FEES 6
Financial Services Compensation Scheme Funding
FEES 6.1
Application
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.1.1
See Notes
- 06/04/2011
FEES 6.1.2
See Notes
(1) Firms which are not participant firms (such as certain types of incoming EEA firms, service companies and ICVCs) are not required to contribute towards the funding of the compensation scheme.
(2) Although a member is a participant firm for the purposes of most provisions of COMP, a member is excluded from the definition of participant firm for the purposes of FEES 6 (see definition of participant firm in Glossary). This is because the fees levied in relation to the carrying on of insurance market activities by members will be imposed on Society rather than individually on each member (see FEES 6.3.24 R).
- 01/01/2006
Purpose
FEES 6.1.3
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
General structure
FEES 6.1.4
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.1.4A
See Notes
- 12/10/2010
FEES 6.1.5
See Notes
- 12/10/2010
FEES 6.1.6
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.1.7
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.1.8
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
The management expenses levy
FEES 6.1.9
See Notes
- 12/10/2010
FEES 6.1.10
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.1.11
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.1.13
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
The compensation costs levy
FEES 6.1.14
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.1.15
See Notes
- 06/08/2010
FEES 6.1.16
See Notes
If a participant firm is a member of more than one sub-class, the total compensation costs levy and specific costs levy for that firm will be the aggregate of the individual levies calculated for the firm in respect of each of the sub-classes. Each sub-class has a levy limit which is the maximum amount of compensation costs which may be allocated to a particular sub-class in a financial year for the purposes of a levy. Once the costs attributable to a particular sub-class have exceeded the levy limit the excess costs are allocated to the other sub-class in the same class, up to the levy limit of that other sub-class, and thereafter allocated to a 'general retail pool' of all the other sub-classes whose levy limits have not been reached (with the exception of the home finance providers). The amount of the excess cost to be allocated to each particular sub-class in the general retail pool is calculated pro-rata in accordance with the relative size of the levy limit of that sub-class to the sum of the levy limits of the remainder of the sub-classes in the general retail pool whose levy limits have not been reached. In the case of the deposits class, once the costs attributable to that class have exceeded the levy limit the excess costs are allocated to the general retail pool. The use made by FSCS of borrowing facilities to provide liquidity until the next levy does not affect this allocation of costs.
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.1.16A
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
Incoming EEA firms
FEES 6.1.17
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.2
Exemption
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.2.1
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.2.2
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.2.3
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.2.4
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.2.5
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.2.6
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.2.7
See Notes
The financial year of the compensation scheme is the twelve months ending on 31 March. The effect of FEES 6.2.6 R and FEES 6.2.1R (2) is that if a firm fails to notify FSCS of an exemption under FEES 6.2.1 R by 31 March it will be treated as non-exempt for the whole of the next financial year.
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.2.8
See Notes
- 01/04/2007
FEES 6.3
The FSCS's power to impose levies
- 01/01/2006
General limits on levies
FEES 6.3.1
See Notes
- 12/10/2010
FEES 6.3.2
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.3.3
See Notes
- 12/10/2010
FEES 6.3.4
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
Limits on compensation costs levies on sub-classes and classes
FEES 6.3.5
See Notes
The maximum amount of compensation costs for which the FSCS can levy each sub-class and class in any one financial year of the compensation scheme is limited to the amounts set out in the table in FEES 6 Annex 2.
- 01/04/2008
Levy for compensation costs paid in error
FEES 6.3.10
See Notes
- 06/12/2009
Management of funds
FEES 6.3.11
See Notes
The FSCS must hold any amount collected from a specific costs levy or compensation costs levy to the credit of the classes and relevant sub-classes, in accordance with the allocation established under FEES 6.4.6 R and FEES 6.5.2 R.
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.3.12
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.3.13
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.3.14
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.3.15
See Notes
The FSCS may use the money collected from firms within one class to pay compensation costs in respect of any sub-class within that class, so long as it ensures that this is done without prejudice to the participant firms from whom the money has been collected.
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.3.15A
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.3.16
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.3.17
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.3.18
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.3.19
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.3.20
See Notes
- (1) This rule applies where the FSCS makes recoveries in relation to protected claims where related compensation costs would have been met by a sub-class (sub-class A) had the levy limit for sub-class A not been reached and have therefore been met by another sub-class or sub-classes.
