subject to 8.3, the FSCS must make compensation payments in respect of eligible deposits in pounds sterling. Where the account in which the eligible deposit was held was maintained in a different currency, the FSCS must use the exchange rate applying on the compensation date.
8.3
Where the FSCS is instructing a non-UK scheme to make a payment under 27.3, the FSCS must instruct the relevant non-UK scheme to make such payments in the currency of that host Member State.
[Note: Art. 6(4) of the DGSD]
Export chapter as
9
Time Limits
9.1
This Chapter applies only to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 9.1
9.2
The FSCS must pay compensation in respect of eligible deposits within the applicable time period and as soon as reasonably practicable after:
- (1) it is satisfied that the conditions in 3.2 have been met; and
- (2) it has calculated the amount of compensation due to the compensation recipient.
9.3
The applicable time period referred to in 9.2 is the period starting on the day following the compensation date and ending:
- (1) until 31 December 2018: twenty business days later;
- (2) from 1 January 2019 until 31 December 2020: fifteen business days later;
- (3) from 1 January 2021 until 31 December 2023: ten business days later;
- (4) from 1 January 2024: seven business days later;
unless 6.2(5) applies, or the FSCS reasonably believes that it may, in which case it ends three months later.
[Note: Art. 8(1), (2) and (3) of the DGSD]
9.4
The FSCS may decide to defer the payment of compensation beyond the time period set out in 9.3 where:
- (1) it is uncertain whether a person is entitled to receive compensation;
- (2) the deposit is subject to a legal dispute;
- (3) the deposit is subject to restrictive measures imposed by national governments or international bodies;
- (4) there has been no transaction on the account within the last 24 months;
- (5) the amount to be repaid is deemed to be part of a temporary high balance, in which case 10.8 applies;
- (6) the amount to be repaid is to be paid out by the host state scheme; or
- (7) the depositor or the compensation recipient has been charged with an offence arising out of or in relation to money laundering.
[Note: Art. 8(5) and (8) of the DGSD]
9.5
The FSCS may decide not to pay compensation where there has been no transaction on the account in which the deposit is held within the 24 months prior to the compensation date and the amount of the deposit is lower than the administrative costs that would be incurred by the FSCS in paying compensation.
[Note: Art. 8(9) of the DGSD]
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 9.5
9.6
- (1) From 1 June 2016 until 31 December 2023, in cases to which 9.3 applies, where the FSCS cannot pay compensation within seven business days starting on the day following the compensation date, the FSCS shall, provided it receives sufficient information to enable it to make a payment, ensure that within five business days of receipt of a request from a depositor:
- (a) the depositor who is an individual, has access to an appropriate amount of their covered deposits to cover the cost of living; and
- (b) the depositor which is not an individual or a large company, has access to an appropriate amount of their covered deposits to cover necessary business expenses or operating costs.
- [Note: Art 8(4) of the DGSD]
- (2) From 3 July 2015 until 1 December 2016, in cases to which 9.3 applies the FSCS shall ensure that a depositor which is a large company has access to their covered deposits within fifteen business days of receipt of a request from the depositor which contains sufficient information to enable the FSCS to make a payment.
- (2A) From 3 July 2015 until 1 June 2016, in cases to which 9.3 applies, the FSCS shall ensure that a depositor which is a small local authority has access to their covered deposits within fifteen business days of receipt of a request from the depositor which contains sufficient information to enable the FSCS to make a payment.
- (3) In 9.6 the following definition shall apply:
- large company
- means a body corporate which does not qualify as a small company under section 382 of the Companies Act 2006.
10
Temporary High Balances
10.1
This Chapter applies only to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 10.1
10.2
In order to qualify as a temporary high balance, a part of an eligible deposit in excess of the coverage limit provided for in 4.2 must meet at least one of the following additional criteria:
- (1) it comprises:
- (a) monies deposited in preparation for the purchase of a private residential property (or an interest in a private residential property) by the depositor;
- (b) monies which represent the proceeds of sale of a private residential property (or an interest in a private residential property) of the depositor; or
- (c) monies which represent the proceeds of an equity release by the depositor in a private residential property;
- (2) it comprises sums paid to the depositor in respect of:
- (a) benefits payable under an insurance policy;
- (b) a claim for compensation for personal (including criminal) injury;
- (c) State benefits paid in respect of a disability or incapacity;
- (d) a claim for compensation for wrongful conviction;
- (e) a claim for compensation for unfair dismissal;
- (f) their redundancy (whether voluntary or compulsory);
- (g) their marriage or civil partnership;
- (h) their divorce or dissolution of their civil partnership; or
- (i) benefits payable on retirement;
- (3) it comprises sums paid to the depositor in respect of:
- (a) benefits payable on death;
- (b) a claim for compensation in respect of a person’s death; or
- (c) a legacy or other distribution from the estate of a deceased person;
- (4) it is held in an account on behalf of the personal representatives of a deceased person for the purpose of realising and administering the deceased’s estate; or
- (5) it otherwise serves a social purpose provided for, or of the type provided for, in the law of a part of the United Kingdom, which is linked to the marriage, civil partnership, divorce, dissolution of civil partnership, retirement, incapacity, death of an individual, or to the buying or selling of a depositor’s only or main residence that is not freehold, heritable or leasehold property.
10.3
Following the compensation date, the FSCS must review the single customer view of each depositor with the DGS member and provide written notice to an individual with aggregate eligible deposits in excess of the coverage levels set out in 4.2 of the following:
- (1) that the depositor may be entitled to additional compensation if all or part of the eligible deposit in excess of the coverage levels provided for in 4.2 qualifies as a temporary high balance;
- (2) that in order to claim such additional compensation, the depositor must provide the FSCS with a written application and evidence supporting the depositor’s claim that all or part of the eligible deposit in excess of the coverage levels provided for in 4.2 qualifies as a temporary high balance;
- (3) that the depositor may make more than one claim for a temporary high balance if there are multiple events giving rise to a temporary high balance; and
- (4) the date by which such written application and supporting evidence should be submitted to the FSCS.
10.4
The FSCS must pay compensation to a depositor in respect of a temporary high balance in accordance with 4.3 if it is satisfied that there is a sufficient link between an event giving rise to a temporary high balance and the part of the eligible deposit in excess of the coverage levels provided for in 4.2, taking into account the following considerations:
10.5
The FSCS must pay compensation to a depositor in accordance with 4.3 in respect of each temporary high balance that the depositor has with any one DGS member.
10.6
The FSCS may pay compensation in respect of a temporary high balance to a person who makes a claim on behalf of another person if the FSCS is satisfied that the person on whose behalf the claim is made would have been paid compensation by the FSCS in respect of that temporary high balance had the person been able to make the claim themselves, or to pursue their application for compensation further.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 10.6
10.7
The protection for temporary high balances under 4.3 shall run for a period of six months from the later of:
- (1) the first date on which a temporary high balance is credited to a depositor’s account, or to a client account on a person’s behalf; and
- (2) the first date on which the temporary high balance becomes legally transferable to the depositor.
[Note: Art. 6(2) of the DGSD]
10.8
The FSCS must, within three months of the compensation date, pay to the depositor a sum representing the amount due to the depositor in respect of the temporary high balance unless one or more of 10.9 to 10.11 applies.
[Note: Art. 8(5)(d) of the DGSD]
10.9
The FSCS may defer payment in respect of a temporary high balance for a period in excess of the period specified in 10.8 where:
- (1) the depositor provides the written application and evidence referred to in 10.3 to the FSCS more than two months following the date of the written notice from the FSCS under 10.3;
- (2) the FSCS has informed the depositor that the FSCS is contacting a third party to ask for additional information necessary to determine the claim; or
- (3) one or more of the circumstances set out in 9.4 (1)-(7) arise.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 10.9
10.10
If the FSCS considers that the written application and evidence provided by a depositor under 10.3 does not demonstrate a sufficient link between an event giving rise to a temporary high balance and the eligible deposit being in excess of the coverage levels provided for in 4.2, the FSCS must write promptly to that depositor to:
10.11
10.12
Where all or part of a temporary high balance is transferred to another DGS member after the start of the coverage period referred to in 10.7, the FSCS must pay compensation if it considers that the transferred deposit is sufficiently linked to the temporary high balance. The coverage period in 10.7 shall be calculated by reference to the point at which the temporary high balance was credited to the first account.
10.13
Export chapter as
11
Marking and Information Requirements
11.1
A firm must mark eligible deposits in a way that allows for the immediate identification of such deposits.
[Note: Art. 5(4) of the DGSD]
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 11.1
11.2
A firm must mark accounts (including client accounts and trust accounts) which are held on behalf of beneficiaries and which contain or may contain eligible deposits in a way that allows immediate identification of such accounts.
