Financial Services
(Jersey) Law 1998[1]
A LAW to make provision for the
supervision of certain types of financial service business, generally to
provide for purposes connected with, and incidental to, the supervision of
certain types of financial service business, and to create certain offences, including
offences relating to insider dealing, market manipulation, and providing
misleading information, in respect of financial matters.[2]
Commencement
[see endnotes]
PART
1
PRELIMINARY
Definitions, exemptions and
functions
1 General interpretation[3]
(1) In this Law, unless the
context otherwise requires –
“address”, in respect of a service provided by a person
carrying on trust company business, means an address for the receipt of
correspondence or electronic communications (including telephone calls and
facsimile communications) or both provided by that person in the course of that
business to a third party;
“AIF” means a scheme or arrangement that –
(a) is an
AIF within the meaning of Directive 2011/61/EU, in relation to which an
AIFM (as defined in that Directive) is an AIFM to which the provisions of that
Directive apply; or
(b) is an
AIF within the meaning of the UK AIFM Regulations, in relation to which an AIFM
(as defined in those Regulations) is an AIFM to which the provisions of those Regulations
apply;
“AIF services business” has, subject to any Order under
Article 4, the meaning given to that expression by Article 2;
“applicant” has the meaning given in Article 8(1);
“associate”, in relation to a person, means –
(a) the
person’s husband, wife or civil partner, child or stepchild;
(b) the
person’s partner;
(c) any
company of which the person is a director;
(ca) any limited
liability company of which the person is a manager;
(cb) where the person
is a limited liability company, any manager, any limited liability company in
the same group as the limited liability company, and any manager of such a
limited liability company;
(d) where
the person is a company, any director or employee of the company, any company
in the same group as the company, and any director or employee of such a
company; and
(e) any
person with whom the first mentioned person has an agreement, arrangement or
other obligation –
(i) to act together
in exercising voting power,
(ii) with
respect to the acquisition, holding or disposal of shares or other interests in
a company, partnership or other association;
“auditor” means a person qualified under Article 113
of the Companies (Jersey)
Law 1991 for appointment as auditor of a company under Article 109 of
that Law;
“buy” includes to acquire;
“client”, in relation to a registered person, means a
person, whether resident on or off Jersey, with or for whom the registered
person transacts or has transacted financial service business (other than trust
company business) or gives or has given advice about financial service business
(other than trust company business);
“client asset” means –
(a) property
belonging to a client, including money, investments and insurance policies; and
(b) any
fund asset;
“Code of Practice” means a Code of Practice under
Article 19;
“collective investment fund” has the meaning given to
that expression by Article 3 of the Collective Investment Funds
(Jersey) Law 1988;
“Commission” means the Jersey Financial Services
Commission established by the Financial Services Commission
(Jersey) Law 1998;
“company” (except for the purposes of Part 3A or
paragraph 1 of Schedule 1) means any body corporate (other than a
limited liability company registered as a body corporate under the LLC Law)
incorporated with or without limited liability in any part of the world;
“compliance officer” means a person so designated, under
a Code of Practice, by a registered person and having the function of
monitoring whether the law of Jersey, and the Codes of Practice, are being
complied with in the conduct of the business in respect of which the registered
person is registered;
“Court” means the Royal Court;
“Directive 2011/61/EU” means Directive 2011/61/EU of the
European Parliament and of the Council of 8 June 2011 on Alternative
Investment Fund Managers and amending Directives 2003/41/EC and 2009/65/EC and
Regulations (EC) No. 1060/2009 and (EU) No. 1095/2010 (O.J. No. L174
1.7.2011, p.1), as amended from time to time;
“director” means a person occupying the position of
director, by whatever name called, and includes a manager of a limited
liability company;
“dispose” includes –
(a) in
the case of an investment consisting of rights under a contract or other
arrangements, to assume the corresponding liabilities under the contract or
arrangements;
(b) in
the case of any other investment, to issue or create the investment or to grant
the rights or interests of which it consists;
(c) in
the case of an investment consisting of rights under a contract, to surrender,
assign or convert those rights;
“documents” includes accounts, deeds, writings and
information recorded in any form and, in relation to information recorded
otherwise than in legible form, references to its provision or production
include references to providing or producing a copy of the information in
legible form;
“ESAs” means the European Supervisory Authorities
comprising –
(a) the
European Banking Authority established by Regulation (EU) No. 1093/2010 of
the European Parliament and of the Council of 24 November 2010 (O.J.
No. L 331, 15.12.2010, p.12);
(b) the
European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority established by
Regulation (EU) No. 1094/2010 of the European Parliament and of the
Council of 24 November 2010 (O.J. No. L 331, 15.12.2010, p.48);
and
(c) the
European Securities and Markets Authority established by Regulation (EU)
No. 1095/2010 of the European Parliament and of the Council of
24 November 2010 (O.J. No. L 331, 15.12.2010, p.84);
“ESRB” means the European Systemic Risk Board established
by Regulation (EU) No. 1092/2010 of the European Parliament and of the
Council of 24 November 2010 (O.J. No. L 331, 15.12.2010,
p.1);
“express trust” means a trust created by the express
declaration of a settlor or a trustee made orally, by instrument in writing or
by will;
“financial service advertisement” means an advertisement
containing –
(a) an
invitation to transact financial service business; or
(b) information
which is intended or might reasonably be presumed to be intended to lead directly
or indirectly to the transaction of financial service business,
and includes any means of bringing such an invitation or such
information to the notice of any person, and a reference to an advertisement
shall be construed accordingly;
“financial service business” has, subject to any Order
under Article 4, the meaning given to that expression by Article 2(1);
“foundation” means a foundation incorporated under the Foundations (Jersey)
Law 2009;
“fund asset” means an asset of a collective investment
fund or of an unregulated fund;
“fund services business” has, subject to any Order under
Article 4, the meaning given to that expression by Article 2;
“general insurance” means, subject to any Order under
Article 4, a type of insurance that falls within a paragraph specified in
Schedule 4 and that is not excepted by virtue of a further provision
contained in that paragraph;
“general insurance advice” means advice about a
client’s general insurance requirements, including the merits of buying,
selling, lapsing, switching, cancelling, altering or converting a policy of
general insurance;
“general insurance mediation business” has, subject to
any Order under Article 4, the meaning given to that expression by Article 2;
“group” means, in
relation to a company or a limited liability company –
(a) that
company or limited liability company;
(b) any
other company or limited liability company which is its holding company or
holding limited liability company, or its subsidiary; and
(c) any
other company or limited liability company which is a subsidiary of that
holding company or holding limited liability company;
“holding company” has the meaning given to that
expression by Article 2 of the Companies (Jersey)
Law 1991;
“holding limited liability
company” has the meaning given to that expression under
Regulation 2 of the Limited Liability Companies (General Provisions) (Jersey)
Regulations 202-;
“industrial and provident society” means a society
registered or deemed to be registered under the Industrial and Provident
Societies Acts 1965 to 75 of the United Kingdom as applied to Jersey by
the Industrial and Provident Societies (Channel Islands) Order 1965;
“investment” means, subject to any Order under Article 4,
an asset, right or interest that falls within a paragraph of Schedule 1
and that is not excepted by virtue of a further provision contained in that
paragraph;
“investment business” has, subject to any Order under
Article 4, the meaning given to that expression by Article 2(2);
“Jersey AIF” has the meaning given to “AIF”
by Regulation 3 of the Alternative Investment Funds
(Jersey) Regulations 2012;
“key person” means a person employed or otherwise
engaged by a registered person as an officer of any one or more of the
following classes in relation to the conduct of the business of the registered
person –
(a) compliance
officer;
(b) money
laundering compliance officer;
(c) money
laundering reporting officer;
“limited liability company”
means a limited liability company registered under either the LLC Law or a body
established under an equivalent law of a jurisdiction outside Jersey;
“LLC controller” has the meaning given by sub-paragraph (ba)(i)
of the definition “principal person”;
“LLC interest” has
the same meaning as in the LLC Law;
“LLC Law” means
the Limited Liability Companies
(Jersey) Law 2018;
“manager”, in
relation to a limited liability company, includes a member of that limited
liability company in whom the management of the limited liability company vests
in accordance with Article 21 of the LLC Law;
“Minister” means the Minister for External Relations;
“money laundering compliance officer” means a person
appointed as “compliance officer” under the Money Laundering (Jersey)
Order 2008;
“money laundering reporting officer” means a person
appointed as “reporting officer” under the Money Laundering (Jersey)
Order 2008;
“money service business” has, subject to any Order under
Article 4, the meaning given to that expression by Article 2(9);
“partner”, in respect of a partnership, means a partner
or an equivalent position in the partnership howsoever called and includes a
member of a limited liability company;
“partnership” includes a partnership constituted under
the law of a country or territory outside Jersey;
“pension supervisor” means any entity (whether in Jersey
or elsewhere) responsible in whole or in part for the supervision of pension
funds, plans, schemes or arrangements;
“policy holder” means a person who is the holder of, or
may receive a benefit under, a policy securing a contract of insurance;
“prescribed” means prescribed by an Order made by the
Minister on the recommendation of the Commission;
“principal person” means –
in relation to a person –
(a) being
a sole trader, the proprietor;
(b) being
a company –
(i) a person who,
either alone or with any associate or associates –
(A) directly or
indirectly holds 10% or more of the share capital issued by the company,
(B) is
entitled to exercise or control the exercise of not less than 10% of the voting
power in general meeting of the company or of any other company of which it is
a subsidiary, or
(C) has a
holding in the company directly or indirectly which makes it possible to
exercise significant influence over the management of the company,
other than a person holding shares only as a custodian or its
nominee and able to exercise the voting rights attached to the shares only
under instructions given in writing (including by electronic means),
(ii) a
director,
(iii) a
person in accordance with whose directions, whether given directly or
indirectly, any director of the company, or director of any other company of
which the company is a subsidiary, is accustomed to act (but disregarding
advice given in a professional capacity),
but not including, in relation to a company that is a Jersey AIF,
any shareholder controller of that company;
(ba) being a limited
liability company means –
(i) a person, other
than a person holding LLC interests in the limited liability company only as a
custodian or its nominee and able to exercise the voting rights attached to
those LLC interests only under instructions given in writing (including by
electronic means), who, either alone or with any associate or
associates –
(A) directly or
indirectly holds not less than 10% of the LLC interests in the limited
liability company,
(B) is
entitled to exercise or control the exercise of not less than 10% of the
voting power in meetings of the limited liability company or of any other
limited liability company of which it is a subsidiary, or
(C) has
an LLC interest in the limited liability company directly or indirectly which
makes it possible to exercise significant influence over the management of the
limited liability company,
(ii) a
manager, or equivalent by whatever name called,
(iii) a
person in accordance with whose directions, whether given directly or
indirectly –
(A) any
manager, or where there is no appointed manager, the members of the limited
liability company, or
(B) any
manager or where there is no appointed manager, the members of any limited
liability company of which the limited liability company is a subsidiary,
is accustomed to act (but disregarding advice given in a
professional capacity),
but not including, in relation to limited liability company that is
a Jersey AIF, any shareholder controller of that limited liability company;
(c) being
a partnership –
(i) a partner,
(ii) where
a partner is a company, any person who, in relation to that company, falls
within sub-paragraph (b)(i), (ii) or (iii), and
in relation to a person whose registered office and principal place
of business is outside Jersey, includes a person who, either alone or jointly
with one or more other persons, is responsible for the conduct of the
person’s financial service business in Jersey, and
includes a person who has been appointed a liquidator of the person
(whether or not appointed under a bankruptcy) or an administrator of a bankrupt
person’s affairs;
“public statement” means a statement issued under
Article 25;
“recognized fund” means a collective investment fund in
relation to which there is a recognized fund certificate granted under the Collective
Investment Funds (Recognized Funds) (General Provisions (Jersey) Order 1988 or
the Collective Investment Funds
(Recognized Funds) (Rules) (Jersey) Order 2003;
“registered person” means a person registered by the
Commission under Article 9, and “registered” shall be construed
accordingly;
“registration” means registration by the Commission
under this Law;
“relevant supervisory authority”, in relation to a
country or territory outside Jersey, means an authority discharging in that
country or territory any function that is the same as, or similar to, a
function of the Commission;
“rules of a securities market” means rules written and
published in a manner that will bring them to the attention of anyone affected
by them (whether contained in a legislative instrument or otherwise), of the
country or territory, or part of the country or territory, that hosts the
securities market that regulate or are recognized as regulating the conduct of
the securities market;
“secretary” means
a person occupying the position of, and carrying out the duties of –
(a) in
respect of a service provided by a person carrying on trust company business, a
company secretary, howsoever named;
(b) the
secretary of a limited liability partnership under the Limited Liability
Partnerships (Jersey) Law 2017;
(c) the
secretary or deputy secretary of a limited liability company under the LLC Law;
“securities market functions” means any of the following
functions –
(a) the
listing or admittance to trading of securities on a securities market;
(b) the
authorization or registration (as the case may be) and supervision of any
person that –
(i) deals in
securities,
(ii) is
a professional intermediary, or
(iii) is a
professional advisor to an issuer,
in accordance with the rules of a securities market and recognized
as so doing under those rules; and
(c) the
monitoring of trading activity on a securities market for the purposes of
deterring or detecting one or more of the following activities –
(i) market
manipulation,
(ii) misleading
information, and
(iii) insider
dealing;
“sell” includes to dispose;
“shareholder controller” has the meaning given by
sub-paragraph (b)(i) of the definition of “principal person”;
“subscription” for the purposes of Article 2(2)(c)(i)
in relation to a pension scheme
includes the application or arrangement to participate in or pay into the
pension scheme;
“subsidiary” has
the meaning given to it by –
(a) in
relation to a body corporate (other than a limited liability company registered
as a body corporate under the LLC Law), Article 2 of the Companies (Jersey)
Law 1991; and
(b) in
relation to a limited liability company, Regulation 2 of the Limited Liability Companies
(General Provisions) (Jersey) Regulations 2022;
“supervisor of a securities market” means a person other
than a relevant supervisory authority that is incorporated, constituted or
otherwise established under a legislative instrument of a country or territory
that hosts a securities market, and whose functions include (but are not limited
to) securities market functions;
“trust” has the same meaning as in the Trusts (Jersey) Law 1984;
“trust company business” has, subject to any Order under
Article 4, the meaning given to that expression by Article 2(3);
“trust company business assets”, in respect of a
registered person, means –
(a) trust
property; or
(b) any
other assets or property not beneficially owned by the registered person;
“trust property” has the meaning given to that
expression by Article 1 of the Trusts (Jersey) Law 1984;
“UK AIFM Regulations” means the Alternative Investment
Fund Managers Regulations 2013 of the United Kingdom (S.I. 2013/1773)
as amended from time to time;
“unclassified fund” means a collective investment fund
that is not a recognized fund;
“unregulated fund” means an unregulated fund within the
meaning of the Collective Investment Funds
(Unregulated Funds) (Jersey) Order 2008.[4]
(2) In this Law a note
contained in a paragraph of a Schedule forms part of that paragraph.
2 “Financial service business” defined[5]
(1) A person carries on
financial service business if by way of business the person carries on
investment business, trust company business, general insurance mediation business,
money service business, fund services business or AIF services business.[6]
(2) A person carries on
investment business if the person –
(a) deals
in investments, that is, the person –
(i) buys, sells,
subscribes for or underwrites investments, either as principal or agent, or
(ii) makes
arrangements for another person (whether as principal or agent) to buy, sell,
subscribe for or underwrite investments;
(b) undertakes
discretionary investment management, that is, the person decides as agent to
buy, sell, subscribe for or underwrite investments on behalf of a principal;
(c) gives
investment advice, that is, the person gives to persons in their capacity as
investors or potential investors advice on the merits of –
(i) the purchase,
sale, subscription for or underwriting of a particular investment, or
(ii) the
exercise of a right conferred by an investment to acquire, dispose of,
underwrite or convert the investment.[7]
(3) A person carries on
trust company business if the person carries on a business that
involves –
(a) the
provision of company administration services;
(b) the
provision of trustee or fiduciary services;
(c) the
provision of services to foundations;
(ca) the provision of
services to limited liability companies; or
(d) the
provision of services to partnerships not being services described in sub-paragraph (a),
(b), (c) or (ca),
and in the course of providing those services the person provides
any of the services specified in paragraph (4).[8]
(4) Those services
are –
(a) acting
as a company formation agent, a limited liability company registration agent, a
partnership formation agent or a foundation formation agent;
(b) acting
as or fulfilling the function of or arranging for another person to act as or
fulfil the function of director or alternate director of a company;
(c) acting
as or fulfilling the function of or arranging for another person to act as or
fulfil the function of a partner of a partnership;
(d) acting
as or fulfilling the function of or arranging for another person to act as or
fulfil the function of a member of the council of a foundation;
(da) acting as or
fulfilling the function of or arranging for another person to act as or fulfil
the function of a member or manager of a limited liability company;
(e) acting
or arranging for another person to act as secretary, alternate, assistant or
deputy secretary of a company, a limited liability company or a limited
liability partnership;
(f) providing
a registered office or business address for a company, a limited liability
company, a partnership or a foundation;
(g) providing
an accommodation, correspondence or administrative address for a company, a
limited liability company, a partnership or a foundation or for any other
person;
(h) acting
as or fulfilling or arranging for another person to act as or fulfil the
function of trustee of an express trust;
(i) acting
as or fulfilling or arranging for another person to act as shareholder or
unitholder as a nominee for another person.[9]
(5) In this Article a
reference to a company, a limited liability company, trust, partnership or
foundation is a reference –
(a) to a
company, a limited liability company, trust, partnership or foundation wherever
incorporated or otherwise established; and
(b) to
any similar or equivalent structure or arrangement, howsoever named.[10]
(6) For the purposes of
this Article a person acts as a company formation agent, a partnership formation
agent, a limited liability company registration agent or a foundation formation
agent if the person arranges for the registration, formation or incorporation,
or the sale, transfer or disposal, of companies, partnerships or foundations,
as the case may be.[11]
(7) A person carries on
general insurance mediation business if the person, whether as a principal or
an agent, does any of the following –
(a) promotes
himself or herself or another person as able to give general insurance advice
or as able to arrange for persons to enter into contracts of general insurance;
(b) gives
general insurance advice to a person in relation to particular contracts of
general insurance;
(c) arranges
for the entry of persons into contracts of general insurance with other persons;
(d) assists
in the administration and performance of contracts of general insurance;
(e) agrees
to perform an activity referred to in sub-paragraph (a), (b), (c) or (d).[12]
(8) In paragraph (7),
“agent” means an agent of an insurance company, an agent of a
policy holder or an agent of a prospective policy holder.[13]
(9) A person carries on
money service business if the person carries on the business of any of the
following –
(a) a
bureau de change;
(b) providing
cheque cashing services;
(c) transmitting
or receiving funds by wire or other electronic means;
(d) engaging
in money transmission services.[14]
(10) A person carries on fund
services business if by way of business the person is –
(a) a
manager, manager of a managed entity, administrator, registrar, investment
manager or investment adviser;
(b) a
distributor, subscription agent, redemption agent, premium receiving agent,
policy proceeds paying agent, purchase agent or repurchase agent;
(c) a
trustee, custodian or depositary; or
(d) a member (except a limited partner) of a
partnership, including a partnership constituted under the law of a country or
territory outside Jersey,
in relation to an unclassified fund or an unregulated fund.[15]
(11) A person carries on AIF
services business if the person is a legal person whose regular business is
managing one or more AIFs (where “managing”, in relation to an AIF,
has the same meaning as in Directive 2011/61/EU or in the UK AIFM
Regulations, as the case may be).[16]
3 Exclusion from class of
financial service business[17]
An activity described in Schedule 2 that is within a class of
financial service business specified in the Schedule shall not be treated as
within the class of financial service business for the purposes of this Law to
the extent specified in relation to the activity in the Schedule.
3A Certain
general insurance mediation business excluded from application of certain
provisions of this Law[18]
(1) Articles 13 to 19
(inclusive) shall not apply to, or in relation to, incidental general insurance
mediation business.[19]
(2) In paragraph (1),
incidental general insurance mediation business means general insurance
mediation business that is carried on by a person where the person carries
on such business only –
(a) incidentally
to some other business;
(b) in relation
to goods or services sold by him or her; or
(c) by
way of the sale of a policy of general insurance as part of a contract to
provide goods and services.
(3) The Minister may, on
the recommendation of the Commission, by Order amend paragraphs (1) or
(2).
4 Power
to vary definitions and exemptions
(1) The Minister may, on
the recommendation of the Commission, by Order amend –
(a) the
exemptions conferred by –
(i) Article 7(2)(a)(ii),
and
(ii) Article 7(2)(b);
and
(b) subject
to paragraph (5), the Schedules.[20]
(2) The States may by
Regulations amend the definitions and ancillary provisions in Articles 1
and 2.
(3) [21]
(4) An Order or Regulations
under this Article may exclude or modify the effect of the Order or the
Regulations on any other enactment which is expressed to have effect in
relation to financial service business within the meaning of this Law.[22]
(5) An Order made under
this Article may amend Schedule 5 –
(a) by
inserting into the Schedule transitional provisions made by the Order in
accordance with paragraph (4); or
(b) by
amending transitional provisions in the Schedule, other than provisions
inserted by Regulations made under paragraph (6).[23]
(6) Regulations made under
this Article may amend Schedule 5 –
(a) by
inserting into the Schedule transitional provisions made by the Regulations in
accordance with paragraph (4); or
(b) by
amending transitional provisions inserted into the Schedule by Regulations made
under this paragraph.[24]
5 Functions
of the Commission
The Commission shall have the powers conferred on it by this Law and
the duty generally to supervise the persons registered by it in the exercise of
those powers.
6 Limitation
of liability
(1) No person or body to
whom this Article applies shall be liable in damages for anything done or
omitted in the discharge or purported discharge of any functions under this Law
or any enactment made, or purportedly made, under this Law unless it is shown
that the act or omission was in bad faith.
(1A) Paragraph (1) does not apply
so as to prevent an award of damages made in respect of an act on the ground
that the act was unlawful as a result of Article 7(1) of the Human Rights (Jersey)
Law 2000.[25]
(2) This Article applies
to –
(a) the
States;
(b) the
Minister or any person who is, or is acting as, an officer, servant or agent in
an administration of the States for which the Minister is assigned
responsibility or who is performing any duty or exercising any power on behalf
of the Minister; and
(c) the
Commission, any Commissioner or any person who is, or is acting as, an officer,
servant or agent of the Commission or who is a person appointed by the
Commission to conduct an investigation under Article 33 or who is
performing any duty or exercising any power on behalf of the Commission.
