The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA)
has found 7.4 million people unsuccessfully attempted to contact
one or more of their financial services providers in the 12
months before May 2022, with the most vulnerable in society most
likely to struggle with this.
The figure comes from the FCA’s latest
Financial Lives survey with over 19,000
respondents.
Less than half of UK adults, or 21.9
million people, had confidence in the UK financial services
industry and just 36% agreed that most financial firms are honest
and transparent in the way they treat them. Although a more
positive picture emerged when people were asked to rate their own
provider rather than the sector in
general.
The regulator’s findings come only
days away from the introduction of the Consumer Duty. The Duty
will require firms to act to deliver good outcomes for consumers
and, in turn, help to improve trust and confidence in the
financial services sector.
Under the Duty, firms will have
to:
-
Provide helpful and responsive
customer service – for example, it should be as easy to
complain about or switch and cancel products or services as it
was to buy them.
-
Equip their customers to make good
decisions through communications people can understand,
provided at the right time.
-
Provide products and services that
meet consumers’ needs and work as
expected.
-
Explain and justify their pricing
decisions. This includes being able to demonstrate that rates
offer fair value.
Sheldon Mills, Executive Director,
Consumers and Competition said:
“Times like this show why it’s
important people get the support they need as more people are
likely turning to their financial services providers for
help.
“Our Consumer Duty will guide our
ongoing work to improve the way firms provide customer support -
getting through to your provider is the starting point for
receiving help, so we will be working with them to improve in
this area.”
FCA action since the start of the
cost-of-living squeeze has already led to an increase in the
amount of engagement lenders are having with their customers.
Following conversations with firms and new guidance set by the
FCA, lenders supported over 2 million mortgage customers to
manage their finances in the past year, including through
budgeting tools, access to debt advice, and tailored mortgage
forbearance.
While there have been positive steps
taken, there is still work to do - 4.9 million people who used
firm communications to help them make a decision in the 12 months
before May 2022 found it did not help at
all.
The FCA’s survey also found that an
increasing number of people are choosing to use digital banking,
payments and other online services, with almost nine in ten
adults (88% or 42.9 million) banking online or using a mobile app
in 2022, up from 77% in 2017.
While there is an increasing number of
people regularly using digital services, the FCA recognises that
many people are still heavy users of cash (6% or 3.1 million) and
reliant on face-to-face services. Through the Financial Services
and Markets Act, the FCA will take on powers on access to cash
and will expect firms to ensure that they meet all their
customers' needs.
Notes to
Editors
-
The latest Financial Lives 2022
survey results
are available on request from the press office.
-
The Consumer Duty will be coming into force on 31
July
-
The Consumer Duty will require firms
to act in good faith towards retail customers, avoid
foreseeable harm, and enable and support retail customers to
pursue their financial objectives.
-
The number of people struggling to meet bills and credit repayments has risen by
3.1m since May 2022 (10.9m, compared to 7.8m in May
2022). The number of
adults who missed bills or loan payments in at least three of
the last six months has also gone up by 1.4 million, from 4.2
million to 5.6 million over the same
period.
-
Adults with one or more
characteristics of vulnerability were more likely to report
that customer support services did not help them at all to
achieve what they wanted to do. For example, 20% of those with
low financial resilience and 20% of those with low capability
reported that provider communications did not help at all,
compared with 12% of those with no characteristics of
vulnerability.
-
In May 2022, 11% of adults expressed
high trust in mortgage lenders, yet 54% of adults with a
mortgage had high trust in their own mortgage
provider.
-
Cash remains a vital payment method
for some. In May 2022, 3.1 million adults (6%) paid for
everything or most things in cash in the previous 12
months.