---
title: "LEXLAW Raises Concerns with the FCA on its Implementation and Oversight of the IRHP Review & Redress Scheme"
url: https://lexlaw.co.uk/solicitors-london/lexlaw-raises-concerns-with-the-fca-on-its-implementation-and-oversight-of-the-irhp-review-redress-scheme/
date: 2019-10-04
modified: 2026-06-02
author: "Jaron Dosanjh"
description: "In June 2019, the FCA appointed Mr John Swift QC as an independent reviewer for the lessons learned review commissioned by the FCA's board. The review of the redress scheme..."
categories:
  - "Banking Dispute Resolution Service"
  - "Banking Law"
  - "Barclays"
  - "Derivatives"
  - "FCA"
  - "Financial Mis-selling"
  - "IRHP Reviews"
  - "Lloyds"
  - "Media"
  - "News"
  - "RBS"
tags:
  - "Banks"
  - "Derivatives"
  - "Derivatives Mis-selling"
  - "FCA"
  - "FCA Review"
  - "IRHP reviews"
  - "Media"
  - "Mis-selling"
  - "News"
image: https://lexlaw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/Financial-Conduct-Authority-FCA-logo-lexlaw-bank-litigation-mis-selling-solicitors-london.jpg
word_count: 3818
---

# LEXLAW Raises Concerns with the FCA on its Implementation and Oversight of the IRHP Review & Redress Scheme

*In June 2019, the [FCA](https://www.fca.org.uk/) appointed [Mr John Swift QC](https://www.monckton.com/barrister/john-swift-qc/) as an i[ndependent reviewer for the lessons learned review commissioned by the FCA's board](https://www.monckton.com/fca-appoints-john-swift-qc-to-review-the-redress-scheme-for-interest-rate-hedging-products/). The review of the redress scheme for [Interest Rate Hedging Products](https://lexlaw.co.uk/solicitors-london/category/irhp-reviews/page/3/) (IRHP) is expected to last 15 months, following which the FCA intend to publish in full the report by the independent reviewer.*

*LEXLAW have [previously written to the FCA in 2013](https://lexlaw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/101013-Letter-LEXLAW-to-FCA-FAILINGS-IN-AND-ABUSES-OF-THE-IRHP-REVIEW.pdf), on behalf of our SME clients who have been mis-sold IRHPs by a wide range of banks (including [Barclays Bank](https://www.barclays.co.uk/), [HSBC](https://www.hsbc.co.uk/), [Lloyds Bank](https://www.lloydsbank.com/), the [Royal Bank of Scotland](https://personal.rbs.co.uk/personal.html) and [Clydesdale ](https://secure.cbonline.co.uk/)and Yorkshire Banks ) to share their grave concerns about the review, which views we share. *

[*LEXLAW have now written to Mr John Swift QC,*](https://lexlaw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/260919-Letter-to-John-Swift-QC.pdf)* putting the FCA on (repeated) notice of its continuing failings in relation to the Financial Conduct Authority's (FCA) implementation and oversight of the Interest Rate Hedging Products (IRHP) review and redress scheme. *

A copy of our letter to the FCA is below.

![Financial Conduct Authority FCA UK Logo - LEXLAW Litigation Law Firm in London](https://lexlaw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/FCA-Financial-Conduct-Authority-UK-Logo-LEXLAW-Litigation-Solicitors-London.jpg)[Click here to download our letter to the FCA](https://lexlaw.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/260919-Letter-to-John-Swift-QC.pdf)

For the attention of: Mr John Swift QC
FCA Head Office
12 Endeavour Square
London, E20 1JN

Dear Sirs

## REPEATED NOTICE OF FAILINGS IN THE FCA’S IMPLEMENTATION AND OVERSIGHT OF THE INTEREST RATE HEDGING PRODUCTS (IRHP) REVIEW AND REDRESS SCHEME

We write further to the investigation into the FCA’s implementation and
oversight of the Interest Rate Hedging Products (IRHP) Review and Redress
Scheme (“the Review”) on behalf of our SME clients, who have been mis-sold
interest rate hedging products by a wide range of banks (including Barclays
Bank, HSBC, Lloyds Bank, the Royal Bank of Scotland and Clydesdale and
Yorkshire Banks).

