FCA makes changes to Handbook regarding CFD offering restrictions

Maria Nikolova

The changes to the rules aim to reduce harm to retail consumers by ensuring that CFDs and restricted options are not sold with excessive risk features.

Following consultation in Consultation Paper (CP) 18/38, on June 27, 2019 the Board of the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) made changes to the Handbook concerning the offering of CFDs to retail customers.

The amendments related to the Consultation Paper released in December 2018. In that paper, the FCA proposed permanent rules to require firms to:

  • limit leverage to between 30:1 and 2:1 by collecting minimum margin as a percentage of the overall exposure that the CFD provides;
  • close out a customer’s position when their funds fall to 50% of the margin needed to maintain their open positions on their CFD account;
  • provide protections that guarantee a client cannot lose more than the total funds in their CFD account;
  • stop offering monetary and non-monetary inducements to encourage trading, and
  • provide a standardised risk warning, which requires firms to tell potential customers the percentage of their retail client accounts that make losses.

The legislative piece which results in the latest amendments to the FCA Handbook is called Conduct of Business (Contracts for Difference) Instrument 2019. It amends Glossary COBS 22 and adds a new section to the Handbook: COBS 22.5.

In summary, this instrument makes changes to the Handbook to reduce harm to retail consumers by ensuring that CFDs and restricted options are not sold with excessive risk features, while still allowing sales to retail consumers who understand the risks and are capable of bearing potential trading losses. Retail consumers are expected to save between £267 million and £449 million per year from these measures.

The proposed interventions are the same in substance as ESMA’s, although the FCA is also proposing to apply its rules to closely substitutable products (the measures for CFDs will thus be applied to CFD-like options).

The FCA Handbook will define CFD-like options in line with a proposed new glossary definition of ‘restriction options’, which is intended to catch CFD-like options. The glossary definition covers options that include additional product features, which ensure the value of the option changes in a linear manner with the value of the underlying asset, excluding costs, charges, and spreads (ie the difference between the bid-price and ask-price). The scope is not intended to capture traditional or ‘vanilla’ options.

The most commonly traded CFD-like options are so-called ‘turbo certificates’. These products are more widely offered in other EEA jurisdictions by large wholesale banks. While they are similar to the CFDs typically offered in the UK market, they differ in that they:

  • may qualify as transferable securities and are sold with a prospectus that complies with the Prospectus Directive
  • are commonly traded on a trading venue, and
  • typically limit client’s losses to the amount initially invested.

FCA’s market intelligence suggests that there is currently little demand from UK consumers for these products. Only two FCA-authorised firms offer access to turbo certificates in the UK and there was £289.5 million in annual trading volume in 2017, which is relatively small compared to retail CFD trading volumes in the UK. Client outcomes from trading these products are similar to CFDs. According to firm data, 67% of retail client accounts lost money trading ‘turbo certificates’ and the average outcome from trading was a loss of £2,620.

Other CFD variations, which UK CFD providers have recently started offering, include ‘knock outs’ and ‘delta one options’.

A restricted option defines is defined as an option:

  • that is in the money at the point of sale;
  • where the value is determined by one-to-one fluctuations in the value or price of the underlying asset; and
  • for which the value is not significantly affected by the time to expiry.

The definition of restricted speculative investments after the amendments includes:

  • (1) contracts for differences;
  • (2) spread bets; and
  • (3) rolling spot forex contracts (other than a future in limb (a) of the Glossary definition of rolling spot forex contract).; and
  • (4) restricted options.

Part 1 of Annex A (amendments to glossary of definitions) and Part 1 of Annex B (amendments to COBS) of this instrument come into force on 1 August 2019 and Part 2 of Annex A and Part 2 of Annex B of this instrument come into force on 1 September 2019.

Read this next

blockdag

BlockDAG’s Explosive Presale Hits $20.3M In April Swaying Investors From XRP’s Price Trends Upward, & Polygon’s NFT Market

Learn about BlockDAG’s impressive $20.3M presale results, XRP’s price increase prospects, and the booming NFT market on Polygon among the top 10 cryptocurrencies.

Retail FX

Financial Commission warns of Eplanet Brokers

The Financial Commission, a self-regulatory compliance specialist for the financial services industry, is ramping up its scrutiny of unregulated brokerage firms. Today, the independent association warned against a company called Eplanet Brokers.

Retail FX

Dubai crypto exchange steps into prop trading

Dubai-based cryptocurrency trading platform, CoinW Exchange, marked its sixth anniversary by announcing a rebranding initiative and launching a proprietary trading product.

Fintech

Bitcoin payments app Strike launches in Europe

Bitcoin blockchain-based payments app Strike launched in Europe on Wednesday, allowing users in the region to buy, sell, and withdraw bitcoin (BTC).

Chainwire

Bandit Network’s Points SDK and Brave Ads Power Astar zkEVM’s Quest Platform “Yoki Origins”

“Yoki Origins,” supported by Bandit Network and Brave Ads, introduces a gamified and rewarding experience for Astar zkEVM users, marking a significant milestone in Web3 adoption.

Digital Assets

Crypto ETFs to debut in Hong Kong next week

Hong Kong has authorized six cryptocurrency-based spot ETFs set to launch on April 30, according to Bloomberg.

blockdag

BlockDAG Among The Best New Crypto To Invest In Post 8 Billion Coins Sales; More On Bitcoin Cash Futures’ Launch & Solana Positive Predictions

Explore Solana’s ATH predictions to see whether it can rise after a $17B dip? BlockDAG sells 8 billion coins in presale as Bitcoin Cash Futures launch.

Fundamental Analysis, Market News, Tech and Fundamental

Global FX Market Summary:USD, FED, German IFO ,Gold April 24 ,2024

Mixed US economic data and Fed rate hike uncertainty are causing volatility in the EUR/USD pair, while the Eurozone and gold prices add another layer of complexity.

Market News, Tech and Fundamental, Technical Analysis

EURCHF Technical Analysis Report 24 April, 2024

EURCHF currency pair can be expected to rise further toward the next major resistance level 0.9840, which stopped the pervious waves C and B, as can be seen below.

<