- (2) This rule applies even though the recovery is made in a subsequent financial year.
- (3) Recoveries referred to in (1) must be applied in the following order of priority:
- (a) (if the compensation costs were allocated to the general retail pool (see FEES 6.5.2 R(2)) to the classes and sub-classes to which the costs were allocated in accordance FEES 6.5.2 R(2) in the same proportion as those classes and respective sub-classes contributed, up to the total amount of that allocation plus interest at a rate equivalent to the Bank of England's repo rate from time to time in force;
- (b) (if the compensation costs were allocated to the other sub-class in the same class as sub-class A) to that other sub-class up to the total amount of that allocation plus interest at a rate equivalent to the Bank of England's repo rate from time to time in force; and
- (c) sub-class A.
- 14/12/2012
FEES 6.3.20A
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.3.21
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
Adjustments to calculation of levy shares
FEES 6.3.22
See Notes
- 01/11/2008
FEES 6.3.22A
See Notes
- 01/11/2008
FEES 6.3.22B
See Notes
- 01/11/2008
Firms acquiring businesses from other firms
FEES 6.3.22C
See Notes
- 01/01/2009
Remission of levy or additional administrative fee
FEES 6.3.23
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
Levies on the Society of Lloyd's
FEES 6.3.24
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.4
Management expenses
- 01/01/2006
Obligation on participant firm to pay
FEES 6.4.1
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
Limit on management expenses
FEES 6.4.2
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
Participant firm's share
FEES 6.4.3
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.4.4
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
Base costs levy
FEES 6.4.5
See Notes
Unless FEES 6.3.22 R applies, the FSCS must calculate a participant firm's share of a base costs levy by:
- (1) identifying the base costs which the FSCS has incurred, or expects to incur, in the relevant financial year of the compensation scheme, but has not yet levied;
- (2) calculating the amount of the participant firm's regulatory costs as a proportion of the total regulatory costs relating to all participant firms for the relevant financial year; and
- (3) applying the proportion calculated in (2) to the figure in (1).
- 01/01/2006
Specific costs levy
FEES 6.4.6
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.4.7
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
New participant firms
FEES 6.4.8
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.4.10
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
Specific costs levy for newly authorised firms
FEES 6.4.10A
See Notes
- 01/04/2009
Application of FEES 6.4.10AR
FEES 6.4.10B
See Notes
References in this table to dates or months are references to the latest one occurring before the start of the FSCS financial year unless otherwise stated.
Type of permission acquired on 1 November | Tariff base | Valuation date but for FEES 6.5.13BR | Data period under FEES 6.5.13bR |
Accepting deposits | Protected deposits | As at 31 December 2009 | As at 31 December 2009 |
Effecting contracts of insurance
(Insurers - general) | Relevant net premium income | The firm's tariff base calculated in the year 2009 - so projected valuation will be used. | 1 November to 31 December 2009 |
Dealing in investments as agent in relation to General Insurance Intermediation | Annual eligible income | Financial year ended 31 March 2009 - so projected valuations will be used. | 1 November to 31 December 2009 |
- 01/04/2009
FEES 6.4A
Management expenses in respect of relevant schemes
- 12/10/2010
Obligation on participant firm to pay
FEES 6.4A.1
See Notes
- 12/10/2010
Restriction on management expenses in respect of relevant schemes
FEES 6.4A.2
See Notes
- 12/10/2010
Management expenses in respect of relevant schemes levy
FEES 6.4A.3
See Notes
- 12/10/2010
FEES 6.5
Compensation costs
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.5.1
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.5.2
See Notes
The FSCS must allocate any compensation costs levy to the sub-classes in proportion to the amount of compensation costs arising from, or expected to arise from, claims in respect of the different activities represented by those sub-classes up to the levy limit of each relevant sub-class and thereafter in the following order:
- (1) any excess must be allocated to the other sub-class in the same class up to the levy limit of that other sub-class (except in the deposit class, for which there is only one sub-class); and any excess must be allocated to the other sub-class in the same class up to the levy limit of that other sub-class (except in the deposit class, for which there is only one sub-class); and
- (2) any excess above the levy limit of the class must be allocated to each other sub-class, other than the home finance provision sub-class E1, whose levy limit has not been reached (the 'general retail pool'), in proportion to the relative sizes of the levy limits of those remaining sub-classes in the general retail pool.
