MCOB 2.6A Protecting customer's interests: home purchase plans, home reversion plans and regulated sale and rent back agreements2
A firm must ensure that the interests of its customer under a home purchase plan, home reversion plan or regulated sale and rent back agreement2 are protected to a reasonable standard.
Circumstances that a firm should consider include how the customer will be protected in the event of:
- (1)
the failure of a reversion provider, home purchase provideror SRB agreement provider;2
- (2)
the transfer of a reversion provider's, home purchase provider's or SRB agreement provider's2 interest (or the interest the provider would have had, had it not nominated a third party to hold it) in the property to a third party;
- (3)
other dealings by a reversion provider,home purchase provider or SRB agreement provider2 (or its nominee) with a third party; and
- (4)
a reversion provider's, home purchase provider's or SRB agreement provider's2 (or its nominee's) failure to perform obligations owed to third parties, or imposed by statute.
The steps that a firm might take in order to protect its customer's interests will depend on a number of factors, including the nature and structure of the home purchase plan, home reversion plan or regulated sale and rent back agreement2 and the jurisdiction in which the property is situated. If it is not possible to achieve reasonable protection (for example, due to impediments under a particular legal system) then a firm should not enter into, arrange or administer the plan.
- (1)
In the FSA's view, a customer's interests will include:
- (a)
protection of the customer's rights under the plan, in particular the right to occupy the property throughout its term;
- (b)
protection of any interest (legal or beneficial) that the customer retains, acquires or is intended to acquire in the property, including the expectation that such interests will be unencumbered by third party interests; and
- (c)
that, where a customer pays sums under a home purchase plan towards the purchase price of the property, those sums will be applied towards the purchase price. Or, in circumstances where that is not practicable (for example, on repossession), that an appropriate amount will be returned to the customer.
- (a)
- (2)
The protections that a firm should consider include:
- (a)
the extent to which different forms of tenure protect the tenant's right to occupy the property and afford protection against removal. In particular, granting the customer a licence to occupy the property is unlikely to provide an adequate level of security;
- (b)
(except in Scotland) the need for any agreement under which a customer has a right to acquire an interest in the property to be specifically enforceable;
- (c)
the extent to which appropriate registrations, restrictions, notices or other entries should be made in the relevant land register;
- (d)
the timing of entries in the relevant land register and who should be responsible for making them; and
- (e)
the customer's need for a full and clear understanding of all the steps that the firm expects him or his advisers to take to protect his interests both at the time the plan is entered into, and throughout its duration.
- (a)
Protecting customers' interests: additional material for home reversion plans
Unless it is satisfied on reasonable grounds based on the customer's knowledge, expertise and experience that it is unnecessary, a firm must obtain from its customer's legal adviser, before its customer enters into a home reversion plan, confirmation that:
- (1)
he has been instructed to ensure that the customer's legal rights under the plan are protected to a reasonable standard; and
- (2)
he has explained to the customer those aspects of the customer's legal rights and obligations under the home reversion plan that he needs to understand.
Protecting customer's interests: regulated sale and rent back agreements
2A firm must ensure that before a SRB agreement seller enters into a regulated sale and rent back agreement, the SRB agreement seller is made aware of the availability and importance of independent legal or professional advice.
Protecting customers' interests: additional material for home purchase plans
A home purchase provider should consider obtaining confirmation from the customer's legal adviser that he has carried out, or will carry out, the steps that the firm expects the customer or his legal advisers to take to protect his interests at the time the plan is taken out.
Treating customers fairly: home purchase plans, home reversion plans and regulated sale and rent back agreements2
A firm must pay due regard to the interests of its customer and treat him fairly when drafting, amending the terms of, or imposing obligations or exercising rights or discretions under, a home purchase plan, home reversion plan or regulated sale and rent back agreement.2
A firm is unlikely, for example, to be treating its customer fairly in relation to termination of a home purchase plan, home reversion plan or regulated sale and rent back agreement2if:
A firm is also unlikely to be treating its customer fairly if, upon termination of an agreement under a home purchase plan, home reversion plan or regulated sale and rent back agreement,2 the customer does not receive (net of any reasonable sums payable by the customer):
- (1)
in the case of a home reversion plan or regulated sale and rent back agreement2 where the customer retains a beneficial interest in the property, the value of that beneficial interest; or
- (2)
in the case of a home purchase plan, the value of purchase payments made.
[Note: The terms of a home purchase plan, home reversion plan or regulated sale and rent back agreement2 should take into account relevant legal obligations such as those under the Unfair Terms Regulations and, where applicable, the Housing Act 1988 (or, in Scotland, the Housing (Scotland) Act 1988). A firm may find material on the FSA website concerning the FSA's consumer protection powers useful. The Office of Fair Trading has also published guidance on the impact of the Unfair Terms Regulations on tenancy agreements.]
