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Monday 16 January 2023

UK Review of the Payment Services (and E-money) Regulations

The Treasury is calling for evidence to assist in its review of the Payment Services Regulations 2017. This also necessarily involves consideration of the Electronic Money Regulations 2011, since e-money institutions are subject to both. Those regulations implemented corresponding EU directives that are also being reviewed (which the Treasury ignores). You have until 7 April 2023 to submit responses to the UK process. Please let me know if you would like assistance.

Of course, 'elephant in the room' is whether the UK regulations should remain harmonised with the EU directives that they implemented, particularly as most UK payment service providers will have EEA aspirations, at least, if not their own regulated firms within the trade bloc. Indeed, the UK review will seem eerily familiar to many, because the European Commission embarked on its own review of the second Payment Services Directive (PSD2) in May 2022; and in July the European Banking Authority proposed numerous changes that I summarised for Ogier Leman in Ireland, including the merger of PSD2 and the second E-money Directive (EMD2). I suspect the UK review is timed to coincide with likely changes arising from the EU's review process. The timing might not work perfectly, so the UK might make any changes that seem settled or non-controversial in the EU process, then mop up the rest in due course.

The UK government believes that its e-money and payment services regulation should address: 

  • 'authorised push payment' (APP) fraud; 
  • whether 'strong customer authentication' requirements are too prescriptive and should be 'outcome-based' including delaying payments where APP fraud is suspected to allow for communication with a potentially affected customer;
  • the use of cryptoassets or cryptocurrencies as payment methods.

There is no mention of the European Commission or EBA proposals relating to the review of PSD2 and EMD2, let alone consideration of whether those proposals should be addressed in the UK. I guess that is left to the rest of us to consider and submit.

The UK has already made changes to its insolvency regime to cater for the more orderly and efficient wind-down of payment and e-money institutions, as this was something that the EU directives did not really address (aside from the 'pooling' provisions relating to safeguarded funds). The UK government is also inviting evidence on whether these additional arrangements are adequate (and the EBA has urged greater clarity on wind-down arrangements under the EU directive(s).

The government persists in its tediously jingoistic claims that the UK somehow pioneered 'Open Banking' through the API requirements proposed by the Competition and Markets Authority in 2016 (among other remedies to improve competition for retail banking). However, that happened three years after the specific open banking requirements were proposed in the first version of PSD2. In fact, such 'open data' and 'midata' initiatives were fully developed by 2012 common across Europe and, indeed, globally within the context of the World Economic Forum, as I posted at the time. It cites unspecified plans to ‘develop’ and ‘progress’ such services through a Joint Regulatory Oversight Committee after the CMA found that its mandated Open Banking Implementation Entity was improperly managed and lacked corporate governance.

While omitting a focus on whether banks unfairly withhold payment accounts from innovative financial services businesses, the consultation also includes highly irregular claims that the government is concerned about whether payment service providers might be terminating customer relationships in reaction to the customers' right wing, 'libertarian' political views. The paper concedes that there is no evidence at all that this is a genuine issue, merely citing assertions from a Conservative MP based on speculation by a conservative pundit about why PayPal might have regarded his accounts as suspicious. That such nonsense has found its way into a Treasury consultation paper is deeply worrying. It smacks of the false claims about Channel 4's activities by the then Culture Secretary, ironic given the government's decision to boycott and later sell Channel 4 in reaction to what it believed was unwarranted scrutiny of its activities by journalists. Just as the government has been forced to row back on the sale of Channel 4, it would seem unwise to politicise payment services regulation...

Though maybe the drafts-person was fully aware of the irony in referring to the 'Daily Sceptic' and the 'Free Speech Union' in the context of better ways to combat APP fraud.  


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