Home Money Vanquis shares slump after jump in costs

Vanquis shares slump after jump in costs

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Investigation: Vanquis said in January that its car finance arm Moneybarn was not affected by the FCA's review into car finance loans as it never offered variable fees.

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Vanquis banking group shares plunged on Monday after the company warned that profits would be “substantially lower” than market forecasts.

The Bradford-based firm expects an adjusted return on tangible equity (net profits divided by shareholders’ equity) in the low single digits for the current financial year.

It follows the Financial Conduct Authority’s review of the motor finance commission’s landmark settlements.

Although it was not the subject of the FCA investigation, the company said its administrative costs had increased significantly in dealing with the high volume of complaints, an overwhelming majority of which are unsubstantiated.

Investigation: Vanquis said in January that its car finance arm Moneybarn was not affected by the FCA's review into car finance loans as it never offered variable fees.

Investigation: Vanquis said in January that its car finance arm Moneybarn was not affected by the FCA’s review into car finance loans as it never offered variable fees.

Vanquis said he was considering legal action “to address this situation.”

He added that the majority of third-party complaints received by Vanquis are not related to the Financial Conduct Authority’s review of the motor finance commission’s historic settlements and, in fact, relate to Vanquis’ credit card business. Vanquis.

Meanwhile, for fiscal 2025, Vanquis anticipates its RoTE will remain at a single-digit level due to the “near-term adverse impact” of accounting requirements related to accounts receivable growth.

By late afternoon, Vanquis’ share price had fallen 39.6 per cent to 75p, making it by far the biggest loser on the FTSE All-Share index.

Launched in January, the FCA’s investigation into historic car finance loans will examine so-called “discretionary commission arrangements” (DCAs), which used to comprise around three-quarters of all car finance deals.

DCAs were controversial because they allowed car dealers and brokers to impose any interest rate they wanted on a loan, thus encouraging them to charge higher rates. They were finally banned in 2021.

However, over the past year, more customers told regulators that lenders unfairly rejected their compensation for DCAs.

The Financial Ombudsman Services recently ruled in favor of two clients whose cases were rejected, while others were upheld in court.

With lenders expected to receive a flood of complaints following these rulings, the FCA launched an investigation into DCAs and told car finance lenders to pause their responses to complaints received since 17 November.

Many analysts believe the investigation could mirror the payment protection insurance scandal, which led to banks paying out around £40bn in compensation.

Vanquis said in January that its car finance arm Moneybarn was not affected by the FCA investigation as it never offered variable commissions.

Later this month, the company plans to launch a strategy to return RoTE levels to the mid-teens from 2026 through a return to “sustainable revenue growth.”

On Monday, it warned that moves to overhaul its products and pricing would result in annual revenues being “materially lower” than the £538.3m estimated by analysts.

Ian McLaughlin, chief executive of Vanquis, said: “We have short-term challenges to address, but we remain confident that the group’s new strategy will deliver good results for our clients and attractive, sustainable returns for our shareholders in the medium and long term.” .

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