PART 2
REGISTRATION OF FINANCIAL SERVICE BUSINESS[26]
Financial Service Business[27]
7 Prohibition of carrying on unauthorised financial service business[28]
(1) Subject to paragraph (2) –
(a) a
person shall not carry on financial service business in or from within Jersey;
and
(b) a
person being a company incorporated in Jersey or a limited liability company
registered in Jersey shall not carry on such business in any part of the world,
unless the person is for the time being a registered person under
this Law, and acting in accordance with the terms of his or her registration.[29]
(2) This Law shall not
apply to –
(a) the
doing of anything by or on behalf of –
(i) the States, the
Viscount, the Judicial Greffier or a Jurat of the Royal Court, or
(ii) subject
to such conditions or restrictions as may be prescribed, any other prescribed
person or institution;
(b) subject
to such conditions or restrictions as may be prescribed, any prescribed
transaction.[30]
(3) Any person who holds
himself or herself out as carrying on financial service business in or from
within Jersey, and any company incorporated in Jersey or limited liability
company registered in Jersey which holds itself out as carrying on financial
service business shall, for the purposes of this Article, be treated as
carrying on such business.[31]
(4) A person who
contravenes this Article shall be guilty of an offence and liable to
imprisonment for a term not exceeding 7 years or a fine, or both.
Registration
8 Application
for registration
(1) A person to whom this
Law applies who intends to carry on financial service business (referred to in
this Law as an “applicant”) shall make an application to the
Commission to be registered under Article 9 for the purposes of this Law.[32]
(2) The Minister may, on
the recommendation of the Commission, prescribe classes of financial service
business in respect of which application may be made.[33]
(3) An application under
paragraph (1) shall –
(a) be
in such form as the Commission may from time to time determine;
(b) contain
or be accompanied by such information and documents as the Commission may
require, relating to the applicant and the applicant’s business, to
persons who are principal persons in relation to the applicant and verified in
such manner as the Commission may require; and
(c) be
accompanied by such fees as may be published by the Commission in accordance
with Article 15(5)[34] of the Financial Services Commission (Jersey) Law 1998.[35]
(4) At any time after
receiving an application and before determining it the Commission may, at its
discretion, by written notice order the applicant or any person who is or is to
be a principal person in relation to the applicant to provide such additional
information or documents as the Commission reasonably requires for the
determination of the application, verified in such manner as the Commission may
require, and such requirements may differ as between different applications.
(5) The Commission may by
written notice require the applicant or any person who is to be a principal
person in relation to the applicant to provide a report by an auditor or
accountant, or other qualified person approved by the Commission, on such
aspects of any information and documents required by or under paragraph (3)
or (4) as the Commission may specify.
(6) An applicant who, while
his or her application is awaiting determination by the Commission under
Article 9 –
(a) determines
to bring about any alteration in; or
(b) becomes
aware of any event which may affect in any material respect,
any information or documents supplied by the applicant to the
Commission in connection with the application shall forthwith give written
notice of that matter to the Commission.
(7) An applicant may, by
written notice to the Commission, withdraw the applicant’s application
under this Article at any time before it is granted or refused.[36]
(8) [37]
9 Registration
or refusal of application, or revocation of registration
(1) On an application under
Article 8, the Commission may either register a person with or without
attaching conditions under Article 10(2) or may refuse to register a
person.
(2) Whenever the Commission
registers a person it shall issue to that person a registration certificate.
(3) The Commission may
refuse to register a person on one or more of the following grounds, namely
that –
(a) having
regard to the information before the Commission as to the –
(i) integrity,
competence, financial standing, structure and organization of the applicant,
(ii) persons
employed by or associated with the applicant for the purposes of the
applicant’s business or who are principal persons in relation to the
applicant,
(iii) description
of business which the applicant proposes to carry on,
the Commission is not satisfied that the applicant is a fit and
proper person to be registered;
(b) the
applicant has at any time and whether or not in relation to the application, in
any case where information was required under this Law in any
connection –
(i) failed to provide
any such information, or
(ii) provided
to the Commission information which was untrue or misleading in any material
particular;
(c) the
applicant has at any time failed to comply with any condition prescribed or
attached under Article 10 to a current or previous registration held by
the applicant in any material respect;
(d) the applicant or any person employed by or associated with the
applicant for the purposes of the applicant’s business has been convicted
of –
(i) an offence
(whether under the law of Jersey or of a country or territory outside Jersey)
involving fraud or other dishonesty,
(ii) an
offence under –
(A) this Law,
(B) the Banking Business (Jersey) Law
1991;
(C) the Collective Investment Funds
(Jersey) Law 1988,
(D) the Insurance Business (Jersey)
Law 1996,
(E) any
Regulation or Order made under any of those Laws,
(F) the Alternative Investment Funds
(Jersey) Regulations 2012,
(iii) any
offence similar to those listed in clause (ii) under the law of a country
or territory outside Jersey,
(iv) where
clause (ii) or (iii) does not apply, an offence under any enactment
(whether of Jersey or of a country or territory outside Jersey) relating to
building societies, companies, consumer credit, consumer protection, credit
unions, friendly societies, industrial and provident societies, insider
dealing, insolvency, insurance, money laundering or terrorist financing, or
(v) an offence (whether
under the law of Jersey or of a country or territory outside Jersey) of perjury
or conspiracy to pervert the course of justice;
(e) it appears to the Commission, as a result of information provided in
pursuance of requirements of or under Article 8, or information otherwise
obtained, that –
(i) it is in the best
interests of persons who may transact financial service business (other than
trust company business) with the applicant that the applicant should not be
registered,
(ii) it
is in the best interests of persons who may enter into agreements for services
provided by the applicant in carrying on trust company business that the
applicant should not be registered,
(iia) it is in
the best interests of persons who may receive the benefit of services provided,
or arranged, by the applicant in carrying on trust company business that the
applicant should not be registered,
(iii) in
order to protect the reputation and integrity of Jersey in financial and
commercial matters, the applicant should not be registered, or
(iv) in
the best economic interests of Jersey, the applicant should not be registered;
(f) the
Commission has reason to believe that the applicant has at some time
contravened a Code of Practice;
(fa) the
applicant has failed to pay any part of a penalty imposed by the Commission
under Article 21A of the Financial Services Commission
(Jersey) Law 1998 (including any surcharge imposed under Article 21E(1) of that
Law);
(g) the
person who is the applicant has failed to comply with a direction given to the
person at any time under Article 16 or 23.[38]
(4) The Commission may
revoke a registration under this Law at any time –
(a) at
the request of the registered person;
(b) if
the registered person has not commenced a financial
service business in or from within Jersey within one year of the
date of the person’s registration;
(c) if
the registered person ceases to conduct a financial
service business in or from within Jersey;
(d) if
the registered person is a company incorporated in Jersey
or a limited liability company registered in Jersey and ceases to conduct a financial service
business;
(e) on
one or more of the grounds set out in paragraph (3)(a), (b), (c), (d), (f)
and (g) (where those sub-paragraphs are read as if references in them to the
applicant were references to the registered person);
(ea) if it appears to
the Commission that it is in the best interests of any of the following persons
that the registered person’s registration be revoked –
(i) persons who
transacted or may transact financial service business (other than trust company
business) with the registered person,
(ii) persons
who entered or may enter into agreements for services provided by the
registered person in carrying on trust company business,
(iii) persons
who received or may receive the benefit of services provided, or arranged, by
the registered person in carrying on trust company business;
(eb) if it appears to
the Commission that, in order to protect the reputation and integrity of Jersey
in financial and commercial matters, the registration should be revoked;
(ec) if it appears to
the Commission that it is in the best economic interests of Jersey that the
registration be revoked;
(f) if
there is a failure to comply with a notice of objection served under Article 13;
or
(g) if the registered person fails to pay any fee published under
paragraph (6) that is payable.[39]
(5) Where, under this
Article, the Commission refuses to register a person or revokes a registration
it shall give notice in writing to the applicant or registered person
concerned.
(6) The Commission may, in
accordance with Article 15 of the Financial Services Commission
(Jersey) Law 1998, publish fees that shall be payable by registered persons at such
intervals and upon the occurrence of such events as the Commission may
determine.[40]
(7) [41]
(8) [42]
10 Conditions
of registration
(1) The Minister may, on
the recommendation of the Commission –
(a) prescribe
conditions which shall apply to registered persons and to the carrying on of financial service business by
registered persons; and
(b) in
like manner, and from time to time, amend, vary, substitute or revoke any such
condition, or prescribe new conditions,
and such conditions may make different provision for different
classes of persons, or for different classes of financial service business.[43]
(2) The Commission may
attach conditions to any particular grant of registration under Article 9,
and may from time to time amend, vary, substitute or revoke any such condition
or attach new conditions.[44]
(3) Where, under paragraph (2),
the Commission attaches a condition to a registration, amends, varies,
substitutes or revokes a condition attached to a registration, or attaches a
new condition, it shall give notice in writing to the registered person
concerned.[45]
(4) If any registered
person fails to comply with any condition prescribed under paragraph (1)
or attached under paragraph (2), the registered person shall for each such
contravention be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 2 years or a
fine, or both.
(5) The record of the
conviction of any person for an offence under paragraph (4) shall be
admissible in any civil proceedings as evidence of the fact of the breach of a
condition prescribed or attached under this Article.
(6) Conditions prescribed
under paragraph (1) or attached under paragraph (2) may indicate that
a Code of Practice issued under Article 19 is to be wholly or partly
disregarded for the purposes of Article 19(4).
11 Procedure
on refusal or revocation, or new or varied condition
(1) Where the Commission,
acting under Article 9, revokes a registration, or, acting under Article 10(2),
attaches a new condition to the registration of a particular person or amends,
varies, substitutes or revokes any condition so attached, subject to paragraph (4),
such revocation, new condition or amendment, variation, substitution or
revocation of a condition shall not take effect before the expiration
of –
(a) a
period of one month from the date on which notice in writing was given to the
registered person under Article 9(5), or, as the case may be, under
Article 10(3);
(b) the
date on which any appeal against the revocation, new condition or amendment,
variation, substitution or revocation of a condition is determined by the Court
or withdrawn,
whichever is later, unless the registered person requests that it
should take effect at an earlier date.[46]
(2) Where the
Commission –
(a) acting
under Article 9, refuses to register a person or revokes a registration;
or
(b) acting
under Article 10(2), attaches a condition (or a new condition) to the
registration of a particular person or amends, varies, substitutes or revokes
any condition so attached,
the Commission shall at the same time give a statement in writing of
its reasons for that decision.[47]
(3) Any person aggrieved by
such refusal or revocation, or by the conditions attached to the person’s
registration, or by any new condition so attached or by any amendment,
variation, substitution or revocation of such conditions, may appeal to the
Court, either in term or in vacation, within one month from the date on which
notice in writing has been given to the person under Article 9(5) or, as
the case may be, under Article 10(3) on the ground that the decision of
the Commission was unreasonable having regard to all the circumstances of the
case.[48]
(4) If, on the application
of the Commission, the Court is satisfied that it is desirable –
(a) in
the best interests of persons who transacted or may transact financial service
business (other than trust company business) with the registered person;
(b) in
the best interests of persons who entered or may enter into agreements for
services provided by the registered person in carrying on trust company
business; or
(c) in
the best interests of persons who received or may receive the benefit of
services provided, or arranged, by the registered person in carrying on trust
company business,
that paragraph (1) should not have effect, or should cease to
have effect in a particular case, or that the period suggested in paragraph (1)(a)
should be reduced, the Court may so order.[49]
(5) An order under
paragraph (4) may be made without prior notice to and without hearing the
registered person concerned.
(6) An order under
paragraph (4) shall have immediate effect, but any person aggrieved by the
order may apply to the Court to vary or set aside the order.[50]
(7) In respect of an
application under paragraph (4), the Court may make such order as it
thinks fit, and in respect of an application under paragraph (6), the
Court may make such order in respect of the relevant order under paragraph (4)
as it thinks fit.[51]
(8) Nothing in paragraph (1)
or (2) derogates from or otherwise affects a condition prescribed under Article 10(1).
11A Display of
registration certificate and conditions[52]
(1) When the Commission
registers a person under Article 9(1), it may give that person notice in
writing with reasons of the manner in which that person shall display or
otherwise make available to members of the public –
(a) that
person’s registration certificate, or the information contained in the
certificate, or both; and
(b) a
record of such conditions as the Commission may specify –
(i) that are
prescribed under Article 10(1) and apply to that person,
(ii) that
are prescribed under Article 10(1) and apply to the carrying on of
financial service business by that person, or
(iii) that
are attached to the registration of that person under Article 10(2).
(2) Where the Commission
under Article 10(2) amends, varies or substitutes a condition or attaches
any new condition to the registration of that person it may give that person
notice in writing with reasons of the manner in which that person shall display
or otherwise make available to members of the public a record of the condition
as amended, varied or substituted or the new condition, as the case may be.
(3) The Commission may at
any time amend, vary, substitute or revoke any requirement in any notice it has
given to a person under paragraph (1) or (2) by further notice in
writing with reasons to the registered person.
(4) Without prejudice to
the generality of paragraphs (1), (2) and (3), a notice under any of those
paragraphs may require the certificate, information or record of conditions, as
the case may be, to be displayed at any address at which the registered person
carries on financial service business or to be published on the internet, or
both.
(5) A notice given under
paragraph (1), (2) or (3) shall give particulars of the rights of appeal
conferred by paragraph (9).
(6) A notice under
paragraph (1) shall take effect on such date as is specified in the
notice.
(7) Subject to paragraph (8),
a notice given under paragraph (2) or (3) shall not take effect before
whichever is the latest of the following –
(a) one
month after the notice is given;
(b) such
date as is specified in the notice for it to take effect;
(c) if an
appeal is lodged under paragraph (9), the date when the appeal is determined
by the Court or withdrawn.
(8) Paragraph (7)
shall not have effect if the Commission and person entitled to the relevant
notice agree that it will take effect at a time earlier than that which would
apply under paragraph (7).
(9) Within one month after
a person is given notice under paragraph (1), (2) or (3) the person may
appeal to the Court on the ground that any requirement contained in the notice
is unreasonable having regard to all the circumstances of the case.
(10) On an appeal under paragraph (9),
the Court may make such interim or final order as it thinks fit.
(11) A registered person who
carries on financial service business in breach of requirements in a notice
given under this Article which have effect in relation to that business shall be
guilty of an offence and liable to a fine of level 2 on the standard
scale.
12 Commission
may apply to Court for appointment of manager in prescribed circumstances[53]
(1) The Minister may, by
Order, prescribe circumstances in which the Commission may apply to the Court
for the appointment by the Court of a person to manage the affairs of persons
in so far as those affairs relate to the carrying on of financial service
business.
(2) An Order made under
paragraph (1) may contain such incidental or supplementary provisions as
the Minister thinks necessary or expedient, and may contain different
provisions for different classes of financial service business.
(3) The Court may, on an
application made to it by the Commission in circumstances prescribed in an
Order made under paragraph (1), appoint, on such terms as it considers to
be appropriate, a person to manage the affairs of a person in so far as those
affairs relate to the carrying on of financial service business.
PART 3
SUPERVISION OF FINANCIAL SERVICE BUSINESS
Principal persons, KEY
PERSONS and shareHOLDERs[54]
13 Objection to principal
persons, key persons or share holdings[55]
(1) Where it appears to the
Commission at any time that, on the information before it, and having regard to
the matters set out in Article 9(3), a person who is a principal person,
or key person of any class, in relation to a registered person or in respect of
whom notice has been given that the person will become such a principal person,
or key person of any class, is not a fit and proper person to be a principal
person, or key person of that class or of any class, respectively in relation
to a registered person, the Commission shall serve on that person and on the
registered person concerned a written notice of objection, directing that the
person shall not continue to be, or shall not become, a principal person or key
person of the relevant class or of any class (as the case requires),
respectively.
(2) Following receipt of a
notice under Article 14(2) or (3) that a person has increased his or her
holding, or is about to do so, or that the person is about to reduce or dispose
of his or her holding, the Commission may serve on that person and on the
registered person concerned a written notice of objection, directing that he or
she shall not continue to have such increased holding, or shall not increase,
reduce, or dispose of the person’s holding, as the case may be.
(3) A notice of objection
served on a person under this Article directing that the person shall not
continue to be a principal person, or key person of a particular class or of
any class, or shall not continue to have an increased holding shall, subject to
paragraph (4), not take effect before –
(a) the
expiration of one month after the notice is given to the person; or
(b) the
date on which an appeal under paragraph (10) against the notice is
determined by the Court or withdrawn,
whichever is the later, unless the person to whom the notice relates
requests that it should take effect at an earlier date.
(4) If, on the application
of the Commission, the Court is satisfied that it is desirable –
(a) in
the best interests of persons who transacted or may transact financial service
business (other than trust company business) with the registered person;
(b) in
the best interests of persons who entered or may enter into agreements for
services provided by the registered person in carrying on trust company
business; or
(c) in
the best interests of persons who received or may receive the benefit of
services provided, or arranged, by the registered person in carrying on trust
company business,
that paragraph (3) should not have effect, or should cease to
have effect in a particular case, or that the period specified in paragraph (3)(a)
should be reduced, the Court may so order.[56]
(5) An order under
paragraph (4) may be made without prior notice to, and without hearing,
the registered person concerned.
(6) An order under
paragraph (4) shall have immediate effect, but any person aggrieved by the
order may apply to the Court to vary or set aside the order.
(7) In respect of an
application under paragraph (4), the Court may make such order as it
thinks fit, and in respect of an application under paragraph (6), the
Court may make such order in respect of the relevant order under paragraph (4)
as it thinks fit.
(8) A notice of objection
shall –
(a) if
served under paragraph (1), specify the reasons for which it appears to
the Commission that the person in question is not fit and proper;
(b) if
served under paragraph (2), specify the reasons for the objection;
(c) draw
the attention of the person in relation to whom, or to whose holding, objection
is taken, and of the registered person, to the provisions of Article 9(3)
and (4), if appropriate;
(d) give
particulars of the rights of appeal conferred by paragraph (10).
(9) Paragraph (8)(a)
and (b) shall not require the Commission –
(a) to
specify any reason that would in the Commission’s opinion involve the
disclosure of confidential information the disclosure of which would be
prejudicial to a third party; or
(b) to
specify the same reasons, or reasons in the same manner, in the case of notices
to different persons about the same matter.
(10) A person aggrieved by a
notice of objection under this Article may appeal to the Court within one month
from the date on which the notice was so served, on the ground that the
decision of the Commission is unreasonable having regard to all the
circumstances of the case.
14 Notification of change
of principal person, key person , shareholding or LLC interest [57]
(1) No person shall become
a principal person, or key person of any class, in relation to a registered
person unless –
(a) he or
she has notified the Commission in writing of his or her intention to become a
principal person, or key person of that class, in relation to the registered
person; and
(b) the
Commission has notified him or her in writing that there is no objection to his
or her so becoming such a person in relation to the registered person.[58]
(2) No person who is a
shareholder controller shall increase, reduce or dispose of his or her holding
in the company concerned so that the proportion of the share capital or voting
rights held by the person in the company reaches, exceeds or falls
below 20%, 33% or 50%, or so that the company becomes the subsidiary of
such person or ceases to be such subsidiary, as the case may be, unless the
person has notified the Commission in writing of his or her intention to
increase, reduce or dispose of such holding, as the case may be, and the
Commission has notified the person in writing that there is no objection to the
person’s so doing.
(2A) A person who is an LLC controller must
not increase, reduce or dispose of that person’s holding in the limited
liability company in respect of which that person is an LLC controller so that
the proportion of the LLC interests or voting rights held by the person in the
limited liability company reaches, exceeds or falls below 20%, 33% or 50%,
or so that the limited liability company becomes the subsidiary of such person
or ceases to be such subsidiary, as the case may be, unless –
(a) the
person has notified the Commission in writing of that person’s intention
to increase, reduce or dispose of such holding, as the case may be; and
(b) the
Commission has notified the person in writing that there is no objection to the
person’s so doing.[59]
(3) Subject to paragraph (5),
a registered person shall, before the end of one month beginning with the day
on which the registered person becomes aware that any person has become or is
about to become, or has ceased to be a principal person or key person in
relation to the registered person, or has increased, reduced or disposed of his
or her holding, as the case may be, or is about to do so for the purposes of
paragraph (2) or (2A), give written notice to the Commission of that fact.[60]
(4) For the purposes of
paragraphs (1) and (3) a person shall be treated as –
(a) becoming
a principal person, or key person, in relation to a registered person if, being
respectively a principal person in one or more capacities, or a key person of
any class, he or she becomes respectively a principal person in any other
capacity, or a key person of any other class; and
(b) ceasing
to be a principal person or key person in relation to a registered person if,
being respectively a principal person in one or more capacities, or a key
person of any class, he or she ceases to be respectively a principal person in
one or more such capacities or a key person of that class.[61]
(5) The obligations imposed
by paragraph (3) shall not apply in any case where a registered person has
complied with an equivalent obligation under another enactment under which the
Commission exercises a supervisory function or where the Commission by notice
in writing waives the obligations, wholly or in part.
(6) A notice under
paragraph (1), (2), (2A) or (3) that a person has become or is about to
become a principal person or key person, or has increased, reduced or disposed
of his or her holding or is about to do so, as the case may be, shall include
such information regarding the person in question as may be required by the
Commission.[62]
(7) A notice under
paragraph (2), (2A) or (3) that a person has ceased to be a principal
person or key person or has reduced or disposed of his or her holding or is
about to do so, as the case may be, shall include a statement of the reasons
for the change.[63]
(8) Following receipt of a
notice under paragraph (1), (2), (2A) or (3), the Commission may, by
giving written notice, require the person concerned or the registered person to
provide such additional information or documents as the Commission may require
in order to decide whether to serve a notice of objection under Article 13.[64]
(8A) Notice under paragraph (8) may
include a requirement that the person concerned or the registered person (as
the case may be) provide verification, in accordance with the notice, of any
information or documents referred to in that paragraph.[65]
(9) A notice given by the
Commission under paragraph (1), (2) or (2A) that there is no objection
shall lapse if –
(a) the
person concerned does not become a principal person, or key person of the
relevant class, as the case requires; or
(b) the
increase, reduction or disposal, does not take place,
within one year following the giving of the notice by the
Commission.[66]
15 Failure
to notify change[67]
(1) A
registered person who fails to give a notice required by Article 14(3)
shall be guilty of an offence and liable to imprisonment for a term of 6 months
and to a fine.
