Is it legal? A Question of Culture - Address by Deputy Governor Ed Sibley to Eversheds Sutherland conference
14 November 2017
Press Release
- Tracker mortgage scandal is the latest in an unacceptably long list of cultural failings in financial services firms
- Restoration of trust in financial services is vital for the system to be effective in serving the economy and its customers sustainably over the long term
- Cultural change is as urgent as technology, business model and regulatory changes
Full
speech
Deputy
Governor, Prudential Regulation, Ed Sibley, this morning addressed an Eversheds
Sutherland conference on “Leadership and Culture Change in Financial Services”.
In a
speech titled “Is it legal? A Question of Culture”, he addressed the importance
of culture in a well-managed and well-regulated financial system, which serves
the needs of the economy and customers over the long term.
Deputy
Governor Sibley noted the tracker mortgage scandal as an example of an ‘is it legal?’ attitude, which still
pervades in too many institutions. He
said the Central Bank is under no illusion that “continued and concerted
pressure is required to ensure all affected customers receive redress and
compensation and banks comply with our findings.” He said he expects all the main banks will be
subject to Central Bank enforcement investigations.
Mr
Sibley noted that the Central Bank continues to enhance its approach to
behaviour and culture. He said:
“Work has been
undertaken in banks and insurance firms from a prudential perspective, and in
the consumer area we have developed a framework for the assessment of culture
in regulated entities. As has been well
documented, this work will be expedited across the retail banks over the coming
months, and be rolled out further after that.“
A
standardised culture across firms is not desirable, he said, but the Central
Bank expects firms to “critically evaluate their culture, considering what type
of culture they want to develop, how staff are incentivised to behave, and to
be held to account as to whether the culture they want is the culture they have
and how would they know if it is not”.
On the
importance of diversity at a leadership level in addressing behaviour and
culture risks, he noted the acute imbalance in gender and other aspects of
diversity in financial services firms, which needs to be addressed, and which will
be the subject of further Central Bank scrutiny.
He
concluded by telling attendees that:
“There are real
opportunities for leadership - to turn the dial, to drive change, to
differentiate positively, to show: that the mistrust is no longer valid, that
lessons have been learnt, that you have demonstrably, definitively and
permanently changed, and that the behaviours and cultures by and within your
firms and industries are in the long term interest of both your customers and
your shareholders.”
He
said that the opportunity for culture change is every bit as urgent as the
technology, business model and regulatory changes that are frequently focused
on in the financial sector.
Notes
· Deputy Governor Sibley also spoke at the Association
of Compliance Officers in Ireland annual conference on Friday 10 November.