Treating customers fairly: home reversion plans and regulated sale and rent back agreements2
A firm is unlikely, for example, to be treating a reversion occupier or SRB agreement seller2 fairly if:
- (1)
the reversion occupier or SRB agreement seller2 is obliged to maintain the property to a standard which exceeds the standard that the property is in when the home reversion plan or regulated sale and rent back agreement2 commences;
- (2)
the reversion occupier or SRB agreement seller2 is not entitled to, or is not given, reasonable notice of an inspection, or the inspection is conducted in a way that is biased against him;
- (3)
unreasonable restrictions are imposed on who may occupy the property, taking into account the potential needs of the reversion occupier or SRB agreement seller2 throughout the duration of the home reversion plan or regulated sale and rent back agreement;2
- (4)
unreasonable restrictions are imposed on the uses to which the property may be put;
- (5)
the reversion occupier or SRB agreement seller is unreasonably treated as having abandoned the property. For example, it is likely to be unreasonable to treat a property as abandoned based only on a period of non-occupation;
- (5A)
the rent payable under a regulated sale and rent back agreement is increased by an unreasonable amount or any charges payable under a regulated sale and rent back agreement are unreasonably imposed after the agreement is concluded; and2
- (6)
where the reversion occupier has a reasonable expectation that the home reversion plan can be transferred to another property, agreement to such a transfer is, or can be, refused unreasonably.
Independent valuation: home reversion plans and regulated sale and rent back agreements2
A firm must ensure that any valuation is carried out by a competent valuer who is independent of the reversion provider or SRB agreement provider.2
- (1)
A valuer may be considered competent if he is a suitably qualified member of a professional body.
- (2)
A valuer may be considered independent if:
- (a)
the customer can choose the valuer subject to the firm objecting on reasonable grounds and to the valuer being competent;
- (b)
he owes a duty of care to the customer in valuing the property; and
- (c)
the customer has an appropriate remedy against him under a complaints procedure which allows the complaint to be referred to an independent person whose decision is binding on the valuer.
- (a)
- (3)
For a home reversion plan,2compliance with (1) and (2) may be relied on as tending to establish compliance with MCOB 2.6A.12 R.
- (4)
For a regulated sale and rent back agreement, compliance with (1) may be relied upon as tending to establish compliance with the competence requirement of MCOB 2.6A.12 R.2
Obtaining best price: partial home reversion plans or regulated sale and rent back agreements2
A firm must take reasonable steps to ensure that, when a home reversion plan or regulated sale and rent back agreement2 ends and the customer retains a beneficial interest in the property:
It is recognised that a balance has to be struck between the need to sell the property as soon as possible, and other factors, such as market conditions, which may prompt the delay of the sale. Legitimate reasons for deferring action might include the expiry of a period when a grant is repayable on re-sale, or the discovery of a title defect that needs to be remedied if the optimal selling price is to be achieved.
Arranging or administering for unauthorised providers: home reversion plans
For the purpose of this section (except this rule), a reversion arranger or reversion administrator's customer:
- (1)
includes a reversion occupier or potential reversion occupier who enters, or proposes to enter, into a home reversion plan with an unauthorised reversion provider who is the firm's customer; and
- (2)
excludes an unauthorised reversion provider.
Arranging or administering for unauthorised providers: regulated sale and rent back agreements
2For the purpose of this section (except this rule), a SRB arranger's or SRB administrator's customer:
- (1)
includes a SRB agreement seller or potential SRB agreement seller who enters, or proposes to enter, into a regulated sale and rent back agreement with an unauthorised SRB agreement provider who is the firm's customer; and
- (2)
excludes an unauthorised SRB agreement provider.
Arranging or administering for unauthorised providers: home reversion plans and regulated sale and rent back agreements2
A person may enter into a home reversion plan or regulated sale and rent back agreement2 as provider or agreement provider2 without being regulated by the FSA (or an exempt person) if the person does not do so by way of business (see PERG 14.5). If a firm arranges or makes arrangements2 for such a person to enter into a home reversion plan or regulated sale and rent back agreement2 as provider or agreement provider, the firm will be responsible for ensuring that the reversion occupier's or SRB agreement seller's interests are protected to a reasonable standard, even if the reversion arranger or SRB arranger2 is not acting for the reversion occupier or SRB agreement seller. A reversion administrator or SRB administrator is under the same obligation in relation to a reversion occupier or SRB agreement seller2 under a home reversion plan or regulated sale and rent agreement which it administers on behalf of an unauthorised reversion provider or unauthorised SRB agreement provider.2