(2) Any
person who –
(a) fails
to give a notice required by Article 14(1) or (2) or becomes a principal
person, or key person of any class, or increases, reduces or disposes of his or
her holding before having been served with a notice by the Commission under
Article 14(1) or (2), as the case requires; or
(b) becomes
or continues to be a principal person, or key person of any class, or continues
to have an increased holding, or increases, reduces or disposes of, his or her
holding, as the case may be, following service on the person of a notice of
objection under Article 13 in that connection,
shall be guilty of an
offence.
(3) A
person shall not be guilty of an offence under paragraph (2) if he or she
shows that he or she did not know of the acts or circumstances by which, as the
case may be, he or she became a principal person, he or she became a key person
of any class, or his or her holding was increased, reduced or disposed of.
(4) Despite
paragraph (3), if the person subsequently becomes aware of the relevant
acts or circumstances, he or she shall be guilty of an offence unless he or she
gives the Commission written notice of the fact that he or she, as the case may
be, has become such a principal person, has become such a key person of any
class or has increased, reduced or disposed of his or her holding, within 14
days of becoming aware of that fact.
(5) A
person guilty of an offence under paragraph (2) or (4) shall be liable to
imprisonment for a term of 2 years and to a fine.
16 Powers
of Commission and Court in respect of shares or LLC interests[68]
(1) The powers conferred by
this Article are exercisable where a person has contravened Article 15(2)
and –
(a) the
registered person is a company and the person concerned is a shareholder
controller of that company; or
(b) the
registered person concerned is a limited liability company and the person
concerned is an LLC controller of that limited liability company.[69]
(2) The Commission may, by
notice in writing served on the person concerned, direct that any specified shares
or LLC interests to which this Article applies shall, until further notice, be
subject to one or more of the following restrictions –
(a) any
transfer of, or agreement to transfer, those shares or
LLC interests or, in the case of
unissued shares or LLC interests, any transfer of or agreement to transfer the right to be issued
with them, shall be void;
(b) no
voting rights shall be exercisable in respect of the shares or LLC interests;
(c) no
further shares or LLC interests shall be issued in right of them or in pursuance of any offer
made to their holder;
(d) except
in liquidation, no payment shall be made of any sum due from the registered
person on the shares or LLC interests, whether in respect of capital or otherwise.[70]
(2A) The power to give directions under
this Article shall include the power by direction to vary a direction given
under this Article.[71]
(3) Subject to paragraph (4),
the Court may, on the application of the Commission, order the sale of any
specified shares or LLC interests to which this Article applies and, if they
are for the time being subject to any restrictions under paragraph (2),
that they shall cease to be subject to those restrictions.[72]
(4) No order shall be made
under paragraph (3) in a case where a notice of objection was served under
Article 13 –
(a) until
the end of the period within which an appeal can be brought against the notice
of objection; and
(b) if
such an appeal is brought, until it has been determined or withdrawn.
(5) Where an order has been
made under paragraph (3) the Court may, on the application of the
Commission, make such further order relating to the sale or transfer of the
shares or LLC interests as it thinks fit.[73]
(6) Where shares or LLC
interests are sold in pursuance of an order under this Article the proceeds of
sale, less the costs of the sale, shall be paid to the Viscount for the benefit
of the persons beneficially interested in them; and any such person may apply
to the Court for an order that the whole or part of the proceeds be paid to the
person by the Viscount.[74]
(7) This Article
applies –
(a) to
all shares or LLC interests in the registered person referred to in paragraph (1) held
by the person concerned, or by any associate of the
person, which were not so held
immediately before the person became a principal person, or increased his
or her holding, or which were so held
immediately before he or she reduced or disposed of his or her holding, as the case may be; and
(b) where
the person concerned became a principal person, or increased his or her holding, or reduced, or
disposed of his or her holding, as a result of the acquisition or disposal by the person or any associate of the person of shares or LLC interests in another company or limited liability company, to
all the shares or LLC interests in that company or limited liability
company which are held by the person or any associate of the person and were not so held
before he or she
became a principal person or increased his or her holding, or which were so held immediately before he or she reduced or disposed of his or her holding.[75]
(8) A copy of the notice
served on the person concerned under paragraph (2) shall be served on the
registered person referred to in paragraph (1) and on any company referred
to in paragraph (7)(b) and, if it relates to shares or LLC interests held
by an associate of the principal person concerned, on that associate.[76]
(9) Any person who fails to
comply with a notice served on the person under paragraph (2) or an order
made under paragraph (3) shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable
on conviction to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 2 years or a fine, or
both.
Accounts and Auditors
17 Power
to make Orders relating to accounts and auditors
(1) The Minister may, on
the recommendation of the Commission, by Order provide for matters relating to
the accounting and audit of registered persons.
(2) Without prejudice to
the generality of paragraph (1), an Order under paragraph (1) may
provide for –
(a) the
keeping of accounting records by registered persons;
(b) the
duty of registered persons to prepare annual financial statements giving a true
and fair view of the registered person’s affairs;
(c) the
qualification of auditors and their appointment by registered persons;
(d) the
form and content of auditors’ reports to be obtained by registered
persons;
(e) the
submission of annual financial statements and auditors’ reports to the
Commission and the time limits in which they should be submitted;
(f) the
powers and duties of auditors including their right of access to the accounting
and other records of registered persons;
(g) the
form and content of financial statements.
(3) An Order made under
paragraph (1) may make a contravention of any of its provisions an offence
for which a person is liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 2 years
or a fine, or both.
18 Communication with Commission by auditors and approved professionals[77]
(1) No duty to which an
auditor of a registered person or an approved professional may be subject is
contravened by reason of his or her communicating in good faith to the
Commission, whether or not in response to a request made by it, any information
or opinion on a matter to which this Article applies and which is relevant to
any function of the Commission under this Law.
(2) In relation to an
auditor of a registered person, this Article applies to any matter of which the
auditor becomes aware in his or her capacity as auditor and which relates to
the business or affairs of –
(a) the
registered person or former registered person;
(b) a
principal person or former principal person of a registered person or former
registered person; or
(c) a
company or limited liability company that is a holding company or subsidiary in
relation to that registered person or former registered
person.[78]
(3) In relation to an
approved professional, this Article relates to any matter of which that person
becomes aware in his or her capacity as the person making the report and which
relates to the business or affairs of –
(a) an
applicant for registration;
(b) a
registered person;
(c) a
former registered person;
(d) a
principal person or proposed principal person of an applicant for registration
or a registered person;
(e) a
former principal person of a registered person or former registered person; or
(f) a
company or limited liability company that is a holding company or subsidiary in
relation to a person mentioned in sub-paragraphs (a) to (c),
in relation to whom the report is made.[79]
(4) The Minister may by
Order specify circumstances in which an auditor or an approved professional is
required to communicate any information or opinion to the Commission on a
matter to which this Article applies, and which is relevant to any function of
the Commission under this Law.
(5) Orders under this
Article may be made only –
(a) on
the recommendation of the Commission; and
(b) after
consultation with such bodies as appear to the Commission to represent the
interests of auditors, approved professionals and registered persons.
(6) A person who
contravenes an Order made under this Article is guilty of an offence and liable
to imprisonment for a term of 6 months and a fine.
(7) In this
Article –
“approved professional” means a person appointed to make
a report as referred to in Article 8(5) or 32(6);
“auditor” includes a person who was an auditor of a
registered person or former registered person at any time during the period of
the person’s registration.
Powers, controls, FALSE INFORMATION, etc.[80]
19 Codes
of Practice
(1) The Commission may,
after consultation with such persons or bodies as appear to be representative
of the interests concerned –
(a) prepare
and issue a Code of Practice setting out
the principles and detailed requirements that must be complied with in the
conduct of financial service business;
(b) revise
any such Code of Practice by revoking, varying, amending or adding to its
provisions; and
(c) indicate
in any such Code of Practice if and to what extent it is or is not to apply to
any class of financial service business or particular financial service business.[81]
(2) The Commission shall
cause any Code of Practice issued under this Article to be printed and
distributed, and may make such arrangements as it thinks fit for such
distribution, including causing copies of the Code of Practice to be put on
sale to the public at such price as the Commission considers to be reasonable.
(3) The contravention of a
Code of Practice –
(a) may
lead the Commission to exercise its powers under this Law or any other
enactment applicable to such contravention; but
(b) otherwise
does not of itself render a person liable to proceedings of any kind or
invalidate any transaction.[82]
(4) Subject to Article 10(6),
in any proceedings under this Law or otherwise, any Code of Practice issued
under this Article shall be admissible in evidence if it appears to the court
conducting the proceedings to be relevant to any question arising in the
proceedings, and shall be taken into account in determining any such question.
(5) A copy, certified in
writing on behalf of the Commission to be an accurate copy –
(a) of
a Code; or
(b) of
any part of such a Code,
shall be admissible in evidence in all legal proceedings as of equal
validity with the original and as evidence of any fact stated in it of which
direct oral evidence would be admissible.
(6) Where a document
purports on its face to be a copy of a Code or part of a Code, certified in
accordance with paragraph (5), it shall be unnecessary for the purposes of
paragraph (5) to prove the official position or handwriting of the person
signing on behalf of the Commission.
20 Client
assets
(1) Where a registered
person has control of or is otherwise responsible for client assets which he or
she is required to safeguard, he or she shall arrange proper protection for
them by way of segregation and identification of the assets or otherwise in
accordance with the responsibilities he or she has accepted.
(2) Without prejudice to
the generality of paragraph (1), the Minister may, on the recommendation
of the Commission, prescribe the manner in which any classes of client assets
are to be protected.
(3) Orders made under
paragraph (2) may provide that certain client assets are held by a
registered person on trust.
(4) A person who fails to
comply with an Order made under paragraph (2) is guilty of an offence and
liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 6 months or a fine, or both.
21 Trust
company business assets[83]
(1) Where a registered
person has control of or is otherwise responsible for trust company business
assets which he or she is required to safeguard, he or she shall arrange proper
protection for them by way of segregation and identification of the assets or
otherwise in accordance with the responsibilities he or she has accepted.
(2) Without prejudice to
the generality of paragraph (1), the Minister may, on the recommendation
of the Commission, prescribe the manner in which any classes of trust company
business assets are to be protected.
(3) A person who fails to
comply with an Order made under paragraph (2) is guilty of an offence and
liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 6 months or a fine, or both.
22 Contracts
made by or through unregistered persons
(1) This Article applies to
any contract entered into by a person (referred to in this Article as the
“provider”) in the course of carrying on financial service business
(other than trust company business) which is in contravention of Article 7(1).[84]
(2) Subject to paragraph (4),
a contract to which this Article applies shall be unenforceable by the provider
against other parties to it; and such other parties shall be entitled to
recover any money or other property paid or transferred by them under the
contract, together with compensation for any loss sustained by them as a result
of having parted with it.
(3) The compensation
recoverable under paragraph (2) shall be such as the parties may agree or
as the Court may, on the application of either party, determine.
(4) The Court may make an
order allowing a contract to which this Article applies to be enforced or money
or property paid or transferred under it to be retained if it is satisfied that
it is just and equitable to do so, having particular regard to whether the
provider was, reasonably, unaware of the contravention.
(5) Subject to any order
made by the Court under paragraph (4), where a party elects not to perform
a contract which is unenforceable against the party by virtue of paragraph (2),
and by virtue of that paragraph recovers the money paid or other property
transferred by the party under the contract together with any compensation due
under paragraph (2), the party shall repay any money and return any other
property previously received by the party under the contract.
(6) Where any property
transferred under a contract to which this Article applies has passed to a
third party the references to that property in paragraphs (2), (4) and (5)
shall be construed as references to its value at the time of its transfer under
the contract.
(7) A contravention of a
type referred to in paragraph (1) shall not make a contract illegal or
invalid otherwise than as is provided in this Article.
23 Power
to issue directions[85]
(1) If
it appears to the Commission in relation to financial service business
that –
(a) any
requirements in relation to the registration of a registered person are no
longer satisfied;
(b) it is
in the best interests of –
(i) creditors of a
registered person,
(ii) persons
who transacted or may transact financial service business (other than trust
company business) with a registered person,
(iii) persons
who entered or may enter into agreements for services provided by the
registered person in carrying on trust company business,
(iv) persons
who received or may receive the benefit of services provided, or arranged, by
the registered person in carrying on trust company business, or
(v) one or more registered
persons;
(c) it is
desirable in order to protect the reputation and integrity of Jersey in
financial and commercial matters; or
(d) it is
in the best economic interests of Jersey,
the Commission may, whenever
it considers it necessary, give, by notice in writing, such directions as it
may consider appropriate in the circumstances.[86]
(2) Without
prejudice to the generality of paragraph (1), a direction under this
Article may –
(a) require
anything to be done or not done, or impose any prohibition, restriction or
limitation, or any other requirement, and confer powers, with respect to any
transaction or other act, or to any assets, or to any other thing whatsoever;
(b) require
that any principal person, key person, or person having functions, in relation
to a registered person be removed or removed and replaced by another person
acceptable to the Commission;
(c) require
that any individual –
(i) not perform a
specified function (or any function at all) for,
(ii) not
engage in specified employment (or any employment at all) by, or
(iii) not
hold a specified position (or any position at all) in the business of,
a specified registered person
(or any registered person at all);
(d) require
a registered person or formerly registered person to cease operations and to
wind up its affairs, in accordance with such procedures and directions as may
be specified in the direction, which may provide for the appointment of a
person to take possession and control of all documents, records, assets and
property belonging to or in the possession or control of the registered person
or formerly registered person;
(e) prohibit
the issue, re-issue or continuance of a particular financial service
advertisement;
(f) require
that any particular financial service advertisement be modified in a specified
manner;
(g) prohibit
the issue, re-issue or continuance of financial service advertisements of any
description; or
(h) require
that financial service advertisements of any description be modified in a
specified manner.
(3) A
direction under this Article may be of unlimited duration or of a duration
specified in the notice of the direction.
(4) The
power to give directions under this Article shall include the power by direction
to vary or withdraw any direction, as well as the power to issue further
directions.
(5) A
notice of a direction under this Article shall –
(a) specify
the reasons for the giving of the direction;
(b) specify
when the direction is to have effect and, if the direction makes a requirement
referred to in paragraph 2(c) or (d), give particulars of paragraph (12);
(c) give
particulars of the provisions of paragraphs (6) and (7); and
(d) give
particulars of the rights of appeal conferred by paragraph (8).[87]
(6) Any
person to whom a direction is given under paragraph (1) may apply to the
Commission to have it withdrawn or varied and the Commission shall withdraw or
vary the direction in whole or in part if it considers that there are no longer
any grounds under paragraph (1)(a) to (d) which justify the direction or
part of the direction concerned.
(7) If
the Commission refuses an application under paragraph (6), or grants such
an application only in part, it shall give notice in writing of that fact to
the applicant.
(8) Any
person aggrieved by a direction given to the person under paragraph (1),
or a refusal to grant an application under paragraph (6), or the granting
of such an application only in part, may appeal to the Court.
(9) Such
an appeal may be made only on the ground that the decision to give the
direction, to make the refusal or to grant the application only in part (as the
case requires) was unreasonable having regard to all the circumstances of the
case.
(10) A
person’s appeal under paragraph (8) shall be lodged with the Court
no later than the day that is one month after the day on which notice was
served on the person of the direction, refusal or grant (as the case requires).
(11) On
the appeal, the Court may make such interim or final order as it thinks fit.
(12) If
a direction makes a requirement referred to in paragraph (2)(c)
or (d), the requirement shall not take effect until the latest of the
following times –
(a) when
one month has passed since the notice of the direction was given;
(b) such
date as is specified in the notice of the direction;
(c) if an
appeal is lodged under paragraph (8) against the giving of the direction,
when the appeal is determined by the Court or withdrawn.[88]
(13) Paragraph (12)
shall not have effect if –
(a) the person
on whom the requirement is imposed agrees with the Commission that the
requirement take effect at a time earlier than the time that would apply under
paragraph (12); or
(b) the
Court so orders under paragraph (13A).[89]
(13A) If,
on the application of the Commission, the Court is satisfied that it is in the
best interests of –
(a) persons
who transacted or may transact financial service business (other than trust
company business) with the relevant person;
(b) persons
who entered or may enter into agreements for services provided by the relevant
person in carrying on trust company business;
(c) persons
who received or may receive the benefit of services provided, or arranged, by
the relevant person in carrying on trust company business; or
(d) the
public,
that paragraph (12)
should not have effect, or should cease to have effect in a particular case, or
that the period specified in paragraph (12) should be reduced, the Court
may so order.[90]
(13AB) In
paragraph (13A), “relevant person” means –
(a) in
the case of a direction under paragraph (2)(c) in respect of functions
for, employment by, or the business of, a specified registered person, that
registered person;
(b) in
the case of a direction under paragraph (2)(c) in respect of functions
for, employment by, or the business of, any registered person at all, any
registered person at all;
(c) in
the case of a direction under paragraph (2)(d) in respect of a registered
person, the registered person; or
(d) in
the case of a direction under paragraph (2)(d) in respect of a formerly
registered person, the formerly registered person.[91]
(13B) Except
where paragraph (12)(c) has effect, an appeal made under paragraph (8)
shall not suspend the operation of the direction.[92]
(14) An
appeal made under paragraph (8) in relation to an application under
paragraph (6) shall not suspend the operation of the direction in
connection with which the application was made.
(15) A
person who fails to comply with any of the provisions of a direction given
under this Article shall be guilty of an offence and liable to imprisonment for
a term of 2 years and to a fine.
(15A) A
person who allows an individual to perform a function, engage in employment or
hold a position where the person knows that such performance, engagement or
holding is in contravention of a direction that makes a requirement referred to
in paragraph (2)(c) shall be guilty of an offence and liable to a term of
imprisonment for 2 years and a fine.[93]
(16) The
record of the conviction of any person for an offence under paragraph (15)
or (15A) shall be admissible in any civil proceedings as evidence of the facts
constituting the offence.[94]
24 Injunctions
and remedial Orders
(1) Where, on the
application of the Commission, the Court is satisfied that it is likely that a
person will contravene (or continue or repeat a contravention of) –
(a) Article 7(1);
(b) any
condition prescribed or attached under Article 10;
(c) any
provision of Article 28, 31, 39G or 39L;
(d) any
direction given under Article 23; or
(e) any
Regulation or Order made under this Law,
the Court may if it thinks fit issue an injunction restraining that
person from committing (or, as the case may be, continuing or repeating) the
contravention.[95]
(2) Where, on the
application of the Commission, the Court is satisfied that any person has
committed a contravention of a type referred to in paragraph (1)(a) to
(e), and that there are steps which could be taken to remedy the contravention,
the Court may make an order requiring that person, or any other person who
appears to the Court to have been knowingly concerned, to take such steps as
the Court may direct to remedy the contravention.
25 Public
statements[96]
The Commission may
issue –
(a) a
public statement with respect to, or setting out, any direction that the
Commission has given under Article 16 or 23;
(b) a
public statement concerning a person if that person appears to the Commission
to have contravened a Code of Practice;
(ba) a
public statement with respect to the serving of a final notice on a registered
person, or a person who is or was a principal person of a registered person,
under Article 21C(3) of the Financial Services Commission (Jersey) Law 1998 imposing a penalty following the contravention of a Code of
Practice by that registered person;
(c) a
public statement concerning a person if that person appears to the Commission
to have committed a contravention of any of the provisions referred to in
Article 24(1)(a) to (e); or
(d) a
public statement concerning a person if it appears to the Commission that the
person carried on or is carrying on financial service business (whether or not
the person is or was a registered person at the time of carrying on that
business and whether the business is or was carried on in Jersey or in a
country or territory outside Jersey), and it appears to the Commission to be
desirable to issue the statement in the best interests of –
(i) persons
who transacted or may transact financial service business (other than trust
company business) with the person,
(ii) persons
who entered or may enter into agreements for services provided by the person in
carrying on trust company business,
(iii) persons
who received or may receive the benefit of services provided, or arranged, by
the person in carrying on trust company business, or
(iv) the public.
25A Notice of public
statement[97]
(1) If
a public statement identifies any person who is registered, the Commission
shall serve notice on the person.
(2) If
a public statement identifies any person who is not registered, and at any time
before the Commission issues the public statement it is reasonably practicable
for the Commission to serve notice on the person, the Commission shall do so.
(3) A
notice under paragraph (1) or (2) shall –
(a) give
the reasons for issuing the statement;
(b) give
the proposed or actual date of issue of the statement;
(c) contain
a copy of the statement;
(d) give
particulars of the right of appeal under Article 25C in respect of the
statement; and
(e) if
the statement is issued, in accordance with a decision under Article 25B(3),
before the day specified in Article 25B(1) in relation to the statement,
give the reasons for issuing it before that day.
(4) Paragraph (3)
shall not require the Commission –
(a) to
specify any reason that would in the Commission’s opinion involve the
disclosure of confidential information the disclosure of which would be
prejudicial to a third party; or
(b) to
specify the same reasons, or reasons in the same manner, in the case of notices
to different persons about the same matter.
(5) In
this Article and Articles 25B and 25C, a reference to the identification
of a person in a public statement does not include the identification, in the
statement, of the Commission or of any other person in their capacity of
exercising functions under this Law.
25B Notice period[98]
(1) If
service is required under Article 25A(1) or (2) in relation to a public
statement, the Commission shall not issue the public statement earlier than the
expiration of one month from the date of the last such service in relation to
the public statement.
(2) Paragraph (1)
shall not apply if –
(a) each
of the persons identified (within the meaning of Article 25A) in the
relevant public statement agrees with the Commission that the statement may be
issued on a date earlier than the date that would apply under that paragraph;
and
(b) the
statement is in fact issued on or after the earlier date.
(3) Paragraph (1)
shall not apply if –
(a) the
Commission decides on reasonable grounds that the interests of –
(i) persons who
transacted or may transact financial service business (other than trust company
business) with any person identified (within the meaning of Article 25A)
in the relevant public statement,
(ii) persons
who entered or may enter into agreements for services provided by any person
(being a person so identified) in carrying on trust company business,
(iii) persons
who received or may receive the benefit of services provided, or arranged, by
any person (being a person so identified) in carrying on trust company
business, or
(iv) the
public,
in the issue of the relevant
public statement on a date earlier than the date that would apply under that
paragraph outweigh the detriment to the persons identified in the statement,
being the detriment attributable to that earliness; and
(b) the
statement is in fact issued on or after the earlier date.[99]
(4) In
making a decision under paragraph (3), the Commission is not prevented
from choosing as the date of issue of a public statement the date of service
(if any) of notice of the statement.
(5) Despite
this Article, if an appeal is made to the Court under Article 25C(1), and
the Court orders that the statement not be issued before any specified date or
event, the Commission shall not issue the statement before the date or event so
specified.
