FCA decides to ban Crispin Odey and fine him £1.8m; Rachel Reeves in battle against over-regulation – business live | Business
FCA decides to ban Crispin Odey and fine him £1.8m
Crispin Odey. Photograph: REX/Shutterstock
Newsflash: Britain’s City watchdog has decided to fine financier Crispin Odey £1.8m and ban him from the UK financial services industry “for a lack of integrity”.
The FinancialConductAuthority says that it believes Odey “deliberately sought to frustrate” the disciplinary processes of his hedge fund, OdeyAssetManagement LLP (OAM) “to protect his own interests”, following allegations of sexual harassment.
The FCA says:
Mr Odey showed reckless disregard for OAM’s governance, causing OAM to breach certain regulatory requirements. In addition, the FCA considers that Mr Odey’s behaviour towards both OAM and the FCA lacked candour.
The FCA considers Mr Odey’s conduct demonstrated that he is not a fit and proper person to perform any function related to regulated activities.
Odey has referred his Decision Notice to the Upper Tribunal where he and the FCA will present their cases, meaning the FCA’s findings are provisional.
The regulator explains that Odey used his majority shareholding in OAM to remove the existing members of its executive committee, just weeks before he was due to appear for a disciplinary hearing in January 2022. Having appointed himself ExCo’s sole member, Odey decided the disciplinary hearing into his conduct would be indefinitely postponed since he said he was unable to conduct it with impartiality, the FCA explains.
ThereseChambers, joint executive director of enforcement and market oversight at the FCA said:
“A culture of silence in which allegations of misconduct are not dealt with effectively can put consumers and markets at risk. Mr Odey repeatedly sought to evade and obstruct efforts to hold him to account. His lack of integrity means he deserves to be banned from the industry.”
The FCA’s ruling follows allegations published last year by the Financial Times, with Tortoise Media, which reported claims of sexual assault and harassment against Odey from 20 women. The allegations led to him being removed from his hedge fund business, and in October 2023 OAM announced it was closing.
Odey has previously denied the allegations against him, and is suing the FT for libel, seeking at least £79m in damages.
Key events
You can read the Decision Notice for Robin Crispin William Odey online, here.
Reminder, the findings are provisional, as Odey has referred the Decision Notice to the Upper Tribunal.
Explaining the decision to ban Odey from the City, the Notice states:
During the relevant period, Mr Odey demonstrated a repeated disregard for standards and requirements that he was expected to meet, including by deliberately frustrating a disciplinary process designed to scrutinise his conduct and uphold OAM’s internal policies and procedures relevant to the performance of regulated activities.
Mr Odey’s behaviour towards both OAM and the Authority lacked candour. He used improper means to protect his own interests and achieve his objectives; the reasons he gave for his dismissal of ExCo, and his conduct in his dealings with the Authority also support the finding that he lacks integrity.
Mr Odey’s conduct exposed investors to the risk of harm and risked undermining the integrity of the UK financial system.
FCA decides to ban Crispin Odey and fine him £1.8m
Crispin Odey. Photograph: REX/Shutterstock
Newsflash: Britain’s City watchdog has decided to fine financier Crispin Odey £1.8m and ban him from the UK financial services industry “for a lack of integrity”.
The FinancialConductAuthority says that it believes Odey “deliberately sought to frustrate” the disciplinary processes of his hedge fund, OdeyAssetManagement LLP (OAM) “to protect his own interests”, following allegations of sexual harassment.
The FCA says:
Mr Odey showed reckless disregard for OAM’s governance, causing OAM to breach certain regulatory requirements. In addition, the FCA considers that Mr Odey’s behaviour towards both OAM and the FCA lacked candour.
The FCA considers Mr Odey’s conduct demonstrated that he is not a fit and proper person to perform any function related to regulated activities.
Odey has referred his Decision Notice to the Upper Tribunal where he and the FCA will present their cases, meaning the FCA’s findings are provisional.
The regulator explains that Odey used his majority shareholding in OAM to remove the existing members of its executive committee, just weeks before he was due to appear for a disciplinary hearing in January 2022. Having appointed himself ExCo’s sole member, Odey decided the disciplinary hearing into his conduct would be indefinitely postponed since he said he was unable to conduct it with impartiality, the FCA explains.
ThereseChambers, joint executive director of enforcement and market oversight at the FCA said:
“A culture of silence in which allegations of misconduct are not dealt with effectively can put consumers and markets at risk. Mr Odey repeatedly sought to evade and obstruct efforts to hold him to account. His lack of integrity means he deserves to be banned from the industry.”
