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Changes over time for: Section 52B


Timeline of Changes
This timeline shows the different points in time where a change occurred. The dates will coincide with the earliest date on which the change (e.g an insertion, a repeal or a substitution) that was applied came into force. The first date in the timeline will usually be the earliest date when the provision came into force. In some cases the first date is 01/02/1991 (or for Northern Ireland legislation 01/01/2006). This date is our basedate. No versions before this date are available. For further information see the Editorial Practice Guide and Glossary under Help.
Status:
Point in time view as at 06/04/2005.
Changes to legislation:
There are currently no known outstanding effects for The Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Regulated Activities) Order 2001, Section 52B.

Changes to Legislation
Revised legislation carried on this site may not be fully up to date. At the current time any known changes or effects made by subsequent legislation have been applied to the text of the legislation you are viewing by the editorial team. Please see ‘Frequently Asked Questions’ for details regarding the timescales for which new effects are identified and recorded on this site.
[Providing basic advice on stakeholder productsU.K.
52B.—(1) Providing basic advice to a retail consumer on a stakeholder product is a specified kind of activity.
(2) For the purposes of paragraph (1), a person (“P”) provides basic advice when—
(a)he asks a retail consumer questions to enable him to assess whether a stakeholder product is appropriate for that consumer; and
(b)relying on the information provided by the retail consumer P assesses that a stakeholder product is appropriate for the retail consumer and—
(i)describes that product to that consumer;
(ii)gives a recommendation of that product to that consumer; and
(c)the retail consumer has indicated to P that he has understood the description and the recommendation in sub-paragraph (b).
(3) In this article—
“retail consumer” means any person who is advised by P on the merits of opening or buying a stakeholder product in the course of a business carried on by P and who does not receive the advice in the course of a business carried on by him;
“stakeholder product” means—
(a)
an account which qualifies as a stakeholder child trust fund within the meaning given by the Child Trust Funds Regulations 2004;
(b)
[rights under a stakeholder pension scheme;]
“relevant stakeholder pension scheme” means a stakeholder pension scheme within the meaning given by section 1 of the Welfare Reform and Pensions Act 1999 and which is subject to lifestyling, and
“lifestyling” means the process, applied from a date at least five years before the member’s retirement date, or, in the case of a member who joins the scheme less than five years before his retirement date, immediately after he becomes a member, and continuing until the member’s retirement date, by which an investment strategy is adopted by the trustees or manager which aims progressively to minimise the variation or potential variation in the value of the member’s rights caused by market conditions from time to time, and the words “member” and “scheme” have the same meaning as they have in the Welfare Reform and Pensions Act 1999;
(c)
an investment of a kind specified in regulations made by the Treasury.]
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