(6) In
a case to which paragraph (1) applies, if an appeal is made under Article 25C(2)
to the Court against a decision to issue a public statement, the Commission
shall not issue the statement before the day on which that appeal is determined
by the Court or withdrawn.
25C Appeals
about public statements[100]
(1) A
person aggrieved by a decision of the Commission under Article 25B(3) may
appeal to the Court, in accordance with this Article, against the decision.
(2) A
person aggrieved by a decision of the Commission to issue a public statement
that identifies the person may appeal to the Court, in accordance with this
Article, against the decision.
(3) An
appeal under paragraph (2) may be made only on the ground that the
decision of the Commission was unreasonable having regard to all the
circumstances of the case.
(4) A
person’s appeal under this Article shall be lodged with the Court no
later than –
(a) if
notice is served on the person under Article 25A in relation to the public
statement, the day that is one month after the date of the last such service on
the person in relation to the public statement; or
(b) if no
such notice is served on the person, the day that is one month after the issue
of the public statement.
(5) Nothing
in paragraph (4) prevents the lodging of an appeal before a notice is
served or a public statement is issued.
(6) On
an appeal under this Article, the Court may make such interim or final order as
it thinks fit, including an order that the Commission not issue the relevant
public statement or, if the public statement has been issued, that the
Commission issue a further public statement to the effect set out in the order
or stop making the statement available to the public.
26 Powers
of intervention
(1) Where, on the
application of the Commission, the Court is satisfied that –
(a) a
registered person –
(i) is not in terms
of Article 9(3)(a) a fit and proper person to carry on financial service
business that the registered person is purporting to carry on,
(ii) is
not fit to carry on financial service business to the extent to which the
registered person is purporting to do, or
(iii) has
committed or is likely to commit a contravention of a type referred to in
Article 24(1); and
(b) it is
desirable for the Court to act under this paragraph for the protection
of –
(i) persons who
transacted or may transact financial service business (other than trust company
business) with the registered person,
(ii) persons
who entered or may enter into agreements for services provided by the
registered person in carrying on trust company business, or
(iii) persons
who received or may receive the benefit of services provided, or arranged, by
the registered person in carrying on trust company business,
the Court may, as it thinks just, make an order making the
registered person’s business subject to such supervision, restraint or
conditions from such time and for such periods as the Court may specify, and
may also make such ancillary orders as the Court thinks desirable.[101]
(2) If, on an application
made under paragraph (1), the Court is satisfied that a registered person
has –
(a) by
entering into any transaction with another person, contravened Article 7;
(b) by
entering into any transaction with another person, contravened any condition
applicable to the registered person (whether attached to the registered
person’s registration or prescribed by Order) or any direction given to
the registered person under Article 23;
(c) contravened
Article 39G or 39L with the result that another person has been induced to
enter into a transaction with the registered person or with a third person; or
(d) entered
into any transaction with another person who was induced to enter into the
transaction as a result of the contravention of Article 39G or 39L by a
third person,
the Court may order any one or more of those persons (and any other
person who appears to the Court to have been knowingly concerned in the
contravention) to take such steps as the Court may direct for restoring one or
more of the persons to the position in which they were before the transaction
was entered into.[102]
(3) Without prejudice to
the generality of paragraph (1) or (2), an order issued under either of
those paragraphs may include a requirement that all assets, or all assets of a
specified description which, at any time while the requirement is in
force –
(a) where the registered person carries on financial service
business –
(i) belong to the
registered person concerned, or
(ii) belong
to persons with whom the registered person is transacting financial service
business and that are held by or to the registered person’s order; or
(b) where
the registered person carries on trust company business –
(i) belong to the
registered person concerned,
(ii) are
held on behalf of persons who have entered into an agreement for the provision
of services to be provided by the registered person when carrying on trust
company business, or
(iii) are
held on behalf of persons who have received or may receive the benefit of
services provided or arranged by the registered person when carrying on trust
company business,
shall be transferred to and held by a person whose appointment is
approved by the Court (in this Article referred to as an “appointed
person”).[103]
(4) Where a requirement of
a type referred to in paragraph (3) is imposed under this Article, it
shall be the duty of the registered person concerned to transfer the assets to
the appointed person and to give the appointed person all such other assistance
as may be required to enable the appointed person to discharge his or her
functions in accordance with the requirement.
(5) Assets held by an
appointed person in accordance with a requirement of a type referred to in
paragraph (3) shall not be released or dealt with except in accordance
with directions given by the Court or in such circumstances as may be specified
by it.
(6) An order including a
requirement of a type referred to in paragraph (3) may relate to assets
outside Jersey.
(7) The provisions of this
Article shall be without prejudice to any right of any aggrieved person to
bring proceedings directly in respect of any right such person may otherwise
have independently of the Commission.
27 Compensation
schemes
(1) The States may by
Regulations establish in relation to any financial service business (other than
trust company business), or to classes of such business (other than trust
company business), schemes for compensation in cases where registered persons
or formerly registered persons are unable, or are likely to be unable, to
satisfy claims in respect of any description of civil liability incurred by
them in connection with such business, and the provisions of such schemes may
be different for different classes of person or for different classes of such
business.[104]
(2) Without prejudice to
the generality of paragraph (1), Regulations may in particular make
provision –
(a) for
levies to be imposed on registered persons for the purpose of meeting expenses
incurred, or expected to be incurred, including expenses related to
establishing the scheme and paying compensation;
(b) for
the procedure to be followed in making a claim;
(c) for
making interim payments before a claim is finally determined;
(d) limiting
the amount payable on a claim to a specified maximum amount or a maximum amount
calculated in a specified manner;
(e) for
payment to be made, in specified circumstances, to a person other than the
claimant;
(f) for
the determination and regulation of matters relating to the scheme by any
specified person;
(g) as to
the effect of a payment of compensation under the scheme in relation to rights
or obligations arising out of the claim against a registered person or former
registered person in respect of which the payment was made;
(h) for
conferring on any person managing the scheme a right of recovery against a
registered person or former registered person.[105]
28 False
information and failure to supply information
(1) Any person who
knowingly or recklessly provides the Commission or any other person entitled to
information under this Law with information which is false or misleading in a
material particular shall be guilty of an offence if the information is
provided –
(a) in
purported compliance with a requirement imposed under this Law or any
Regulation or Order made thereunder;
(b) otherwise
than as mentioned in sub-paragraph (a) but in circumstances in which the
person providing the information intends, or could reasonably be expected to
know, that the information would be used by the Commission for the purpose of
exercising its functions under this Law.
(2) Any person who
knowingly or recklessly provides the Commission or any other person with
information which is false or misleading in a material particular shall be
guilty of an offence if the information is provided in connection with an
application for registration under this Law.
(3) A registered person or
formerly registered person shall be guilty of an offence if he or she fails to
provide the Commission with any information in his or her possession, knowing
or having reasonable cause to believe that or being reckless as to
whether –
(a) the
information is relevant to the exercise by the Commission of its functions
under this Law in relation to the registered person or formerly registered
person; and
(b) the
withholding of the information is likely to result in the Commission being
misled as to any matter which is relevant to and of material significance for
the exercise of those functions in relation to the registered person or
formerly registered person.
(4) Any person who
knowingly or recklessly provides any person appointed under Article 33
with information which is false or misleading in a material particular shall be
guilty of an offence.
(5) A person guilty of an
offence under paragraph (1), (2) or (4) shall be liable to imprisonment
for a term not exceeding 5 years or a fine, or both.
(6) A person guilty of an
offence under paragraph (3) shall be liable to imprisonment for a term not
exceeding 2 years or a fine, or both.
29 Regulations
regarding rescission of agreements and withdrawal of offers[106]
The States may by Regulations make provision for enabling a person
who has entered, or offered to enter, into an agreement relating to financial
service business (other than trust company business) with a registered person
to rescind the agreement or withdraw the offer within such period and in such
manner as may be provided for in the Regulations, and, in particular, but
without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing, may make provision –
(a) for requiring the
service of notice with respect to the rights exercisable under the Regulations;
(b) for the restitution of
property and the making or recovery of payments where those rights are
exercised;
(c) for such other matters
as are incidental to or connected with any of the above.[107]
30 [108]
31 Control
of advertising
(1) The Minister may, on
the recommendation of the Commission, make Orders relating to the issue, form
and content of financial service advertisements.[109]
(2) Orders made under this
Article may make different provision for different cases and, without prejudice
to the generality of paragraph (1), may in particular –
(a) prohibit
the issue of financial service advertisements of any description (whether by reference to the matters set out
in paragraph (b), to the persons by whom they are issued or otherwise);
(b) make
provision regarding the presentation, content, accuracy, effect and
implications of financial service advertisements, and ancillary matters, and may include provision regarding
matters which must be, as well as matters which may not be, included in
financial service advertisements;
(c) provide
for exemptions from any prohibition or requirement imposed by the Orders,
including exemptions by reference to a person’s membership of a class
whose membership is determined otherwise than by the Minister or the
Commission.[110]
(3) Any registered person
who issues or causes to be issued in Jersey or elsewhere and, subject to
paragraph (4), any other person who issues or causes to be issued in
Jersey, a financial service advertisement –
(a) the
issue of which is prohibited by an Order made under this Article;
(b) which
does not comply fully with, or contravenes in any material respect, any
requirement imposed by such an Order; or
(c) in
circumstances which do not comply in any respect with any requirement imposed
by such an Order,
shall be guilty of an offence and liable to imprisonment for a term
not exceeding 2 years or a fine, or both.[111]
(4) A person whose business
it is to publish or arrange for publication of advertisements shall not be
guilty of an offence under this Article if the person proves that he or she
received the financial service advertisement in question for publication in the
ordinary course of his or her business, that the matters contained in the
financial service advertisement were not, wholly or in part, devised or
selected by him or her or by any person under his or her direction or control
and that the person did not know and had no reason for believing that
publication of the financial service advertisement would constitute an offence.[112]
(5) For the purposes of
this Article –
(a) a financial service advertisement issued or caused to be issued by any person by way of display or
exhibition in a public place shall be treated as issued or caused to be issued
by him or her on
every day on which he or she causes or permits it to be displayed or exhibited;
(b) where
a financial service advertisement invites the transaction of financial service business with, or the provision of services provided or arranged by a person
carrying on trust company business by a
person specified in the advertisement, its issue shall be presumed, unless the
contrary is proved, to have been caused by that person.[113]
(6) For the purposes of
this Article a financial service advertisement issued outside Jersey shall be
treated as issued in Jersey if it is directed to persons in Jersey or is made
available to them otherwise than in a newspaper, journal, magazine or other
publication published and circulating principally outside Jersey or in a sound
or television broadcast transmitted principally for reception outside Jersey.[114]
Information and investigations
32 General
power to require information and documents[115]
(1) The Commission, an
officer or an agent may by notice in writing served on a defined person require
the person to do either or both of the following –
(a) to
provide the Commission, an officer or an agent, at such times and places as are
specified in the notice, with such information or documents as are specified in
the notice and as the Commission, an officer or an agent reasonably requires
the person to provide for the purposes of the performance of the
Commission’s functions under this Law;
(b) to
attend at such times and places as may be specified in the notice and answer
such questions as the Commission, an officer or an agent reasonably requires
the person to answer for the purposes of the performance of the
Commission’s functions under this Law.
(2) If the Commission has
reasonable grounds to suspect that a person has contravened Article 7, 39G
or 39L, the Commission, an officer or an agent may, by notice in writing served
on that person, require the person to do either or both of the
following –
(a) to
provide the Commission, an officer or an agent, at such times and places as are
specified in the notice, with such information or documents as are specified in
the notice and as the Commission, an officer or an agent reasonably requires
for the purposes of investigating the suspected contravention;
(b) to
attend at such times and places as are specified in the notice and answer such
questions as the Commission, an officer or an agent reasonably requires the
person to answer for the purpose of investigating the suspected contravention.
(3) In a case where the
Commission, an officer or an agent may, by notice in writing served on a person
under paragraph (1) or (2), require the person to provide information or
documents, the Commission, an officer or an agent may in addition or instead
require any other person (by notice in writing served on the latter person) who
appears to be in possession of some or all of the information or documents to
do something that the Commission, an officer or an agent could have required
the first-mentioned person to do under sub-paragraph (a) or (b) of that
paragraph.
(4) An officer or an agent
may, on producing if required evidence of his or her authority, enter, at a
reasonable time, any premises occupied by a person on whom a notice has been
served under paragraph (1), (2) or (3), or any other premises where
information or documents are kept by such person, for the purpose of obtaining
there the information or documents required by that notice, putting the
questions referred to in paragraph (1)(b) or (2)(b) or of exercising the
power conferred by paragraph (8), as the case may be.
(5) If the Commission, an
officer or an agent serves notice on a person under paragraph (1) or (2),
the Commission, officer or agent may, by the same or another notice served on
the person, require the person to provide verification, in accordance with the
latter notice, of any information, or documents, required from the person under
paragraph (1) or (2) (as the case may be).
(6) The Commission, an
officer or an agent may by notice in writing served on a person specified in
paragraph (15) require the person to provide a report, by an accountant,
or other person with relevant professional skill, nominated or approved by the
Commission and appointed by the person served with the notice under this
paragraph, being a report –
(a) on,
or on any aspect of, any information, documents, or questions, that the
Commission, an officer or an agent could require the person, by notice under
paragraph (1) or (2), to provide or answer (whether or not notice has in
fact been served on the person under paragraph (1) or (2)); and
(b) in
such form (if any) as the notice under this paragraph may specify.
(7) If, under this Article,
a person provides documents in the person’s possession but claims a lien
on the documents so provided, the provision of the documents shall be without
prejudice to the lien.
(8) The power under this
Article to require documents to be provided includes power –
(a) if
the documents are provided, to retain them, to take copies of them or to take
extracts from them, and to require the person providing the documents, or any
person who appears to possess information relating to the documents, to provide
an explanation of them; or
(b) if
the documents are not provided, to require the person to whom the requirement
was directed to state, to the best of the person’s knowledge and belief,
where they are.
(9) If documents provided
under this Article are retained under paragraph (8)(a) the documents may
be so retained –
(a) for a
period of one year; or
(b) if
within that period proceedings to which the documents are relevant are
commenced against any person, until the conclusion of those proceedings,
whichever is the later.[116]
(10) If the person providing a
document that is retained under paragraph (8)(a) requires the document for
the purpose of the person’s business and requests the document (or a copy
of it) from the Commission, the Commission shall supply the person with a copy
of the document as soon as practicable.
(11) If a person fails without
reasonable excuse to comply with a requirement imposed on the person under this
Article or obstructs an officer, or an agent, exercising powers under paragraph (4),
the person shall be guilty of an offence and liable to imprisonment for a term
of 6 months and a fine.
(12) Nothing in this Article shall
require the disclosure or provision by a person to the Commission, an officer
or an agent of information, or documents, that the person would, in proceedings
in the Court, be entitled to refuse to disclose or to provide on the grounds of
legal professional privilege, except, if the person is a lawyer, the name and
address of his or her client.
(13) A statement made by a person
in compliance with a requirement imposed under this Article shall not be used
by the prosecution in evidence against the person in any criminal proceedings
except proceedings under paragraph (11) or Article 28.
(14) In this Article –
“agent” means an agent of the Commission, being an agent
who has been authorized by the Commission to perform the functions set out or
referred to in that provision;
“defined person”
means any of the following persons –
(a) a
registered person;
(b) a
person who was a registered person at any time;
(c) a
person who is a principal person, or key person, in relation to another person
who is a registered person or was a registered person at any time;
(d) a
person who was at any time a principal person, or key person, in relation to
another person who is a registered person or was a registered person at, before
or after that time;
(e) a
person who is, or was at any time, an associate in relation to a defined person
within the meaning of sub-paragraph (c) or (d);
(f) a
person who is an employee of, or party to a contract for services with, another
person who is a registered person or was a registered person at any time;
(g) a
person who was at any time an employee of, or party to a contract for services
with, another person who is a registered person or was a registered person at,
before or after that time;
(h) a
person who is an employee of a person who is a party to a contract for services
with another person who is a registered person;
(i) a
person who was at any time an employee of a person who was at that time a party
to a contract for services with another person who was a registered person at
that time;
“officer” means an officer of the Commission, being an
officer who has been authorized by the Commission to perform the functions set
out or referred to in that provision.[117]
(15) For the purposes of paragraph (6),
the following persons are specified –
(a) a
person within sub-paragraph (a) or (b) of the definition of “defined
person” in paragraph (14) or a person within sub-paragraph (c)
or (d) of that definition (other than as a key person);
(b) a
person who the Commission has reasonable grounds to suspect has contravened
Article 7.
(16) For the avoidance of doubt,
in sub-paragraph (d), (g) or (i) of the definition of “defined
person” in paragraph (14), the reference to a person who was a
registered person includes such a person who is no longer in existence at the
time when the relevant function is exercised under this Article.
(17) For the avoidance of
doubt –
(a) a time
that is specified for the purposes of any provision of this Article may be, but
is not required to be, expressed in terms of times, dates, intervals, periods
or time limits; and
(b) a
document, or information, that is specified for the purposes of any provision
of this Article may be, but is not required to be, specified in terms of one or
more classes or descriptions.
33 Investigations
on behalf of the Commission
(1) If it appears to the
Commission desirable to do so –
(a) in
the interests of persons with whom a registered person has transacted or may
transact, financial service business; or
(b) if
the registered person is carrying on trust company business, in the interests
of persons who have entered into or may enter into, agreements for the
provision of services to be provided by the registered person when carrying on
trust company business, or in the interests of persons who have received or may
receive the benefit of services provided or arranged by the registered person
when carrying on trust company business,
the Commission may appoint one or more competent persons to
investigate and report to the Commission on –
(i) the
nature, conduct or state of such registered person’s financial service
business or any particular aspect of it;
(ii) the registered
person’s integrity, competence, financial standing or organisation;
(iii) the
integrity, competence and financial standing, so far as relevant in the opinion
of the Commission, of persons who are principal persons in relation to the
registered person, and of associates of such principal persons; or
(iv) the
compliance by those persons with this Law and any Regulation, Order or Code of
Practice made, or a condition of any grant of registration, or a direction
given under this Law.[118]
(2) The Commission shall
give written notice of any such appointment to the registered person concerned.
(3) It shall be the duty of
every person who is or was at any material time a registered person under
investigation under paragraph (1), a principal person in relation to, or
officer, employee, banker, auditor or, subject to paragraph (8), legal
adviser of such a registered person, and of any person appointed to make a
report in respect of the registered person as referred to in Article 32(6)
and of any other person who appears to be in possession of relevant
information –
(a) to
provide to the persons appointed under paragraph (1), within such time and
at such place as they may require, all documents relating to the registered
person or formerly registered person which are in his
or her custody or power;
(b) to
attend before them at such time and place as they may require and to answer
questions which they reasonably require the person to answer for the purposes of the investigation; and
(c) otherwise
to give them all assistance in connection with the investigation which the person is reasonably able to
give,
and the persons appointed under paragraph (1) may retain or
take copies of or extracts from any documents provided to them under sub-paragraph (a).[119]
(4) This Article shall
apply in respect of a formerly registered person as it applies to a registered
person and to any person who appears to the Commission to be acting or to have
acted in contravention of Article 7(1), 39G or 39L and references in this
Article to a “registered person” shall be construed accordingly.[120]
(5) For the purpose of
exercising the person’s power under this Article a person appointed under
paragraph (1) may enter any premises occupied by a registered person or
formerly registered person or a person who is or was a principal person in
relation to him or her or any associate of such a principal person being
investigated by the person under this Article or any other premises where
information is kept by such a person; but he or she shall not do so without
prior notice in writing unless he or she has reasonable cause to believe that
if such notice were given any documents whose provision might be required under
this Article would be removed, tampered with or destroyed.
(6) A person exercising
powers by virtue of an appointment under this Article shall, if so required,
produce evidence of his or her authority.
(7) Any person
who –
(a) without
reasonable excuse fails to provide any document which it is his or her duty to provide under
paragraph (3);
(b) without
reasonable excuse fails to assist or attend before a person appointed under
paragraph (1) when required to do so;
(c) without
reasonable excuse fails to answer any question which is put to him or her by a person so
appointed with respect to a person under investigation; or
(d) obstructs
a person in the exercise of the powers conferred by paragraph (5),
shall be guilty of an offence and liable to imprisonment for a term
not exceeding 6 months or a fine, or both.
(8) Nothing in this Article
shall require the disclosure or production by a person of information or
documents which the person would in any action in the Court be entitled to
refuse to disclose or produce on the grounds of legal professional privilege in
proceedings in the Court except, if he or she is a lawyer, the name and address
of his or her client.
(9) Where any person by
whom documents are required to be provided under paragraph (3) claims a
lien on any such document, the provision shall be without prejudice to the
lien.
(10) A person who is convicted on
a prosecution instituted following an investigation under this Article may in
the same proceedings be ordered to pay the expenses of the investigation to
such extent as may be specified by the Court.
(11) For the purposes of paragraph (10)
the expenses of the investigation shall include such sums as the Commission may
determine in respect of the cost of staff and overheads.
(12) A statement made by a person
in compliance with a requirement imposed by virtue of this Article may not be
used by the prosecution in evidence against the person in any criminal
proceedings except proceedings under paragraph (7) or Article 28.
34 Entry
and search of premises
(1) If the Bailiff is
satisfied by information on oath that there is reasonable cause to suspect
that –
(a) there
has been a contravention of a type referred to in Article 32(2) and that
either –
(i) a specified
person has failed in any respect to comply with a notice served on him or her
under that paragraph,
(ii) there
are reasonable grounds for suspecting the completeness of any information or
documents provided by him or her in response to such a notice, or
(iii) if
such a notice were served on a specified person on whom it might be served under
that paragraph, it would not be complied with; or documents to which such a
notice might relate would be likely to be removed, tampered with or destroyed;
(b) if a notice were served under Article 14(8) or 32, it would not
be complied with;
(c) documents
to which a notice might relate would be likely to be removed, tampered with or
destroyed;
(d) a
specified person has failed in any respect to comply with a notice served on
the person under Article 14(8) or 32;
(e) a
specified person has not provided complete information or documents in response
to a notice served on the person under those paragraphs;
(f) a
notice served under Article 13(1) or (2), 16(2) or 23(1) has not been
complied with in any respect; or
(g) any
officer or agent of the Commission or person appointed under Article 33(1)
has been or may be obstructed in exercising a power of entry under Article 32(4)
or 33(5), as the case may be,
the Bailiff may grant a warrant under this paragraph.[121]
(2) A warrant under
paragraph (1) may authorize any police officer, together with any other
person named in the warrant –
(a) to
enter any premises specified in the warrant, using such force as is reasonably
necessary for the purpose;
(b) to
search the premises and obtain information or take possession of any documents
appearing to be information or documents of a type referred to in any of the
Articles referred to in paragraph (1) or information in relation to
matters referred to therein or which otherwise appear to be relevant to the
investigation of an offence under this Law, or to take, in relation to any such
information or documents, any other steps which may appear to be necessary to
preserve them or prevent interference with them;
(c) to
take copies of, or extracts from such documents and to require the person who
had possession of them, or any person who appears to be in possession of
relevant information, is or has been an officer, shareholder controller or
auditor or employee of the registered person, or formerly registered person, or
other person concerned, as the case may be, to provide an explanation of them;
(d) to
require any person named in the warrant to answer questions relevant for
determining any matter arising in connection with this Law; and
(e) if
the information or documents are not provided, to require any person appearing
to be in possession of relevant information, to state, to the best of the person’s knowledge and belief,
where they are and how they may be retrieved.
