Defining ‘conduct supervision’
The consistent themes defining conduct supervision in all jurisdictions are the fair treatment of customers and the stability of financial markets. These underpin the purpose of the conduct supervisor and unify the outcomes that each seeks to deliver.
In Ireland, the organisational structure of the CBI comprises two key pillars, Prudential Regulation and Financial Conduct, with the latter comprising four distinct Directorates: Consumer Protection, Securities and Markets Supervision, Policy and Risk and Enforcement and AML.
Similarly, the French Monetary and Financial Code charges the AMF with responsibility for overseeing the protection of savings invested in financial instruments, the information to investors and the proper functioning of financial markets.
The Dutch regulator is “problem-oriented”. Dutch law expresses conduct supervision in terms of outcomes, describing it as something aimed at securing orderly and transparent financial market processes, integrity in relations between market parties and due care in the provision of services to clients.
In Germany, the concept is articulated as an obligation imposed upon investment firms to act honestly, fairly and professionally in accordance with the best interests of their clients and to provide a fair, orderly and transparent financial market when providing investment services to clients.