Wednesday, December 3, 2025

What lenders must do now

The Financial Conduct Authority’s Consultation Paper CP25/27 proposes an industry-wide redress scheme for UK motor finance customers who may have been unfairly charged due to inadequate disclosure of commission arrangements between lenders and brokers.

Covering agreements from 6 April 2007 to 1 November 2024, the scheme targets practices such as Discretionary Commission Arrangements (DCAs) and high or exclusive commissions that may have breached FCA principles.

It is expected that the compensation scheme will have the following accounting implications for lenders:

As a result of the Supreme Court rulings and the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA’s) consultation paper on DCAs, there is greater clarity for affected lenders on their position. The FCA’s paper lays outs a suggested redress methodology.

Under UK GAAP FRS 102 Section, provisions should be accounted for if the following conditions are met:

  1. The entity has an obligation at the reporting date as a result of a past event – Given that the redress is as a result of agreements issued in past between 2007 and 2024 this condition is satisfied.

  2. It is probable (ie more likely than not) that the entity will be required to transfer economic benefit in settlement; Given that inadequate disclosure of commission arrangements represents a regulatory breach that has been confirmed by the courts for which the remedy is redress this condition is satisfied.

  3. The amount of the obligation can be estimated reliably – Given that the FCA has proposed a redress methodology which may change but gives affected lenders a reliable estimate of the redress which they will pay this condition is satisfied.

The FCA’s proposals reduce uncertainty and will allow firm to make meaningful provisions for redress.

Affected firms will currently be in one of the following positions:

Lenders who currently do not have a provision in place, should assess customers impacted and use the proposed redress methodology to calculate a provision. Lenders who already have a provision in place, should reassess their provisions. Under FRS 102 Section 21, the initial measurement should be the best estimate that an entity would rationally pay at the reporting date.

The inclusion of a redress provision in the accounts may have an impact on the going concern status of the affected lenders. The inclusion of a new provision or an increased provision will reduce the profit for the current period, and the future payments of redress will impact future cash flows. Lenders should factor these impacts into their future cash flow forecasts and consider whether this affects management’s conclusions in relation to going concern.

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