[Note: Art 5(4) and 7(3) of the DGSD]
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 11.2
11.3
A firm must be able to provide the FSCS with the aggregated amount of eligible deposits of every depositor.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 11.3
11.4
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 11.4
11.5
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 11.5
11.6
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 11.6
11.7
A firm must take reasonable steps to ensure the accuracy of the data it holds to satisfy the requirements of this Chapter.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 11.7
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 11.8
16
Firms’ Disclosure Obligations - Information and Exclusions
16.1
This Chapter does not apply to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 16.1
16.2
A firm must:
- (1) prepare an ‘information sheet’ and prepare an exclusions list;
- (2) ensure that the information sheet is kept up-to-date;
- (3) before entering into a contract on deposit-taking with the intending depositor:
- (a) provide the exclusions list to;
- (b) provide the information sheet to; and
- (c) obtain an acknowledgement of receipt of the information sheet from,
- each intending depositor.
- (4) before entering into a contract on deposit-taking, inform each intending depositor of the exclusions from deposit guarantee scheme protection that fall within 2.2(4)(b) and 2.2(4)(k), if applicable.
[Note: Art. 16(1), (2), (3) and (4) and Art. 19(2) of the DGSD]
16.3
Where the depositor holds eligible deposits through a UK establishment, the information sheet must be in English, or, if different, in the language that was agreed between the depositor and the firm when the account was opened. A firm which accepts eligible deposits through a branch established in another EEA State may provide the information sheet in the official language of that EEA State.
[Note: Art. 16(4) of the DGSD]
17
Firms’ Disclosure Obligations - Statements of Account
17.1
A firm must:
- (1) confirm that deposits are eligible deposits on a depositor’s statements of account;
- (2) include a reference to the information sheet and a reference to the exclusions list in a depositor’s statement of account;
- (3) at least annually:
- (a) provide to the depositor:
- (i) the information sheet; and
- (ii) the exclusions list; and
- (b) if applicable, inform the depositor of the exclusions from deposit guarantee scheme protection that fall within 2.2(4)(b) and 2.2(4)(k); and
- (4) include the following information in a depositor’s statement of account:
For further information about the compensation provided by the FSCS, refer to the FSCS website at www.FSCS.org.uk. |
[Note: Art. 16(1) and (3) of the DGSD]
17.2
The information set out in 17.1(3) must be provided in a depositor’s statement of account.
18
References to the Deposit Guarantee Scheme in Advertising
18.1
A firm must not, in advertising materials, provide any further information about the deposit guarantee scheme beyond referring to the fact that the product advertised is or is not covered by the deposit guarantee scheme, and to any further factual information required by law including by this Part.
[Note: Art. 16(5) of the DGSD]
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 18.1
19
Disclosure of Transfer of Deposits
19.1
In the case of a merger, conversion of subsidiaries into branches, transfer or similar operations, a firm must:
- (1) inform depositors at least one month before the operation takes legal effect, save where the PRA allows a shorter deadline on grounds of commercial secrecy or financial stability; and
- (2) give depositors a three month period following notification in accordance with (1), to withdraw or transfer to another institution, without incurring any penalty, such part of their eligible deposits, together with any accrued interest and other benefits, as exceed the coverage level pursuant to 4.2 (or, if applicable in the case of a non-UK scheme, other transposition of Article 6(1) of the DGSD) at the time of the operation.
[Note: Art. 16(6) of the DGSD]
20
Disclosure of Withdrawal or Exclusion from the Deposit Guarantee Scheme
20.1
A firm must inform depositors within one month if it withdraws from or is excluded from the deposit guarantee scheme or any non-UK scheme.
[Note: Art. 16(7) of the DGSD]
21
Method of Communication
21.1
A firm may discharge all its information-providing obligations in this Part:
- (1) to depositors who use internet banking facilities, by way of electronic communications;
- (2) to depositors who receive only paper statements, in writing in paper form; and
- (3) to depositors who neither receive paper statements nor use internet banking, in a way that brings it to the attention of the depositor,
but it must provide the information on paper if so requested by the depositor.
[Note: Art. 16(8) of the DGSD]
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 21.1
Export chapter as
22
Notification Requirements on Transfer to a Non-UK Scheme
22.1
If a firm which is a DGS member intends to transfer to become a member of a non-UK scheme, and cease to be a DGS member, it shall give at least six months’ notice to the FSCS and the PRA of its intention to make such a transfer. During the six month period, the firm shall remain a DGS member.
[Note: Art. 14(4) of the DGSD]
23
Deposit Compensation Information - Branches and Websites
23.1
This Chapter does not apply to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 23.1
23.2
In this Chapter, references to “compensation sticker” and “compensation poster” are references to the sticker and poster set out in Annex 2 to this Part.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 23.2
23.3
In this Chapter, references to “compensation leaflet” are:
- (1) in the case of a DGS member, references to the FSCS’s standard leaflet with respect to its protection of deposits; and
- (2) in the case of an incoming firm that it is a credit institution, references to a leaflet with respect to the protection of deposits by the compensation scheme of its home member state where such a leaflet is provided electronically and in English by the home state scheme or, where a leaflet is not available, a link to the home state scheme’s website.
23.4
A firm that accepts deposits under a single brand or trading name must prominently display the compensation sticker and compensation poster in each branch in the following ways:
23.5
A firm that accepts deposits under multiple brands or trading names must prominently display the compensation sticker and compensation poster in each branch in the following ways:
23.6
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 23.6
23.7
A firm that accepts deposits under a single brand or trading name must, in a way that best brings the information to depositors’ attention:
- (1) display prominently (in electronic form) the compensation sticker; and
- (2) provide from the compensation sticker an electronic link to the compensation leaflet.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 23.7
23.8
A firm that accepts deposits under multiple brands or trading names must, in a way that best brings the information to depositors' attention:
- (1) display prominently (in electronic form) the compensation poster; and
- (2) provide from the compensation poster an electronic link to the compensation leaflet.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 23.8
23.9
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 23.9
23.10
A firm that accepts eligible deposits through a branch or branches established in other EEA States may provide the information required by this Chapter in the official language(s) of the EEA State (which may be either the compensation sticker, compensation poster or compensation leaflet in that language or the firm's own translation of that compensation sticker, compensation poster or compensation leaflet).
24
Duties of the FSCS
24.1
This Chapter applies to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 24.1
24.2
The FSCS must administer the deposit guarantee scheme:
- (1) in accordance with the rules in this Part and any other rules prescribed by law;
- (2) in a manner that is procedurally fair; and
- (3) in accordance with the European Convention on Human Rights.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 24.2
24.3
The FSCS must publish for depositors on its website all necessary information:
- (1) on the operation of the deposit guarantee scheme; and
- (2) on the process, eligibility, exclusions from protection and conditions for payment of compensation,
including all information specified in the information sheet as being available on its website.
[Note: Art.16(1) and Art. 16(3) of the DGSD]
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 24.3
24.4
The FSCS may agree to pay the reasonable costs of a depositor bringing or continuing insolvency proceedings against a DGS member in respect of eligible deposits (whenever instituted), if the FSCS is satisfied that those proceedings would help it to discharge its functions under this Part.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 24.4
24.5
The FSCS must have regard to the need to use its resources in an efficient and economic way in carrying out its functions under this Part.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 24.5
24.6
The FSCS must perform stress tests of its systems relating to the payment of compensation in respect of eligible deposits at least once every three years and more frequently where the FSCS considers it necessary, with the first such stress test taking place by 3 July 2017.
[Note: Art. 4(10) of the DGSD]
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 24.6
24.7
The FSCS shall use the information necessary to perform stress tests of its systems relating to the payment of compensation in respect of eligible deposits only for the performance of those tests and shall keep such information no longer than is necessary for that purpose.
[Note: Art. 4(11) of the DGSD]
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 24.7
24.8
The FSCS must take appropriate steps to ensure that depositors are informed of the process for receiving compensation as soon as a possible after the compensation date.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 24.8
24.9
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 24.9
24.10
24.11
25
Claims Against the FSCS and Challenging FSCS Decisions
25.1
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 25.1
25.2
The FSCS may provide that depositors may only submit claims for compensation in respect of deposits within a specified period of time (not less than three months) from the expiry of the applicable time period for payment of compensation as specified in 9.2 or the decision of the FSCS under 9.3 or 9.4.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 25.2
25.3
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 25.3
25.4
The procedure established by the FSCS under this Chapter must satisfy the minimum requirements of procedural fairness and comply with the European Convention on Human Rights for the handling of any complaints of maladministration relating to any aspect of the operation of the deposit guarantee scheme.
[Note: Art. 9(1) and (3) of the DGSD]
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 25.4
26
Confidentiality, Information Sharing and Co-operation
26.1
The FSCS must ensure the confidentiality and the protection of the data pertaining to depositors’ accounts. The processing of such data must be carried out in accordance with the Data Protection Act 1998.
