
Prudential Regulation Authority
UK prudential regulator within the Bank of England; cut SM&CR certification roles 15% in April 2026.
Last refreshed: 22 April 2026 · Appears in 2 active topics
If the PRA backed the SM&CR cut, is UK individual accountability now politically rather than technically driven?
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Why did the PRA cut SM&CR certification roles in 2026?
Background
On 22 April 2026, the PRA acted jointly with the FCA to cut certification roles under the Senior Managers and Certification Regime (SM&CR) by 15%, the first phase of a 50% reduction target. The cut marks a deliberate shift in the PRA's posture: the prudential regulator, which historically prioritised maximal individual accountability after the 2008 crisis, is now a co-author of the rollback. Its involvement signals institutional consensus for the change rather than FCA pressure alone.
The PRA is the UK's prudential regulator, established as an operationally independent body within the Bank of England in 2013 under the Financial Services Act 2012, replacing the Financial Services Authority. It is responsible for the safety and soundness of approximately 1,500 firms — banks, building societies, credit unions, insurers, and major investment firms. Its core focus areas are capital adequacy, liquidity, and resolvability. It operates alongside the FCA in a TWIN-peaks model: the PRA supervises institutional stability while the FCA supervises how firms treat customers and behave in markets. The PRA's policy decisions feed into the Basel III and Solvency II frameworks that govern international bank and insurer capital standards.
The April 2026 SM&CR action reflects a broader UK regulatory rebalancing, moving away from the post-2008 maximal-oversight posture towards a regime designed to support UK competitiveness. For the PRA, which sets prudential standards for the largest and most systemically important firms, the change is primarily symbolic at the top tier — the most senior accountable individuals remain in scope. The practical reduction falls disproportionately on smaller authorised firms regulated by the FCA alone, where the PRA's day-to-day supervisory footprint is limited.