Our clients expressed grave concerns to us about the Review prior to its implementation; however, the FCA’s chief executive (Martin Wheatley) disregarded those concerns. Given the prescience of those concerns, we ask the FCA to take urgent action in order to ensure that the failings in the FCA’s implementation and oversight of the Review are not repeated.

## Conflict of
Interests in the Review

On 29 June 2012, the FCA (formerly the Financial Services Authority)
announced that it had found serious failings in the sale of interest rate
hedging products by a wide range of banks (including Barclays Bank, HSBC,
Lloyds Bank and RBS), including *“the
inappropriate sale of complex varieties of IRHPs [Interest Rate Hedging
Products] to ‘non-sophisticated’ customers and a range of poor sales practices”*.

According to the FCA, the types of poor sales practices committed by
these banks included:

- Poor disclosure of exit costs;- Failure to ascertain the customers’
understanding of the risks;- Giving advice in supposedly non-advisory
sales;- Selling interest rate hedging products where
the amount and/or duration exceeded that of the underlying loans; and- Allowing internal incentives and rewards to
encourage these poor sales practices.

The FCA was clearly and correctly of the view that the banks’ mis-selling
of interest rate hedging products needed to be investigated, with redress to be
offered to wronged customers who had suffered losses due to the mis-selling
that had taken place. 

It is unfortunate that the FCA decided that the best party to investigate
the banks’ mis-selling of interest rate hedging products and determine the
extent of the banks’ regulatory misconduct was the banks themselves.

The banks were
obliged to present their findings under the Review to an “independent reviewer”
to supposedly ensure that an impartial, independent and thorough review had
been conducted of each customer’s case. 

However, the
“independent reviewer” was, in fact, appointed by the respective banks; for
example, HSBC Bank appointed Deloitte LLP to *“review our assessments of (i) whether customers meet the
sophistication customer criteria, (ii) whether redress is owed and (iii) if the
redress that is proposed is fair and reasonable”*. 

While we
understand that the FCA was able to reject a bank’s choice of “independent
reviewer”, we are not aware of any instances in which the FCA actually did so.
Furthermore, the fact that the banks were able to appoint their own
“independent reviewers” at all clearly demonstrated that these reviewers were
not independent and therefore did not provide the proper scrutiny and oversight
required for effective conduct of this Review. This is particularly the case
where the appointed reviewer is a large financial institution who inevitability
has an ongoing relationship with the bank in question that they will be anxious
to preserve.

The banks were
reviewing their own mis-selling practices, deciding whether each customer
should be included in the Review, determining whether to offer any redress and (if
so) finally determining the amount and form of any redress. 

After this
process, the banks then had their decisions scrutinised by “independent
reviewers” whom they themselves appointed. This was a fundamentally flawed
basis for the conduct of the Review and failed to achieve the impartial,
independent and thorough investigation of the banks’ mis-selling of interest
rate hedging products for which purpose the Review presumably existed.

The dangers
inherent to the conflict of interests in the Review between the banks and their
“independent reviewers” were highlighted dramatically by [credible
reports that KPMG (an “independent reviewer” for RBS) were pressured and *“browbeaten”* by RBS into minimising
compensation paid for mis-sold IRHPs to RBS’s customers](https://lexlaw.co.uk/solicitors-london/fca-irhp-review-kpmg-whistleblower-rbs-interest-rate-swap-compensation/).

There are obvious
questions as to why the wrongdoer banks were allowed by the regulator to review
their own wrongdoing. We invite you to explain why on this occasion you decided
that the wrongdoer could review its own wrongdoing and why you chose not to
appoint your own independent reviewers (as you have done in the past) in order
to ensure that a truly independent review took place.