The FCA’s ruling follows allegations published last year by the Financial Times, with Tortoise Media, which reported claims of sexual assault and harassment against Odey from 20 women. The allegations led to him being removed from his hedge fund business, and in October 2023 OAM announced it was closing.
Odey has previously denied the allegations against him, and is suing the FT for libel, seeking at least £79m in damages.
Despite the Trump trade wars, the OECD has slightly revised up its forecast for China’s growth this year.
China is now forecast to grow by 4.8% this year, up from 4.7% previously.
But, it adds:
Growth in China is projected to slow from 4.8% this year to 4.4% in 2026.
The OECD says:
These projections are based on an assumption that bilateral tariffs between Canada and the United States and between Mexico and the United States are raised by an additional 25 percentage points on almost all merchandise imports from April.
Chancellor of the Exchequer RachelReeves has broken off from her battle against growth-hampering regulation to respond to the OECD’s new forecasts.
She says:
“This report shows the world is changing, and increased global headwinds such as trade uncertainty are being felt across the board.
“A changing world means Britain must change too, and we are delivering a new era of stability, security and renewal, to protect working people and keep our country safe.
“This means we can better respond to global uncertainty, with the UK forecast to be Europe’s fastest growing G7 economy over the coming years – second only to the US.”
OECD cuts growth forecasts, blames trade war
Newsflash: The OECD has slashed its forecast for growth among advanced economies this year, as Donald Trump’s trade war bites.
In its latest economic outlook, the OECD has lowered its forecast for growth among G20 countries this year to 3.1%, down from 3.3% expected in December.
Canada’s growth forecast this year has been more than halved, from 2% to 0.7%.
Mexico’s economy is now forecast to contract this year, by 1.3%, down from a previous forecst of 1.2% growth.
Overall the 2025 global growth forecast has been cut to 3.1% from 3.3% in 2025.
The OECD has also trimmed its forecast for UK growth in 2025, from 1.7% to 1.4%. That would make the UK the second-fastest growing G7 country this year, after the US (+2.2%), with Germany, France, Italy and Japan’s growth forecasts also lowered.
A chart showing the latest OECD growth forecasts Photograph: OECD
In the report, the OECD warns that “significant changes have occurred in trade policies” that would hit global growth and raise inflation. It cites the 25% levy on Mexico and Canada. saying:
These projections are based on an assumption that bilateral tariffs between Canada and the United States and between Mexico and the United States are raised by an additional 25 percentage points on almost all merchandise imports from April.
The Paris-based think tank adds:
Global GDP growth is projected to moderate from 3.2% in 2024, to 3.1% in 2025 and 3.0% in 2026, with higher trade barriers in several G20 economies and increased geopolitical and policy uncertainty weighing on investment and household spending.
Recent activity indicators have begun to point to a softening of global growth prospects. Business and consumer sentiment have weakened in some countries, and indicators of economic policy uncertainty have risen markedly around the world.
Photos: Reeves meets the regulators this morning
Photograph: Jonathan Brady/PA Photograph: Jonathan Brady/PA Photograph: Jonathan Brady/PA
UK defence company Qinetiq hit by “geopolitical uncertainty”
These should be boom times for defence companies, as European countries pledge a massive spending increase to protect the region.
But UK defence company Qinetiq has surprised the City with a profits warning this morning, knocking its shares down by a fifth.
Qinetiq told shareholders this morning that it has continued to experience “tough near-term trading conditions”, which have hurt its work in our UK Intelligence and US Sectors.
As well as delayed contracts, Qinetiq has also suffered from “geopolitical uncertainty”.
Qinetiq now expects organic revenue growth of 2% this financial year, down from the “high single digit organic revenue growth” it was predicting back in January.
It is taking a goodwill impairment charge of £140m, as well as a non-cash charge of up to £40m due to US operations, “predominantly in our legacy US operations”.
Qinetiq are the top faller on the FTSE 250 share index, down 21%. Other UK defence companies are in the red too, with BAESystems down 0.5%, and Babcock down 0.3%.
Susannah Streeter, head of money and markets at Hargreaves Lansdown, says:
There have been high hopes that the pledge from European nations to swell military budgets amid heightened geopolitical tensions would translate into a flurry of new contracts.