(3) A warrant under
paragraph (1) shall continue in force until the end of the period of one
month beginning with the date on which it was issued.
(4) Any documents of which
possession is taken under paragraph (2) may be retained –
(a) for
a period of one year; or
(b) if,
within that period proceedings to which the documents are relevant are
commenced against any person, until the conclusion of those proceedings.
(5) A person who requires
any documents of which possession is taken under paragraph (2) for the
purpose of his or her business and who requests such documents shall be
supplied with copies as soon as practicable.
(6) Any person who
obstructs the exercise of any power conferred by a warrant issued under this
Article or fails to comply with a requirement imposed on him or her by virtue
of paragraph (2)(c) to (e) shall be guilty of an offence and liable to
imprisonment for a term not exceeding 2 years or a fine, or both.
(7) Where any person from
whose premises documents are taken under paragraph (2) claims a lien on
any such documents, the possession of such documents by the officer or person
concerned and by anyone to whom he or she passes them shall be without
prejudice to the lien.
(8) Nothing in this Article
shall require the disclosure or production by a person of information or
documents which the person would in an action in the Court be entitled to
refuse to disclose or produce on the grounds of legal professional privilege in
proceedings in the Court except, if he or she is a lawyer, the name and address
of his or her client.
(9) A statement made by a
person in compliance with a requirement imposed by virtue of this Article may
not be used by the prosecution in evidence against the person in any criminal
proceedings except proceedings under paragraph (6) or Article 28.
35 Obstruction
of investigations
(1) A person who knows or
suspects that an investigation is being or is likely to be carried out under
Article 33 or that information or documents are being or are likely to be
required under Article 14 or 32 shall be guilty of an offence if he or she
falsifies, conceals, destroys or otherwise disposes of, or causes or permits
the falsification, concealment, destruction of or disposal of, information or
documents which he or she knows or suspects are or would be relevant to such an
investigation or are or would be required unless the person proves that he or
she had no intention of concealing facts disclosed by the information or
documents from persons carrying out such an investigation or requiring such
information or documents.
(2) A person guilty of an
offence under this Article shall be liable to imprisonment for a term not
exceeding 2 years or a fine, or both.
36 Co-operation with relevant supervisory authority[122]
(1) The following powers
may be exercised (by the officer or person specified in the relevant provision)
in order to assist a relevant supervisory authority –
(a) the
power to refuse or revoke a registration under Article 9(1);
(b) the
power to impose, revoke or vary conditions pursuant to Article 10(2);
(ba) the power to give
a direction under Article 16 or 23;
(c) on
the application of the Commission, the powers under Article 26;
(d) the
powers relating to information and documents under Article 32;
(e) the
powers under Article 33;
(f) the
powers under Article 34;
(g) communication
by the Commission to the relevant supervisory authority of information that is
in the possession of the Commission, whether or not as a result of the exercise
of any of the above powers.[123]
(2) The Commission shall
not exercise the power referred to in paragraph (1)(g) unless satisfied
that the relevant supervisory authority will treat the information communicated
with appropriate confidentiality and that –
(a) the
power is exercised in order to assist the authority in the exercise of its
supervisory functions; or
(b) the
exercise of the power has been requested by the authority and requested only
for the purposes of obtaining assistance for the authority in the exercise of
one or more of its supervisory functions.
(3) The other powers
referred to in paragraph (1) shall not be exercised by virtue of this
Article unless the Commission is satisfied that the exercise has been requested
by the relevant supervisory authority and requested only for the purposes of
obtaining assistance for the authority in the exercise of one or more of its
supervisory functions.
(4) In deciding whether to
exercise a power by virtue of this Article, the following factors (among
others) may be taken into account –
(a) whether
corresponding assistance would be given in that country or territory to the
Commission;
(b) whether
the case concerns the possible breach of a law, or other requirement, which has
no close parallel in Jersey or involves the assertion of a jurisdiction not
recognized by Jersey;
(c) the
seriousness of the case and its importance in Jersey and whether the assistance
could be obtained by other means;
(d) whether
it is otherwise appropriate in the public interest to give the assistance.
(5) The exercise of powers
by virtue of this Article may be refused unless the relevant supervisory
authority undertakes to make such contribution towards the costs of its
exercise as the Commission considers appropriate.
(6) For the purposes of
this Article –
(a) a
reference –
(i) in Article 32(2)
or 33(4) to a contravention of Article 7(1), 39G or 39L, or
(ii) in
Article 34(1) to a contravention of a type referred to in Article 32(2),
shall include a reference to a contravention (committed at any time,
including a time before the enactment of a provision of this Law) of a
provision of a law of a country or territory outside Jersey, which provision
the Commission reasonably considers to be similar to Article 7(1), 39G or
39L; and
(b) a
reference in Article 32(9) or 34(4) to proceedings shall include a
reference to proceedings outside Jersey.[124]
(7) For the purposes of
this Article, a reference (however expressed or implied) in Article 7, 39G
or 39L (or in any provision necessary for the interpretation of any of those
Articles) to Jersey, or to any class of person, any qualification or any
provision, shall be construed, in the application of that Article to a
contravention of a law of a country or territory outside Jersey, as a reference
to that country or territory, or to an equivalent class of person,
qualification or provision, in terms of the law of that country or territory.[125]
(8) The exercise of a power
under any provision shall be no less an exercise of that power under that
provision because it is exercised by virtue of this Article, and this
Law (and any other law that applies when a power is exercised directly
under that provision) applies also when that power is exercised by virtue of
this Article.
Restrictions on disclosure of information
37 Restricted
information
(1) Subject to paragraph (2)
and to Article 38, a person who receives information relating to the
business or other affairs of any person –
(a) under
or for the purposes of this Law; or
(b) directly
or indirectly from a person who has so received it,
shall be guilty of an offence and liable to imprisonment for a term
not exceeding 2 years or a fine, or both, if he or she discloses the
information without the consent of the person to whom it relates and (where
sub-paragraph (b) applies) the person from whom it was received.
(2) This Article does not
apply to information which at the time of the disclosure is or has already been
made available to the public from other sources, or to information in the form
of a summary or collection of information so framed as not to enable
information relating to any particular person to be ascertained from it.
38 Permitted
disclosures
(1) Article 37 does
not preclude the disclosure of information –
(a) by
the Commission –
(i) to the Viscount,
(ii) to
the Comptroller and Auditor General for the purpose of enabling or assisting
the carrying out of any of the Comptroller and Auditor General’s
functions in relation to the Commission,
(iii) to
any person for the purpose of enabling or assisting that person to exercise
that person’s statutory functions in relation to any person or class of
person in respect of whom the Commission has or had statutory functions, or
(iv) to
any person for the purpose of enabling or assisting that person to exercise
that person’s statutory control functions in relation to any person or
class of person in respect of whom the Commission does not have statutory
functions;
(aa) without prejudice
to the generality of sub-paragraph (a)(iii), by the Commission to the
Office of the Financial Services Ombudsman or to an Ombudsman, within the
meaning of the Financial Services Ombudsman
(Jersey) Law 2014 –
(i) to comply with a
duty of the Commission under Article 20 of that Law, or
(ii) for
the purpose of enabling or assisting that Office or Ombudsman to exercise any function
under that Law (including the raising of a levy);
(b) by or
to any person in any case in which disclosure is for the purpose of enabling or
assisting any of the following –
(i) the Commission or
any person acting on its behalf,
(ii) a
person appointed under an enactment by any of the following –
(A) the
Commission,
(B) the
Court, on the application of the Commission,
(C) a
Minister, where that Minister and the Commission are each specified in that
enactment as having power to appoint that person,
to discharge the Commission’s functions or that person’s
functions under this Law or under any other enactment;
(c) by
the Commission to a relevant supervisory authority pursuant to Article 36;
(d) to a
person by the Commission showing whether or not any person is registered or was
formerly registered under this Law, including any conditions which are or were
formerly attached to the registration of that person under Article 10(2);
(da) by the Commission
to the public of the name of –
(i) a director of a
company that carries on investment business and is registered under this Law,
(ii) a
director of a company that is a partner in a partnership that carries on
investment business and is registered under this Law,
(iii) a
person employed under a contract of service or a contract for services by a
person that carries on investment business and is registered under this Law,
such an employee being so employed as –
(A) a dealer,
(B) a
discretionary investment manager,
(C) an
adviser, or
(D) a
supervisor,
(iv) a
manager of a limited liability company that carries on investment business and
is registered under this Law;
(e) with
a view to the investigation of a suspected offence, or institution of, or
otherwise for the purposes of, any criminal proceedings, whether under this Law
or not;
(f) in
connection with any other proceedings arising out of this Law;
(h) by the Commission to the Attorney General or to a police officer
being information obtained under any of Articles 32 to 34 or being
information in the possession of the Commission as to any matter in relation to
which the powers conferred by those Articles are exercisable, but any
information so disclosed may only be disclosed by the Attorney General or a
police officer for the purposes of an investigation into a suspected offence in
Jersey or a prosecution in Jersey or, at the discretion of the Attorney
General, a suspected offence or prosecution in a country or territory outside
Jersey;
(i) by
the Commission to any person or body responsible for a compensation
scheme in relation to one or more financial services businesses, (whether in Jersey or elsewhere) if it appears to the Commission that disclosing the
information would enable or assist the recipient of the information or the
Commission to discharge its functions but any such disclosure by the Commission
may only be made if the recipient of the information gives
to the Commission prior to disclosure a
written undertaking that the information will not be further disclosed without
the prior consent of the Commission;
(j) by
the Commission to the auditor of –
(i) a registered
person,
(ii) a
formerly registered person, or
(iii) a
person who appears to the Commission to be acting or have acted in
contravention of Article 7,
if it appears to the Commission that disclosing the information
would be in the interests of persons who have transacted or may transact
financial service business with a person described in any of clauses (i)
to (iii) or, in respect of a person carrying on trust company business, in the
interests of persons who –
(A) have entered into or may
enter into agreements for the provision of services to be provided by a person
described in any of clauses (i) to (iii) when carrying on trust company
business, or
(B) have received or may
receive the benefit of services provided or arranged by a person described in
any of clauses (i) to (iii) when carrying on trust company business;
(k) by
the Commission to any person acting on behalf of an international body or
organization where that body’s or organization’s functions include
the assessment of Jersey’s compliance with international standards
relating to regulation of the financial sector and the disclosure is for the
purpose of enabling or assisting that body or organization to discharge those
functions;
(l) by
any of the following persons –
(i) the Commission,
(ii) a
person appointed under an enactment by any of the following –
(A) the
Commission,
(B) the
Court, on the application of the Commission,
(C) a
Minister, where that Minister and the Commission are each specified in that
enactment as having power to appoint that person,
to any person or body (whether in Jersey or elsewhere) responsible
for setting standards of conduct for any profession and having powers to
discipline persons who fail to meet those standards for the purpose of enabling
or assisting that person or body to exercise any of its supervisory functions;
(m) subject to
paragraphs (1B) to (1D), by the Commission to any of the following
organizations or persons –
(i) the ESAs,
(ii) the
ESRB, or
(iii) a supervisor
of a securities market;
(n) by
the Commission to a pension supervisor for the purpose of enabling or assisting
a pension supervisor to exercise any of its supervisory functions;
(o) by
the Commission to the Society of Lloyd’s (being organs constituted by or
under the Lloyd’s Act 1982 of the United Kingdom) for the purpose of
enabling or assisting that Society to exercise any of its supervisory
functions.[126]
(1A) In paragraph (1)(a)(iv),
“statutory control functions” means functions conferred by or under
an enactment on any person which requires or enables that person to issue a
licence, register, or give consent or any other form of authorization or
permission to or in respect of any person or class of persons, including any
ancillary functions related thereto, for such purposes as may be prescribed or
specified (as the case may be) under that enactment.[127]
(1B) The
Commission shall not disclose information under paragraph (1)(m) unless
satisfied that –
(a) the purpose of the
disclosure is in order to assist the relevant organization or person to whom it
is disclosed, in the exercise of any of its functions; and
(b) that organization or
person will treat the disclosed
information with appropriate confidentiality.[128]
(1C) In
deciding whether to disclose information under paragraph (1)(m), the
Commission may take the following factors (among others) into account –
(a) whether corresponding
disclosure of information would be given by the relevant organization or
person, if such information were requested by the Commission;
(b) whether the case
concerns the possible breach of a law, or other requirement, which has no close
parallel in Jersey;
(c) the seriousness of the
case and its importance in Jersey;
(d) whether the information
could be obtained by other means; and
(e) whether it is otherwise
appropriate in the public
interest to disclose the information.[129]
(1D) The Commission may refuse to disclose
information under paragraph (1)(m) unless the relevant organization or
person undertakes to make such contribution towards the costs of the disclosure
as the Commission considers appropriate.[130]
(2) No information shall be
disclosed under or by virtue of paragraph (1)(a)(ii), (iii) or (iv), or
(b)(i) or (c), or (k), (l), (m), (n) or (o), or Article 36(1)(g) unless
the Commission or person, as the case requires, making the disclosure (‘the
disclosing party’) is satisfied that the person or body to whom or which
disclosure is made complies with or will comply with any conditions to which
the disclosing party may, in its discretion, subject such disclosure.[131]
(3) The States may by
Regulations amend this Article by –
(a) adding
further persons or bodies to or by whom disclosure may be made and specifying
in each case the purpose for which disclosure of information may be made; and
(b) amending
the circumstances in which disclosure may be made to whom or by any person
specified in those Articles, including the purposes for which and conditions in
which such disclosure may be made.[132]
39 Information
supplied to Commission by relevant overseas authority
Articles 37 and 38 apply also to information supplied to the
Commission for the purposes of its functions under this Law by a relevant
supervisory authority, any of the ESAs, the ESRB or a supervisor of a
securities market.[133]
Part 3A[134]
MARKET MANIPULATION, misLEADING information AND INSIDER DEALING
Interpretative provisions
39A Interpretation
(1) In this Part, in
Schedule 6 and for the purposes of the definition “supervisor of a
securities market” –
“company” means any body (whether or not incorporated,
wherever incorporated or constituted, and including limited liability companies
registered under the LLC Law) which is not a public sector body;
“issuer”, in relation to any securities, means any company,
public sector body or person by which or by whom the securities have been or
are to be issued;
“market maker” means a person who –
(a) holds
himself or herself out at all normal times in compliance with the rules of a
securities market as willing to acquire or dispose of securities; and
(b) is
recognized as doing so under those rules;
“public sector body” means –
(a) the
States or the government of any country or territory outside Jersey;
(b) a
parish in Jersey or the local government of any country or territory outside
Jersey;
(c) any
international organization the members of which include Jersey, the United
Kingdom, or a member state of the EU; and
(d) the
central bank of any sovereign State, the European System of Central Banks or
any other system of central banks;
“relevant market rules”, in relation to a securities
market, means the rules, regulating the activities of the securities market in
relation to the use and dissemination of information, that are –
(a) specified
in a legislative instrument of the country or territory, or the part of a
country or territory, that hosts the securities market; or
(b) made
by the securities market, if the securities market is authorized to make such rules by a legislative instrument of the
country or territory, or the part of a country or territory, that hosts the
securities market;
“securities” has the meaning set out in Schedule 6;
“securities market” means any securities market that is
established by or under, or is regulated by or under, a legislative instrument
made by the country or territory, or the part of a country or territory, that
hosts the securities market.[135]
(2) The States may by
Regulations amend the meaning of “securities” set out in Schedule 6.
39B “Dealing”
in securities
(1) For the purposes of
this Part, a person deals in securities if –
(a) he or
she acquires or disposes of the securities (whether as principal or agent); or
(b) he or
she procures, directly or indirectly, an acquisition or disposal of the
securities by any other person.
(2) For the purposes of
this Part and Schedule 6, “acquire”, in relation to a
security, includes –
(a) agreeing
to acquire the security; and
(b) entering
into a contract which creates the security.
(3) For the purposes of
this Part and Schedule 6, “dispose”, in relation to a
security, includes –
(a) agreeing
to dispose of the security; and
(b) bringing
to an end a contract which created the security.
(4) For the purposes of
paragraph (1), a person procures an acquisition or disposal of a security
if the security is acquired or disposed of by a person who is –
(a) his
or her agent;
(b) his
or her nominee; or
(c) a
person who is acting at his or her direction, in relation to the acquisition or
disposal.
(5) Paragraph (4) is
not exhaustive as to the circumstances in which one person may be regarded as
procuring an acquisition or disposal of securities by another.
39C Meaning of
“inside information”, etc.
(1) For the purposes of
this Part, “inside information” means information
which –
(a) relates
to particular securities or to a particular issuer of securities or to
particular issuers of securities and not to securities generally or to issuers
of securities generally;
(b) is
specific or precise;
(c) has
not been made public; and
(d) if it
were made public would be likely to have a significant effect on the price of
any securities.
(2) For the purposes of
this Part, securities are “price-affected securities” in relation
to inside information, and inside information is “price-sensitive
information” in relation to securities, if and only if the information
would, if made public, be likely to have a significant effect on the price of
the securities.
(3) For the purposes of
this Part, information shall be treated as relating to an issuer of securities
which is a company or limited liability company not only where it is about the
company or limited liability company but also where it may affect the
company’s or limited liability company’s business prospects.[136]
(4) For the purposes of
this Article “price” includes value.
39D Meaning of
“having information as an insider”
(1) For the purposes of
this Part, a person has information as an insider if and only if –
(a) it
is, and he or she knows that it is, inside information; and
(b) he or
she has it, and knows that he or she has it, from an inside source.
(2) For the purposes of
paragraph (1), a person has information from an inside source if and only
if –
(a) he or
she has it through –
(i) being a director,
employee or shareholder of a body corporate (other than a limited liability
company registered as a body corporate under the LLC Law) that is an issuer of
securities,
(ia) being
a manager or a member of a limited liability company that is an issuer of
securities,
(ii) having
access to the information by virtue of his or her employment, office or
profession; or
(b) the
direct or indirect source of his or her information is a person within
sub-paragraph (a).[137]
39E Meaning of
“made public”
(1) For the purposes of
this Part, “made public”, in relation to information, shall be
construed in accordance with this Article but the provisions of this Article
are not exhaustive as to the meaning of that expression.
(2) Information is made
public if –
(a) it is
published in accordance with the rules of a securities market for the purpose of informing investors and their professional
advisers;
(b) it is
contained in records which by virtue of any legislation of the country or
territory, or a part of a country or territory, that hosts the securities
market are open to inspection by the public;
(c) it
can be readily acquired by those likely to deal in any securities –
(i) to which the
information relates, or
(ii) of
an issuer to which the information relates; or
(d) it is
derived from information which has been made public.
(3) Information may be
treated as made public even though –
(a) it
can be acquired only by persons exercising diligence or expertise;
(b) it is
communicated to a section of the public and not to the public at large;
(c) it
can be acquired only by observation;
(d) it is
communicated only on payment of a fee; or
(e) it is
published only outside the country or territory, or the part of the country or
territory, in which is situated the securities market to which the information
relates.
39F Meaning of
“professional intermediary”
(1) For the purposes of
this Part, a “professional intermediary” is a person –
(a) who
carries on a business consisting of an activity mentioned in paragraph (2)
and who holds himself or herself out to the public or any section of the public
(including a section of the public constituted by persons such as himself or
herself) as willing to engage in any such business; or
(b) who
is employed, by a person falling within sub-paragraph (a), to carry out
any such activity.
(2) The activities referred
to in paragraph (1) are –
(a) acquiring
or disposing of securities (whether as principal or agent); or
(b) acting
as an intermediary between persons taking part in any dealing in securities.
(3) A person is not to be
treated as carrying on a business consisting of an activity mentioned in
paragraph (2) –
(a) if
the activity in question is merely incidental to some other activity not
falling within paragraph (2); or
(b) merely
because he or she occasionally conducts one of those activities.
(4) For the purposes of
this Part, a person dealing in securities relies on a professional intermediary
if and only if a person who is acting as a professional intermediary carries on
an activity mentioned in paragraph (2) in relation to that dealing.
Insider
dealing
39G Insider dealing
(1) A person who has
information as an insider is guilty of an offence if, in the circumstances
mentioned in paragraph (3), he or she deals in securities that are
price-affected securities in relation to the information.
(2) A person who has
information as an insider is guilty of an offence if –
(a) he or
she encourages another person to deal in securities that are (whether or not
that other person knows it) price-affected securities in relation to the
information, knowing or having reasonable cause to believe that the dealing
would take place in the circumstances mentioned in paragraph (3); or
(b) he or
she discloses the information, otherwise than in the proper performance of the
functions of his or her employment, office or profession, to another person.
(3) The circumstances
referred to in paragraph (1) and (2) are that –
(a) the
acquisition or disposal in question occurs on a securities market; or
(b) the
person dealing relies on a professional intermediary or is himself or herself
acting as a professional intermediary.
(4) A person guilty of an
offence under this Article shall be liable to imprisonment for a term not
exceeding 10 years or a fine.
39H Monetary policy
activity, validity of contracts not affected
(1) Article 39G does
not apply to anything done by a person acting on behalf of a public sector body
in pursuit of monetary policies or policies with respect to exchange rates or
the management of public debt or foreign exchange reserves.
(2) No contract shall be void
or unenforceable by reason only of Article 39G.
39I Territorial
scope of offence of insider dealing
(1) A person is only guilty
of an offence under Article 39G(1) if –
(a) he or
she was within Jersey at the time when he or she is alleged to have done any
act constituting or forming part of the alleged dealing; or
(b) the
professional intermediary referred to in Article 39G was within Jersey at
the time when he or she is alleged to have done anything by means of which the
offence is alleged to have been committed.
