Business

‘Santander UK probed over flawed advice’

‘Santander UK probed over flawed advice’

February 14, 2013 | 12:35 AM
A customer uses an automated teller machine outside a Banco Santander bank branch in London.

A customer uses an automated teller machine outside a Banco Santander bank branch in London. Santander’s British arm is under investigation for possible investment advice failures and could face a fine or licence changes that prevent it from offering such services in future, four industry sources said. Britain’s Financial Services Authority (FSA) said yesterday it had referred a major high street bank to its enforcement division, the latest clamp-down on an industry tarnished by mis-selling and interest rate-rigging scandals. UK banks are already facing bills totalling billions of pounds from a series of misdemeanours, including mis-selling payment protection insurance (PPI), misleading customers about interest rate hedging products and a global interest rate rigging scam. The FSA declined to name the lender and Santander UK declined to comment on whether it was being investigated. The financial regulator said the probe, which followed spot checks during a review of the quality of advice available at six major banks and building societies, would only have been ordered if the company in question had a history of poor advice.

February 14, 2013 | 12:35 AM