But as alliances shape shift, the uncertainty has been more of a curse than a blessing. Qinetiq has been best with contract delays, not just for its US arm, but also its UK intelligence business. It’s undergoing a re-evaluation and restructuring of its US business to help revive growth.
Lay-offs at the US defense department may exacerbate its current problems, given that its short-term contracts in the US which appear to have already been hit hard. It seems spending decisions are being delayed amid the uncertainty.
The Government wants to make sure that there is “less duplication in the system” when it comes to regulation, a Treasury minister has said.
Emma Reynolds, the economic secretary to the Treasury, told BBC Breakfast:
“We want to ensure that there is less duplication in the system.
“That means that we shouldn’t have the layering upon layering of regulation, but it’s also the case that some regulators are being folded into other regulators.
Because companies that want to set up and grow are facing sometimes two sets of very similar rules or very similar processes to gain authorisation, and we don’t think that that is a good use of resources, for one, but also it’s slowing down growth, and it’s slowing down the initiative and entrepreneurship of British business.”
Reeves expected to restrict UK competition watchdog’s merger investigations
Rachel Reeves is expected to defang Britain’s competition regulator, restricting its powers to investigate mergers.
According to the Financial Times, the chancellor will say she plans to update the two main tests that determine whether the CompetitionandMarketsAuthority should probe a merger.
They say:
One test, known as “share of supply”, allows the CMA to investigate deals that would result in a company controlling 25 per cent of the supply of goods and services in a market.
The second “material influence” test can give the antitrust regulator power over purchases of certain interests in a business, such as significant shareholdings, even if they fall short of total control. Officials said Reeves wanted to “tighten” and “limit” the circumstances in which deals come under CMA scrutiny.
Tightening and limiting the circumstances in which deals come under CMA scrutiny could help companies pull of mergers.
Ministers have already shaken up the CMA by installing the former boss of Amazon UK, Doug Gurr, as interim chair, replacing Marcus Bokkerink, who agreed to stand down.
Last month, the CMA’s chief executive, SarahCardell, argued that the regulator’s new growth focus did not clash with its core mandate to support competitin.
Cardell told the Guardian:
“I don’t see there being a fundamental tension between the two and we haven’t got a growth duty that’s coming in over and above. Our statutory functions are to promote competition and protect consumers. Those fundamentals haven’t changed.
“It’s about making sure that the way in which we discharge those statutory duties is done in a way that helps to contribute to driving growth, building that business investor confidence.
“We are looking for more pace, for more predictability, proportionality, and making sure our processes work.”
Trump: Both reciprocal and sectoral tariffs coming on 2 April
US President Donald Trump speaking to reporters on Air Force One on his return to Washington, DC Photograph: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters
Hopes that US president Donald Trump might sway away from deepening his global trade war next month have taken a knock overnight.
Trump has insisted that reciprocal and sectoral tariffs will be imposed on US trading partners on 2 April, and also insisted that he has no intention of creating exemptions on steel and aluminum tariffs.
Speaking to reporters on Air Force One, Trump was asked if he would be imposing sectoral and reciprocal tariffs on 2 April, as has been previously suggested.
He replied “In certain cases, both,” adding:
“They charge us, and we charge them. Then, in addition to that, on autos, on steel, on aluminum, we’re going to have some additional.”
Reciprocal tariffs are taxes on imports to the US which are set at a similar rate to taxes other countries put on goods they import from the US, while sectoral tariffs would target a particular type of products – such as automobiles, steel, aluminum, microprocessors, and pharmaceuticals.
The comments are a sign that Trump is determined to press ahead with a more aggressive trade regime, despite having upset US allies – and spooked the financial markets – by announcing and imposing tariffs since returning to power.
Trump insists, though, that slapping tariffs on imports to the US makes sense:
“April 2 is a liberating day for our country.
We’re getting back some of the wealth that very, very foolish presidents gave away because they had no clue what they were doing.”
President Trump waving from the stairs of Air Force One this morning Photograph: Luis M Alvarez/AP
Starmer: I’ll cut regulation and unleash animal spirits
Sir Keir Starmer is promising to “bring back the animal spirits of the private sector” by cutting the burden of regulation.
Writing in City AM this morning, Starmer says “it is an outrage” that the government does not know how much it costs business to comply with regulations.
He is promising to lead the first government to baseline these costs, and cut them by 25% by the end of this parliament.
In a notably pro-business column, the PM says the government must “unleash the power of the private sector” if it is to deliver economic growth.
