Close Menu
Finance Pro
  • Home
  • Art Gallery
  • Art Investment
  • Art Stocks
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Finance
  • Investing in Art
  • Investments
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • How Much of Your Portfolio Should Be in Cryptocurrency?
  • Archibald Knox items feature in refreshed national art gallery
  • Finance professionals say the AI skills gap is widening
  • Lloyds will not take legal action against UK’s £9bn car finance redress scheme
  • #CryptoCornerSeason2 | Sigma Capital’s Vineet Budki To CNBC-TV18 – Most investors seem to be in a wait and watch mode – Investors should evaluate and invest in cryptocurrencies on declines Manisha Gupta | Binance #CNBCTV18Market #Cryptocurrenc – LinkedIn
  • What They Are and How To Choose
  • Funding secured to reopen galleries at Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery
  • The true cost of owning a priceless painting- The Week
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Get In Touch
Finance ProFinance Pro
  • Home
  • Art Gallery
  • Art Investment
  • Art Stocks
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Finance
  • Investing in Art
  • Investments
Finance Pro
Home»Finance»Lloyds will not take legal action against UK’s £9bn car finance redress scheme
Finance

Lloyds will not take legal action against UK’s £9bn car finance redress scheme

April 10, 20263 Mins Read


Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.

Lloyds Banking Group has decided against launching a legal challenge against the UK financial regulator’s £9.1bn compensation scheme for consumers allegedly mis-sold car finance over the past two decades.

The move by Lloyds, which is the UK’s largest provider of vehicle loans through its Black Horse brand, is a boost for the Financial Conduct Authority less than two weeks after it presented scaled-back proposals for its industry-wide redress programme.

The bank had weighed mounting a legal challenge to the scheme because it believed that the regulator had not adhered to court judgments, according to people familiar with the matter. In October, when the FCA published initial details of its programme, Lloyds was forced to increase its total provisions to £1.95bn.

While Lloyds still has significant concerns about the way the FCA has designed the scheme and how it came about, the bank’s senior executives decided this week that it was in the interests of both the industry and consumers to draw a line under the issue.

“While we remain disappointed in and disagree with [the FCA’s] conclusions, we believe that moving forward with the scheme is now the right step for our customers and shareholders in support of a clear, orderly and final process that provides certainty for consumers and industry,” a Lloyds spokesperson told the FT.

“Motor finance continues to play a critical role for customers across the UK and our focus is on ensuring these essential services are provided.”

The news comes only days after FirstRand, one of South Africa’s biggest lenders, announced it had decided to exit the UK’s motor finance market after 20 years and sell the challenger bank Aldermore because of the FCA’s redress programme. 

On Tuesday FirstRand slammed the scheme as “deeply flawed”, “disproportionate” and “unfair” and said that owning a consumer finance business in the UK had been made overly risky because of the scheme.

Despite Lloyds’ decision, other individual lenders, trade associations, law firms and consumer representatives have been considering whether to launch their own legal challenges against the scheme.

Under the rules of FCA redress programmes, parties have 28 days to bring a legal challenge after they are announced. It will then be up to a judge to decide which, if any, challenges will be allowed and how soon they are heard.

The UK motor finance scandal, which bubbled away for years before reaching the Supreme Court last year, has at times hit the share prices of Britain’s biggest banks and forced them to book billions of pounds in provisions to cover compensation costs. 

Recommended

Nikhil Rathi speaks on stage with a headset microphone during the Singapore FinTech Festival.

It stems from commissions paid by lenders to car dealerships as part of financing for vehicle purchases. The FCA and courts have said many of these commissions were poorly disclosed to consumers and often incentivised dealerships to charge higher interest rates.  

At the end of March, the FCA gave full details of its redress programme and made concessions to banks, reducing the number of people eligible for compensation from 14.2mn to 12.1mn.

It said the estimated cost for British lenders had dropped to £9.1bn, compared with the £11bn it forecast in initial proposals last October.

An FCA spokesperson said on Friday: “Our scheme provides certainty and is the most cost-efficient and orderly way to deal with liabilities that exist. We welcome Lloyds, and other lenders, confirming they will deliver it.”



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Finance professionals say the AI skills gap is widening

April 10, 2026 Finance

Embedded Finance vs Banking as a Service in 2026: Key Differences Explained

April 10, 2026 Finance

NMG Announces US$297 Million Equity Financing Package including US$213 Million Private Placement and US$84 Million Bought Deal Public Offering, Advancing Phase-2 Matawinie Mine toward FID – Yahoo Finance UK

April 9, 2026 Finance

African Development Bank Group Consultative Dialogue on NAFA: Abidjan to Host a Crucial Meeting to Redesign Africa’s Financial System and Accelerate the Continent’s Development – African Development Bank Group

April 9, 2026 Finance

The finance talent crunch – and why hybrid global teams are winning

April 8, 2026 Finance

Better Home & Finance Holding Company Reports $1.64B in Preliminary Funded Loan Volume for Q1 2026, Exceeding Prior Guidance; Strengthens Balance Sheet and Announces Strategic Actions to Drive Profitable Growth – Yahoo Finance

April 8, 2026 Finance
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss

How Much of Your Portfolio Should Be in Cryptocurrency?

April 12, 2026 Cryptocurrency 2 Mins Read

If you’re not sure how much of an allocation cryptocurrency deserves in your portfolio, you’re…

Archibald Knox items feature in refreshed national art gallery

April 11, 2026

Finance professionals say the AI skills gap is widening

April 10, 2026

Lloyds will not take legal action against UK’s £9bn car finance redress scheme

April 10, 2026
Our Picks

How Much of Your Portfolio Should Be in Cryptocurrency?

April 12, 2026

Archibald Knox items feature in refreshed national art gallery

April 11, 2026

Finance professionals say the AI skills gap is widening

April 10, 2026

Lloyds will not take legal action against UK’s £9bn car finance redress scheme

April 10, 2026
Our Picks

Outlook India – India’s Best Magazine

April 9, 2026

NMG Announces US$297 Million Equity Financing Package including US$213 Million Private Placement and US$84 Million Bought Deal Public Offering, Advancing Phase-2 Matawinie Mine toward FID – Yahoo Finance UK

April 9, 2026

Leonard McComb exhibition at Wirral gallery later this year

April 9, 2026
Latest updates

How Much of Your Portfolio Should Be in Cryptocurrency?

April 12, 2026

Archibald Knox items feature in refreshed national art gallery

April 11, 2026

Finance professionals say the AI skills gap is widening

April 10, 2026
Weekly Updates

Cryptocurrency scams cost customers in Essex County last year – NBC Boston

June 19, 2024

Top Tron Investors Lose Faith In Justin Sun & Join New $0.001777 Cryptocurrency

August 21, 2024

Illinois Tech Receives $6 Million NSF Investment to Diversify, Expand Chicago’s Tech Workforce and Convert Research into Societal Impact

February 1, 2024
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Get In Touch
© 2026 Finance Pro

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.