For the reasons
set out above, it is misleading to describe the Review as an “independent
review” or an “FCA review”. We are concerned that the use of these and similar
descriptions gave an inaccurate impression to customers and members of the
public as to the terms and conduct of the Review.

We quote one such
example from DLA Piper UK LLP, acting for RBS and NatWest against our client
whom we shall call Partnership G:

*“The Bank considers the FCA review to be analogous to the methods
of ADR listed in paragraph 8.2 of the Practice Direction, and we note that it
is an independent review conducted at no cost to your client”* (added emphasis).

However, the
Review was not being conducted by the FCA or by an independent party appointed
by the FCA. The Review could not and should not have been described as an “independent
review” and the FCA must take steps to ensure banks desist from such inaccurate
and misleading descriptions in future.

Furthermore, the
FCA’s approach to the Review enabled several questionable practices by the
banks in the conduct of the Review, including:

- Unreasonable exclusion of customers from the
Review;- Lengthy and unreasonable delays in conduct of
the Review; and- Scheme manipulation (i.e. unfair and
one-sided conduct of the Review).

## A. Unreasonable Exclusion of Customers from
the Review by the Banks

### Unreasonable Exclusion by Improper Application of the Sophistication Assessment

Customers were
only able to have their cases considered under the Review if they were assessed
by the banks as being “non-sophisticated” customers. It is therefore concerning
that allowing the banks to decide which customers were included in the Review
allowed the banks to unfairly exclude some of their customers from the Review. We
note from the FCA that over 34% of IRHP sales were excluded from the Review on
the basis that those customers were allegedly “sophisticated”. However, we know
from our own experience that this included customers who were not sophisticated
in any normal sense of the word.

It is also
concerning that any customer who disagreed with their bank’s decision to
classify them as “sophisticated” had to appeal to their bank rather than to an
independent body capable of making a fair and independent decision.

By way of a first
example, we wrote to Lloyds regarding their erroneous assessment of our client,
Company C, as “sophisticated”. However, despite the arguments advanced on
behalf of Company C, Lloyds were able to continue improperly excluding our
client from the Review, and our client had no effective recourse to obtain
regulatory redress.

By way of a further
example, we also refer to the experience under the Review of another of our SME
clients, Family K, who agreed a suspension of payments under their interest
rate hedging product with Lloyds in February 2013. However, Lloyds stated that
it could terminate that suspension in the event that Family K was notified that
*“you are not within scope of the Review
because you are a “sophisticated customer”*. Lloyds subsequently stated in
May 2013 that it had classified Family K as an intermediate/professional
customer, as a result of which our client was required to resume making
payments that it could not afford. Despite repeated requests by us, Lloyds
declined to provide any explanation of this incorrect classification, which
only served to wrongly exclude Family K from the Review.

As the case fell
just inside the limitation period, Family K instructed us to investigate and
commence legal proceedings, following which [Lloyds
were forced to pay Family K full compensation (in excess of £1 million) for the
mis-sold product](https://lexlaw.co.uk/solicitors-london/swap-misselling-case-settlement-revealed-irhp-the-times-lloyds-missold-derivatives/). It is of grave concern that, had circumstances been slightly
different, Family K might have been unjustly excluded from any effective
redress by their apparently arbitrary exclusion from the scope of the Review.

There does not
appear to have been any objective basis for determining whether a particular
customer is “sophisticated”, and this unfair application of the sophistication
assessment was symptomatic of a review process that allowed the wrongdoer banks
to determine their own regulatory misconduct.

### Unreasonable Exclusion by Improper Sophistication Assessment Criteria

In addition to the
significant issues concerning the application of the sophistication assessment
by the banks (as explained above), there were also fundamental flaws in the
criteria contained within the sophistication assessment itself.