[Note: Art. 4(9) of the DGSD]
26.2
The FSCS must exchange with host state schemes (in relation to a DGS member), information:
- (1) relating to the DGS member’s compliance with this Part;
- (2) necessary to prepare for a repayment of depositors, including markings made under Chapter 11;
- (3) communicated to the FSCS by the PRA that the PRA has detected problems with a DGS member that are likely to give rise to the intervention of the deposit guarantee scheme.
[Note: Art. 14(4) of the DGSD]
26.3
The FSCS must have appropriate procedures in place to enable it to share information and communicate effectively with non-UK schemes, the members of such schemes, and bodies outside the UK. The FSCS shall inform the PRA of any cooperation agreement it enters into with a non-UK scheme.
[Note: Art. 14(6) of the DGSD]
26.4
In order to facilitate effective co-operation, the FSCS shall have written co-operation agreements in place with non-UK schemes. Such agreements shall take account of 26.1.
[Note: Art. 14(5) of the DGSD]
27
Payments in Respect of UK Branches of Incoming Firms and EEA Branches of DGS Members
27.1
This Chapter applies only to the FSCS.
27.2
Where the FSCS is required under the deposit guarantee scheme regulations to pay compensation on behalf of a non-UK scheme, the FSCS must inform the depositors concerned that the relevant credit institution is in default and of their right to compensation on behalf of the non-UK scheme. The FSCS may receive correspondence from those depositors on behalf of the non-UK scheme.
[Note: Art. 14(2) of the DGSD]
27.3
Where the FSCS is required, under this Part, to pay compensation to a depositor in respect of deposits held with a branch of a DGS member in an EEA state other than the UK, the FSCS must instruct the relevant non-UK scheme to make such payments on its behalf. The FSCS must provide the necessary funding prior to payout by the non-UK scheme and must compensate the non-UK scheme for costs incurred by the non-UK scheme with regard to acts done by the non-UK scheme in accordance with the instructions given by the FSCS.
[Note: Art. 14(2) of the DGSD]
28
Subrogation
28.1
This Chapter applies to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 28.1
28.2
The FSCS may determine that the payment of compensation by the FSCS shall have all or any of the following effects:
- (1) the FSCS shall immediately and automatically be subrogated, subject to such conditions as the FSCS determines are appropriate, to all or any part (as determined by the FSCS) of the rights and claims in the UK and elsewhere of the compensation recipient against the DGS member and/or any third party (whether such rights are legal, equitable or of any other nature whatsoever and in whatever capacity the DGS member or third party is acting) in respect of or arising out of the compensation recipient’s deposits being unavailable;
- (2) the FSCS may claim and take legal or any other proceedings or steps in the United Kingdom or elsewhere to enforce such rights in its own name or in the name of, and on behalf of, the compensation recipient or in both names against the relevant credit institution and/or any third party;
- (3) the subrogated rights and claims conferred on the FSCS shall be rights of recovery and claims against the relevant credit institution and/or any third party which are equivalent (including as to amount and priority and whether or not the relevant DGS member is insolvent) to and not exceed the rights and claims that the compensation recipient would have had; and/or
- (4) such rights and/or obligations (as determined by the FSCS) as between the firm and the compensation recipient arising out of the compensation recipient’s deposit being unavailable, shall be transferred to, and subsist between, another firm and the compensation recipient provided that the firm has consented (but the transferred rights and/or obligations shall be treated as existing between the firm and the FSCS to the extent of any subrogation, transfer or assignment for the purposes of (1) to (3) and 28.3).
[Note: Art. 9(2) of the DGSD]
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 28.2
28.3
- (1) The FSCS may determine that, if it is necessary or desirable in conjunction with the exercise of the FSCS's powers under 28.2, that the compensation recipient shall be treated as having irrevocably and unconditionally appointed the chairman of the FSCS for the time being to be their attorney and agent and on their behalf and in their name or otherwise to do such things and execute such deeds and documents as may be required under such laws of the UK, another EEA State or any other state or law-country to create or give effect to such assignment or transfer or otherwise give full effect to those powers.
- (2) The execution of any deed or document under (1) shall be as effective as if made in writing by the compensation recipient or by his agent lawfully authorised in writing or by will.
28.4
- (1) The powers conferred on the FSCS in 28.2 and 28.3 to make a determination must be exercised in writing.
- (2) An instrument by which the FSCS makes a determination must specify the provision under which it is made, the date and the time from which it takes effect and the DGS member and the eligible deposits or classes of eligible deposit in respect of which it applies.
- (3) The FSCS must take appropriate steps to publish the determination as soon as possible after it is made. Such publication must be accompanied by a statement explaining the effect of 28.2 and the FSCS’s determination.
- (4) Failure to comply with any requirement under this rule does not affect the validity of the determination.
- (5) A determination by the FSCS under 28.2 may be amended, remade or revoked at any time and subject to the same conditions.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 28.4
28.5
- (1) The production of a copy of the determination purporting to be made by the FSCS under this Chapter:
- (a) on which is endorsed a certificate, signed by a member of the FSCS’s staff authorised by it for that purpose; and
- (b) which contains the required statements;
- is evidence (or in Scotland sufficient evidence) of the facts stated in the certificate.
- (2) The required statements are:
- (a) that the determination was made by the FSCS; and
- (b) that the copy is a true copy of the determination.
- (3) A certificate purporting to be signed as mentioned in (1) is to be taken to have been properly signed unless the contrary is shown.
- (4) A person who wishes in any legal proceedings to rely on a determination may require the FSCS to endorse a copy of the determination with a certificate of the kind mentioned in (1).
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 28.5
29
Duties on the FSCS to Pursue Recoveries
29.1
If the FSCS takes a transfer of rights from the compensation recipient or is otherwise subrogated to the rights of the compensation recipient, it must pursue all and only such recoveries as it considers are likely to be both reasonably possible and cost effective to pursue.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 29.1
29.2
If the FSCS decides not to pursue such recoveries and a compensation recipient wishes to pursue those recoveries and so requests in writing, the FSCS must comply with that request and assign the rights back to the compensation recipient.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 29.2
30
Recoveries of Eligible Deposits: Return of Surplus to Compensation Recipient
30.1
If the FSCS, in relation to a claim for eligible deposits, makes recoveries from the credit institution or any third party in respect of that eligible deposit, it must:
- (1) retain from those recoveries a sum equal to the aggregate of:
- (a) the sum paid by the FSCS as compensation;
- (b) any amount paid or payable by a home state scheme to the compensation recipient; and
- (c) any amount the FSCS determines is appropriate to cover all or part of its reasonable costs of recovery; and
- (2) as soon as reasonably possible after it makes the recoveries, pay any remaining sum to the compensation recipient (or, if not the depositor, as directed by the depositor or to any person subrogated to the claim of the depositor against the credit institution or to the rights of the depositor under this Part or to any person otherwise entitled to any remaining sum).
31
Funding - Available Financial Means
31.1
This Chapter applies only to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 31.1
31.2
The FSCS must have in place adequate systems to determine the potential liabilities of the deposit guarantee scheme and ensure that the available financial means of the deposit guarantee scheme are proportionate to those liabilities.
[Note: Art. 10(1)(first paragraph) of the DGSD]
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 31.2
31.3
The FSCS must primarily use the available financial means of the deposit guarantee scheme to repay depositors pursuant to the deposit guarantee scheme.
[Note: Art. 11(1) of the DGSD]
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 31.3
32
Funding - Use of Existing Mandatory Contributions
32.1
This Chapter applies only to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 32.1
32.2
If the PRA determines, in accordance with the deposit guarantee scheme regulations, that the FSCS is unable to raise a DGS compensation costs levy from DGS members to meet the liabilities of the deposit guarantee scheme, the FSCS may borrow an amount equal to the amount of such mandatory contributions in order to meet the liabilities of the deposit guarantee scheme.
[Note: Art. 10(4) (third paragraph) of the DGSD]
32.3
The FSCS must impose a DGS compensation costs levy on DGS members sufficient to repay any amounts equal to mandatory contributions borrowed in accordance with Article 10 (4) of the DGSD within a reasonable time and in accordance with repayment deadlines under the applicable loan agreement and 34.3.
[Note: Art. 10(4) (third paragraph) and Article 10(2) (second paragraph) of the DGSD]
33
Funding - FSCS’s Power to Levy and Limits on Levies
33.1
This Chapter applies only to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 33.1
33.2
The FSCS may, at any time, impose on DGS members a:
- (1) DGS compensation costs levy;
- (2) DGS management expenses levy; or
- (3) legacy costs levy.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 33.2
33.3
The maximum aggregate amount of DGS compensation costs, legacy costs and DGS specific costs for which the FSCS can levy class A in any one financial year of the deposit guarantee scheme is limited to £1,500,000,000 less whatever DAS compensation costs and DAS specific costs the FSCS has imposed on class J in the same year.