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.5.2A
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.5.2B
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.5.2C
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.5.3
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.5.4
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.5.5
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.5.6
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
Sub-classes and tariff bases for compensation cost levies and specific costs levies
FEES 6.5.7
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
FEES 6.5.8
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
New participant firms
FEES 6.5.9
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
Compensation costs levy for newly authorised firms
FEES 6.5.9A
See Notes
- 01/04/2009
FEES 6.5.9B
See Notes
- 01/04/2009
Membership of several classes or sub-classes
FEES 6.5.12
See Notes
- 01/04/2008
Reporting requirements
FEES 6.5.13
See Notes
- 01/11/2008
FEES 6.5.13A
See Notes
- 01/11/2008
FEES 6.5.14
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.5.15
See Notes
- 31/12/2010
FEES 6.5.16
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.6
Incoming EEA firms
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.6.1
See Notes
- 01/11/2007
FEES 6.7
Payment of levies
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.7.1
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.7.2
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.7.3
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.7.4
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.7.5
See Notes
- 01/01/2006
FEES 6.7.6
See Notes
- 01/10/2011
FEES 6 Annex 1
Financial Services Compensation Scheme - Management Expenses Levy Limit
- 01/04/2006
See Notes
This table belongs to FEES 6.4.2 R | |
Period | Limit on total of all management expenses levies attributable to that period (£) |
1 December 2001 to 1 April 2002 | £4,209,000 |
1 April 2002 to 31 March 2003 | £13,228,000 |
1 April 2003 to 31 March 2004 | £13,319,000 |
1 April 2004 to 31 March 2005 | £17,590,000 |
1 April 2005 to 31 March 2006 | £27,030,000 |
1 April 2006 to 31 March 2007 | £37,060,000 |
1 April 2007 to 31 March 2008 | £37,520,000 |
1 April 2008 to 31 March 2009 | £1,000,000,000 provided that £600,000,000 may be recovered in respect of specific costs relating to the declaration by the FSA on 27 September 2008 that Bradford & Bingley plc is in default only. |
1 April 2009 to 31 March 2010 | £1,000,000,000 |
1 April 2010 to 31 March 2011 | £1,000,000,000 |
1 April 2011 to 31 March 2012 | £1,000,000,000 |
1 April 2012 to 31 March 2013 | £1,000,000,000 |
- 01/04/2012
FEES 6 Annex 2
Financial Services Compensation Scheme - annual levy limits
- 06/11/2007
See Notes
Class | Sub-class | Levy Limit (£ million) |
Deposit | ||
Deposit | 1,840 | |
Life and Pensions | ||
Life and Pensions Provision | 690 | |
Life and Pensions Intermediation | 100 | |
General insurance | ||
General Insurance Provision | 775 | |
General Insurance Intermediation | 195 | |
Investment | ||
Fund management | 270 | |
Investment Intermediation | 100 | |
Home Finance | ||
Home Finance Provision | 70 | |
Home Finance Intermediation | 60 |
- 06/11/2007
FEES 6 Annex 3
Financial Services Compensation Scheme - classes and sub-classes
- 06/11/2007
See Notes
Class A | Deposit |
Legal basis for activity in class A | accepting deposits. and/or operating a dormant account fund. BUT does not include any fee payer who either effects or carries out contracts of insurance. |
Tariff base | (1) Protected deposits and/or (2) Protected dormant accounts multiplied by 0.2 as at 31 December Except where paragraph (4) says otherwise, protected deposits must be adjusted as follows. |
(1) Only include a protected deposit to the extent that an eligible claimant would have a claim in respect of it. | |
(2) Exclude any amount in respect of which the FSCS would not pay compensation due to the maximum payment limits in COMP 10.2. | |
(3) The tariff base calculation is made on the basis of the information that the firm would have to include in the single customer views it has to be able to produce under COMP 17 (Systems requirements for firms that accept deposits). The information must be of the extent and standard required if the firm was preparing the single customer views as at the valuation date for the tariff base (31 December). | |
(4) (a) If this paragraph applies, the adjustments in (1) to (3) do not apply and the calculation is based on protected deposits. | |
(b) This paragraph applies with respect to a protected deposit to the extent that, under COMP 17, the firm does not have to identify an eligible claimant with respect to that protected deposit because the account is held by the account holder on behalf of others. (c) This paragraph applies with respect to a protected deposit that has been excluded from the single customer view because it is an account that is not active, as defined in COMP 17.2.3R (2). |
Class B | General Insurance |
Sub-class B1 | General Insurance Provision |
Legal basis for activity in sub-class B1 |
effecting contracts of insurance; and/or
|
that are general insurance contracts. | |
Sub-class B2 | General Insurance Intermediation |
Legal basis for activity in sub-class B2 | Any of the following in respect of general insurance contracts: |
agreeing to carry on a regulated activity which is within any of the above.