We refer with
great concern to the experience of our client, Company G, who was classified by
Yorkshire Bank as a retail client before being sold an interest rate swap on
that basis in May 2008. Company G was classified as a retail client rather than
a professional client because Yorkshire Bank correctly recognised that our
client did not have any experience or knowledge of interest rate hedging
products and was therefore non-sophisticated.

However, Yorkshire
Bank subsequently attempted to exclude Company G from the Review by including the
turnover and net assets of Company G’s parent company and thereby
mis-classifying Company G as a “sophisticated” customer (under the revised
sophistication assessment criteria).

Retail clients
such as Company G are entitled to the “most regulatory protection” and it is
therefore unacceptable that the FCA allowed wrongdoer banks to deny their SME
customers any regulatory protection even when those customers were previously
considered (at the time of sale) to be non-sophisticated.

In addition, according
to [the
FCA’s own flowchart about the Review](http://www.fca.org.uk/your-fca/documents/fsa-irs-flowchart), there was a stage in the sophistication
assessment where a bank could decide that a customer had, at the time of sale, *“the necessary experience and knowledge to understand
the service to be provided and the type of product or transaction envisaged,
including its complexity and the risks involved”*, thereby defining that
customer as “sophisticated” and so excluding that customer from the Review.

However, there were
no stated parameters as to how a bank should decide whether a customer actually
had that level of experience and knowledge in relation to interest rate hedging
products at the time of sale. Therefore, given the astonishing level of
discretion allowed to the banks in making this decision, it was possible for a
bank to arbitrarily exclude a customer from the Review by claiming that the
customer had the requisite level of knowledge and experience.

Furthermore, we
also note that customers were defined as sophisticated (and therefore excluded
from the Review) if they had existing IRHPs with a total value of more than £10
million. However, this criterion was flawed and unjust: what would happen if a
customer who had a loan of £3 million with a bank was sold £11 million in IRHPs
(which that customer could not afford to break) by that bank?

Under the
criterion in the Review, that customer would have been assessed as
“sophisticated” and excluded from the Review, even though that customer would
have been the victim of substantial over-hedging by its bank.

Given that the FCA noted back in June 2012 that over-hedging had been a recurrent problem with the banks’ mis-selling of IRHPs, this was a disturbing and illogical omission by the FCA and only served to deny redress to many customers who suffered most from the banks’ mis-selling of IRHPs precisely because of the high and excessive value of the IRHPs in question.

## B. Lengthy and Unreasonable Delays in the Conduct
of the Review by the Banks

On 31 January
2013, the FCA announced that *“We expect
the banks to aim to complete their review within six months, although the
priority must be delivering fair and reasonable outcomes for customers. We
accept that for banks with larger review populations this may take up to 12
months”*.

As a result of the
FCA’s announcement, customers were led to believe that the Review would be
completed by 31 January 2014 at the latest. However, according to [the
FCA’s own data](https://www.fca.org.uk/publication/data/aggregate-progress-final.pdf), the Review was not completed until 30 September 2016 (i.e. over two
and a half years after that announcement).

The lengthy nature
of this delay in the Review was inevitable once the FCA surrendered control of
the Review to the banks, who had no incentive to complete the Review within a
reasonable timescale (particularly as the banks were still able to collect
payments from the vast majority of their customers under the mis-sold IRHPs).

By contrast, in
response to complaints from customers about the mis-selling of payment
protection insurance (“PPI”), the Financial Services Authority created a scheme
in August 2010 requiring banks to deal with PPI mis-selling complaints within eight
weeks. By contrast, the FCA’s approach to the timescale of the Review was dithering
and indecisive, and led to distress and uncertainty among customers.

This delay must be
considered against the backdrop of the prejudice suffered by customers, not least
of which was the ongoing loss of the right to pursue legal remedies which for
many customers became time-barred. This is a matter of grave concern which we
expand on below.