33.4
The maximum amount of DGS compensation costs for which the FSCS can levy DGS members per calendar year must not exceed 0.5% of total covered deposits (excluding temporary high balances) of all DGS members. The FSCS may in exceptional circumstances and with the prior consent of the PRA impose higher levies.
[Note: Art. 10(8) of the DGSD]
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 33.4
34
Funding - DGS Compensation Costs Levy
34.1
This Chapter applies only to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 34.1
34.2
The FSCS must raise available financial means by imposing a DGS compensation costs levy on DGS members at least once in each financial year for expenditure incurred or expected in the period of 12 months following 1 July in that year.
[Note: Art. 10(1)(second paragraph) of the DGSD]
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 34.2
34.3
- (1) If, after the available financial means of the deposit guarantee scheme have reached the target level for the first time, the available financial means have been reduced to less than two-thirds of the target level, the FSCS must impose regular DGS compensation cost levies on DGS members at a level allowing the target level to be reached again within six years.
- (2) The regular levies imposed under (1) shall take due account of the phase of the business cycle and the impact that procyclical contributions may have when setting annual contributions.
[Note: Art. 10(2) (third and fourth paragraphs) of the DGSD]
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 34.3
34.4
DGS compensation cost levies imposed on DGS members to raise the available financial means of the deposit guarantee scheme must be based on the amount of covered deposits (excluding temporary high balances) incurred by the respective DGS member.
[Note: Art. 13(1) of the DGSD]
34.5
The FSCS may decide that a DGS member must pay a minimum contribution under a DGS compensation costs levy, irrespective of the amount of its covered deposits.
[Note: Art. 13(1) (fifth paragraph) of the DGSD]
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 34.5
34.6
The FSCS may only impose a DGS compensation costs levy on DGS members if the FSCS has reasonable grounds for believing that the funds available to it to meet relevant expenses are, or will be, insufficient, taking into account expenditure already incurred, actual and expected recoveries and the level of the FSCS’s expected expenditure in respect of DGS compensation costs in the 12 months immediately following the levy.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 34.6
34.7
The FSCS may include in a DGS compensation costs levy the costs of compensation paid by the FSCS in error, provided that the payout was not made in bad faith.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 34.7
35
Funding - DGS Management Expenses Levy
35.1
This Chapter applies only to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 35.1
35.2
The FSCS may only impose a DGS management expenses levy on DGS members if it has reasonable grounds for believing that the funds available to it to meet relevant expenses are, or will be, insufficient, taking into account expenditure already incurred, actual and expected recoveries and the level of the FSCS’s expected expenditure in respect of those expenses in the financial year of the deposit guarantee scheme in relation to which the levy is imposed.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 35.2
35.3
The FSCS must apply any amount collected from a DGS management expenses levy to the payment of management expenses and, as such, must not treat such funds as available financial means of the deposit guarantee scheme.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 35.3
36
Funding - Legacy Costs Levy
36.1
This Chapter applies only to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 36.1
36.2
The FSCS must not impose a legacy costs levy on Northern Ireland credit unions in respect of legacy costs incurred before 31 March 2012.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 36.2
36.3
The FSCS must apply any amount collected from a legacy costs levy to the payment of legacy costs and, as such, must not treat such funds as available financial means of the deposit guarantee scheme.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 36.3
36.4
The FSCS must allocate any legacy costs levy to DGS members subject to the levy limit for class A under 33.3.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 36.4
36.5
The FSCS must calculate each DGS member’s share of a legacy costs levy by:
- (1) identifying the legacy costs allocated to class A;
- (2) calculating the DGS member’s class A tariff base as a proportion of the total class A tariff base of all DGS members (excluding Northern Ireland credit unions), using the statement of business most recently supplied;
- (3) applying the proportion calculated in (2) to the figure in (1).
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 36.5
36.6
Legacy cost levies must be based on the amount of covered deposits (excluding temporary high balances) incurred by the respective DGS member.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 36.6
36.7
A firm which becomes a DGS member part way through a financial year of the deposit guarantee scheme will not be liable to pay a share of a legacy costs levy made in that year.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 36.7
36.8
41.5 applies to the calculation of a DGS member’s legacy costs levy and its class A tariff base as it applies to the calculation of its DGS specific costs levy.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 36.8
Export chapter as
37
Funding - Management of Funds Levied
37.1
This Chapter applies only to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 37.1
37.2
If the FSCS invests any available financial means of the deposit guarantee scheme, it must invest it in a low-risk and sufficiently diversified manner.
[Note: Art. 10(7) of the DGSD]
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 37.2
37.3
The FSCS must hold any amount collected from a DGS specific costs levy, DGS compensation costs levy or legacy costs levy to the credit of class A.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 37.3
37.4
Interest earned by the FSCS in the management of funds held to the credit of class A must be credited to that class, and must be set off against the DGS management expenses, DGS compensation costs and legacy costs allocated to that class.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 37.4
37.5
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 37.5
38
Funding - Adjustments to Levy Shares
38.1
This Chapter applies only to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 38.1
38.2
If a DGS member’s share of a DGS levy or an additional administrative fee or interest under 45.3 would be so small that, in the opinion of the FSCS, the costs of collection would be disproportionate to the amount payable, the FSCS may treat the DGS member as if its share of the levy or additional administrative fee amounted to zero.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 38.2
38.3
The calculation of DGS levies must take into account previous levies, where funds raised in anticipation of meeting liabilities prove either more or less than the amount actually required.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 38.3
38.4
The FSCS may adjust the calculation of a DGS member’s share of any DGS levy to take proper account of:
- (1) any excess, not already taken into account, between previous levies of that type imposed in relation to previous periods and the relevant costs actually incurred in that period; or
- (2) amounts that the FSCS has not been able to recover from DGS members as a result of 33.3 or 33.4; or
- (3) amounts that the FSCS has not been able to recover from DGS members after having taken reasonable steps; or
- (4) payments deferred under 46.2, the calculation of levies after an acquisition of deposit business under Chapter 39 or Chapter 40, calculations under 41.6; or
- (5) anything else that the FSCS believes on reasonable grounds should be taken into account.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 38.4
38.5
The FSCS must not adjust the calculation of a DGS member’s share of any DGS levy under 38.4 on the grounds that it would be inequitable for that firm to pay that share or part of it or on the grounds that it would be inequitable for the FSCS to retain that share or part of it. Any such claim should be dealt with under Chapter 46.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 38.5
39
Funding - Business Acquisitions from DGS Members
39.1
This Chapter applies only to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 39.1
39.2
If:
- (1) a DGS member (A) assumes a liability to repay deposits held by another DGS member (B);
- (2) B is no longer liable to pay a DGS levy to the FSCS; and
- (3) the assumption of liability takes place after the date to which, or as of which, A's most recent statement of business is drawn up,
the FSCS must require A to pay an additional amount equal to the levy that would have been payable by B in relation to the relevant business and class A if the acquisition had not taken place and B had remained liable to pay DGS levies. The amount is based on the B’s most recent statement of business.
39.3
This Chapter only applies with respect to those financial years of the FSCS for which A's levies are calculated on the basis of a statement of business drawn up to a date, or as of a date, before the assumption of liability took place.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 39.3
40
Funding - Business Acquisitions from Non-DGS Members
40.1
This Chapter applies only to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 40.1
40.2
If a DGS member (A) assumes a liability to repay deposits held by a non-DGS member (B) and the assumption of liability takes place after the date to which, or as of which, A’s most recent statement of business is drawn up, the FSCS must not require A to pay an additional amount as a result of that acquisition.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 40.2
40.3
This Chapter only applies with respect to those financial years of the FSCS for which A’s levies are calculated on the basis of a statement of business drawn up to a date, or as of a date, before the assumption of liability took place.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 40.3
41
Funding - Management Expenses
41.1
A DGS member’s share of a DGS management expenses levy consists of one or more of: (1) a share of a DGS base costs levy and (2) a share of a DGS specific costs levy.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 41.1
41.2
The FSCS must ensure that each DGS member’s share of a DGS management expenses levy separately identifies the firm’s share of the DGS base costs levy and DGS specific costs levy.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 41.2
41.3
The FSCS must allocate any DGS specific costs levy to class A up to the levy limit for class A under 33.3.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 41.3
41.4
The FSCS must calculate a DGS member’s share of a DGS specific costs levy by:
- (1) identifying DGS specific costs which the FSCS has incurred, or expects to incur, in the relevant financial year of the deposit guarantee scheme allocated to class A, but not yet levied;
- (2) calculating the DGS member’s class A tariff base as a proportion of the total class A tariff base, using the statement of business most recently supplied; and
- (3) applying the proportion calculated in (2) to the figure in (1).
