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HM Treasury

P-002660 · Statement · Decision date: 24 June 2024 · View HM Treasury scorecard
Complaint (AI summary)
Miss R complained HM Treasury failed to act on concerns about a funeral plan provider in 2017, leading to her losing money when the provider entered administration.
Outcome (AI summary)
The ombudsman found no indication that HM Treasury acted wrongly, concluding it responded appropriately to the concerns raised about the funeral plan provider.

Full decision details

The Complaint

3. Miss R complains that HM Treasury did not act as it should have on concerns put to it in 2017 about the Provider. She says HM Treasury was told the Provider was in breach of regulations that exempted funeral plan firms from Financial Conduct Authority (the FCA) regulation if they followed certain rules around handling money, but did not act or direct the FCA to act either despite having the power to make the FCA investigate. She also complains that HM Treasury delayed progressing new legislation.

4. In 2022 the Provider went into administration, and its 46,000 customers stand to lose most of the money they had paid for their funerals. Miss R says that she lost her funeral plan and the money she paid for that.

5. Miss R wants HM Treasury to compensate her (and the 46,000 others) for the consequences of its failure to act appropriately in 2017 equal to the loss in value of their funeral plans.

Background

6. In 2017 and 2018 HM Treasury met another funeral plan provider and a consumer group to discuss a report about the pre-paid funeral plan sector. The other funeral plan provider and the consumer group also raised concerns about the Provider.

7. In March 2022 the Provider went into administration. People such as Miss R who had paid for funeral plans with the Provider lost their money.

8. In July 2022 Parliament passed new that laws gave funeral providers’ customers more protection than before.

Findings

Complaint about HM Treasury’s action in response to concerns raised about the Provider

10. Before we decide if we should conduct a detailed investigation of a complaint, we look at whether there are signs the organisation, in this case HM Treasury, has got something wrong.  We do this by comparing what should have happened with what did happen.  We have done that and not found indications that anything has gone wrong.

11. The FCA is an independent regulator, accountable to HM Treasury and Parliament. We cannot investigate FCA’s actions but can consider the administrative actions of HM Treasury in its oversight role.

12. Miss R complained that HM Treasury did not act as it should have on concerns put to it in 2017 and 2018 about the Provider.

13. Under the Financial Services Act 2012 the FCA must carry out an investigation where it appears to it that ‘events have occurred in relation to a regulated person (or collective investment scheme) which indicated a significant failure to secure appropriate consumer protection…and those events might not have occurred, or the failure or adverse effect might have been reduced, but for a serious failure in the system…for the regulation of authorised persons and regulated activities’.

14. If HM Treasury considered that these conditions were met, it could require the FCA to investigate.

15. Until 2022 a funeral plan provider was exempt from the requirement to be authorised by the FCA if it undertook that sums paid by the customer under the contract would be held on trust for the purpose of providing the funeral, and that the trust met other requirements. In relation to this complaint, it meant the Provider was exempt from regulation by the FCA.

16. In April 2023 HM Treasury replied to a complaint from Miss R. It said it had no investigatory or enforcement powers of its own. It said it had acted on general concerns about the funeral plan market in the report and ‘responded quickly to bring the sector into regulation. However, the process…typically takes a number of years.’

17. HM Treasury also said in 2017 and 2018 HM Treasury staff had said concerns about the Provider should be reported to the FCA.

18. We note FCA’s role is to ensure financial markets, and the businesses within them, work well. FCA encourages consumers to report poor business conduct. This helps FCA understand risks to consumers, including from specific firms, and it helps inform its approach to regulation.

19. We have seen evidence to indicate HM Treasury passed on concerns it received about the Provider to FCA in 2017/18.  We have also seen that FCA considered those matters.

20. HM Treasury told us the 2017 report had highlighted concerns about lack of clarity for consumers in relation to funeral plans; high pressure sales tactics; poor transparency around customer payments; and lack of access to the Financial Services Compensation Scheme or Financial Ombudsman Service.

21. The publication of that report led to the meeting at which HM Treasury told the consumer group to refer its concerns to the FCA. As far as directing the FCA to carry out an inquiry, HM Treasury said none of the 2017 and 2018 concerns related to a regulated activity as the Provider was exempt from FCA regulation.

22. We have seen that the FCA also replied to complaints from consumers about the Provider. In these responses the FCA confirmed that the Provider was exempt from FCA regulation, and set out why that meant that its activities were outside the FCA’s jurisdiction.