### The FCA’s Irresponsible Attitude towards Limitation

[The
FCA stated in its press release dated 4 September 2013](https://www.fca.org.uk/news/press-releases/fca-publishes-four-month-update-banks%E2%80%99-reviews-sales-interest-rate-hedging) that the *“IRHP review can deliver fair and reasonable redress to customers
without them needing to hire lawyers”*, which was merely the latest of a
series of claims by the FCA that customers did not need to obtain legal advice
in relation to the mis-selling of IRHPs. The FCA had always been aware that the
majority of these products were sold to SMEs in the period between 2005 and
2008.

These claims were
dangerous because many of those cases were coming up to their “limitation
date”, which is usually six years after the date when the IRHP was presented or
sold. Once that limitation date has passed, it was too late for many thousands
of customers to bring legal proceedings against their banks, and customers
needlessly lost an avenue of potential redress in reliance on the FCA’s advice.
This was a failure of the FCA’s regulatory responsibility towards consumers.

By way of
illustration of the dangers of expiring limitation periods, consider the experience
of Company C, which was sold two Category A interest rate hedging products by
Lloyds on 24 July 2007, and was sold another Category A product on 1 December
2008 (with Category A being the category designated by the FCA for the most
complex interest rate hedging products). On 27 September 2012, Lloyds wrote to Company
C to confirm that they had been assessed as a “non-sophisticated” customer and
were included in the pilot Review for the sales of all three products.

Company C was
asked to provide additional information to Lloyds in order to *“assist us with the Review of your cases”*,
and provided this information in October 2012. Company C then met with Lloyds
under the Review on 25 October 2012, and then heard nothing further from Lloyds
about the Review, even though customers who had been sold Category A products
should have proceeded straight into the redress phase.

Following the
FCA’s revision of the sophistication assessment criteria on 31 January 2013,
Lloyds decided to erroneously re-assess Company C as instead being a “sophisticated”
customer. However, for reasons that Lloyds failed to explain, Lloyds failed to communicate
this decision to Company C until 23 August 2013, even though the applicable
limitation date was on 24 July 2013 (being six years after the first sale).

Fortunately,
Company C sought legal advice in time and protected its limitation period by
issuing a protective claim form in July 2013, and subsequently obtained [redress](https://lexlaw.co.uk/solicitors-london/statement-by-coin-group-re-litigation-settlement-with-lloyds-bank-plc-swaps-irhp/) through litigation. However, had Company
C followed the FCA’s and Lloyds’ advice to rely solely on the Review, it would
have been denied legal and regulatory redress.

In the circumstances, it is dismaying that the FCA advised customers not to seek legal advice, especially given the potential expiration of limitation periods and the enormous delays that plagued the Review. Any observer of this conduct would have to question whether the banks’ legal advisers and Review team were using delay precisely to exclude their customers’ rights to seek redress through the courts.

## C. Scheme Manipulation – Unfair and One-Sided
Conduct of the Review by the Banks

It is also
surprising that the FCA would advise customers not to seek legal advice in
relation to the Review given that the banks (who are already more legally and
financially sophisticated than their customers) were instructing City law firms
to act on their behalf in the Review. For example, Barclays instructed Eversheds
LLP *“to gather all relevant information
from customers and Barclays staff regarding the sale of IRHPs and to present
that factual information to Barclays”*. We note it is part of the FCA’s
regulatory duties to seek to protect customers of financial services
institutions.

### Unequal Access to Information in the Review

The role of Eversheds
LLP in Barclays’ conduct of the Review also highlights another fundamental problem
with the Review, namely that customers were expected to provide information to
the banks, and the banks were then able to use that information to decide what
level of redress (if any) to offer.

However, there was
no reciprocal obligation for the banks to provide information to their
customers about their incentives for selling IRHPs or their reasons for believing
that IRHPs were suitable and/or appropriate for customers. It was therefore
difficult for customers to judge whether an offer of redress (once eventually
received) was appropriate when they did not have the full information about the
banks’ mis-selling.