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 41.4
41.5
The FSCS must not require a firm (A) which becomes a DGS member part way through a financial year of the deposit guarantee scheme to pay a share of a DGS specific costs levy until the financial year of the FSCS following the FSCS financial year in which A became a DGS member, at which time A’s share of a DGS specific costs levy must be calculated under 41.6.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 41.5
41.6
- (1) Unless otherwise provided in (2), A’s class A tariff base is calculated, where necessary, using a projected valuation of the business to which the tariff relates
- (2)
- (a) If A’s class A tariff base is calculated using data from a period that begins on or after it became a DGS member, that data must be used to calculate A’s class A tariff base
- (b) If A’s class A tariff base satisfies the following conditions, it must be calculated under (c)
- (i) A became a DGS member between 1 April and 31 December inclusive; and
- (ii) A’s class A tariff base, but for this rule, is calculated by reference to the financial year ended in the calendar year ending 31 December or the twelve months ending 31 December before the FSCS financial year.
- (c) If A satisfies the conditions in (b) it must calculate its class A tariff base as follows:
- (i) it must use actual data in relation to the business to which the tariff relates rather than projected valuations;
- (ii) the tariff is calculated by reference to the period beginning on the date it became a DGS member and ending on the 31 December before the start of the FSCS financial year; and
- (iii) the figures are annualised by increasing them by the same proportion as the period of 12 months bears to the period starting from when the DGS member became a DGS member to the 31 December, as the case may be.
- (d) Where A is required to use the method in (c) it must notify the FSCS of its intention to do so by the date specified in 44.2.
- (e) Where A is required to use actual data under this rule, Chapter 43 is disapplied, to the extent it is incompatible, in relation to the calculation of that DGS member’s valuation date in its second financial year.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 41.6
42
Funding - DGS Compensation Costs
42.1
This Chapter applies only to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 42.1
42.2
The FSCS must allocate any DGS compensation costs levy to DGS members in accordance with the amount of DGS compensation costs arising from, or expected to arise from claims in respect of covered deposits up to the levy limit of class A under 33.3.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 42.2
42.3
The FSCS must calculate each DGS member’s share of a DGS compensation costs levy by:
- (1) identifying the DGS compensation costs allocated to class A;
- (2) calculating, in relation to class A, the DGS member’s tariff base as a proportion of the total tariff base of all DGS members in class A, using the statement of business most recently supplied;
- (3) applying the proportion calculated in (2) to the figure in (1).
42.4
When calculating a DGS member’s share of a DGS compensation costs levy or DGS specific costs levy allocated to class A, the FSCS must use the class A tariff base.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 42.4
42.5
A firm which becomes a DGS member part way through a financial year of the deposit guarantee scheme will not be liable to pay a share of a DGS compensation costs levy made in that year.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 42.5
42.6
41.5 applies to the calculation of a DGS member’s DGS compensation costs levy and its tariff base as it applies to the calculation of its specific costs levy.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 42.6
43
Funding - Class A Tariff Base Calculation
43.1
The Class A tariff base is:
- (1) covered deposits (excluding temporary high balances) as at 31 December except that, where the covered deposit is a dormant account, the applicable tariff base is covered deposit multiplied by 0.2 as at 31 December; and
- (2) the total balance of any deposits in any account which holds funds to which the account holder is not absolutely entitled but may exclude the value of any funds which the firm has confirmed are not covered deposits.
43.2
The class A tariff base calculation must be made on the basis of the information that the firm would have to include in its single customer views. The information must be of the extent and standard required if the firm was preparing the single customer view in accordance with the SCV requirements as at the valuation date for the tariff base.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 43.2
44
Funding - Reporting Requirements
44.1
This Chapter does not apply to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 44.1
44.2
A firm must provide the FSCS by end of February each year (or, if it has become a DGS member part way through the financial year, by the date requested by the PRA) with a statement of the total amount of business (measured in accordance with the class A tariff base) which it conducted, in respect of the most recent valuation period ending before the relevant year in relation to class A.
The relevant year means the year in which the month of February (referred to above) falls.
The valuation period will be 31 December.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 44.2
44.3
A new DGS member must calculate its class A tariff base in accordance with 41.6.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 44.3
44.4
If a firm does not submit a complete statement of business by the date on which it is due in accordance with 44.2 and any prescribed submission procedures:
- (1) the firm must pay an administrative fee of £250 (but not if it is already subject to an administrative fee by the PRA for the same financial year); and
- (2) the DGS compensation costs levy and any DGS specific costs levy will be calculated using (where relevant) the valuation or valuations of business applicable to the previous period, multiplied by the factor of 1.10 (or, if it has become a DGS member part way through a financial year, on the basis of the information provided to the PRA for the purposes of FEES 4.4.2 R or on any other reasonable basis, making such adjustments as seem appropriate in subsequent levies once the true figures are known).
45
Funding - Obligation to Pay
45.1
This Chapter does not apply to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 45.1
45.2
A firm must pay to the FSCS its share of each:
- (1) DGS management expenses levy; and
- (2) DGS compensation costs levy and legacy costs levy allocated to class A.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 45.2
45.3
If a firm does not pay the total amount of its share of a DGS levy, before the end of the date on which it is due, it must pay an additional amount as follows:
- (1) if the DGS levy was not paid in full before the end of the due date, an administrative fee of £250; and
- (2) interest on any unpaid part of the DGS levy or administrative fee at the rate of 5% per annum above the Official Bank Rate from time to time in force, accruing on a daily basis from the date on which the amount concerned became due.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 45.3
Export chapter as
46
Funding - Overpayments and Deferral of Payments
46.1
The FSCS may reduce, remit or refund any overpaid amounts paid by a DGS member in respect of a particular period, due to a mistake of law or fact by the DGS member provided that the claim is made by the DGS member not more than two years after the beginning of the period to which the overpayment relates.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 46.1
46.2
The PRA may defer, in whole or in part, a DGS member’s obligation to pay a DGS compensation costs levy or a legacy costs levy if the PRA considers that such contributions would jeopardise the liquidity or solvency of the firm. Such deferral shall not be granted for a longer period than six months but may be renewed upon request of the firm.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 46.2
46.3
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 46.3
47
Funding - Payment of Levies
47.1
This Chapter does not apply to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 47.1
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 47.2
47.3
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 47.3
47.4
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 47.4
47.5
If a firm ceases to be a DGS member part way through a financial year of the deposit guarantee scheme:
- (1) it will remain liable for any unpaid levies which the FSCS has already made on the firm; and
- (2) the FSCS may make one or more levies upon it (which may be before or after the firm has ceased to be a DGS member but must be before it ceases to be a firm) for the costs which it would have been liable to pay had the FSCS made a levy on all DGS members in the financial year it ceased to be a DGS member.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 47.5
Export chapter as
48
Funding - Transfer of Levies
48.1
This Chapter applies only to the FSCS.
48.2
If a firm ceases to be a DGS member and joins a non-UK scheme, the FSCS must transfer the contributions paid by that firm to the available financial means of the deposit guarantee scheme during the 12 months preceding the end of the membership to the relevant non-UK scheme.
48.3
48.2 does not apply if the firm has been excluded from the deposit guarantee scheme pursuant to Article 4(5) of the DGSD.
48.4
If some of the activities of a DGS member are transferred to another Member State and become subject to a non-UK scheme, the contributions paid by that firm during the 12 months preceding the transfer shall be transferred to the relevant non-UK scheme in proportion to the amount of covered deposits transferred.
