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Misselling


Misselling is the deliberate, reckless, or negligent sale of products or services in circumstances where the contract is either misrepresented, or the product or service is unsuitable for the customer's needs. For example, selling life insurance to someone who has no dependents is regarded as misselling.

Various common types of misselling may occur. More recently, banks have been at the center of misselling with products such as ISAs and investments.

This may include misrepresentation of the commercial situation.

The sale of unsuitable products, such as invalid insurance, is misselling, and has led to substantial compensation orders.

Financial misselling refers to deliberate false statement made by individual, usually a financial organization representative to sell off their financial products or services usually not profound to the customer. For example, HomeServe an emergency home repair insurance company based in United Kingdom was fined for £30m for misselling to its customers by Financial Conduct Authority in February, 2014 as they failed to explain actual price and its coverage of their financial products. According to a news in The Telegraph, Britain's financial services industry has PPI (payment protection insurance, (sold with credit cards) claims worth around £13bn from 2008 to early 2014. Another on going misselling scandal relates to interest rate swaps sold to small and medium enterprises by UK banks.


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