|
|
Tariff base | Sub-class B1: Relevant net premium income and eligible gross technical liabilities. The levy is split into two in the ratio 75:25. The tariff base for the first portion (75%) is calculated by reference to relevant net premium income. The tariff base for the second portion (25%) is based on eligible gross technical liabilities. Eligible gross technical liabilities are calculated in accordance with the method for calculating gross technical liabilities in fee block A3 in part 2 of FEES 4 Annex 1 with the following adjustments. (1) Eligible gross technical liabilities are calculated by reference to protected contracts of insurance with eligible claimants. (2) A firm may choose not to apply paragraph (1) and instead include all gross technical liabilities that it would be obliged to take into account for fee block A3 as long as the amount that it would include under (1) is lower. (3) If an incoming EEA firm does not report gross technical liabilities in the way contemplated by this table, the firm's gross technical liabilities are calculated in the same way as they would be for a UK firm. (4) None of the notes for the calculation of fees in fee block A3 in part 2 of FEES 4 Annex 1 apply except for the purposes of (2). (5) A directive friendly society must also calculate eligible gross technical liabilities in accordance with this table. (6) A non-directive friendly society must calculate gross technical liabilities as the amount that it is required to show in FSC 2 - Form 9 line 11 in Appendix 10 of IPRU(FSOC) (assets allocated towards the general insurance business required minimum margin) in relation to the most recent financial year of the firm (as at the applicable reporting date under FEES 6.5.13 R) for which the firm is required to have reported that information to the FSA under IPRU(FSOC). A non-directive friendly society must disregard for this purpose such amounts as are not required to be included by reason of a waiver or a written concession carried forward as an amendment to the rule to which it relates under SUP TP. |
Sub-class B2: annual eligible income where annual eligible income means annual income adjusted in accordance with this table. Annual income is calculated as the sum of (a) and (b): (a) the net amount retained by the firm of all brokerages, fees, commissions and other related income (for example, administration charges, overriders and profit shares) due to the firm in respect of or in relation to sub-class B2 activities, including any income received from an insurer; and (b) if the firm is an insurer, in relation to sub-class B2 activities, the amount of premiums receivable on its contracts of insurance multiplied by 0.07, excluding those contracts of insurance which result from sub-class B2 activities carried out by another firm, where a payment has been made by the insurer to that other firm and that payment is of a type that falls under (a). Notes relating to the calculation of the tariff base for sub-class B2: (1) Exclude annual income for pure protection contracts. Only include general insurance contracts. (2) The calculation is adjusted in accordance with the definition of annual eligible income. (3) Net amount retained means all the commission, fees, etc. in respect of sub-class B2 activities that the firm has not rebated to customers or passed on to other firms (for example, where there is a commission chain). Items such as general business expenses (for example, employees' salaries and overheads) must not be deducted. (4) Sub-class B2 activities mean activities that fall within sub-class B2. They also include activities that now fall within sub-class B2 but that were not regulated activities when they were carried out. (5) A reference to a firm also includes a reference to any person who carried out activities that would now fall into sub-class B2 but which were not at the time regulated activities. |
Class C | Life and Pensions |
Sub-class C1 | Life and Pensions Provision |
Legal basis for activity in sub-class C1 |
effecting contracts of insurance; and/or
|
that are long-term insurance contract (including pure protection contracts). | |
Sub-class C2 | Life and Pensions Intermediation |
Legal basis for activity in sub-class C2 | Any of the following: |
agreeing to carry on a regulated activity which is within any of the above;
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in relation to any of the following: | |
long-term insurance contracts (including pure protection contracts);
|
|
rights under a stakeholder pension scheme or a personal pension scheme.