[Note: Art. 14(3) of the DGSD]
Export chapter as
49
Transitional Provisions – Marking Effectiveness Report
49.1
This Chapter does not apply to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 49.1
49.2
In this Chapter, the following definition shall apply:
marking effectiveness report
means a report from a firm’s governing body confirming that the firm satisfies the marking requirements and containing the information required by 49.7; and
marking requirements
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 49.2
49.3
A firm must provide the PRA with a marking effectiveness report within three months of receiving a Part 4A permission to accept deposits.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 49.3
49.4
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 49.4
49.5
The notification in 49.4 must be accompanied by a statement signed on behalf of the firm’s governing body confirming that the firm’s systems satisfy the marking requirements.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 49.5
49.6
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 49.6
49.7
A firm’s marking effectiveness report must contain:
- (1) a description of:
- (a) the firm’s systems or to satisfy the marking requirements and how they have been implemented (the firm’s systems include any manual systems used by the firm and any code or keys used internally by the firm to mark eligible deposits and accounts which are held on behalf of beneficiaries and which contain or may contain eligible deposits);
- (b) the testing undertaken with respect to the robustness of the firm’s systems;
- (c) the number of marked accounts that contain eligible deposits;
- (d) the firm’s plan for the ongoing maintenance of its systems;
- (e) how the firm’s governing body will ensure that they remain satisfied that the firm’s systems continue to satisfy the marking requirements; and
- (f) any other factors or dependencies relevant to the design and operation of the firm’s systems or to an assessment of whether the systems satisfy the marking requirements;
- (2) a statement signed on behalf of the firm’s governing body confirming that the firm satisfies the marking requirements;
- (3) a statement of whether the firm’s marking effectiveness report has been reviewed by external auditors, and if so, a statement of the findings of that review; and
- (4) a statement of whether there has been a material change to the firm’s systems since the date of the firm’s previous marking effectiveness report.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 49.7
50
Transitional Provisions – Single Customer View
50.1
This Chapter does not apply to the FSCS.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 50.1
50.2
50.3
In this Chapter, the following definitions shall apply:
large company
means a body corporate which does not qualify as a small company under section 382 of the Companies Act 2006
single customer view
means a single, consistent view of a depositor’s aggregate eligible deposits with a firm which contains the information required by 50.11;
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 50.3
50.4
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 50.4
50.5
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 50.5
50.6
A firm must ensure that the electronic systems which produce the single customer view must:
- (1) be capable of automatically identifying the amount of covered deposits payable to each depositor; and
- (2) include a check facility which allows the firm to identify any portion of an eligible deposit that exceeds the coverage level provided for in 4.2.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 50.6
50.7
A firm that operates fewer than 5,000 accounts which contain eligible deposits on 3 July 2015 may:
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 50.7
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 50.8
50.9
A firm that operates 5,000 or more accounts which contain eligible deposits on 3 July 2015 may not make an election under 50.7 if, on a future date, it operates less than 5,000 accounts which contain eligible deposits.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 50.9
50.10
50.11
A firm must ensure that a single customer view contains all the information set out in the table below.
Field identifier | Field descriptor | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Customer details | |||||
Single customer view record number | Unique customer identifier | ||||
Title | Title [if applicable and where held by the firm] | ||||
Customer 1st Forename | 1st Forename [if applicable] | ||||
Customer 2nd Forename | 2nd Forename [if applicable and where held by the firm] | ||||
Customer 3rd Forename | 3rd Forename [if applicable and where held by the firm] | ||||
Customer Surname [or company name or name of account holder] | Surname [or company name or name of account holder]3 | ||||
Previous Name | Any former name of account holder [where held by the firm] | ||||
National Insurance number | National Insurance number, where held by the firm | ||||
Contact details | |||||
EITHER Format A | |||||
Single customer view record number | Unique customer identifier | ||||
House number | House number/Premise name | ||||
Street | Street | ||||
Locality | Locality [where held by the firm] | ||||
County | County [where held by the firm] | ||||
Postcode | Postcode [where used by a country] | ||||
Country | Country [for countries outside the UK] | ||||
OR Format B | |||||
Single customer view record number | Unique customer identifier | ||||
ADDRESS LINE 1 | As required | ||||
ADDRESS LINE 2 | As required | ||||
ADDRESS LINE 3 | As required | ||||
ADDRESS LINE 4 | As required | ||||
ADDRESS LINE 5 | As required | ||||
ADDRESS LINE 6 | As required | ||||
Postcode | Postcode [where used by a country] | ||||
Country | Country [for countries outside the UK] | ||||
Details of account(s) | |||||
Single customer view record number | Unique customer identifier | ||||
Account title | Surname, first name, any other initials or middle name identifier or company name or name of account holder | ||||
Account number | Unique number for this account | ||||
Product type | Type of product or service - instant access/term | ||||
Account holder indicator | This field applies to joint or multiple accounts. It must identify whether the customer is the primary account holder or secondary account holder (or other such status) | ||||
Account status code | Active accounts only to be included | ||||
Account balance in sterling | Account balance including any interest or premium attributable, at end of business on: (a) the compensation date; or (b) the date of request from the FSCS or the PRA |
||||
Aggregate balance | |||||
Single customer view record number | Unique customer identifier | ||||
Aggregate balance across all accounts in sterling | Account balance including any interest or premium attributable, at end of business on: (a) the compensation date; or (b) the date of request from the PRA or FSCS |
||||
Compensatable amount | The amount to be compensated subject to the limit check that must be performed by the firm under 50.6(2) (this could be lower than the aggregate balance across all accounts if this exceeds the coverage level provided for in 4.2. |
50.12
Where a depositor holds more than one account, the section in the single customer view which sets out “Details of account(s)” must be completed for each account held.
50.13
The amount inserted into the single customer view as the account balance and aggregate balance across all accounts must be the total of the principal plus any interest or premium attributable up to the compensation date (or in the absence of a compensation date, the date on which the FSCS or PRA makes a request to the firm to provide the single customer view).
50.14
If the account is a structured deposit account where the return cannot be calculated until the maturity date because the return is based on growth of an index as determined at a future date, the figure inserted into the single customer view as the account balance must be the total of the principal, any attributable contractual minimum return and any interest accrued prior to the product start date.
50.15
A firm must take reasonable steps to ensure the accuracy of the data it holds to satisfy the requirements of this Chapter.
51
Transitional Provisions – Single Customer View Effectiveness Report
51.1
This Chapter does not apply in relation to an eligible deposit:
- (1) of a large company;
- (2) contained in an account that is not active; or
- (3) contained in an account that holds funds to which a depositor is not absolutely entitled.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 51.1
51.2
In this Chapter, the following definitions shall apply:
large company
means a body corporate which does not qualify as a small company under section 382 of the Companies Act 2006
SCV effectiveness report
means a report from a firm’s governing body confirming that the firm’s systems satisfy the requirements in Chapter 50 with respect to single customer views and containing the information required by 51.7.
single customer view
means a single, consistent view of a depositor’s aggregate eligible deposits with a firm which contains the information required by 50.11;
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 51.2
51.3
A firm must provide the PRA with an SCV effectiveness report within three months of receiving a Part 4A permission to accept deposits.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 51.3
51.4
A firm must notify the PRA and FSCS of a material change in the firm’s systems to satisfy the requirements in Chapter 50 with respect to single customer views, within 3 months of the change.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 51.4
51.5
The notification in 51.4 must be accompanied by a statement signed on behalf of the firm’s governing body confirming that the firm’s systems satisfy the requirements in Chapter 50 with respect to single customer views.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 51.5
51.6
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 51.6
51.7
A firm’s SCV effectiveness report must contain, to the extent applicable:
- (1) a description of:
- (a) the firm’s systems to satisfy the requirements in Chapter 50 with respect to single customer views and how they have been implemented (the firm’s systems include any manual systems used by the firm and any code or keys used internally by the firm so that the FSCS can easily identify eligible deposits and accounts which are held on behalf of beneficiaries and which contain or may contain eligible deposits);
- (b) how the firm proposes to transfer to the PRA or FSCS a single customer view for each depositor with eligible deposits including specifying the transfer method and format;
- (c) the testing undertaken with respect to the robustness of the firm’s systems (including information on preparation of the single customer views in stressed scenarios, frequency of testing and where relevant, reconciliation with core systems);
- (d) the number of single customer views;
- (e) the firm’s plan for the ongoing maintenance of its systems;
- (f) how the firm’s governing body will ensure that they remain satisfied that the firm’s systems continue to satisfy the requirements in Chapter 50 with respect to single customer views;
- (g) how the check facility required by 50.6(2) is applied;
- (h) any other factors relevant to the design of the firm’s systems or to an assessment of whether the systems satisfy the requirements in Chapter 50 with respect to single customer views;
- (i) any dependencies in creating the single customer views (such as reliance on group systems); and
- (j) the procedures and controls that a firm has in place regarding the production of the single customer views (such as secure storage and an indication of how key person dependencies are managed);
- (2) a statement signed on behalf of the firm’s governing body confirming that the firm satisfies the requirements in Chapter 50 with respect to single customer views;
- (3) the date when the firm’s systems last produced:
- (a) single customer view for each depositor; and
- (b) a sample of single customer views and the sample size;
- (4) a statement of whether the firm’s SCV effectiveness report has been reviewed by external auditors, and if so, a statement of the findings of that review; and
- (5) a statement of whether there has been a material change to the systems since the date of the firm’s previous SCV effectiveness report>.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 51.7
51.8
A firm to which 50.5 and 50.6 applies must provide the FSCS with a representative sample of 10% of its single customer views or 10,000 of its single customer views (whichever is the smaller number) within three months of receiving a Part 4A permission to accept deposits.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 51.8
51.9
The representative sample must include all types of account which contain eligible deposits (where the firm operates under more than one trading name the sample must include all types of account which contain eligible deposits for each trading name).
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 51.9
51.10
The FSCS must advise the PRA, within six months of receiving the information required by 51.6 whether the information provided by the firm’s systems to satisfy the requirements in Chapter 50 with respect to single customer views is suitable to be submitted to the FSCS and is compatible with the FSCS’s systems.