23. HM Treasury also told us about indirect oversight that funeral plan providers would have been subject to by FCA in 2017/18.

24. HM Treasury told us that even funeral plan providers backed by a trust, which were exempt from FCA regulation, were subject to indirect FCA oversight and other safeguards. This included that the trust fund manager had to be authorised by the FCA and so subject to rules and supervision; trustees had a duty to act in the beneficiaries' best interests; and actuaries (professionals who assess and manage financial risk) assessed the value of assets and liabilities.

25. HM Treasury also told us about 95% of providers were self-regulated by the Funeral Planning Authority (FPA) voluntary code. The code included that providers ensure ‘funds are protected by being held in trust, are regularly audited, regularly reviewed by an actuary and are only invested by independent fund managers authorised’. The Provider had become a registered member of the FPA in July 2019, which suggested that the FPA considered it met the requirements of the code.

26. Our Principles of Good Administration include ‘Getting it right’, which in turn includes that public bodies must comply with the law, and act according to their statutory powers and duties and any other rules governing the service they provide.

27. We are satisfied that HM Treasury did not have the legal power to order FCA to investigate the Provider. This is because the Provider was exempt from regulation under the legal framework in place at the time. We consider HM Treasury acted appropriately by referring the concerns about the Provider to FCA. So, we see no indications of failings in how HM Treasury acted.

Complaint about progression of legislation

28. Miss R complained HM Treasury delayed progressing new legislation and about how it managed that period.

29. HM Treasury told us the financial services sector was always evolving, and government may assess whether new or existing activities need to be regulated. After the 2017/18 meetings, HM Treasury decided to bring all funeral plan providers into regulation.

30. To do this, HM Treasury considered responses and evidence collated through a policy making process. This included: • a July 2018 – Call for Evidence ‘to ensure that the government understands the market and to gather further evidence’  that included meetings with providers • a June 2019 – Consultation on policy proposals and draft impact assessment on the proposed regulatory framework, to ensure ‘regulation is necessary, proportionate, and effective’ • a March 2020 – Consultation response and updated impact assessment – a summary of the feedback the government received and whether/how it was amending its approach.

31. HM Treasury said it had to include a transition period, to allow the FCA to design, consult on, and implement a new regulatory framework. That would allow funeral plan providers to apply for authorisation and for firms who chose not to apply for FCA authorisation, or were unsuccessful in their application, to transfer their plans.

32. HM Treasury’s consultation outlined the incentives for other providers to take on contracts that needed to be transferred: to increase market share and to protect the reputation of their industry. HM Treasury acknowledged that bringing a previously unregulated sector into regulation created a possibility some providers were not able to meet the threshold for authorisation.

33. From January 2021 Parliament considered HM Treasury’s proposed legislation, and from March 2021 the FCA shared its own plans and consulted on how it planned to regulate. In July 2021 the FCA published its statement on ‘what the final rules for the sector will look like’, and then allowed firms to apply for authorisation. In July 2022 the legislation came fully into effect. HM Treasury said the process had been delayed by COVID-19 and other pressures on parliamentary time.

34. As we have set out, HM Treasury arranged and had to consider responses to consultations. ‘Getting it Right’ says public bodies should plan carefully when introducing new policies and procedures; and decision making should take account of all relevant considerations.

35. We have seen HM Treasury acknowledged that the transition period was necessary but had the potential for consumer harm if the period was too long. Its actions set out above seem reasonable and to have progressed in a timely way given the steps needed while FCA communications included efforts to minimise risks.

36. We see no indication of failings in how HM Treasury handled the process. It took steps to progress the new legislation when it identified the need for it.

37. We realise Miss R will be disappointed and frustrated by our decision, and that this outcome leaves her without the money she paid towards a funeral plan. We hope this statement clearly explains why we have decided HM Treasury acted in line with the relevant guidelines and did not do anything wrong.

Our Decision

1. We have carefully considered Miss R’s complaint about HM Treasury. We have seen no indication that HM Treasury got things wrong. We think HM Treasury acted appropriately on the concerns put to it about the funeral plan provider (the Provider) Miss R had a funeral plan with.

2. We realise the circumstances in the complaint were upsetting for Miss R as she had invested and lost a significant sum with the Provider. We appreciate this outcome will be disappointing and frustrating. We are sorry for that.

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