(2) A person is only guilty
of an offence under Article 39G(2) if –
(a) he or
she was within Jersey at the time when he or she is alleged to have encouraged
the dealing or disclosed the information; or
(b) the
alleged recipient of the encouragement or information was within Jersey at the
time when he or she is alleged to have received the encouragement or
information.
39J General
defences
(1) A person is not guilty
of an offence under Article 39G(1) by virtue of dealing in securities if
he or she proves –
(a) that
at the time he or she did not expect the dealing to result in a profit
attributable to the fact that the information in question was price-sensitive
information in relation to the securities;
(b) that
at the time he or she believed on reasonable grounds that the information had
been disclosed widely enough to ensure that none of those taking part in the
dealing would be prejudiced by not having the information; or
(c) that
he or she would have done what he or she did even if he or she had not had the
information.
(2) A person is not guilty
of an offence under Article 39G(2) by virtue of encouraging another person
to deal in securities if he or she proves –
(a) that
at the time he or she did not expect the dealing to result in a profit attributable
to the fact that the information in question was price-sensitive information in
relation to the securities;
(b) that
at the time he or she believed on reasonable grounds that the information had
been or would be disclosed widely enough to ensure that none of those taking
part in the dealing would be prejudiced by not having the information; or
(c) that
he or she would have done what he or she did even if he or she had not had the
information.
(3) A person is not guilty
of an offence under Article 39G(2) by virtue of a disclosure of
information if he or she proves –
(a) that
he or she did not at the time expect any person, because of the disclosure, to
deal in securities in the circumstances mentioned in Article 39G(3); or
(b) that,
although he or she had such an expectation at the time, he or she did not
expect the dealing to result in a profit attributable to the fact that the
information was price-sensitive information in relation to the securities.
(4) A person is not guilty
of an offence under Article 39G(1) or (2) by virtue of dealing in
securities or encouraging another person to deal if he or she proves that he or
she acted in good faith in the course of –
(a) his
or her business as a market
maker; or
(b) his
or her employment in the
business of a market maker.
(5) A person is not guilty
of an offence under Article 39G(1) or (2) by virtue of dealing in
securities in a securities market or encouraging another person to deal in a
securities market if he or she proves that he or she acted in conformity with
the relevant market rules.
(6) In this Article
references to a profit include references to the avoidance of a loss.
39K Defence if
information was market information
(1) A person is not guilty
of an offence under Article 39G(1) or (2) by virtue of dealing in
securities or encouraging another person to deal if he or she proves
that –
(a) the
information which he or she had as an insider was market information; and
(b) it
was reasonable for a person in his or her position to have acted as he or she did despite having that information as an insider at the time.
(2) In determining for the
purposes of paragraph (1) whether it is reasonable for a person to do any
act despite having market information at the time, there shall, in particular,
be taken into account –
(a) the
content of the information;
(b) the
circumstances in which he or she first had the information and in what capacity; and
(c) the
capacity in which he or she acts at the time the determination is made.
(3) A person is not guilty
of an offence under Article 39G(1) or (2) by virtue of dealing in
securities or encouraging another person to deal if he or she
proves –
(a) that
he or she acted –
(i) in connection
with an acquisition or disposal which was under consideration or the subject of
negotiation, or in the course of a series of such acquisitions or disposals,
and
(ii) with
a view to facilitating the accomplishment of the acquisition or disposal or the
series of acquisitions or disposals; and
(b) that
the information which he or she had as an insider was market information arising directly out of
his or her involvement in the
acquisition or disposal or series of acquisitions or disposals.
(4) For the purposes of
this Article, market information is information consisting of one or more of
the following facts –
(a) that securities of a particular kind have been or are to be
acquired or disposed of, or that their acquisition or disposal is under
consideration or the subject of negotiation;
(b) that
securities of a particular kind have not been or are not to be acquired or
disposed of;
(c) the
number of securities acquired or disposed of or to be acquired or disposed of
or whose acquisition or disposal is under consideration or the subject of
negotiation;
(d) the
price (or range of prices) at which securities have been or are to be acquired
or disposed of or the price (or range of prices) at which securities whose
acquisition or disposal is under consideration or the subject of negotiation
may be acquired or disposed of;
(e) the
identity of the persons involved or likely to be involved in any capacity in an
acquisition or disposal.
Market
manipulation and misleading information
39L Market manipulation and misleading
information
(1) Any person
who –
(a) makes
a statement, promise or forecast which the person knows to be misleading, false or deceptive;
(b) dishonestly
conceals any material facts; or
(c) recklessly
makes (dishonestly or otherwise) a statement, promise or forecast which is
misleading, false or deceptive,
is guilty of an offence if he or she makes the statement, promise or
forecast or conceals the facts for the purpose of inducing, or is reckless as
to whether it may induce, another person (whether or not the other person is
the person to whom the statement, promise or forecast is made or from whom the
facts are concealed) –
(i) to
enter or offer to enter into, or refrain from entering or offering to enter
into, an agreement or arrangement the making of which or performing of which
constitutes financial service business or would do so but for Schedule 2;
or
(ii) to
exercise, or refrain from exercising, any rights conferred by an investment or
contract of general insurance.
(2) Any person who does any
act or engages in any course of conduct which creates a false or misleading
impression as to the market in or the price or value of any investment or a
contract of general insurance is guilty of an offence if the person does so for
the purpose of creating that impression and of thereby inducing another
person –
(a) to
acquire, dispose of, subscribe for or underwrite that investment or contract of
general insurance; or
(b) to
refrain from doing so or to exercise, or refrain from exercising, any rights
conferred by that investment or contract of general insurance.
(3) A person does not
commit an offence under this Article unless –
(a) the
statement, promise or forecast is made in or from, or the facts are concealed
in or from, Jersey, or arrangements are made in or from the Jersey for the
statement, promise or forecast to be made or the facts to be concealed;
(b) the
person on whom the inducement is intended to or may have effect is in Jersey;
or
(c) the
agreement or arrangement is or would be entered into or the rights are or would
be exercised in Jersey.
(4) A person guilty of an
offence under this Article shall be liable to imprisonment for a term not
exceeding 10 years or a fine.
(5) In paragraphs (1)
and (2), “contract of general insurance” means a contract of
general insurance, general insurance product or general insurance service.
39M Application
Article 39L does not apply to anything done by a person acting
on behalf of a public sector body in pursuit of monetary policies or policies
with respect to exchange rates or the management of public debt or foreign
exchange reserves.
39N Defences
(1) A person is not guilty
of an offence under Article 39L(1) in relation to a statement, promise or
forecast if the statement, promise or forecast was made in respect of a
securities market and he or she proves that he or she acted in conformity with
the relevant market rules.
(2) A person is not guilty
of an offence under Article 39L(2) in relation to an act or a course of
conduct if he or she engaged in the act or course of conduct in respect of a
securities market and he or she proves that –
(a) he or
she reasonably believed that the act or conduct would not create an impression
that was false or misleading as to the matters contained in Article 39L(2);
or
(b) he or
she acted in conformity with the relevant market rules.
PART 4
SUPPLEMENTARY
40 Service
of notices[138]
(1) No notice or other
document required by this Law to be given to the Commission shall be regarded
as so given until it is received.
(2) Subject to paragraph (1),
any notice or other document required or authorized by or under this Law to be
given to the Commission may be given by facsimile, electronic transmission or
by any similar means that produces a document containing the text of the
communication in legible form or is capable of doing so.
(3) Any notice, direction
or other document required or authorized by or under this Law to be given to or
served on any person other than the Commission may be given or served on the
person in question –
(a) by
delivering it to the person;
(b) by
leaving it at the person’s proper address;
(c) by
sending it by post to the person at that address; or
(d) by
sending it to the person at that address by facsimile, electronic transmission
or other similar means that produces a document containing the text of the
communication in legible form or is capable of doing so.
(4) Any such notice,
direction or other document may –
(a) in
the case of a company incorporated in Jersey, be served by being delivered to
its registered or principal office;
(aa) in the case of a
limited liability company registered in Jersey, be served by being delivered to
its registered office;
(b) in
the case of a partnership, company incorporated outside Jersey or
unincorporated association, be given to or served on a person who is a
principal person in relation to it, or on the secretary or other similar
officer of the partnership, company or association or any person who purports
to act in any such capacity, by whatever name called, or on the person having
the control or management of the partnership business, as the case may be, or
by being served on the person or delivered to the person’s registered or
administrative office.[139]
(5) For the purposes of
this Article and of Article 7 of the Interpretation (Jersey) Law
1954
in its application to this Article, the proper address of any person to or on
whom a notice, direction or other document is to be given or served by post
shall be the person’s last known address, except that –
(a) in
the case of a company incorporated in Jersey, or its secretary, clerk or other
similar officer or person, it shall be the address of the registered or
principal office of the company in Jersey; and
(b) in
the case of a partnership, or a person who is a principal person in relation to
a partnership, it shall be that of its principal office in Jersey.
(6) If the person to or on
whom any notice, direction or other document referred to in paragraph (3)
is to be given or served has notified the Commission of an address within
Jersey other than the person’s proper address within the meaning of
paragraph (5), as the one at which the person or someone on the
person’s behalf will accept documents of the same description as that
notice, direction or other document, that address shall also be treated for the
purposes of this Article and Article 7 of the Interpretation (Jersey) Law
1954
as the person’s proper address.
41 Legal
proceedings[140]
(1) In any proceedings, a
certificate purporting to be signed on behalf of the Commission and certifying
any of the following –
(a) that
a particular person is or is not an applicant or registered person or was or
was not an applicant or registered person at a particular time;
(b) the
date on which a particular applicant or registered person or formerly
registered person made application or became a registered person or ceased to
be a registered person, as the case may be;
(c) the
scope of a particular person’s application or registration;
(d) that
conditions set out in the certificate were, at the relevant time, prescribed
under Article 10 in relation to registered persons, or attached under
Article 10 to a particular person’s registration,
shall be admissible in evidence in all legal proceedings as evidence
of any fact stated in it of which direct oral evidence would be admissible.[141]
(2) A certificate
purporting to be signed in accordance with paragraph (1) shall be deemed
to have been duly signed unless the contrary is shown.
(3) Where an offence under
this Law committed by a registered person or formerly registered person is
proved to have been committed with the consent or connivance of, or to be
attributable to any neglect on the part of a person who is or was, a principal
person in relation to that registered person or formerly registered person, the
person shall be guilty of the offence and liable in the same manner as the
registered person or formerly registered person to the penalty provided for
that offence.
(4) Where an offence under
this Law committed by a limited liability partnership or company is proved to
have been committed with the consent or connivance of, or to be attributable to
any neglect on the part of –
(a) a
person who is a partner or secretary of the partnership, or director, manager, secretary
or other similar officer of the company; or
(b) any
person purporting to act in any such capacity,
the person shall also be guilty of the offence and liable in the
same manner as the partnership or company to the penalty provided for that
offence.[142]
(5) Where the affairs of a
company are managed by its members, paragraph (4) shall apply in relation
to acts and defaults of a member in connection with the member’s
functions of management as if the member were a director of the company.[143]
(6) Any person who aids,
abets, counsels or procures the commission of an offence under this Law shall
also be guilty of the offence and liable in the same manner as a principal
offender to the penalty provided for that offence.[144]
(7) Nothing in paragraph (6)
affects the operation of paragraph (3), (4) or (5).[145]
(8) No proceedings for an
offence under this Law shall be instituted except by or with the consent of the
Attorney General.
42 Orders
(1) The Minister may, on
the recommendation of the Commission, make Orders for the purposes of carrying
this Law into effect and in particular, without prejudice to the generality of
the foregoing power, for prescribing any matter which is to be prescribed by
any provision of this Law.
(2) [146]
(3) An Order or Regulations
made under this Law may contain such transitional, consequential, incidental or
supplementary provisions as appear to the Minister or States (respectively) to
be necessary or expedient for the purposes of the Order or Regulations.[147]
(4) The power to make
Orders, or the power to make Regulations, under this Law may be
exercised –
(a) either
in relation to all cases to which the power extends, or in relation to all
those cases subject to specified exceptions, or in relation to any specified
cases or classes of case; and
(b) so as
to make, as respects the cases in relation to which it is
exercised –
(i) the full
provision to which the power extends or any lesser provision (whether by way of
exception or otherwise),
(ii) the
same provision for all cases in relation to which the power is exercised, or
different provision for different cases or classes of case, or different
provision as respects the same case or class of case for different purposes of
the Order or Regulations,
(iii) any
such provision either unconditionally or subject to any specified condition.[148]
43 Transitional
provisions[149]
(1) Subject to paragraphs (2)
to (6), a person who makes an application in compliance with this Law under
Article 8(1) before such day as is appointed by the Committee, on the
recommendation of the Commission, by Order for the purposes of this paragraph
may, during the period between the date of the person’s application and
its being granted or refused by the Commission under Article 9, carry on
investment business in the same manner as he or she was doing at the date of
his or her application provided that such business is in accordance with the
terms of his or her application.
(2) The Committee may, on
the recommendation of the Commission prescribe, or the Commission may impose by
notice in writing, conditions which shall apply to applicants during the period
specified in paragraph (1) in addition to or in substitution for
conditions prescribed under Article 10(1) and may make different provision
for different applicants or for different classes of applicants or for
different classes of investment businesses and may, in such circumstances as
the Commission thinks fit, exclude applicants from carrying on investment business.
(3) Paragraphs (3) to
(5) of Article 10 shall apply in respect of conditions imposed under
paragraph (2) as they apply in respect of conditions attached (to a
registration) under Article 10(2).
(4) The provisions of this
Law shall apply (with the necessary modifications) to an applicant to whom
paragraph (1) for the time being applies, as they apply to a registered
person.
(5) Without prejudice to
the generality of paragraph (4), the following modifications shall apply
in relation to applicants to whom paragraph (1) for the time being
applies –
(a) for
any reference to the period during which a person is registered there shall be
substituted a reference to the period between the date of the application and
the date of its being granted or refused by the Commission;
(b) for
any reference to the terms of a registration there shall be substituted a
reference to the terms of the application.
(6) Paragraph (1)
shall not apply to a person who, immediately before the day referred to in that
paragraph, was carrying on the business to which the application relates in
contravention of the Regulation of Undertakings and Development (Jersey)
Law 1973 or the Control of Borrowing (Jersey)
Law 1947.
43A Further
transitional provisions[150]
Schedule 5 shall have effect to make transitional provisions.
44 Citation[151]
This Law may be cited as the Financial Services (Jersey)
Law 1998.
Schedule 1[152]
(Article 1)
INVESTMENTS
1 Shares,
etc.
Shares and stock in the share capital of a company.
Note: For
the purposes of this paragraph “company” includes any body
corporate and any unincorporated body constituted under the law of any country
or territory but does not include a company which is a collective investment
fund within the meaning of the Collective Investment Funds
(Jersey) Law 1988 or a limited liability company registered as a body corporate under
the LLC Law).
2 Debentures
Debentures, including debenture stock, loan stock, bonds,
certificates of deposit and other instruments of the same kind creating or
acknowledging indebtedness.
Notes:
(1) This
paragraph shall not apply to –
(a) any instrument
acknowledging or creating indebtedness for, or for money borrowed to defray, the
consideration payable under a contract for the supply of goods or services;
(b) a cheque or other bill
of exchange, a banker’s draft or a letter of credit;
(c) a banknote, a statement
showing a balance in a current, deposit or savings account or (by reason of any
financial obligation contained in it) a lease or other disposition of property,
a hypothec, security interest, mortgage or other charge, or an insurance
policy; or
(d) any instrument creating
or acknowledging indebtedness in respect of money received by the Director of
Savings as deposits or otherwise in connection with the business of the
National Savings Bank or in respect of money raised under the National Loans
Act 1968 of the United Kingdom under the auspices of the Director of
Savings or in respect of money treated as having been so raised by virtue of
section 11(3) of the National Debt Act 1972 of the United Kingdom.
(2) For
the purposes of this paragraph references to an instrument include references
to any record whether or not in the form of a document.
3 Instruments
entitling to shares, LLC interests or securities
Warrants or other instruments entitling the holder to subscribe for
investments falling within paragraph 1, 2 or 9B.
Notes:
(1) It is
immaterial whether the investments are for the time being in existence or
identifiable.
(2) An
investment falling within this paragraph shall not be regarded as falling
within paragraph 6, 7 or 8.
4 Certificates
representing securities
Certificates or other instruments which confer –
(a) property rights in
respect of any investment falling within paragraph 1, 2, 3 or 9B;
(b) any right to acquire,
dispose of, underwrite or convert an investment, being a right to which the holder
would be entitled if the holder held any such investment to which the
certificate or instrument relates; or
(c) a contractual right
(other than an option) to acquire any such investment otherwise than by
subscription.
Note: This paragraph does not apply to any instrument
which confers rights in respect of 2 or more investments issued by different
persons.
5 Units
in a collective investment fund
Units in a collective investment fund within the meaning of the Collective Investment Funds
(Jersey) Law 1988 or in a fund which would be a collective investment fund but for
the fact that it does not acquire capital by means of an offer to the public of
units for subscription, sale or exchange, as described in that Law.
6 Options
Options to acquire or dispose of –
(a) an investment falling
within any other paragraph of this Schedule;
(b) currency of Jersey or
of any other country or territory;
(c) gold, palladium,
platinum or silver; or
(d) an option to acquire or
dispose of an investment falling within this paragraph by virtue of
sub-paragraph (a), (b) or (c).
7 Futures
Rights under a contract for the sale of a commodity, or property of
any other description which is entered into for investment, not commercial
purposes, and under which delivery is to be made at a future date and at a
price agreed upon when the contract is made.
Notes:
(1) A
contract shall be regarded as made for investment purposes if it is made or
traded on an investment exchange, or made otherwise but expressed to be as
traded on such an exchange or on the same terms as those on which an equivalent
contract would be made on such an exchange.
(2) A
contract not falling within Note (1) is to be regarded as made for
commercial purposes if –
(a) under the terms of the
contract delivery is to be made within 7 days of the contract being made,
unless it can be shown that there existed an understanding that (despite the
terms of the contract) delivery would not be made within 7 days;
(b) it is a commodities
future and the parties intend that the profit is to be obtained or the loss
avoided by taking delivery of any property to which the contract relates; or
(c) it is a foreign
exchange future, and –
(i) the
parties intend that the profit is to be obtained or the loss avoided by taking
delivery of the currencies to which the contract relates, and
(ii) the
purpose of the trade is to facilitate a means of payment for identifiable goods
and services.
8 Contracts
for differences
Rights under a contract for
differences.
Note: This paragraph shall not
apply to rights under any contract under which money is received by the
Director of Savings as deposits or otherwise in connection with the business of
the National Savings Bank or in respect of money raised under the National
Loans Act 1968 of the United Kingdom under the auspices of the Director of
Savings or under which money raised is treated as having been so raised by
virtue of section 11(3) of the National Debt Act 1972 of the United Kingdom.
8A Financial
derivatives
Rights under any contract,
except an option, future or contract for differences, the purpose or pretended
purpose of which is to secure a profit or avoid a loss by reference to
fluctuations in the value or price of property of any description or in an
index or other factor designated for that purpose in the contract.
Notes:
(1) This paragraph
includes any contract made or traded on an investment exchange, or made
otherwise but expressed to be as traded on such an exchange or on the same
terms as those on which an equivalent contract would be made on such an
exchange.
(2) This
paragraph does not apply to a contract not falling within Note (1) where
the parties intend that the profit is to be obtained or the loss avoided by
taking delivery of any property to which the contract relates.
(3) This paragraph does not apply to
rights under any contract under which money is received by the Director of
Savings as deposits or otherwise in connection with the business of the
National Savings Bank or in respect of money raised under the National Loans
Act 1968 of the United Kingdom under the auspices of the Director of
Savings or under which money raised is treated as having been so raised by
virtue of section 11(3) of the National Debt Act 1972 of the United
Kingdom.
9 Long-term
insurance contracts
Rights under a contract the effecting and carrying out of which
constitutes long-term business within the meaning of the Insurance Business (Jersey)
Law 1996 or would do so but for the fact that for the purposes of class 6 or
7 set out in Schedule 1 to that Law it is effected and carried out by a
person carrying on a banking business or by a person who does not carry on
long-term business of class 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5 or general business of any class.
Notes:
(1) Where
the provisions of a contract of insurance are such that the effecting and
carrying out of the contract –
(a) constitutes both
long-term business within the meaning of the Insurance Business (Jersey)
Law 1996 and general business within the meaning of that Law; or
(b) by virtue of paragraph
3(2) of Part 4 of Schedule 1 to the Insurance Business (Jersey)
Law 1996 constitutes long-term business notwithstanding the inclusion of
subsidiary general business provisions,
references in this
paragraph to rights and benefits under the contract are references only to such
rights and benefits as are attributable to the provisions of the contract
relating to long-term business.
(2) This
paragraph does not apply to rights under a reinsurance contract.
(3) Rights
falling within this paragraph shall not be regarded as falling within paragraph
8.
9A Pension
schemes
Approved Jersey schemes or
approved drawdown contracts (as those terms are defined in Article 130(1)
of the Income Tax (Jersey) Law 1961).
Note: This paragraph applies only to the giving
of investment advice in respect of a pension scheme.
9B LLC
interests
Interests in a limited
liability company (LLC interests).
10 Rights
and interests in investments
Rights to and interests in anything which is an investment falling
within any other paragraph of this Schedule.
Schedule 2
(Article 3)
EXEMPTIONS
PART 1 – INVESTMENT BUSINESS[153]
1 Newspapers,
broadcasting and information services
The giving of investment advice in any newspaper, journal, magazine,
television broadcast, teletext service, sound broadcast or electronic
information service, or in any other periodical publication, broadcast or electronic
information service if –
(a) the
principal purpose of the periodical publication, broadcast or service, taken as
a whole and including any advertisements contained in it, is not to induce
persons to buy, sell, subscribe for or underwrite a particular investment; or
(b) the publisher,
broadcaster, service provider or producer of the periodical publication,
broadcast or service does not derive any direct benefit from any investment
business resulting from the investment advice given therein.
2 Executors
and administrators, tuteurs and guardians
The carrying out by executors or administrators of estates of
deceased persons, or by tuteurs
and guardians, curateurs, administrateurs, general and special attornies and fideicommisaires in their capacity as such, of any of the activities described in
Article 2.
3 Certain persons regulated
under the Collective Investment Funds (Jersey) Law 1988
1. The
carrying on, by a company issuing units that is a recognized fund, of the
activities of a functionary, within the meaning of the Schedule to the Collective Investment Funds
(Jersey) Law 1988, under the functionary’s permit granted under that Law.