|
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Tariff base | Sub-class C1: Relevant net premium income and eligible mathematical reserves. The levy is split into two in the ratio 75:25. The tariff base for the first portion (75%) is calculated by reference to relevant net premium income. The tariff base for the second portion (25%) is based on mathematical reserves. Eligible mathematical reserves are calculated in accordance with the method for calculating mathematical reserves in fee block A4 in part 2 of FEES 4 Annex 1 with the following adjustments. (1) Eligible mathematical reserves are calculated by reference to protected contracts of insurance with eligible claimants. (2) A firm may choose not to apply paragraph (1) and instead include all mathematical reserves that it would be obliged to take into account for fee block A4 as long as the amount that it would include under (1) is lower. (3) If an incoming EEA firm does not report mathematical reserves in the way contemplated by this table, the firm's mathematical reserves are calculated in the same way as they would be for a UK firm. (4) None of the notes for the calculation of fees in fee block A4 in part 2 of FEES 4 Annex 1 apply except for the purposes of (2). (5) A directive friendly society must also calculate eligible mathematical reserves in accordance with this table. (6) A non-directive friendly society must calculate mathematical reserves as the amount that it is required to show in FSC 2 - Form 9 line 23 in Appendix 10 of IPRU(FSOC) (total mathematical reserves after distribution of surplus) in relation to the most recent financial year of the firm (as at the applicable reporting date under FEES 6.5.13 R) for which the firm is required to have reported that information to the FSA under IPRU(FSOC). A non-directive friendly society must disregard for this purpose such amounts as are not required to be included by reason of a waiver or a written concession carried forward as an amendment to the rule to which it relates under SUP TP. (7) The provisions relating to pension fund management business in Part 2 of FEES 4 Annex 1 do not apply. A firm undertaking such business that does not carry out any other activities within sub-class C1 (ignoring any activities that would have a wholly insignificant effect on the calculation of its tariff base for sub-class C1) must use its Long-term insurance capital requirement instead of gross technical liabilities. The Long-term insurance capital requirement means the amount that it is required to show as its Long-term insurance capital requirement in Form 2 Line 31 (Statement of solvency - Long-term insurance business) in relation to the most recent financial year of the firm (as at the applicable reporting date under FEES 6.5.13 R) for which the firm is required to have reported that information to the FSA. (8) The split in the levy between relevant net premium income and eligible mathematical reserves does not apply to a partnership pension society (as defined in Chapter 7 of IPRU(FSOC) (Definitions)). Instead the levy is only calculated by reference to relevant net premium income. |
Sub-class C2: annual eligible income where annual eligible income means annual income adjusted in accordance with this table. Annual income is calculated as the sum of (a) and (b): (a) the net amount retained by the firm of all brokerages, fees, commissions and other related income (for example, administration charges, overriders and profit shares) due to the firm in respect of or in relation to sub-class C2 activities including any income received from an insurer; and; (b) if the firm is a life and pensions firm, in relation to sub-class C2 activities, the amount of premiums or commission receivable on its life and pensions contracts multiplied by 0.07, excluding those life and pensions contracts which result from sub-class C2 activities carried out by another firm, where a payment has been made by the life and pensions firm to that other firm and that payment is of a type that falls under (a). Notes relating to the calculation of the tariff base for sub-class C2: (1) Life and pensions contracts mean long-term insurance contracts (including pure protection contracts) and rights under a stakeholder pension scheme or a personal pension scheme. (2) Life and pensions firm means an insurer. It also means a firm that provides stakeholder pension schemes or personal pension schemes if those activities fall into sub-class D1. (3) The calculation is adjusted in accordance with the definition of annual eligible income. (4) Net amount retained means all the commission, fees, etc. in respect of sub-class C2 activities that the firm has not rebated to customers or passed on to other firms (for example, where there is a commission chain). Items such as general business expenses (for example, employees' salaries and overheads) must not be deducted. (5) Sub-class C2 activities mean activities that fall within sub-class C2. They also include activities that now fall within sub-class C2 but that were not regulated activities when they were carried out. (6) A reference to a firm also includes a reference to any person who carried out activities that would now fall into sub-class C2 but which were not at the time regulated activities. |
Class D | Investment |
Sub-class D1 | Fund Management |
Legal basis for activity in sub-class D1 | Any of the following: |
agreeing to carry on a regulated activity which is within any of the above.
