UT (Tax & Chancery) UT-2022-000134 UT-2022-000135 UT-2022-000137 - [2025] UKUT 00214 (TCC)
Upper Tribunal Tax and Chancery Chamber

UT (Tax & Chancery) UT-2022-000134 UT-2022-000135 UT-2022-000137 - [2025] UKUT 00214 (TCC)

Fecha: 31-Ene-2025

Prohibition orders

Prohibition orders

833.

The Authority may decide to make a prohibition order under s56 FSMA 2000 “if it appears to it that an individual is not a fit and proper person to perform functions in relation to a regulated activity”.

834.

The part of the Authority’s Handbook entitled “The Fit and Proper test for Approved Persons” contains relevant guidance, including FIT 1.3.1B G, which provides that “the most important considerations will be the person’s: (1) honesty, integrity and reputation; (2) competence and capability; and (3) financial soundness”. The Authority’s Enforcement Guide provides further guidance. Paragraph 9.2.3 provides that the scope of a prohibition order will depend on the range of functions which the individual performs in relation to regulated activities, the reasons why he is not a fit and proper person, and the severity of risk which he poses to consumers or to the market.

835.

In its Decision Notice in relation to each Trader the Authority set out its decision on the same basis for all three of them:

(1)

Fitness and propriety - The Authority considers that the relevant Trader’s conduct in deliberately engaging in market manipulation was dishonest and lacked integrity. This dishonest conduct was highly likely adversely to impact other market participants and was repeated many times over a period of two months. As a result, they are not a fit and proper person to perform any function in relation to any regulated activity carried out by an authorised person, exempt person or exempt professional firm.

(2)

Prohibition - The Authority has had regard to the guidance in Chapter 9 of the Enforcement Guide in considering whether to impose a prohibition order on the relevant Trader. The Authority has the power to prohibit individuals under section 56 FSMA 2000. The Authority considers that, due to their dishonesty and the fact that they have engaged in deliberate market abuse, each Trader is not a fit and proper person to perform any function in relation to any regulated activity carried out by an authorised person, exempt person or exempt professional firm, and that a prohibition order should be imposed on them under section 56 FSMA 2000.

836.

The Authority decided to make the prohibition orders on the basis that each Trader’s conduct was “dishonest and lacked integrity”. There can be no doubt that conduct that is dishonest must also lack integrity for this purpose.

837.

We have concluded that Mr Urra, Mr Sheth and Mr Lopez each engaged in an abusive trading strategy and their conduct was dishonest. It is clear that the imposition of a prohibition order by the Authority under s 56 FSMA 2000 on the grounds that they are each not a fit and proper person to perform any function in relation to any regulated activity carried out by an authorised person, exempt person or exempt professional firm is a course of action reasonably open to the Authority on the basis of the findings that we have made. We therefore see no basis on which we should interfere with the Authority’s decision in that regard.