52
Transitional Provisions – Class A Tariff Base Calculation
52.1
In this Chapter, the following definition shall apply:
large company
means a body corporate which does not qualify as a small company under section 382 of the Companies Act 2006
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 52.1
52.2
53
Transitional Provisions – Application of COMP
53.1
In this Chapter the following definitions shall apply:
COMP
means the Compensation Sourcebook of the PRA Handbook in force immediately before 3 July 2015
has the definition in the Glossary in force immediately before 3 July 2015
has the definition in the Glossary in force immediately before 3 July 2015
protected deposit
has the definition in the Glossary in force immediately before 3 July 2015
has the definition in the Glossary in force immediately before 3 July 2015
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 53.1
53.2
The rules in COMP continue to apply to the FSCS in relation to a protected deposit claim in respect of a relevant person in default before 3 July 2015.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 53.2
54
Transitional Provisions - Firms’ Additional Disclosure Obligations
54.1
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 54.1
54.2
As soon as practicable after 31 December 2015 and in any event by 1 July 2016, a firm must:
- (1) provide to a depositor:
- (a) the information sheet; and
- (b) the exclusions list; and
- (2) if applicable, inform the depositor of the exclusions from deposit guarantee scheme protection that fall within 2.2(4)(b) and 2.2(4)(k).
[Note: Art. 16(3) of the DGSD]
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 54.2
55
Transitional Provisions - Firms’ Disclosure Obligations (Supervening Rules)
55.1
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 55.1
55.2
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 55.2
55.3
17.2 shall not apply to a firm until 2 July 2016.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 55.3
56
Transitional Provisions – Deposit Compensation Information – Branches and Websites (Supervening Rules)
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 56.1
56.2
A firm will not breach the compensation sticker and poster rules if it complies with those rules soon as practicable and in any event from 1 September 2015.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 56.2
56.3
A firm will not breach the compensation leaflet rules if it complies with those rules as soon as practicable and in any event from 1 January 2016.
- 03/07/2015
- Legal Instruments that change this rule 56.3
Annex 1 – Information Sheet (Chapter 16)
Basic information about the protection of your eligible deposits | |
Eligible deposits in [insert name of firm] are protected by: | the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (“FSCS”)1 |
Limit of protection: | £75,000 per depositor per bank / building society / credit union2 [where applicable]The following trading names are part of your bank / building society / credit union: [insert all trading names which operate under the same licence] |
If you have more eligible deposits at the same bank / building society / credit union: | All your eligible deposits at the same bank / building society / credit union are “aggregated” and the total is subject to the limit of £75,000.2 |
If you have a joint account with other person(s): | The limit of £75,000 applies to each depositor separately.3 |
Reimbursement period in case of bank, building society or credit union’s failure: | 20 working days4 |
Currency of reimbursement: | Pound sterling (GBP, £) or, for branches of UK banks operating in other EEA Member States, the currency of that State. |
To contact [insert name of firm] for enquiries relating to your account: To contact the FSCS for further information on compensation: |
[insert name of firm and contact details] Financial Services Compensation Scheme 10th Floor Beaufort House 15 St Botolph Street London EC3A 7QU Tel: 0800 678 1100 or 020 7741 4100 Email: ICT@fscs.org.uk |
More information: | http://www.fscs.org.uk |
Acknowledgement of receipt by the depositor: |
Additional information (all or some of the below)
1Scheme responsible for the protection of your eligible deposit
Your eligible deposit is covered by a statutory Deposit Guarantee Scheme. If insolvency of your bank, building society or credit union should occur, your eligible deposits would be repaid up to £75,000 by the Deposit Guarantee Scheme.
2General limit of protection
If a covered deposit is unavailable because a bank, building society or credit union is unable to meet its financial obligations, depositors are repaid by a Deposit Guarantee Scheme. This repayment covers at maximum £75,000 per bank, building society or credit union. This means that all eligible deposits at the same bank, building society or credit union are added up in order to determine the coverage level. If, for instance a depositor holds a savings account with £80,000 and a current account with £20,000, he or she will only be repaid £75,000.
[only where applicable] This method will also be applied if a bank, building society or credit union operates under different trading names. [insert name of the account holding bank, building society or credit union] also trades under [insert all other trading names of the same bank, building society or credit union]. This means that all eligible deposits with one or more of these trading names are in total covered up to £75,000.
In some cases eligible deposits which are categorised as “temporary high balances” are protected above £75,000 for six months after the amount has been credited or from the moment when such eligible deposits become legally transferable. These are eligible deposits connected with certain events including:
- (a) certain transactions relating to the depositor’s current or prospective only or main residence or dwelling;
- (b) a death, or the depositor’s marriage or civil partnership, divorce, retirement, dismissal, redundancy or invalidity;
- (c) the payment to the depositor of insurance benefits or compensation for criminal injuries or wrongful conviction.
More information can be obtained under http://www.fscs.org.uk
3Limit of protection for joint accounts
In case of joint accounts, the limit of £75,000 applies to each depositor.
However, eligible deposits in an account to which two or more persons are entitled as members of a business partnership, association or grouping of a similar nature, without legal personality, are aggregated and treated as if made by a single depositor for the purpose of calculating the limit of £75,000.
4Reimbursement
The responsible Deposit Guarantee Scheme is the Financial Services Compensation Scheme, 10th Floor Beaufort House, 15 St Botolph Street, London, EC3A 7QU, Tel: 0800 678 1100 or 020 7741 4100, Email: ICT@fscs.org.uk. It will repay your eligible deposits (up to £75,000) within 20 working days until 31 December 2018; within 15 working days from 1 January 2019 until 31 December 2020; within 10 working days from 1 January 2021 to 31 December 2023; and within 7 working days from 1 January 2024 onwards, save where specific exceptions apply.
Where the FSCS cannot make the repayable amount available within 7 working days, it will, from 1 June 2016 until 31 December 2023, ensure that you have access to an appropriate amount of your covered deposits to cover the cost of living (in the case of a depositor which is an individual) or to cover necessary business expenses (in the case of a depositor which is not an individual or a large company) within 5 working days of a request. Again, there are specific exceptions to this obligation.
In the case of a depositor which is a large company, where the FSCS cannot make the repayable amount available within 7 working days, it will, from 3 July 2015 until 1 December 2016, ensure that you have access to your covered deposits within fifteen working days of a request containing sufficient information to enable it to make a payment, save where specific exceptions apply.
If you have not been repaid within these deadlines, you should contact the Deposit Guarantee Scheme since the time to claim reimbursement may be barred after a certain time limit. Further information can be obtained under http://www.fscs.org.uk.
Other important information
In general, all retail depositors and businesses are covered by Deposit Guarantee Schemes. Exceptions for certain deposits are stated on the website of the responsible Deposit Guarantee Scheme. Your bank, building society or credit union will also inform you of any exclusions from protection which may apply. If deposits are eligible, the bank, building society or credit union shall also confirm this on the statement of account.
Annex 2 – Content of Compensation Stickers and Posters (Chapter 23)
1 | The compensation stickers must contain the following statements only: | |
UK banks building societies credit unions Northern Ireland credit unions An overseas firm that: (a) is not an incoming firm; and (b) has a Part 4A permission that includes accepting deposits |
||
(1) | "Your eligible deposits with [insert name of firm] are protected up to a total of £75,000 by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme, the UK's deposit guarantee scheme. Any deposits you hold above the limit are unlikely to be covered. Please ask/click here [delete as appropriate] for further information or visit www.fscs.org.uk ." As an alternative, for credit unions or Northern Ireland credit unions that accept deposits under a single brand or trading name: "Your eligible deposits are protected up to a total of £75,000 by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme, the UK's deposit guarantee scheme. Any deposits you hold above the limit are unlikely to be covered. Please ask/click here [delete as appropriate] for further information or visit www.fscs.org.uk " |
|
Incoming firm that is a credit institution | ||
(2) | "Your eligible deposits with [insert name of firm] are protected up to a total of [insert 100,000 euro or home state equivalent] by [insert name of compensation scheme] the [insert home state of compensation scheme] deposit guarantee scheme and are not protected by the UK Financial Services Compensation Scheme. Any deposits you hold above the [insert 100,000 euro or home state equivalent] limit are unlikely to be covered. Please ask/click here [delete as appropriate] for further information or visit [insert website address of scheme]." |
|
2 | The compensation posters must contain the following statements only: | |
UK banks building societies credit unions Northern Ireland credit unions An overseas firm that: (a) is not an incoming firm; and (b) has a Part 4A permission that includes accepting deposits |
||
(1) | Firms that accept deposits under a single brand or trading name "Your eligible deposits with [insert name of firm] are protected up to a total of £75,000 by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme, the UK's deposit guarantee scheme. Any deposits you hold above the limit are unlikely to be covered. Please ask/click here [delete as appropriate] for further information or visit www.fscs.org.uk" As an alternative, for credit unions or Northern Ireland credit unions that accept deposits under a single brand or trading name: "Your eligible deposits are protected up to a total of £75,000 by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme, the UK's deposit guarantee scheme. Any deposits you hold above the limit are unlikely to be covered. Please ask/click here [delete as appropriate] for further information or visit www.fscs.org.uk" |
|
(2) | Firms that accept deposits under multiple brands or trading names "Your eligible deposits with [insert name of firm] are protected up to a total of £75,000 by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme, the UK's deposit guarantee scheme. This limit is applied to the total of any deposits you have with the following: [insert names of brands as appropriate]. Any total deposits you hold above the limit between these brands are unlikely to be covered. Please ask/click here [delete as appropriate] for further information or visit www.fscs.org.uk" |
|
Incoming firm that is a credit institution | ||
(3) | Incoming firm that is a credit institution and accepts deposits under a single brand or trading name "Your eligible deposits with [insert name of firm] are protected up to a total of [insert 100,000 euro or home state equivalent] by [insert name of compensation scheme] the [insert home state of compensation scheme] deposit guarantee scheme and are not protected by the UK Financial Services Compensation Scheme. Any deposits you hold above the [insert 100,000 euro or home state equivalent] limit are unlikely to be covered. Please ask/click here [delete as appropriate] for further information or visit [insert website address of scheme]." |
|
(4) |
Incoming firm that accepts deposits under multiple brands or trading names |
|
3 | Each of the statements in 1 and 2 must appear as written with the first and second statements on separate lines. The second statement must appear in smaller font. |
|
4 | In 1(1), 2(1) and 2(2), the limit figures must appear in bold font. |
Annex 3 – Exclusions List (Chapter 16)
Section A (up to and including 31 December 2016)
A deposit is excluded from protection if:
- (1) The holder and any beneficial owner of the deposit have never been identified in accordance with money laundering requirements. For further information, contact your bank, bank building society or credit union.
