SYSC 9.1 General rules on record-keeping
A firm must arrange for orderly records to be kept of its business and internal organisation, including all services and transactions undertaken by it, which must be sufficient to enable the FSA or any other relevant competent authority under MiFID to monitor the firm's compliance with the requirements under the regulatory system, and in particular to ascertain that the firm has complied with all obligations with respect to clients.
[Note:
article 13(6) of MiFID and article 5(1)(f) of the MiFID implementing Directive]
A firm must retain all records kept by it under this chapter in relation to its MiFID business for a period of at least five years.
[Note: article 51 (1) of the MiFID implementing Directive]
In relation to its MiFID business, a common platform firm must retain records in a medium that allows the storage of information in a way accessible for future reference by the FSA or any other relevant competent authority under MiFID, and so that the following conditions are met:
- (1)
the FSA or any other relevant competent authority under MiFID must be able to access them readily and to reconstitute each key stage of the processing of each transaction;
- (2)
it must be possible for any corrections or other amendments, and the contents of the records prior to such corrections and amendments, to be easily ascertained;
- (3)
it must not be possible for the records otherwise to be manipulated or altered.
[Note: article 51(2) of the MiFID implementing Directive]
Guidance on record-keeping
Subject to any other record-keeping rule in the Handbook, the records required under the Handbook should be capable of being reproduced in the English language on paper. Where a firm is required to retain a record of a communication that was not made in the English language, it may retain it in that language. However, it should be able to provide a translation on request. If a firm's records relate to business carried on from an establishment in a country or territory outside the United Kingdom, an official language of that country or territory may be used instead of the English language.1
In relation to the retention of records for non-MiFID business, a firm should have appropriate systems and controls in place with respect to the adequacy of, access to, and the security of its records so that the firm may fulfil its regulatory and statutory obligations. With respect to retention periods, the general principle is that records should be retained for as long as is relevant for the purposes for which they are made.1
Schedule 1 to each module of the Handbook sets out a list summarising the record-keeping requirements of that module.1
1[Note: article 51(3) of MiFID implementing Directive]
1The Committee of European Securities Regulators (CESR) has issued recommendations on the list of minimum records under Article 51(3) of the MiFID implementing Directive. This can be found at: www.fsa.gov.uk/pubs/other/CESR_Minimum_List_Recommendations.pdf.