Durable medium - FCA Rulebook Term: Difference between revisions
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Exactly what a “durable medium” is was a source of great consternation amongst the great wise council of [[Mediocre lawyer|cash equities counsel]] in the run up to — yea, and subsequent to — {{t|MiFID 2}}, even though the definition didn't change from {{tag|MiFID}} 1 and, indeed, it is littered throughout the European legislation. | Exactly what a “durable medium” is was a source of great consternation amongst the great wise council of [[Mediocre lawyer|cash equities counsel]] in the run up to — yea, and subsequent to — {{t|MiFID 2}}, even though the definition didn't change from {{tag|MiFID}} 1 and, indeed, it is littered throughout the European legislation. | ||
One {{trick for young players}}: DON'T OFFER CLIENTS A CHOICE. If you offer a choice between paper and electronic, you have to respect it. If you don’t, you don’t. | One {{t|trick for young players}}: DON'T OFFER CLIENTS A CHOICE. If you offer a choice between paper and electronic, you have to respect it. If you don’t, you don’t. | ||
{{nuts|durable medium|FCA rulebook}} | {{nuts|durable medium|FCA rulebook}} |
Revision as of 18:59, 30 January 2018
— Section durable medium
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Exactly what a “durable medium” is was a source of great consternation amongst the great wise council of cash equities counsel in the run up to — yea, and subsequent to — MiFID 2, even though the definition didn't change from MiFID 1 and, indeed, it is littered throughout the European legislation.
One trick for young players: DON'T OFFER CLIENTS A CHOICE. If you offer a choice between paper and electronic, you have to respect it. If you don’t, you don’t.
FCA rulebook in a Nutshell™ (durable medium edition)
Durable medium means either (a) paper; or (b) any other communication addressed personally to the client that the client can save and keep unchanged as long as it is relevant, including disks, emails and files saved to hard drives but excluding internet pages unless they are personally addressed to the client.
Usually the form of communication must be appropriate to the relevant business and if the client is offered the choice between paper and the other communication, it must be the one the client choses.
Electronic communications count as context-appropriate if you have regular internet access.
FCA definition
For this definition in its native habitat (ie a more reliable source than the above) see: FCA Website Definition