BCOBS 7.1 Application
What?
- (1)
1This chapter requires a firm to publish information about its provision of personal current accounts and business current accounts.
- (2)
In this chapter:
- (a)
a “personal current account” means an account, other than a current account mortgage or a premium service account, which is a payment account within the meaning of the Payment Accounts Regulations (see BCOBS 7.1.3G(2));
- (b)
a “business current account” means an account which would be a personal current account if the banking customer were a consumer (with the definition of “personal current account” in (2)(a) applying for the purposes of this sub-paragraph as if the words “or a premium service account” were omitted) (see BCOBS 7.1.3G(3));
- (c)
each of the following is a “premium service account”:
- (i)
an account of a type:
- (A)
in respect of which banking customers receive better or faster service, assessed by reference to any of the information which the firm must publish under this chapter, than that provided in respect of one or more other types of personal current account held with the firm under the relevant trading name;
- (B)
which requires the banking customer to do either or both of the following:
- (I)
maintain a credit balance in the account, exceeding an amount specified by the firm, and
- (II)
make deposits into the account each month, exceeding an amount specified by the firm; and
- (C)
which is held by fewer than 20% of the holders of personal current accounts held with the firm under the relevant trading name (with the definition of “personal current account” in (2)(a) applying for the purposes of this sub-paragraph as if the words “or a premium service account” were omitted); and
- (A)
- (ii)
an account:
- (A)
held by a banking customer who receives better or faster service, assessed by reference to any of the information which the firm must publish under this chapter, than the service provided to other banking customers holding the same type of personal current account with the firm under the relevant trading name (a “premium customer”);
- (B)
where the firm’s treatment of the banking customer as a premium customer is dependent on the banking customer doing either or both of the following:
- (I)
maintaining a credit balance in the account, exceeding an amount determined by the firm, and
- (II)
making deposits into the account each month, exceeding an amount determined by the firm; and
- (C)
of a type of which the premium customers constitute fewer than 20% of the holders of personal current accounts of that type (with the definition of “personal current account” in (2)(a) applying, for the purposes of this sub-paragraph, as if the words “or a premium service account” were omitted); and
- (A)
- (i)
- (d)
a “private bank” is a deposit-taking firm over half of whose banking customers are eligible individuals within the meaning of article 9 of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Ring-fenced Bodies and Core Activities) Order 2014 (SI 2014/1960) or meet the condition in paragraph (3) of that article (see BCOBS 7.1.5G(2)).
- (a)
Who?
- (1)
1This chapter applies to a firm in relation to a current account measurement period (see BCOBS 7.7.1R):
- (a)
in respect of personal current accounts held with the firm under a trading name of the firm, if:
- (i)
at the start of the current account measurement period, 70,000 or more personal current accounts are held with the firm under that trading name; and
- (ii)
70,000 or more personal current accounts were held with the firm under that trading name throughout the previous two current account measurement periods; and
- (i)
- (b)
in respect of business current accounts held with the firm under a trading name of the firm, if:
- (i)
at the start of the current account measurement period, 15,000 or more business current accounts are held with the firm under that trading name; and
- (ii)
15,000 or more business current accounts were held with the firm under that trading name throughout the previous two current account measurement periods.
- (i)
- (a)
- (2)
This chapter does not apply in relation to:
- (a)
an account held by a banking customer in respect of whom the main correspondence address held by the firm is outside the United Kingdom;
- (b)
an account held by a banking customer aged under 18 at the start of the relevant current account measurement period (see BCOBS 7.7.1R(1)); or
- (c)
an account which may be used for a currency other than a currency of the United Kingdom.
- (a)
- (3)
This chapter does not apply to a credit union.
- (4)
This chapter does not apply to a private bank.
- (5)
But this rule is subject to BCOBS 7.1.4.R.
- (1)
1This chapter applies to a firm separately in relation to personal current accounts and business current accounts, for each of its trading names as notified to the FCA in accordance with SUP 16 Annex 16AR. For example, a firm which only has 50,000 personal current accounts and no business current accounts will not be subject to the requirements of this chapter (except where BCOBS 7.1.4R applies). If a firm has two trading names, with 150,000 personal current accounts held with the firm under the first name and 50,000 personal current accounts under the second name, and only 10,000 business current accounts, the requirements of this chapter will apply to the firm only in respect of the first trading name and only in respect of personal current accounts (except where BCOBS 7.1.4R applies). The numbers in BCOBS 7.1.1R and 7.1.2R apply to the number of accounts, rather than the number of account holders.
- (2)
The definitions of “personal current account” and “business current account” both refer to the definition of a “payment account” under the Payment Accounts Regulations, that is: “an account held in the name of one or more consumers through which consumers are able to place funds, withdraw cash and execute and receive payment transactions to and from third parties, including the execution of credit transfers, but does not include any of the following types of account provided that the account is not used for day-today payment transactions: savings accounts; credit card accounts where funds are usually paid in for the sole purpose of repaying a credit card debt; current account mortgages or e-money accounts”. The FCA has issued guidance on that definition: see FG16/6 – Payment Accounts Regulations 2015.
