Ben Mason#5336

Ben Mason

Joint CEO, Compliancy Services
Ben specialises in providing compliance, governance and risk advice to boards of banks and regulated companies and assisting new firms get authorised by the FCA and PRA for the first time. He has worked with firms across a number of financial service sectors, in particular leading the applications for banks, investment and fintech firms. This includes supporting sectors that are facing FCA regulation for the first time such as consumer credit and cryptocurrency. For five years he was Chair of the Association of Professional Compliance Consultants Authorisations Working Group where he regularly liaised with the FCA authorisations team to help them consider improvements to the applications process.

As CEO of Compliancy Services he is responsible for the development of their strategy and the new products and service innovation. Under his direction the company has shown a strong aptitude for bringing successful new developments to market which have included a number of regtech services such as an e-learning platform with more than 5,000 users, a software as a service app that helps consumer credit firms manage their compliance, PSD2 compliance monitoring and third party financial institution onboarding and monitoring.

Before joining Compliancy Services in 2004 Ben occupied senior management positions, which included managing European M&A for a subsidiary of GMAC and as Operations Director for a specialist UK provider responsible for a number of asset management activities.
Contributed to

1

Preparing a regulatory business plan—guidelines
Preparing a regulatory business plan—guidelines
Practice notes

This Practice Note provides guidance on the development of the regulatory business plan (RBP), which is an integral part of the application for authorisation from the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA). The guidance is broadly applicable for applicants in all main financial services sectors: investment, insurance intermediation, mortgages, credit and payment services. Applications to the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA), however, (for banks and risk-taking insurers, for example) are a specialist process and out of scope for this document.

Practice Area

Panel

  • Contributing Author

If you expected to see yourself on this page, click here.