Timely insights into the design of mass consumer redress schemes

In R (All-Party Parliamentary Group on Fair Banking) v Financial Conduct Authority [2025] EWHC 525 (Admin), the High Court examined the FCA’s decision regarding the exclusion of certain customers from the scope of the voluntary Interest Rate Hedging Products (IRHP) redress scheme established in 2012, which was criticised in a subsequent independent review. The case contains important insights into the trade-offs involved in the design of such schemes, given the high likelihood that the FCA will soon be rolling out a redress scheme to deal with motor finance mis-selling.

Background

From 2010 onwards, large numbers of complaints began to be made about mis-selling of IRHPs alongside small and medium sized business loans. The IRHPs, which typically swapped floating for fixed interest rates, had become ruinously expensive for many bank customers after interest rates fell sharply during the 2008 financial crisis. Following supervisory intervention by the FSA (the predecessor of the FCA), a voluntary redress scheme was negotiated with various large banks in 2012. The scheme incorporated a “sophistication test”, which excluded customers that exceeded certain objective metrics or were otherwise sophisticated in the use of financial products from being eligible to receive compensation under the scheme for mis-sold financial products.

Subsequently the FCA committed to a review of its supervisory intervention on IRHPs by a leading King’s Counsel. That review concluded (among other things) that the FCA should not have excluded a subset of customers from the scheme via the sophistication test. The FCA disagreed with these findings and decided to take no further action to address that conclusion. The All-Party Parliamentary Group on Fair Banking challenged this exclusion by way of judicial review proceedings, arguing that the FCA’s decision was irrational and procedurally unfair due to a lack of proper consultation with stakeholders.

The FCA argued that it was on balance right (or at least not irrational) to agree the redress scheme incorporating the sophistication test for a number of reasons including that:

Court’s Findings

The High Court rejected the challenge to the manner in which the FCA had exercised its discretion not to seek to require further redress to be paid to sophisticated customers excluded from the voluntary scheme, holding that:

Implications

This judgment reinforces the principles that regulatory bodies like the FCA have broad discretion in designing and implementing redress schemes (whether voluntary or compulsory, especially when balancing regulatory priorities, and the need for timely action, against the complexities of individual cases. Its decisions in such circumstances will not be lightly overturned by the courts. The judgment also shines a light into the decision-making processes of the regulator and the trade-offs that are made when negotiating such schemes. Those insights are worth considering at a time when another mass consumer redress scheme in relation to motor finance mis-selling is highly likely in the coming months, the design of which will inevitably involve similar issues.

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