- (3)
A payment account under the Payment Accounts Regulations is one which is held by a consumer, namely a natural person acting for purposes which are outside that person’s trade, business, craft or profession. A business current account (defined in BCOBS 7.1.1R(2)(b)) is not a payment account because it is not held by a consumer, but is one which would be a payment account if the account holder were a consumer. The exclusion of “premium service accounts” (see (7)) does not apply to business current accounts.
- (4)
Accounts held by banking customers whose main correspondence address is outside the United Kingdom are excluded both from the number of accounts and from the requirements of BCOBS 7.3 to 7.6. Accounts held by persons under the age of 18, or which can only be used for foreign currency, are also excluded; but a joint account should be included if one of the account holders is aged 18 or older.
- (5)
BCOBS applies only to the activity of accepting deposits from banking customers carried on from an establishment maintained by it in the United Kingdom (see BCOBS 1.1.1R). Therefore, this chapter only applies to accounts operated and activities carried out from United Kingdom branches and not, where a firm also has branches outside the United Kingdom, from non-United Kingdom branches.
- (6)
BCOBS 7.1.2R also makes provision for firms whose current account businesses are growing or contracting. For example, a firm which passes the 70,000 threshold for the first time on 29 March, and then stays above it, will have to measure the time it takes do to those things which BCOBS 7.3 to 7.6 require to be measured starting from 1 October, and to publish its first statistics (relating to the period from 1 October to 31 December) on or before 15 February of the following year. It will also have to publish the other information required by BCOBS 7.3 to 7.6 from 1 October. (See BCOBS 7.7.1R.)
- (7)
Premium service accounts are excluded from BCOBS 7.3 to 7.6 . Premium service accounts are those personal current accounts which have eligibility criteria relating to minimum balances or minimum monthly deposits (or both), and whose holders receive better service than non-premium service accounts, based on any of the information or data which this chapter requires a firm to publish. For example, an account which has staff available to respond to relevant queries through telephone banking for more hours of the day than other accounts, or whose account holders can replace a lost debit card more quickly than other accounts, would be a premium service account. An account may be premium on the basis either that it is of a type only made available to eligible banking customers, or because the banking customer is treated as premium compared to other holders of accounts of that type. But an account is not a premium service account for this purpose if accounts of that type of account are held by 20% or more of the firm’s personal current account banking customers, or, where the type of account is held by both premium and non-premium banking customers, the premium banking customers constitute 20% or more of the holders of that type of account. All accounts are treated as non-premium for the purposes of the 20% calculation.
- (1)
1This rule applies to a firm to which this chapter does not otherwise apply in respect of either or both of personal current accounts and business current accounts held under a particular trading name.
- (2)
This rule applies to information which covers the same subject matter as that to which any of the following rules apply (“regulated information”):
- (a)
BCOBS 7.3.5R(1) (information about the speed of the account opening process);
- (b)
BCOBS 7.4.1.R(1) (information about the time taken to replace a lost, stolen or stopped debit card);
- (c)
BCOBS 7.6.1R(1) (information about operational and security resilience); and
- (d)
BCOBS 7.6.3R(1) (complaints).
- (a)
- (3)
The firm must not publish any regulated information or include any regulated information in a communication or financial promotion addressed to a banking customer or a potential banking customer, unless the firm publishes information that:
- (a)
would meet the requirements of BCOBS 7.3.5R, BCOBS 7.4.1R, BCOBS 7.6.1R or BCOBS 7.6.3R as the case may be,
- (b)
has been calculated in accordance with the requirements of this chapter, and
- (c)
is published in the format and order required by this chapter
as if the firm were a firm to which this chapter (apart from this rule) applied in respect of that information in relation to that trading name.
- (a)
- (4)
The requirement in (3)(c) to publish information in the order required by this chapter does not require a firm to publish information which, but for this rule, the firm would not be required to publish.
- (1)
1If a firm does not have 70,000 personal current accounts, or 15,000 business current accounts, under a particular brand (i.e. trading name), this chapter does not require the firm to publish information about its personal current account service or its business current account service (as relevant) for that brand. However, if a firm chooses to publish information about that brand which is within the scope of any of the rules in his chapter, relating to speed of service, operational and security resilience or complaints (‘regulated information’), the firm must comply with the relevant rule in full as if this chapter did apply to that brand. This means that the firm must measure and calculate the information to be published, and publish it, as required by this chapter.
- (2)
The same applies to a credit union or private bank that publishes any regulated information. For the purposes of this chapter, a private bank is a deposit-taking firm over half of whose banking customers are “eligible individuals”, such that their deposits are not treated as core deposits for ring-fencing purposes, or they meet the condition that would enable them to sign a declaration of eligibility for that purpose. The condition is that they held assets to the value of not less than £250,000 over a period of twelve months ending on a day which falls not more than three months before the date of the declaration of eligibility.
- (3)
Where a firm is required to publish information under BCOBS 7.1.4R, it should publish it in the order and format required by this chapter. But the requirement to follow a particular order of presenting information does not require the firm to publish information under a rule not specified in BCOBS 7.1.4R(3) that it not would otherwise be required to publish.