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Sub-class D2 | Investment Intermediation |
Legal basis for activity in sub-class D2 | Any of the following activities in relation to designated investment business |
agreeing to carry on a regulated activity which is within any of the above;
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BUT excluding activities that relate to long-term insurance contracts or rights under a stakeholder pension scheme or a personal pension scheme. | |
Tariff base | Sub-class D1: annual eligible income where annual eligible income means annual income adjusted in accordance with this table. Annual income is equal to the net amount retained by the firm of all income due to the firm in respect of or in relation to activities falling within sub-class D1. |
Sub-class D2: annual eligible income where annual eligible income means annual income adjusted in accordance with this table. Annual income is equal to the net amount retained by the firm of all income due to the firm in respect of or in relation to activities falling within sub-class D2. | |
Notes on annual eligible income for sub-classes D1 and D2: | |
(1) For the purposes of calculating annual income, net amount retained means all the commission, fees, etc. in respect of activities falling within sub-class D1 or D2, as the case may be, that the firm has not rebated to customers or passed on to other firms (for example, where there is a commission chain). Items such as general business expenses (for example employees' salaries and overheads) must not be deducted. |
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(2) The calculation is adjusted in accordance with the definition of annual eligible income. | |
(3) Box management profits are excluded from the calculation of annual income. |
Class E | Home Finance |
Sub-class E1 | Home Finance Provision |
Legal basis for activity in sub-class E1 | Any of the activities below: |
agreeing to carry on a regulated activity which is within any of the above.
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Sub-class E2 | Home Finance Intermediation |
Legal basis for activity in sub-class E2 | Any of the following activities: |
the activities of a home finance provider which would be arranging but for article 28A of the Regulated Activities Order (Arranging contracts or plans to which the arranger is party);
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agreeing to carry on a regulated activity which is within any of the above.
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Tariff base | Sub-class E1: FSA periodic fees |
Sub-class: E2: annual eligible income where the annual income is calculated in accordance with fee-block A18 in part 2 of FEES 4 Annex 1 |
Notes | |
(1) | Any reference in this annex to a specified investment includes a reference to rights to or interests in investments in that specified investment. |
(2) | In calculating annual eligible income a firm must apportion income between different sub-classes and between income that falls within the definition of annual eligible income and income that does not in a reasonable and consistent way and on the basis of clear policies. |
(3) | The question of whether a person is an eligible claimant or not or whether a contract of insurance is a protected contract or not or whether business is compensatable business or not must be judged at whichever of the following dates the firm chooses: (a) (for a person who has become a new client during the period by reference to which the firm's tariff base is being calculated) the date on which the person becomes a client; (b) (for a person who has ceased to be a client during that period) the date on which the person ceases to be a client; or (c) (in any other case) the date to which the most recent information supplied by the firm under FEES 6.5.13 R is prepared. However this does not apply for the purpose of calculating the tariff base for class A (Deposits) so far as it relates to protected deposits. |
- 27/07/2012
FEES 6 Annex 4
Guidance on the calculation of tariff bases
- 06/11/2007
See Notes
Calculation of annual eligible income for firms in sub-class D1 who carry out discretionary fund management and are in FSA fee block A7 | |||
-1.1 | G | The tariff base for sub-class D1 is calculated by taking gross income falling into sub-class D1 and then deducting commission, fees and similar amounts rebated to customers or passed on to other firms (for example, where there is a commission chain). Items such as general business expenses (for example employees' salaries and overheads) should not be deducted. The calculation should be further adjusted so as to exclude income that is not attributable to business conducted with or for the benefit of eligible claimants, unless the firm chooses to include such income. | |
1.1 | G | Gross income for the activity of managing investments is the sum of the following: | |
(1) | the amount of the annual charge on all assets in portfolios which the firm manages on a discretionary basis received or receivable in the latest accounting period (this is calculated as a percentage of funds invested, typically 1% p.a.); plus | ||
(2) | the front-end or exit charge levied on sales or redemptions of assets in portfolios which the firm manages on a discretionary basis (typically 4-5% of sales/redemptions) in that same accounting period; plus | ||
(3) | the amount of performance management fees from the management of assets in portfolios which the firm manages on a discretionary basis received or receivable in that same accounting period; plus | ||
