RFCCBS -1.1 Executive summary
Executive summary
1This guidance explains our policy and our approach to our role as a registering authority for societies under the Co-operative and Community Benefit Societies Act 2014. It also explains the legal obligations and relevant legal processes for societies.
1We want this guidance to help societies and their advisers by making our approach clear and transparent. We hope it will answer many of your questions about our approach to our registration function.
1As the registering authority for societies, the FCA and our predecessors published a series of information notes to help societies. All this guidance is now brought together in this document, which is also the result of extensive consultation with stakeholders.
1This is ‘general guidance’. This means that it explains our policy and suggests some ways to comply with it. It also clearly explains the current rights and responsibilities of societies under the Act. It is aimed at a wide audience, including society officers and members. It is not a substitute for legal advice.
1 RFCCBS 1 and 2 provide an introduction and explain our role as the registering authority under the Co-operative and Community Benefit Societies Act 2014. The FCA’s role as registering authority is different and separate from our role as a financial services regulator. Companies House is the registering authority for companies and we are the registering authority for societies.
1 RFCCBS 3 sets out the registration requirements for societies. A society which plans to carry on an industry, business or trade can register under the Act either as a co-operative society or a community benefit society. Registration gives a business its own corporate identity and limited liability status.
1When a society applies to us to register, we will look at the information in its application form and check its proposed rules. The Act sets out the minimum content for these rules and we give this information in RFCCBS 3.4 of this guidance.
1 RFCCBS 6 gives information on capital. All societies are limited by shares. Most societies issue shares in the form of withdrawable share capital. These shares are issued at risk and cannot increase in value and may go down in value. There is a legal limit on the total of withdrawable shares which an individual member who is not another society may hold in a single society.
1Withdrawable shares which are non-transferable shares are not ‘controlled investments’ or ‘specified investments’ under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000. The issue of non-transferable shares by a society registered under the Act is not therefore subject to either our financial promotions or conduct of business rules.
1Members generally acquire shares in a society in order to capitalise a co-operative business or to further the aims of a community benefit society. The terms and conditions and the rewards linked to the holding of shares, such as the rate of interest (where this is payable), can be an indicator of compliance with the conditions for registration. RFCCBS 6.1.21 onwards provide examples of indicators of compliance and non-compliance with these conditions.
1Along with any balance sheet, these accounts must give a true and fair view of the society’s income and expenditure and of its affairs at the date of the balance sheet. Societies must send us their annual return and accounts within 7 months of the end of the society’s financial year.
1In RFCCBS 8 we summarise a society’s obligations and the processes a society must follow under the Act, including the obligations to continue to meet the conditions for its registration, to register any alteration of its rules with us before implementing it, and to maintain and submit accounts and an annual return.
1Directors of societies must always act prudently and legally in accordance with the society’s rules and in its interests. The Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986 applies to the directors of societies. RFCCBS 8.1.10 onwards provides further details.
1This guidance also gives information about areas including changing your society’s name, recording any charges, and changing the date of the society’s financial year end.
1Societies can be brand new businesses or created by converting from another kind of corporate body. In turn, societies themselves can also convert into another kind of corporate body, such as a company. We explain the procedures for conversions in the section, starting at RFCCBS 3.6.
1A number of different factors can mean we have to remove a society from the register. These can include a transfer of engagements to, or amalgamation with, another society or company, conversion to a company, administration, winding up, and dissolution. We give more information on these processes from RFCCBS 8.8 onwards.