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FSA admits inadequate supervision

By James Blake

Updated on 26 March 2008

The Financial Services Authority admits to a string of errors in its supervision of Northern Rock before the run on the bank last year.

Its own internal review did not pull any punches. The Financial Services Authority admitted to an unacceptable string of errors in its supervision of Northern Rock before the run on the bank last September.

Too few supervisers, failure to meet Northern Rock's management, and, despite recognising the bank was taking risks, a failure to follow through with a risk assesssment programme.

In a statement Hector Sants, the FSA chief executive, admitted its regulation of the bank had not been carried out to an acceptable standard, and he promised improvements.

The report specifically identifies four key failings. They are -



  1. A lack of supervisory engagement with the Northern Rock in monitoring the bank's vulnerability to market conditions, given its business model
  2. Inadequate oversight of "the quality, intensity and rigour" of Northern Rock's supervision
  3. Inadequate specific resource directly supervising Northern Rock
  4. A failure by the FSA to make proper use of the relevant risk information relating to Northern Rock
The report also contains a series of recommendations to improve future supervision. They are - Today's report was commissioned by FSA chief executive Hector Sants in the wake of the collapse of the Northern Rock bank.

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