2. The
carrying on by a person (other than a company issuing units within the meaning
of the Collective Investment Funds
(Jersey) Law 1988), in relation to a recognized fund, of the activities of a
functionary, within the meaning of the Schedule to that Law, under the
functionary’s permit granted under that Law.
3. The
carrying on of the activities of a certified fund, within the meaning of the Collective Investment Funds
(Jersey) Law 1988, by a company issuing units.
3A Persons registered to carry on fund services
business
The carrying on of fund services business by a person who is
registered under this Law to do so.
3A1 Persons
registered to carry on AIF services business
The carrying on of AIF services business by a person who is
registered under this Law to do so.
3B Certain overseas distributors
(1) The following
activities –
(a) a
specified transaction when carried out by an overseas person;
(b) a
specified transaction when carried out with an overseas person; or
(c) the
publication in Jersey by an overseas person of an advertisement
that –
(i) complies with an
Order made under Article 31 of this Law, and
(ii) solicits
a person in Jersey to enter into a specified transaction.
(2) In this paragraph
“overseas person” means a person who –
(a) has
no place of business in Jersey from which he or she carries on fund services
business in or from Jersey; and
(b) is
not –
(i) a company
incorporated in Jersey, or
(ii) a
limited liability company registered in Jersey.
(3) Except as otherwise
provided, in this paragraph ‘specified transaction’ means a
transaction amounting to fund services business by virtue of which an overseas
person –
(a) deals
with a person in Jersey;
(b) acts
as an agent for a person in Jersey;
(c) carries
out discretionary management activities for a person in Jersey; or
(d) provides
advice to a person in Jersey.
(4) A transaction is only a
“specified transaction” for the purposes of this paragraph if the
transaction came about by virtue of –
(a) an
approach made by or on behalf of the person in Jersey to the overseas person
that –
(i) was not solicited
by the overseas person, or
(ii) was
solicited by the overseas person by an advertisement that complied with any
Order made under Article 31 of this Law; or
(b) an
approach made by the overseas person by an advertisement that complied with any
Order made under Article 31 of this Law.
(5) A transaction is only a
“specified transaction” for the purposes of this paragraph
if –
(a) the
overseas person has his or her head office in a country where he or she is
supervised in respect of fund services business by a relevant supervisory
authority in that country; and
(b) the
overseas person when dealing with the person in Jersey does so in accordance
with the relevant standards expected of registered persons as specified in any
Code of Practice in relation to fund services business that is issued by the
Commission.
(6) A transaction is only a
“specified transaction” for the purposes of this paragraph if it
relates to any of the following –
(a) a
collective investment scheme that –
(i) is an undertaking
for collective investment in transferable securities within the meaning of
Council Directive No. 85/611/EEC of 20 December 1985 on the co-ordination of
laws, regulations and administrative provisions relating to undertakings for
collective investment in transferable securities (UCITS) (O.J. No. L375
31.12.1985) as amended by Directive 88/220/EEC of 22nd March 1988 (O.J. L100,
19.4.1988), Directive 95/26/EC of 29th June 1995 (O.J. L.168, 18.7.1995),
Directive 2000/64/EC of 7th November 2000 (O.J. L290 17.11.2000), Directive
2001/107/EC of 21st January 2002 (O.J. L41, 13.2.2002), Directive 2001/108/EC
of 21st January 2002 (O.J. L41, 13.2.2002), Directive 2004/39/EC of 21st April
2004 (O.J. L145 30.4.2004), Directive 2005/1/EC of 9th March 2005 (O.J. L79,
24.3.2005) and Directive 2008/18/EC of 11th March 2008 (O.J. L76 19.3.2008),
and
(ii) is
authorized in accordance with that Directive;
(b) an
authorized unit trust, or authorized open-ended investment company, within the
meaning of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 of the United Kingdom;
(c) a
collective investment fund classified as a Class A Scheme under the Protection
of Investors (Bailiwick of Guernsey) Law, 1987 of the Bailiwick of Guernsey;
(d) a
collective investment fund that is authorized under the Financial Supervision
Act 1988 of the Isle of Man.
(7) A transaction that
requires the overseas person to act as an agent for the person in Jersey in
respect of an agreement with another person is only a “specified
transaction” for the purposes of this paragraph if –
(a) that
other person is outside Jersey; or
(b) if
that other person is in Jersey, if the agreement came about by virtue
of –
(i) an approach made
by or on behalf of the first person to that other person in Jersey
that –
(A) was not
solicited by that other person in Jersey, or
(B) was
solicited by that other person in Jersey by an advertisement that complied with
any Order made under Article 31 of this Law; or
(ii) an
approach made by that other person in Jersey by an advertisement that complied
with any Order made under Article 31 of this Law.
3C Company that is general partner or
trustee of unregulated fund
(1) The activities of a
company in respect of which the following requirements are met –
(a) the
only activities of the company are for one of the following
purposes –
(i) the purpose of
acting as a general partner of one limited partnership, where the partnership
is an unregulated fund,
(ii) the
purpose of acting as a trustee of one unit trust, where the trust is an
unregulated fund,
(iii) the
purpose of acting as one or both of the following –
(A) a general
partner of one or more limited partnerships, where each partnership is an
unregulated fund that, together with one or more other unregulated funds that
are limited partnerships or unit trusts and each have the company as a general
partner or a trustee, constitute a part, or the whole, of a single scheme or
arrangement,
(B) a
trustee of one or more unit trusts, where each trust is an unregulated fund
that, together with one or more other unregulated funds that are limited partnerships
or unit trusts and each have the company as a general partner or a trustee,
constitute a part, or the whole, of a single scheme or arrangement;
(b) a
person registered to carry on one or more classes of fund services business,
including at least the class of manager of a managed entity, provides the
registered office of the company;
(c) the
name of the company is notified to the Commission.
(2) A company does not fail
to meet the requirements set out in sub-paragraph (1)(a) in relation to an
unregulated fund only because it –
(a) invests
in the unregulated fund (or in another component of a scheme or arrangement of
which the unregulated fund is part); or
(b) holds
any interest in the unregulated fund (or in another component of a scheme or
arrangement of which the unregulated fund is part) other than an interest
referred to, or implicit in, sub-paragraph (1)(a).
4 Dealing
as principal
Dealing in investments as principal, unless –
(a) the person concerned
holds himself or herself out as willing to enter into transactions of that kind
at prices determined by the person generally, rather than being determined in
respect of each particular transaction;
(b) the person holds
himself or herself out as engaging in the business of buying investments of the
type to which the transaction concerned relates with a view to selling them; or
(c) the person regularly
solicits members of the public for the purpose of inducing them to deal in
investments as principals or as agents and the transaction concerned is or is
to be entered into as a result of the person having solicited members of the
public in that manner.
Notes:
(1) For
the purposes of this paragraph –
(a) “joint
enterprise” shall have the meaning given to it for the purposes of
paragraph 8;
(b) “members of the
public” in relation to the person soliciting them (the “relevant
person”) means any other persons except –
(i) companies or limited liability companies with
which the relevant person is connected,
(ii) persons
who are, or propose to become, participators with the relevant person in a
joint enterprise;
(c) a company or limited
liability company is connected with another company or limited liability
company if any of the requirements in Note (2) to paragraph 9 are met in
relation to them.
(2) For
the purposes of this paragraph an investment is of the same type as another if
they both fall within the same paragraph of Schedule 1.
5 Dealing
as agent by professionals and non-investment businesses
Dealing in investments as agent if –
(a) the dealing consists of
making arrangements with a view to another person buying, selling, subscribing
for or underwriting investments;
(b) the arrangements are
made in the course of carrying on any business or profession which does not
otherwise constitute investment business;
(c) the agent does not
receive any commission or other remuneration, directly or indirectly, from the
agent’s principal which is calculated by reference to the value of the
transaction concerned or to any premiums or other sums payable with respect to
those investments; and
(d) the agent does not hold
himself or herself out generally as providing a service of dealing in
investments.
Note: For the purposes of this paragraph “making arrangements”
includes –
(a) the
communication of instructions to effect a transaction to a person dealing in
investments;
(b) the
communication of offers and acceptances in relation to transactions to a person
dealing in investments;
(c) the
execution and delivery of documentation concerning the title to investments.
5A Arranging:
professional investment clients
Making arrangements for
another person (person A) (whether as principal or agent) to buy, sell,
subscribe for or underwrite investments, if –
(a) person A –
(i) is a person whose
ordinary activities involve the carrying on of investment business, or who it
is reasonable to expect will carry on investment business for the purposes of
the person’s business,
(ii) is
an employee, director or partner of a person referred to in
sub-clause (i),
(iii) is a
body corporate that is wholly owned by a person referred to in
sub-clause (i),
(iv) is a
limited partnership whose limited partners are all persons referred to in
sub-clause (i), or
(v) is a trust established
for the benefit of a person referred to in sub-clause (i); or
(b) person A’s
buying, selling, subscription or underwriting of the investments in question
could reasonably occur without the involvement of the person arranging that
buying, selling, subscription or underwriting.
5B Arranging: sophisticated and high net worth
investors
Making arrangements for
another person (person A) (whether as principal or agent) to buy, sell,
subscribe for or underwrite investments, if –
(a) person A
is buying, selling, subscribing for or underwriting –
(i) investments
valued at no less than £250,000 in aggregate,
(ii) units
in a collective investment fund in relation to which a certificate has been
granted under Article 8B of the Collective Investment Funds (Jersey) Law 1988, or
(iii) units
in a collective investment fund in relation to which a recognized fund
certificate has been granted under the Collective Investment Funds (Recognized
Funds) (General Provisions) (Jersey) Order 1988 or the Collective Investment Funds (Recognized Funds) (Rules) (Jersey)
Order 2003; or
(b) person A
has an individual wealth or market value of no less than US$10,000,000 or
the equivalent in another currency.
5C Arranging: other exemptions
Making arrangements for
another person (person A) (whether as principal or agent) to buy, sell,
subscribe for or underwrite investments, if –
(a) the
person arranging that buying, selling, subscription or underwriting
(person B) is not remunerated for doing so;
(b) person B’s
activities are limited to introducing person A to another person;
(c) person B is acting in
relation to a professional investor regulated scheme (as defined in the Financial Services (Investment
Business (Restricted Investment Business – Exemption)) (Jersey)
Order 2001) or a special purpose regulated
scheme (as defined in the Financial Services (Investment
Business (Special Purpose Investment Business – Exemption)) (Jersey)
Order 2001); or
(d) advice
in relation to person A’s buying, selling, subscription for or
underwriting of the investments is provided by a person who is registered to
carry on investment business under this Law.
6 Giving
advice in the course of a non-investment business
(1) Giving investment
advice other than in the course of carrying on any business which otherwise
constitutes investment business, unless the advice consists of, includes or
amounts to –
(a) a
recommendation to a person to buy, sell, subscribe for or underwrite a
particular investment or to exercise or refrain from exercising rights
conferred by it;
(b) advice
on the suitability of the investment concerned for the person to whom or in
relation to whom the advice is given; or
(c) advice
on the characteristics or performance of the investment concerned.
(2) Advice given in the
course of carrying on the profession of a lawyer by an advocate or practising
solicitor or of an accountant by a practising accountant in connection with an
investment identified specifically by the client and in relation to which the
client approached the lawyer or accountant for legal or accountancy advice, as
the case may be.
Note: For
the purposes of this paragraph –
“practising
accountant” means a person qualified under Article 113 of the Companies (Jersey) Law 1991 for appointment as auditor of a company under Article 109 of
that Law;
“practising
solicitor” means –
(a) a solicitor of the
Court; or
(b) a person who is
qualified to act as a solicitor under any of section 1 of the Solicitors
Act 1974 of the United Kingdom, Article 4 of the Solicitors (Northern
Ireland) Order 1976 or section 4 of the Solicitors (Scotland)
Act 1980 and who is, for the time being, practising as such from or within
Jersey.
7 Instruments
creating or acknowledging indebtedness
Accepting (whether as principal or as agent) or becoming party to
(otherwise than as a debtor or surety) an instrument creating or acknowledging
indebtedness in respect of any loan, credit, guarantee or other similar
financial accommodation or assurance which the person or the person’s
principal has made, granted, or provided.
8 Connected
companies and joint enterprises
(1) Dealing in investments
by a person as principal with another person if –
(a) they
are connected companies or limited liability companies;
(b) they
participate together in a joint enterprise and the dealing is undertaken for
the purposes of, or in connection with, that enterprise; or
(c) one
of them is a director, manager, other officer or employee of a company or
limited liability company acting in the person’s capacity as trustee and
the other is that company or limited liability company or a connected company
of a company or limited liability company in relation to that company or
limited liability company.
(2) Dealing in investments
by a person as agent for another person if –
(a) they
are connected companies or limited liability companies;
(b) they
participate together in a joint enterprise and the dealing is undertaken for
the purposes of, or in connection with, that enterprise; or
(c) the
other person is acting in the person’s capacity as a trustee and is a
director, manager, other officer or employee of, the company or limited
liability company which is the agent, or of a company or limited liability
company which is a connected company or limited liability company in relation
to the agent,
unless –
(i) the
agent holds himself or herself out (other than to such companies, limited
liability companies, participants or persons); or
(ii) solicits,
in a manner contemplated by paragraph 4(b) or 4(c).
(3) Discretionary
investment management by one person for another and investment advice given by
one person to another if –
(a) they
are connected companies or limited liability companies;
(b) they
participate together in a joint enterprise and the activity is undertaken for
the purposes of, or in connection with, that enterprise; or
(c) the
other person is acting in the person’s capacity as a trustee and is a
director, manager, other officer or employee of the company or limited
liability company which is carrying on such management or giving such advice or
of a company or limited liability company which is a connected company or
limited liability in relation to it,
unless the first mentioned person otherwise carries on the business
of discretionary investment management or of giving investment advice or holds
himself or herself out as carrying on either of those businesses.
Notes:
(1) For
the purposes of this paragraph, “joint enterprise” means an
enterprise into which the persons participating enter for commercial purposes
related to a business other than investment business carried on by such
persons; and where a person participating is a company or limited liability
company, each company or limited liability company with which it is connected
shall also be regarded as a person participating in the enterprise.
(2) For
the purposes of this paragraph a company or limited liability company is
connected with another company or limited liability company if any of the
requirements in Note (2) to paragraph 9 are met in relation to them.
9 Employees’
share schemes
(1) Dealing by a company or
limited liability company, a company or limited liability company with which it
is connected or a relevant trustee for the purpose of enabling or facilitating
transactions in shares or LLC interests in or debentures of the first-mentioned
company or limited liability company for the benefit of any of the persons
mentioned in sub-paragraph (2) or the holding of such shares or LLC
interests or debentures by or for the benefit of any such persons.
(2) The persons referred to
in sub-paragraph (1) are –
(a) the
bona
fide employees or former
employees of the company or limited liability company first mentioned in sub-paragraph (1) above or of another
company or limited liability company with which it is connected; or
(b) the
wives, husbands, civil partners, widows, widowers, surviving civil partners or
children or step-children under the age of 20 years of such employees or
former employees.
Notes:
(1) For
the purposes of this paragraph –
“joint enterprise” shall have the
meaning given to it for the purposes of paragraph 8;
“a relevant trustee” means a person
holding shares or LLC interests in or debentures of the company or
limited liability company first mentioned in
sub-paragraph (1) above as trustee in pursuance of arrangements made for
the purpose mentioned in sub-paragraph (1) by, or by a company or limited liability company
connected with, that company or limited liability
company.
“shares”, “LLC interests” and “debentures” include any investment falling within paragraph 1, 2 or 9B of
Schedule 1 and also include any investment falling within paragraph 3, 4 or 9B of Schedule 1 so
far as relating to those paragraphs or any investment falling within
paragraph 10 of Schedule 1 so far as relating to paragraph 1, 2,
3, 4 or 9B of Schedule 1;
“trustee” includes a duly
appointed delegate of the trustee who is participating in a joint enterprise
with the trustee.
(2) For
the purposes of this paragraph a company or limited liability company is
connected with another company or limited liability company if –
(a) they are in the same
group;
(b) one is entitled, either
alone or with any other company or limited liability company in the same group,
to exercise or control the exercise of a majority of the voting rights, (other
than as nominee shareholder or nominee LLC interest holder) which are
attributable to the share capital or LLC interests in issue and are exercisable
in all circumstances at any general meeting or members meeting of the other
company or limited liability company or of its holding company or holding
limited liability company; or
(c) the first mentioned
company or limited liability company holds, or a company or limited liability
company in the same group as the first-mentioned company or limited liability
company holds, an interest in the equity share capital or equity LLC interests
of the other company or limited liability company carrying rights to vote in
all circumstances at general meetings or members meetings for the purpose of
securing a contribution to the activities of the first-mentioned company or
limited liability company or the company or limited liability company in the
same group as that company or limited liability company respectively by the
exercise of control arising from that interest.
10 Issuing
of shares, LLC interests, debentures, etc.
(1) The issuing of a
company or limited liability company of its own shares or LLC interests or of
share warrants or LLC interest warrants in respect of any shares or LLC
interests, or by any person of the person’s own debentures or debenture
warrants.
(2) The issuing of its own
units by a company, unit trust or limited partnership which would be a
collective investment fund within the meaning of the Collective Investment Funds
(Jersey) Law 1988 but for the fact that it does not acquire capital by means of an
offer to the public of units for subscription, sale or exchange, as described
in that Law.
Note: For the purposes of this paragraph,
“shares”, “LLC interests” and “debentures”
include any investments falling within paragraph 1, 2 or 9B of Schedule 1
and “share warrants”, “LLC interest warrants” and
“debenture warrants” means any investment which falls within
paragraph 3 of Schedule 1 and, in the case of debenture warrants relates
to debentures issued by the person concerned.
11 Sale
of company or limited liability
company
Dealing in the shares of a company or LLC interests of a limited
liability company and giving advice in relation to such dealing,
where –
(a) the shares or LLC
interests comprise shares or LLC interests carrying at least 75% of the voting
rights attributable to share capital or all LLC interests in issue which are
exercisable in all circumstances at a general meeting or members meeting of the
company or limited liability company;
(b) the shares or LLC
interests, together with any already held by the person acquiring them, carry
not less than that percentage of those voting rights; and
(c) the dealing is between
parties each of whom is a single person or a group of connected persons.
Note: For the purposes of this paragraph –
“close relative” means a person’s spouse or civil
partner, children and step-children, parents and step-parents, brothers and
sisters and step-brothers and step-sisters;
“connected persons”, in relation to the seller of the
shares or LLC interests, means persons each of whom is, or is a close relative
of, a director or manager of the company or limited liability company and, in
relation to the buyer or underwriter of or the subscriber for the shares or LLC
interests, means persons each of whom is, or is a close relative of, a person
who is to be a director or manager of the company or limited liability company.
12 Dealing
as bare trustee
Dealing in investments which are or are to be held by the person
concerned as bare trustee, for another person, on that person’s instructions
if –
(a) the dealing takes place
in the course of carrying on any business or profession which does not
otherwise constitute investment business;
(b) the person concerned
does not receive any commission or other remuneration, directly or indirectly,
from the beneficiary which is calculated by reference to the value of the
transaction concerned or to any premiums or other sums payable with respect to
those investments; and
(c) the person concerned
does not hold himself or herself out generally as providing a service of
dealing in investments.
13 Investment
advice given by trustees
Investment advice given by a person as trustee to –
(a) a co-trustee for the
purposes of the trust; or
(b) a beneficiary under the
trust concerning the person’s interest in the trust fund,
unless –
(i) that person
otherwise carries on the business of giving investment advice or of
discretionary investment management or holds himself or herself out as carrying
on either of those businesses; or
(ii) the person was
appointed as a trustee as a result of his or her soliciting for business for
the purposes of inducing any person to enter into investment business
transactions with him or her.
Note: For the purposes of this paragraph –
“joint enterprise” shall have the meaning given to it
for the purposes of paragraph 8;
“trustee” includes a duly appointed delegate of the
trustee who is participating in a joint enterprise with the trustee.
14 Discretionary
investment management by directors or managers
Deciding as the director of a company or the manager of a limited
liability company on the purchase, sale, subscription for or underwriting of
investments by that company or limited liability company or another company or
limited liability company in the same group as that company or limited
liability company, unless –
(a) the director or manager
concerned carries on the business of giving investment advice or otherwise
carries on the business of discretionary investment management or holds himself
or herself out as carrying on either of those businesses;
(b) the person was
appointed as a director or manager as a result of his or her soliciting for
business for the purposes of inducing any person to enter into investment
business transactions with him or her; or
(c) the person receives,
directly or indirectly, any commissions or other remuneration for discharging
his or her duties as a director or manager calculated by reference to the value
of the transaction concerned or to any premiums or other sums payable with
respect to those investments.
Note: For the purposes of this paragraph
“director” includes a duly appointed alternate and
“manager” includes a duly appointed proxy manager.
15 Investment
advice between directors or managers
Investment advice given by a person as director to a co-director or
as manager to a “co-manager” for the purposes of the company or
limited liability company unless –
(a) that person otherwise
carries on the business of giving investment advice or of discretionary
investment management or holds himself or herself out as carrying on either of
those businesses; or
(b) the person was
appointed as a director or manager, as a result of his or her soliciting for
business for the purposes of inducing any person to enter into investment
business transactions with him or her.
Note: For the purposes of this paragraph
“director” includes a duly appointed alternate and
“manager” includes a duly appointed proxy manager.
16 Investment
advice given by protectors
Investment advice given by a person as protector of a trust to a
trustee of that trust, unless –
(a) that person otherwise
carries on the business of giving investment advice or of discretionary
investment management or holds himself or herself out as carrying on either of
those businesses;
(b) the person was appointed
as a protector as a result of his or her soliciting for business for the
purposes of inducing any person to enter into investment business transactions
with him or her; or
(c) the person receives,
directly or indirectly, any commissions or other remuneration for discharging
the person’s duties as a protector calculated by reference to the value
of the transaction concerned or to any premiums or other sums payable with
respect to those investments.
Note: For the purposes of this paragraph –
“protector” means a person named in or appointed under
the terms of a trust as the person whose consent is required before the trustee
may exercise a power or a discretion;
“terms of a trust” shall have the meaning given to it by
Article 1 of the Trusts (Jersey) Law 1984.
17 Long-term
insurance business by insurance companies
Dealing in investments within paragraph 9 of Schedule 1 or
rights in them, in so far as it constitutes the carrying on of long-term
insurance business within the meaning of the Insurance Business (Jersey)
Law 1996 by a person authorized to carry on that business in or from Jersey
by a permit granted under Article 7 of that Law.
