By Mark Kleinman, City Editor
Smaller lenders would be hit by new rules heralding the world's toughest oversight regime for senior bankers, according to the industry's main City-based lobbying groups.
The warning is contained in a confidential paper submitted on Friday to UK watchdogs ahead of sweeping reforms that will include the threat of seven-year prison terms for directors of failed banks.
In a joint response to the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA), the British Bankers' Association (BBA) and Association for Financial Markets in Europe (AFME) said that smaller banks would suffer disproportionately high costs in order to comply with the new supervisory framework.
"Coupled with the existing funding, capital and payment access disadvantages already suffered, these new overheads will act as a further barrier to small banks which have fewer senior executives amongst whom responsibilities can be shared, reducing their ability to provide challenge and competitive alternatives in the UK retail and small business market," the lobby groups said.
Their submission, a copy of which has been obtained by Sky News, contains several other objections to the FCA and PRA proposals, including:
:: A suggestion that non-executive directors of banks would lose their independence and begin "man-marking" their full-time colleagues if they are covered by the same rules.
The response said: "The proposed regime could potentially alter the current nature of NED and executive director relationships, and impact the current collaborative and challenge-based board decision-making processes as individual NEDs seek to protect against their individual personal liability."
That warning comes weeks after Sky News revealed that two directors of HSBC's UK subsidiary were quitting in protest at the new rules, which will come into effect next year.
:: A concern that the FCA would have jurisdiction over the overseas employees of UK-based banks even when individuals have no direct connection with UK clients or a realistic possibility of causing harm to a UK-regulated firm.
:: A plan to discontinue the current FCA register of banking industry employees should be dropped because it "will have a negative effect on standards across the industry, in part because of a reduction in transparent (for the industry, consumers and regulators) of many individuals' conduct history".
:: Rejecting the idea that chairmen of banks should not be solely responsible for ensuring that whistleblowers are protected from detrimental treatment.
Regulators are likely to be particularly sensitive to the complaint about higher costs being imposed on smaller lenders following efforts led by George Osborne, the Chancellor, and Vince Cable, the Business Secretary, to pave the way for a new group of "challenger banks".
The new framework has emerged in the wake of pressure on regulators to toughen penalties in the wake of the financial crisis and subsequent trading scandals, including Libor and foreign exchange benchmarks.
Six banks are expected to pay well over £1bn to UK regulators alone to settle the forex issues, with an announcement expected next month.
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