Furthermore, this
unequal access to information made it simple for the banks to provide low
offers of redress in the safe knowledge that customers were unable to make an
impartial assessment of the redress offered, especially if they had followed
the FCA’s advice and not sought independent legal advice. Given that the Review
needed to be conducted fairly, [it
is impossible to understand why the FCA did not insist that information be
fairly shared between the banks and their customers](https://lexlaw.co.uk/solicitors-london/fca-fsa-review-interest-rate-hedging-irhp-sales-written-statements-fact-find-meetings-swaps/).

It is also
concerning that the banks gathered information from customers in an unfair
manner designed to limit any attribution of liability to the banks. For example,
HSBC gathered information from its customers using a standard Interest Rate
Hedging Review Customer Response Form, in which one of the questions customers
had to answer was: *“Please provide your
recollection of what you were looking to achieve as a business and how you and
the bank reached a conclusion that interest rate protection was required and/or
desirable”* (added emphasis).

This was a “leading question”, because the question how the customer and the bank reached a conclusion presupposes that they did in fact reach such a conclusion. The purpose of the Review was to analyse whether the banks mis-sold IRHPs to customers who did not require or desire those products. However, that question by HSBC took it for granted that (a) interest rate protection was required and/or desirable; and (b) the customer and the bank had reached that conclusion together. These were clearly inappropriate assumptions for the banks to make, which prejudged the outcome of the Review process, and it is dismaying that the FCA allowed banks to put such dangerously leading questions to customers under the Review.

## The Role of the FCA

[The
FCA states on its customer-facing website](http://www.fca.org.uk/about/the-fca) that the FCA has three purposes:

- Protecting consumers – *“we secure an appropriate degree of protection for consumers”*;- Protecting financial markets – *“we protect and enhance the integrity of the
UK  financial system”*; and- Promoting competition – *“we promote effective competition in the interests of consumers”*.

However, in
relation to the mis-selling of IRHPs, the FCA allowed the wrongdoer banks to
review their own mis-selling. Consequently, the banks were able to unfairly exclude
customers from the Review, delay the conduct of the Review, withhold
information from their customers, and decide the extent to which they should
provide redress to customers.

The mis-selling of
IRHPs occurred because the banks were incapable of adhering to the required
legal and regulatory requirements without external oversight. It is therefore
extremely disappointing that the FCA refused to heed the lessons of the past
and allowed the banks to regulate themselves, thereby acting as a banking trade
union and abdicating its responsibilities as a regulator.

We invite you to
consider urgently the above representations made on behalf of our clients and
other SME customers who have been similarly affected and to re-evaluate both
the Review and your role within it.

We look forward to
hearing from you.

Yours
faithfully

LEXLAW

## LEXLAW: City of London Specialist IRHP Litigation Lawyers

*We are the [leading law firm](https://lexlaw.co.uk/) with the skill and experience to act for businesses seeking to resolve wrongdoing by bank recovery departments often titled ‘business support’, ‘restructuring’ or ‘turnaround’ departments. We are aware that some major banks have regularly engineered defaults and created and profited from distress, often caused by other departments of the bank including via wrongdoing such as LIBOR manipulation, deliberate concealment of credit utilisation and mis-sold derivatives. *

*In recent years, we have litigated and settled more banking disputes for UK SMEs in the High Court in England & Wales than all other law firms in the UK combined. We provide strong legal representation and use our banking and financial services litigation expertise to ensure we obtain the best possible results which means optimal compensation for our clients.*

*Our GRG litigation lawyers pursue every avenue to ensure compensation for ex-GRG customers including the GRG complaints process, claims to the FOS and litigation in the courts.*

*Our lawyers are regularly interviewed by journalists and broadcasters and featured in international and UK print and television media commenting on bank litigation and insolvency (see our [Media Appearances](https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDAvge6fi_2850cF88dH-2w) section). *