- (2) The deposit arises out of transactions in connection with which there has been a criminal conviction for money laundering.
- (3) It is a deposit made by a depositor which is one of the following:
- credit institution
- financial institution
- investment firm
- insurance undertaking
- reinsurance undertaking
- collective investment undertaking
- pension or retirement fund1
- public authority, other than a small local authority.
The following are deposits, categories of deposits or other instruments which will no longer be protected from 3 July 2015:
- deposits of a credit union to which the credit union itself is entitled
- deposits which can only be proven by a financial instrument2 unless it is a savings product which is evidenced by a certificate of deposit made out to a named person and which exists in a Member State on 2 July 2014)
- deposits of a collective investment scheme which qualifies as a small company3
- deposits of an overseas financial services institution which qualifies as a small company4
- deposits of certain regulated firms (investment firms, insurance undertakings and reinsurance undertakings) which qualify as a small business or a small company5 – refer to the FSCS for further information on this category
For further information about exclusions, refer to the FSCS website at www.FSCS.org.uk |
1 Deposits by personal pension schemes, stakeholder pension schemes and occupational pension schemes of micro, small and medium sized enterprises are not excluded
2 Listed in Section C of Annex 1 of Directive 2014/65/EU
3 Under the Companies Act 1985 or Companies Act 2006
4 See footnote 3
5 See footnote 3
Section B (from 1 January 2017)
A deposit is excluded from protection if:
- (1) The holder and any beneficial owner of the deposit have never been identified in accordance with money laundering requirements. For further information, contact your bank, bank building society or credit union.
- (2) The deposit arises out of transactions in connection with which there has been a criminal conviction for money laundering.
- (3) It is a deposit made by a depositor which is one of the following:
- credit institution
- financial institution
- investment firm
- insurance undertaking
- reinsurance undertaking
- collective investment undertaking
- pension or retirement fund6
- public authority, other than a small local authority.
For further information about exclusions, refer to the FSCS website at www.FSCS.org.uk |
6 Deposits by personal pension schemes, stakeholder pension schemes and occupational pension schemes of micro, small and medium sized enterprises are not excluded
Annex 4 – Coverage Information (Chapter 54)
On 1 January 2016 the deposit protection limit is changing from £85,000 to £75,000.
If your bank, building society or credit union fails, the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS) protects your eligible deposits up to the deposit protection limit (currently £85,000 for most depositors).1
If you have eligible deposits of more than £75,000, you are unlikely to be fully protected after 1 January 2016 so you may need to take action if you wish to remain fully covered by the FSCS.
From 1 January 2016, your eligible deposits with [insert name of firm] will be protected up to a total of £75,000 by the FSCS. [The limit is applied to the total of your eligible deposits held with the following: insert names of brands as appropriate].
IF YOU HAVE MORE THAN £75,000 WITH [insert name of the account holding bank, building society or credit union and all other trading names of the same bank, building society or credit union]:
[Insert details of firm’s approach in respect of fixed term deposits. For example where firms choose to adopt measures that the PRA is consulting on in CP23/15 ahead of the PRA making final rules they should set this out here. Firms may also refer to the PRA’s consultation to manage the impact on depositors with aggregate deposit balances above £75,000.]
PLEASE CONTACT (insert firm contact details) FOR FURTHER INFORMATION ON KEEPING YOUR MONEY PROTECTED.
If you have total eligible deposits of less than £75,000 with [insert firm name], then you will not be affected by the limit change.
Further information regarding the protection provided by FSCS is set out below.
General limit of protection
Your eligible deposits held at the same bank, building society or credit union are added up in order to determine the coverage level. If, for instance, you hold eligible deposits in a savings account with £70,000 and a current account with £20,000, you will only be repaid £75,000 (or £85,000 for most depositors until 31 December 2015).
From 3 July 2015 until 31 December 2015:
The FSCS protects most depositors, including individuals and small companies, up to £85,000 until 31 December 2015.
Eligible deposits of large companies2 and small local authorities3 are eligible for FSCS protection from 3 July 2015 onwards. The £75,000 deposit protection limit will apply from 3 July 2015 since these deposits have not previously been protected.
From 1 January 2016:
From 1 January 2016, the FSCS will protect most eligible deposits up to a total of £75,000. Any deposits you hold above the limit are unlikely to be covered.
Depositors with aggregate deposit balances over £75,000
Further information will be provided to depositors on how these changes will affect depositors with aggregate balances over £75,000. Please contact ([insert firm details]) or the FSCS (details below) for further information.
Temporary high balances
In some cases, an eligible deposit which is categorised as “a “temporary high balance” (for example, as a result of a house sale, inheritance, or insurance payment) may be protected to a higher limit for six months after the amount has been credited to your account or from the moment when such eligible deposits become legally transferable. This applies from 3 July 2015. See the FSCS website for full details.
Exclusions from protection
A deposit is excluded from protection if:
- (1) The holder and any beneficial owner of the deposit have never been identified in accordance with money laundering requirements. For further information, contact your bank, bank building society or credit union.
- (2) The deposit arises out of transactions in connection with which there has been a criminal conviction for money laundering.
- (3) It is a deposit made by a depositor which is one of the following:
• credit institution
• financial institution
• investment firm
• insurance undertaking
• reinsurance undertaking
• collective investment undertaking
• pension or retirement fund4
• public authority, other than a small local authority.
The following deposits, categories of deposits or other instruments are no longer protected from 3 July 2015:
• deposits of a credit union to which the credit union itself is entitled
• deposits which can only be proven by a financial instrument5 unless it is a savings product which is evidenced by a certificate of deposit made out to a named person and which exists in a Member State on 2 July 2014)
• deposits of a collective investment scheme which qualifies as a small company6
• deposits of an overseas financial services institution which qualifies as a small company7
• deposits of certain regulated firms (investment firms, insurance undertakings and reinsurance undertakings) which qualify as a small business or a small company8 – refer to the FSCS for further information on this category.
Reimbursement
The FSCS aims to repay your eligible deposits (up to the compensation limit) within 7 days, and is required to do so within 20 working days (with some exceptions).
Contact
If you have any questions regarding the change in the compensation limit, please contact the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS) at:
Address: FSCS,
10th Floor Beaufort House,
15 St Botolph Street,
London,
EC3A 7QU
Tel: 0800 678 1100
Email: ICT@fscs.org.uk
Web: http://www.fscs.org.uk.
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1 Exceptions for certain deposits are stated below and on the FSCS’s website: http://www.fscs.org.uk.
2 Large company means a body corporate which does not qualify as a small company under section 382 of the Companies Act 2006
3 Small local authority means a local authority with an annual budget of up to EUR 500,000
4 Deposits by personal pension schemes, stakeholder pension schemes and occupational pension schemes of micro, small and medium sized enterprises are not excluded
5 Listed in Section C of Annex 1 of Directive 2014/65/EU
6 Under the Companies Act 1985 or Companies Act 2006
7 See footnote above
8 See footnote above