That, he says, means:
Entrepreneurs who work day and night to build a business from scratch. Family companies that have passed know-how across the generations. Iconic British companies employing thousands of people across all sectors. Investors who provide the capital and expertise that fuels growth and innovation.
Starmer adds that the government is “kicking off a short, sharp process” to identify regulators that can be cut or merged, as part of his drive to cut ‘quangos’, concluding:
Reshaping our state, our regulatory system, our economy, is not the work of weeks and months. It will take years of discipline, focus and a willingness to make tough choices.
But my government is taking on that challenge to bring back the animal spirits of the private sector, and to make Britain the best place in the world to start and build a business.
IoD welcomes 'rebalancing' of regulation
The Institute of Directors has welcomed the government’s plan to shake-up regulation, calling it “a welcome shift to a more growth friendly approach”.
Dr. Roger Barker, director of policy at the InstituteofDirectors, says:
“Compliance with burdensome regulation is frequently cited by IoD members as one of the top factors having a negative effect on their businesses. Although well-designed and proportionate regulation has a valuable role to play in a modern economy, the current UK framework does not sufficiently prioritise growth and innovation. It is hence appropriate for the government to rebalance its approach with a pro-business orientation at its core.
“In our Spending Review submission in February, the IoD called on the government to reinstate a Business Impact Target for new regulation over the life of the Parliament. We are therefore delighted that the government has listened to this recommendation and is now committed to reducing the administrative costs of regulation on business by 25% through this Plan. Meaningful progress against this target will be crucial for supporting businesses and growing the economy.
“In addition to the measures announced today, we would also like to see the government apply more rigorous and timely impact assessment procedures when considering new regulation. Non-regulatory solutions should always be considered, and the business case for new regulation should be subject to proper independent scrutiny by the Regulatory Policy Committee. There should also be a commitment to reviewing the ongoing effectiveness of existing regulation at regular intervals.”
Rachel Reeves is expected to use today’s meeting to unveil 60 measures that regulators have agreed to undertake to boost economic growth.
The BBC had a handy list of what’s expected:
Fast-tracking new medicines through a pilot to provide parallel authorisations from healthcare regulators
Reviewing the £100 cap on individual contactless payments
Simplifying mortgage lending rules to make it easier to re-mortgage with a new lender and reduce mortgage terms
Setting up a ‘concierge service’ to help international financial services firms navigate regulations
Civil Aviation Authority permitting at least two more large drone-flying trials for deliveries in the coming months - which the government said has already cut travel times for blood samples between hospitals from 30 minutes down to two minutes
Introduction: Reeves to meet regulators in drive to cut red tape
Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.
The UK government has the regulators in its sights as it tries to squeeze more growth out of the economy.
Chancellor RachelReeves is to meet with representatives from financial, environmental and health regulators today, in a push to cut bureaucracy and lower the cost of regulation for business.
She’s expected to unveil an “action plan” to cut red tape by reducing the number of bodies which oversee sectors of the economy that are crucial to boosting growth.
Speaking ahead of the meeting, the chancellor says:
“Today we are taking further action to free businesses from the shackles of regulation.
“By cutting red tape and creating a more effective system, we will boost investment, create jobs and put more money into working people’s pockets.”
The meeting will be attended by the Financial Conduct Authority, Prudential Regulation Authority, the Environment Agency, Natural England, the medicines regulator and the Information Commissioners’ Office.
Between them, these regulators look to protect consumers, businesses, patients and the environment – but ministers seem determined to prevent them clogging up the economy.
The government’s message, as it surveys an economy that shrank slightly in January, is that “regulators must work for the people...not get in the way of progress”.
On the environmental side, the government hopes to stop infrastructure projects being delayed by protection demands – an issue highlighted recently by the £100m bat shelter built for the HS2 trainline.
The Treasury also plan to slim down the legal duties of regulators, such as those in financial services, energy watchdog Ofgem and water regulator Ofwat, “so that they do not waste time satisfying redundant duties”.
One body, The Payment Systems Regulator, has already felt Reeves’ axe – its abolition was announced last week.
Rain Newton-Smith, chief executive of the ConfederationofBritishIndustry, said the UK’s “Gordian knot of regulations” hindered investment with compliance costs that were too high “leaving us trailing the international competition”.
She said:
“Today’s announcement signals a shift towards a more proportionate, outcomes-based approach that should deliver more sustainable growth and investment.”