UK finance firms sharpen staff scrutiny as new misconduct regime looms
XLF•Culture concerns and disclosure requirements
Culture in Britain's financial services industry has long been in the spotlight.
Lawmakers on the parliamentary Treasury Committee voiced shock at the prevalence of sexual harassment and bullying — and at how poorly such allegations were handled — in a 2024 report on sexism in London's financial centre.
An FCA study that year showed that reports of misconduct such as bullying had surged over 70% over three years to 2023, with more than one third of firms not reporting cases to their boards.
Under the new rules, conduct breaches must be disclosed to future employers under regulatory references or formal fitness-for-office assessments, designed to prevent "rolling bad apples" from avoiding consequences by moving from job to job. Instead, offenders risk a potentially career-ending regulatory investigation.
The guidance also covers social media activity.