18 [154]
PART 2 – TRUST COMPANY BUSINESS[155]
18 Special
purpose vehicle
An activity specified in Article 2(3) and (4) carried on by a
special purpose vehicle.
Note: In this
paragraph –
“1958 Order” means the Control of Borrowing (Jersey)
Order 1958;
“partnership interest” has the same meaning as in
Article 10(3) of the 1958 Order;
“relevant consent” means the consent of the Commission
given under Article 1, 2, 3, 4, 4A, 9(1), 10 or 11A of the 1958
Order;
“securities” includes trust interests, shares, LLC
interests, units, any partnership interest, bonds, notes, commercial paper,
debentures, debenture stock and instruments creating or acknowledging
indebtedness;
“special purpose vehicle” means a person who has
obtained a relevant consent and whose sole or principal activity is to
participate in a scheme or arrangement that involves –
(a) the making of a loan,
the giving of a guarantee, or the entering into of a derivatives transaction;
(b) the issuing of
securities;
(c) the securitisation,
acquisition or repackaging of assets;
(d) a capital markets
transaction;
(e) any other transaction
the Commission may approve for the purposes of this paragraph; or
(f) any transaction
in connection with any of the foregoing;
“unit” has the same meaning as in Article 13 of
the 1958 Order.
18A Company that is general partner or trustee of
unregulated fund
(1) The activities of a
company in respect of which the following requirements are met –
(a) the
only activities of the company are for one of the following
purposes –
(i) the purpose of
acting as a general partner of one limited partnership, where the partnership
is an unregulated fund,
(ii) the
purpose of acting as a trustee of one unit trust, where the trust is an
unregulated fund,
(iii) the
purpose of acting as one or both of the following –
(A) a general
partner of one or more limited partnerships, where each partnership is an
unregulated fund that, together with one or more other unregulated funds that
are limited partnerships or unit trusts and each have the company as a general
partner or a trustee, constitute a part, or the whole, of a single scheme or arrangement,
(B) a
trustee of one or more unit trusts, where each trust is an unregulated fund
that, together with one or more other unregulated funds that are limited
partnerships or unit trusts and each have the company as a general partner or a
trustee, constitute a part, or the whole, of a single scheme or arrangement;
(b) a
person registered to carry on one or more classes of fund services business,
including at least the class of manager of a managed entity, provides the
registered office of the company;
(c) the
name of the company is notified to the Commission.
(2) A company does not fail
to meet the requirements set out in sub-paragraph (1)(a) in relation to an
unregulated fund only because it –
(a) invests
in the unregulated fund (or in another component of a scheme or arrangement of
which the unregulated fund is part); or
(b) holds
any interest in the unregulated fund (or in another component of a scheme or
arrangement of which the unregulated fund is part) other than an interest
referred to, or implicit in, sub-paragraph (1)(a).
18B Certain managers of managed entity
The activities –
(a) of a
person registered to carry on a class of fund services business, being a class
that is or includes that of manager of a managed entity; and
(b) to
the extent that they are carried on for a company whose activities are, by
virtue of paragraph 3C, 18A or 21, not to be treated as one or more classes of
financial service business.
18C Persons
registered to carry on AIF services business
The carrying on of AIF services business by a person who is
registered under this Law to do so.
PART 3 – GENERAL
INSURANCE MEDIATION BUSINESS[156]
19 Newspapers, broadcasting and
information services
The giving of general insurance advice in any newspaper, journal,
magazine, television broadcast, teletext service, sound broadcast or electronic
information service, or in any other periodical publication, broadcast or
electronic information service, if –
(a) the principal purpose
of the periodical publication, broadcast or service, taken as a whole and
including any advertisements contained in it, is not to induce persons to buy,
sell, subscribe for or underwrite a general insurance contract; or
(b) the publisher,
broadcaster, service provider or producer of the periodical publication,
broadcast or service does not derive any direct benefit from any general
insurance business resulting from the advice given in the publication,
broadcast or service.
20 Non-mainstream general insurance
businesses
(1) General insurance
mediation business undertaken in the course of carrying on –
(a) the
practice of accountancy by a practising accountant; or
(b) the
profession of a lawyer by a practising lawyer.
(2) For the purposes of
this paragraph –
“practising accountant” means a person qualified under
Article 113 of the Companies (Jersey) Law 1991 for appointment as auditor
of a company under Article 109 of that Law;
“practising lawyer” means –
(a) an écrivain or advocate of the Royal Court; or
(b) a
person who is qualified to act as a solicitor under section 1 of the Solicitors
Act 1974 of the United Kingdom, Article 4 of the Solicitors (Northern
Ireland) Order 1976 or section 4 of the Solicitors (Scotland) Act 1980,
and who is, for the time being, practising as an écrivain, advocate or solicitor from or
within Jersey.
part
4 – fund services business[157]
21 Company that is general partner or
trustee of unregulated fund
(1) The activities of a
company in respect of which the following requirements are met –
(a) the
only activities of the company are for one of the following
purposes –
(i) the purpose of
acting as a general partner of one limited partnership, where the partnership
is an unregulated fund,
(ii) the
purpose of acting as a trustee of one unit trust, where the trust is an
unregulated fund,
(iii) the
purpose of acting as one or both of the following –
(A) a general
partner of one or more limited partnerships, where each partnership is an
unregulated fund that, together with one or more other unregulated funds that
are limited partnerships or unit trusts and each have the company as a general
partner or a trustee, constitute a part, or the whole, of a single scheme or
arrangement,
(B) a
trustee of one or more unit trusts, where each trust is an unregulated fund
that, together with one or more other unregulated funds that are limited
partnerships or unit trusts and each have the company as a general partner or a
trustee, constitute a part, or the whole, of a single scheme or arrangement;
(b) a
person registered to carry on one or more classes of fund services business,
including at least the class of manager of a managed entity, provides the
registered office of the company;
(c) the
name of the company is notified to the Commission.
(2) A company does not fail
to meet the requirements set out in sub-paragraph (1)(a) in relation to an
unregulated fund only because it –
(a) invests
in the unregulated fund (or in another component of a scheme or arrangement of
which the unregulated fund is part); or
(b) holds
any interest in the unregulated fund (or in another component of a scheme or
arrangement of which the unregulated fund is part) other than an interest
referred to, or implicit in, sub-paragraph (1)(a).
22 Certain overseas distributors
The activities described in paragraph 3B.
PART 5 – aIF SERVICES BUSINESS[158]
23 Carrying
on AIF services business
(1) Subject to
sub-paragraph (2), the carrying on of AIF services business in relation to
an AIF by a person who –
(a) is
registered to carry on any one or more classes of fund services business in
relation to an unclassified fund or an unregulated fund where that fund
services business includes the same functions as the AIF services business;
(b) holds
a permit as a functionary of a recognized fund under the Collective Investment Funds
(Jersey) Law 1988 where the functions of the person as that functionary include the
same functions as the AIF services business;
(c) is a
person in respect of which Article 3(2) of Directive 2011/61/EU
applies; or
(ca) is a small third
country AIFM within the meaning of the UK AIFM Regulations; or
(d) has
been granted a certificate, that is in force, under Article 8B of the Collective Investment Funds
(Jersey) Law 1988, in relation to that AIF.
(2) Sub-paragraphs (1)(a),
(b) and (d) shall not apply in relation to a person carrying on AIF services
business that markets an AIF in the United Kingdom, in a member State of the
European Union, or in any other EEA State to which Directive 2011/61/EU
applies, unless the Commission has granted permission in writing for that AIF
to be so marketed.
(3) The carrying on of AIF
services business if –
(a) that
business is carried on in relation to the marketing or management of an AIF in
the United Kingdom or in an EEA State; and
(b) the
laws of that country do not require compliance by that business with the UK
AIFM Regulations or with Directive 2011/61/EU,
to the extent that such business is otherwise required to be
registered under Article 7(1).
(4) In this
paragraph –
(a) “EEA
State” means a State which is a member State of the European Union or any
other State which is a contracting party to the agreement on the European Economic Area signed at
Oporto on the 2nd May 1992 as adjusted by the Protocol signed at
Brussels on the 17th March 1993; and
(b) “marketing”
has the meaning given in the UK AIFM Regulations or in Directive 2011/61/EU,
as the case may be.
Schedule 4[159]
(Article 1(1))
CLASSES OF GENERAL
INSURANCE BUSINESS
Number
|
Description
|
Nature of business
|
1
|
Accident
|
Effecting and/or carrying out contracts of insurance providing
fixed pecuniary benefits or benefits in the nature of indemnity (or a
combination of both) against risks of the persons insured –
(a) sustaining injury as
the result of an accident or of an accident of a specified class;
(b) dying as the result
of an accident or of an accident of a specified class; or
(c) becoming
incapacitated in consequence of disease or of disease of a specified class,
including contracts relating to industrial injury and occupational
disease but excluding contracts falling within paragraph 2 of this Schedule
or within class IV in Part I (permanent health) of the Insurance Business (Jersey)
Law 1996.
|
2
|
Sickness
|
Effecting and/or carrying out contracts of insurance providing
fixed pecuniary benefits or benefits in the nature of indemnity (or a
combination of the two) against risks of loss to the persons insured
attributable to sickness or infirmity, but excluding contracts falling within
class IV in Part I of the Insurance Business (Jersey)
Law 1996.
|
3
|
Land vehicles
|
Effecting and/or carrying out contracts of insurance against loss
of or damage to vehicles used on land, including motor vehicles, but
excluding railway rolling stock.
|
4
|
Railway rolling stock
|
Effecting and/or carrying out contracts of insurance against loss
of or damage to railway rolling stock.
|
5
|
Aircraft
|
Effecting and/or carrying
out contracts of insurance upon aircraft or upon the machinery, tackle,
furniture or equipment of aircraft.
|
6
|
Ships
|
Effecting and/or carrying out contracts of insurance upon vessels
used on the sea or on inland water, or upon the machinery, tackle, furniture
or equipment of such vessels.
|
7
|
Goods in transit
|
Effecting and/or carrying out contracts of insurance against loss
of or damage to merchandise, baggage and all other goods in transit,
irrespective of the form of transport.
|
8
|
Fire and natural forces
|
Effecting and/or carrying out contracts of insurance against loss
of or damage to property (other than property to which any of paragraphs 3 to
7 relate) due to fire, explosion, storm, natural forces other than storm,
nuclear energy or land subsidence.
|
9
|
Damage to property
|
Effecting and/or carrying out contracts of insurance against loss
of or damage to property (other than property to which any of paragraphs 3 to
7 relate) due to hail or frost or to any event (such as theft) other than an
event mentioned in paragraph 8.
|
10
|
Motor vehicle liability
|
Effecting and/or carrying out contracts of insurance against
damage arising out of or in connection with the use of motor vehicles on
land, including third-party risks and carrier’s liability.
|
11
|
Aircraft liability
|
Effecting and/or carrying out contracts of insurance against
damage arising out of or in connection with the use of aircraft, including
third-party risks and carrier’s liability.
|
12
|
Liability for ships
|
Effecting and/or carrying out contracts of insurance against
damage arising out of or in connection with the use of vessels on the sea or
on inland water, including third-party risks and carrier’s liability.
|
13
|
General liability
|
Effecting and/or carrying out contracts of insurance against risks
of the persons insured incurring liabilities to third parties, other than
risks to which one of paragraphs 10, 11 or 12 relates.
|
14
|
Credit
|
Effecting and/or carrying out contracts of insurance against risks
of loss to the persons insured arising from their debtor’s insolvency
or from the failure (otherwise than through insolvency) of their debtors to
pay the debtor’s debts when due.
|
15
|
Suretyship
|
Effecting and/or carrying out –
(a) contracts of insurance against risks of
loss to the persons insured arising from their having to perform contracts of
guarantee entered into by them;
(b) contracts for fidelity bonds, performance
bonds, administration bonds, bail bonds or customs bonds or similar contracts
of guarantee,
if, in the case of contracts referred to in paragraph (b),
the contracts are effected and carried out by a person not carrying on a
banking business and the contracts are effected by way of business (and not
merely incidentally to some other business carried out by the person effecting
them) in return for the payment of one or more premiums.
|
16
|
Miscellaneous financial loss
|
Effecting and/or carrying out contracts of insurance against any
of the following risks –
(a) risks of loss to the persons insured
attributable to interruptions of the carrying on of business carried on by
them or to reduction of the scope of business so carried on;
(b) risks of loss to the persons insured
attributable to their incurring unforeseen expense (other than such loss
covered by contracts within paragraph 18);
(c) risks neither falling within
paragraph (a) or (b) nor being of a kind such that the carrying on of
the business of effecting and carrying out contracts of insurance against
them constitutes the carrying on of insurance business of some other class.
|
17
|
Legal expenses
|
Effecting and/or carrying out contracts of insurance against risks
of loss to the persons insured attributable to their incurring legal expenses
(including costs of litigation).
|
18
|
Assistance
|
Effecting and/or carrying out contracts of insurance providing
either or both of the following benefits –
(a) assistance (whether in cash or kind) for
persons who get into difficulties while travelling, while away from home or
while away from their permanent residence; or
(b) assistance (whether in cash or kind) for
persons who get into difficulties otherwise than as mentioned in paragraph
(a).
|
Schedule 5[160]
(Article 43A)
TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONs
1 General insurance
mediation business
Notwithstanding anything in this Law, a person who carried on general
insurance mediation business at any time during the 3 months immediately
before 21st January 2005 (“the commencement day”) shall not be
taken to have committed any offence against this Law by virtue of any action
that is taken, or not taken, by the person in the course of carrying on that
business during the period –
(a) on
and from the commencement day until the day 3 months after the
commencement day; or
(b) if the person applies,
before 3 months after the commencement day, for registration under this
Law as a person entitled to carry on general insurance mediation
business – on and from the commencement day until the day the
application is finally determined (including as a result of an appeal to the
Court under Article 11) or is withdrawn.
2 Money service business
(1) Despite anything in
this Law, a person who carried on money service business at any time during the
6 months immediately before the commencement day shall not be taken to
have committed an offence under Article 7(4) by virtue of any action that
is taken, or not taken, by the person in the course of carrying on that
business during the period –
(a) on
and from the commencement day until the day 6 months after the
commencement day, or, if a day is prescribed under sub-paragraph (4) in relation
to the person, until that day; or
(b) if
the person applies, before 6 months after the commencement day, for
registration under this Law as a person entitled to carry on money service
business, on and from the commencement day until the day the application is
finally determined (including as a result of an appeal to the Court under
Article 11) or is withdrawn.
(2) In relation to the
period for which, in accordance with sub-paragraph (1), a person is to be
taken not to have committed an offence under Article 7(4), the provisions
of this Law shall apply (with the necessary modifications) to and in relation
to the person as they apply to and in relation to a person registered under the
Law to carry on money service business.
(3) Without prejudice to
the generality of sub-paragraph (2), the following modifications to the
provisions of this Law shall apply to and in relation to a person to whom
sub-paragraph (1) for the time being applies and who has applied for
registration under this Law as a person entitled to carry on money service
business –
(a) a
reference in this Law to the period during which a person is registered shall
be taken to be a reference to the period between –
(i) the date of the
application, and
(ii) the
date on which the application is granted or refused by the Commission, is
finally determined (including as a result of an appeal to the Court under
Article 11) or is withdrawn;
(b) a
reference in this Law to the terms of a registration shall be taken to be a
reference to the terms of the application; and
(c) a
reference in Article 11 to the Commission, acting under Article 9,
revoking a registration shall be taken as a reference to the Commission
refusing an application under Article 9.
(4) The Commission may, on
the application of a person, by notice in writing to the person, prescribe in
relation to the person a day for the purposes of sub-paragraph (1)(a).
(5) The Commission may only
prescribe a day under sub-paragraph (4) if –
(a) the
Commission is satisfied that there are exceptional circumstances that justify
the extension of the period during which the person shall not be taken to have
committed an offence under Article 7(4) by reason only of carrying on
money service business; and
(b) the
day is not more than 12 months after the commencement day.
(6) In this paragraph,
“commencement day” means the day on which the Financial Services
(Amendment of Law) (Jersey) Regulations 2007 came into force.
3 Certain fund services
business
(1) Sub-paragraph (2)
applies to a person (other than a company issuing units within the meaning of
the Collective Investment Funds
(Jersey) Law 1988) who, immediately before the commencement day, holds a permit under
that Law authorizing the person to carry on fund services business in relation
to an unclassified fund.
(2) On and from the
commencement day –
(a) a
person to whom this sub-paragraph applies shall be taken to have applied for
registration under this Law to carry on fund services business in relation to
an unclassified fund;
(b) the
Commission shall be taken to have registered the person to carry on, in
relation to the unclassified fund in respect of which the permit referred to in
paragraph (1) was issued, fund services business of a class specified in
the permit; and
(c) the
Commission shall, as soon as practicable, issue to the person a registration
certificate under Article 9.
(3) Sub-paragraph (4)
applies to a person who, immediately before the commencement day, was a manager
of a person –
(a) who
was a functionary in relation to an unclassified fund; and
(b) to
whom a permit that was in force immediately before the commencement day was
issued under the Collective Investment Funds
(Jersey) Law 1988.
(4) On and from the
commencement day –
(a) a
person to whom this sub-paragraph applies shall be taken to have applied for
registration under this Law to carry on, as a manager of a managed entity, fund
services business in relation to an unclassified fund;
(b) the
Commission shall be taken to have, on the commencement day, registered the
person to carry on, in relation to the unclassified fund in respect of which
the permit referred to in sub-paragraph (3) was issued, fund services
business of a class specified in the permit; and
(c) the
Commission shall, as soon as practicable, issue to the person a registration
certificate under Article 9.
(5) Nothing in
sub-paragraph (2) or (4) shall be taken to prevent the Commission
amending, varying or revoking the registration of a person that is taken by
virtue of that sub-paragraph to have occurred.
(6) In this item,
“commencement day” means the day on which the Financial Services
(Amendment of Law) (No. 2) (Jersey) Regulations 2007 come into force.
4 Certain
types of investment business
(1) Despite anything in
this Law, a person who carried on investment business in relation to the
matters in sub-paragraph (2) at any time during the 6 months
immediately before the commencement day is not to be taken to have committed an
offence under Article 7(4) by virtue of any action that is taken, or not
taken, by the person in the course of carrying on that business during the
period –
(a) on
and from the commencement day until the day 6 months after the
commencement day or, if a later day is specified under sub-paragraph (5)
in relation to the person, until that day; or
(b) if
the person applies, before 6 months after the commencement day, for
registration under this Law as a person entitled to carry on investment
business, on and from the commencement day until the day the application is
finally determined (including as a result of an appeal to the Court under
Article 11) or is withdrawn.
(2) The matters
are –
(a) making
arrangements for another person (whether as principal or agent) to buy, sell,
subscribe for or underwrite investments; or
(b) operating
an investment exchange.
(3) In relation to the
period for which, in accordance with sub-paragraph (1), a person is taken
not to have committed an offence under Article 7(4), the provisions of
this Law apply (with the necessary modifications) to and in relation to the
person as they apply to and in relation to a person registered under the Law to
carry on investment business.
(4) Without prejudice to
the generality of sub-paragraph (3), the following modifications to the
provisions of this Law apply to and in relation to a person to whom
sub-paragraph (1) applies and who has applied for registration under this
Law as a person entitled to carry on investment business –
(a) a
reference in this Law to the period during which a person is registered is
taken to be a reference to the period between –
(i) the date of the
application, and
(ii) the
date on which the application is granted or refused by the Commission is
finally determined (including as a result of an appeal to the Court under
Article 11) or is withdrawn;
(b) a
reference in this Law to the terms of a registration is taken to be a reference
to the terms of the application; and
(c) a
reference in Article 11 to the Commission, acting under Article 9,
revoking a registration is taken to be a reference to the Commission refusing
an application under Article 9.
(5) On the application of a
person, the Commission may, by notice in writing, specify a day in relation to
the person for the purposes of sub-paragraph (1)(a).
(6) The Commission must not
specify a day under paragraph (5) unless –
(a) the
Commission is satisfied that there are exceptional circumstances that justify
the extension of the period during which the person will not be taken to have
committed an offence under Article 7(4) by reason only of carrying on
investment business; and
(b) the
day is not later than 12 months after the commencement day.
(7) In this paragraph,
“commencement day” means –
(a) for
making arrangements for another person (whether as principal or agent) to buy,
sell, subscribe for or underwrite investments, the day on which
Regulation 2 of the Financial Services (Amendment of Law) (No. 6) (Jersey)
Regulations 2023 comes into force; and
(b) for
operating an investment exchange, the day on which Regulation 3 of the
Financial Services (Amendment of Law) (No. 6) (Jersey)
Regulations 2023 comes into force.
Schedule 6[161]
Article 39A
Securities
For the purposes of Part 3A, “securities” means any
of the following –
1 Shares
Shares and stock in the share capital of a company
(“shares”).
2 Debt securities
Any instrument creating or acknowledging indebtedness which is
issued by a company or limited liability company or public sector body
including, in particular, debentures, debenture stock, loan stock, bonds and
certificates of deposit (“debt securities”).
3 Warrants
Any right, (whether conferred by warrant or otherwise) to subscribe
for shares or LLC interests or debt securities.
4 Depositary receipts
(1) The rights under any
depositary receipt.
(2) For the purpose of
sub-paragraph (1) a “depositary receipt” means a certificate
or other record (whether or not in the form of a document) –
(a) which
is issued by or on behalf of a person who holds any relevant securities of a
particular issuer; and
(b) which
acknowledges that another person is entitled to rights in relation to the
relevant securities or relevant securities of the same kind.
(3) In sub-paragraph (2)
“relevant securities” means shares or LLC interests, debt
securities and warrants.
5 Options
Any option to acquire or dispose of any security falling within any
other paragraph of this Schedule.
6 Futures
(1) Rights under a contract
for the acquisition or disposal of relevant securities under which delivery is
to be made at a future date and at a price agreed when the contract is made.
(2) In sub-paragraph (1) –
(a) the
references to a future date and to a price agreed when the contract is made include
references to a date and a price determined in accordance with terms of the
contract; and
(b) “relevant
securities” means any security within the meaning of any other paragraph
of this Schedule.
7 Contracts
for differences
Rights under a contract which does not provide for the delivery of
securities.
8 LLC
interests
LLC interests.
8A Financial
derivatives
Rights under any contract, except an option, future or contract for
differences, the purpose or pretended purpose of which is to secure a profit or
avoid a loss by reference to fluctuations in the value or price of property of
any description or in an index or other factor designated for that purpose in
the contract.