(4) | any other income directly attributable to the management of assets in portfolios which the firm manages on a discretionary basis in that same accounting period, including commission and interest received. | ||
1.2 | G | Annual eligible income should exclude | |
income received or receivable from assets managed on a non-discretionary basis, being assets that the firm has a contractual duty to keep under continuous review but in respect of which prior specific consent of the client must be obtained for proposed transactions, as this activity is covered in sub-class D2 (the investment intermediation sub-class). | |||
1.3 | G | A firm should make appropriate arrangements to ensure that income is not double counted in relation to the activities it undertakes (for example, where it operates and manages a personal pension scheme or collective investment scheme). | |
Calculation of annual eligible income for firms in sub-class D1 and who carry out activities within FSA fee block A9 | |||
2.1 | G | The calculation of income in respect of activities falling into sub-class D1 and FSA fee block A9 should be based on the tariff base provisions for that fee block (in Part 2 of FEES 4 Annex 1). It should be adjusted so as to exclude income that is not attributable to business conducted with or for the benefit of eligible claimants, unless the firm chooses to include such income. | |
2.2 | G | Although the calculation should be based on the one for fee block A9, the calculation is not the same. FSA fee block A9 is based on gross income. Sub-class D1 is based on net income retained. | |
Calculation of annual eligible income for a firm in sub-classB2 or sub-classC2 | |||
3.1 | G | The amount of annual eligible income should include the amount of any trail or renewable commission due to the firm. Trail commission is received as a small percentage of the value of a policy on an ongoing basis. Renewable commission is received from a very small percentage of the value of a policy from ongoing premiums often received once the initial commission period is over. | |
Difficulties in calculating annual eligible income | |||
4.1 | G | The purpose of Note 2 in the section of notes at the end of FEES 6 Annex 3 R (Financial Services Compensation Scheme - classes and sub-classes) is to deal with the practical difficulties of allocating income correctly between different sub-classes and in deciding whether income falls outside FEES 6 Annex 3 R altogether. Note 2 requires a firm to carry out the necessary apportionment on a reasonable and consistent basis. | |
4.2 | G | The following provides some guidance as to how firms may approach the allocation of annual eligible income. | |
4.3 | G | Where a firm cannot separate its income on the basis of activities, such as a fund manager which acts on a discretionary and non-discretionary basis for the same client and who only sends out a single invoice, the firm may apportion the income in another way. For instance, a firm may calculate that the business it undertook for a client was split 90% on a discretionary basis and 10% on a non-discretionary basis calculated by reference to funds under management. The firm may split the income accordingly. | |
4.4 | G | A firm may allocate trail or renewable commission on the basis of the type of firm it receives it from. For instance, if it comes from a life provider the firm may consider it as life and pensions mediation income. If it comes from a fund manager the firm may treat it as investment mediation income. | |
4.5 | G | If a firm receives annual eligible income from a platform based business it may report annual eligible income in line with the proportionate split of business that the firm otherwise undertakes. For instance, if a firm receives 70% of its other commission from life and pensions mediation business and 30% from investment mediation business, then it may divide what it receives in relation to the platform business on the same basis. | |
4.6 | G | Unless a firm chooses to include all relevant annual income, annual eligible income excludes business that is not compensatable under the compensation scheme. This can create difficulties because, for example, a person may move between being and not being an eligible claimant over time. The purpose of Note 3 in the section of notes at the end of FEES 6 Annex 3 R is to deal with that difficulty by fixing a date for deciding this. | |
Gross technical liabilities and mathematical reserves for non-directive friendly societies | |||
5.1 | G | The tariff base for a non-directive friendly society carrying out general insurance business is based in part on gross technical liabilities and the tariff base for a non-directive friendly society carrying out life insurance business is based in part on mathematical reserves. These concepts do not directly apply to non-directive friendly societies and so the tariff base calculation uses a corresponding concept. | |
5.2 | G | The figures for gross technical liabilities and mathematical reserves of a non-directive friendly society for the purpose of calculating its tariff base in sub-class B1 (General Insurance Provision) and C1 (Life and Pensions Provision) are based on a valuation. This valuation only has to be made every three years. FEES 6 does not require a non-directive friendly society to update that information every year. Instead the figures from a non-directive friendly society's valuation will be used on a rolling three year basis for the purposes of the levy calculations in FEES 6. The effect of this calculation is therefore to modify the normal basis on which information is supplied under FEES 6.5.13 R. |
- 01/04/2010