Why financial services end-hirers face FCA third-party oversight and April 2026 JSL on the same compliance line

UK financial services end-hirers and the recruitment agencies serving them now face FCA third-party oversight (PS16/24, PS7/26) and April 2026 Joint and Several Liability on the same compliance line. Labour supply chain assurance is the single operating layer that produces evidence usable for both, and the OPRaaS Virtual Compliance Director sits exactly on that line.
A UK insurance compliance team reviewing a labour supply chain assurance dashboard, illustrating the OPRaaS Virtual Compliance Director response to FCA third-party oversight and April 2026 JSL.

Labour supply chain assurance has moved from a useful operating practice to a single line of evidence that two UK regulatory regimes now ask for together. From April 2026, the Joint and Several Liability regime under ITEPA Chapter 11 puts end-hirers and recruitment agencies on the same line as the umbrella for unpaid PAYE and NICs. In parallel, the Bank of England, PRA and FCA’s third-party oversight policy statements PS16/24 and PS7/26 raise the bar on how UK financial services firms evidence what their material and critical third parties are actually doing.

Read together, both regimes ask one question of the financial services end-hirer: Can you evidence, at any moment, who supplies labour into your business, on what terms, against which controls, with what assurance pattern. The OPRaaS Virtual Compliance Director (OPRaaS VCD) sits exactly on that question, because labour supply chain assurance is the single operating layer that produces evidence usable for both an FCA third-party file and an HMRC JSL enquiry.

What labour supply chain assurance means in practice for financial services end-hirers

Labour supply chain assurance, as OPRaaS practises it, is a continuously refreshed evidence record across every tier of the contingent-labour estate. It maps the contracted parties, the umbrellas and PEOs they introduce, the worker groupings underneath, the controls that should be in place at each tier, and the actual evidence that those controls are working. The output is not a periodic report. It is a live file that is ready for inspection on any working day.

For a UK bank, insurer or asset manager, this evidence file does double duty. It is what HMRC will ask for if a Joint and Several Liability question arises around an umbrella in the PSL. It is also the labour-related portion of the third-party file that the firm’s operational resilience function maintains under the FCA, PRA and Bank of England’s expectations.

The Bank of England, PRA and FCA third-party regime, in plain terms

The starting point is the joint policy statement PS16/24 Operational resilience: Critical third parties to the UK financial sector, published by the Bank of England, PRA and FCA in November 2024. PS16/24 introduces a dedicated regime for third parties designated as critical to the UK financial sector. It complements, rather than replaces, each firm’s own responsibility for resilience and third-party risk management.

The newer March 2026 policy statement PS7/26 Operational resilience: Operational incident and third-party reporting tightens the operational incident reporting expectations and adds a separate requirement to maintain, and on request submit, a register of material third-party arrangements. The reporting timeline is short. The detail required is granular. The lifecycle covered is from onboarding through to exit. Background to the regime is in the Bank of England’s November 2023 joint announcement with the PRA and the FCA.

What this means in practice for a financial services end-hirer is that the third-party file is no longer a procurement artefact. It is a live regulatory record. It must show due diligence at onboarding, the controls in place during the life of the arrangement, the assurance pattern that surfaces issues, the operational incidents that have been reported and how, and a defensible exit path.

How April 2026 JSL changes the labour supply chain ask at the same moment

Joint and Several Liability under ITEPA Chapter 11 lands on the end-hirer and the recruitment agency the moment an umbrella in their supply chain underpays PAYE or NICs from 6 April 2026. There is no statutory defence after the fact. The defence is in the evidence held before the underpayment, which has to show that the labour supply chain was mapped, that umbrellas were assessed against UK law tests rather than accreditation alone, that payslips and payroll evidence were sampled, and that any issue surfaced led to a documented remedial action.

For a financial services firm, this is the same evidence pattern PS16/24 and PS7/26 expect on the wider third-party side. The end-hirer’s procurement team and the firm’s operational resilience team are looking at the same file from two different doors.

Where the OPRaaS Virtual Compliance Director fits as a single answer to both

OPRaaS, On-Pay-Roll-as-a-Service, is a systemised governance and workforce management partner for organisations that rely on temporary, contractor and contingent labour. Through OPRaaS’s Virtual Compliance Director solutions we embed senior governance leadership into your business without the cost of a full-time director, building audit-ready controls across JSL, IR35, CIS, GLAA, modern slavery and HMRC labour supply chain expectations.

The OPRaaS VCD platform is accessed 24/7 and runs the OPRaaS LSCA 2.0 methodology across our Map, Train, Audit and Evidence framework. Output is a continuously refreshed evidence file rather than a periodic report. That is the file an FCA examiner and an HMRC officer will both ask for, and it is the file that a board paper draws on when the question is whether a labour line of the cost base is under control.

Five outcomes a financial services end-hirer should expect this year from OPRaaS LSCA 2.0:

  1. A mapped labour supply chain. Every agency, sub-agency, PEO, umbrella and worker grouping recorded with the controls expected at each tier, ready to surface inside the firm’s third-party register under PS7/26.
  2. An umbrella PSL assessed under UK law tests. Control, personal service, mutuality, financial risk and integration, supported by payslip and remittance sampling rather than reliance on accreditation alone.
  3. A retained governance function. The OPRaaS Virtual Compliance Director as a named, retained capability for end-hirers, recruitment agencies, umbrella companies and managed service providers (MSPs).
  4. An audit-ready evidence pack. Continuously refreshed evidence usable inside an FCA third-party file, an HMRC JSL enquiry or a public-sector framework audit.
  5. A defensible exit path. A documented remediation and supplier-exit pattern that satisfies both the FCA’s exit-strategy expectation and HMRC’s interest in remedial action when an umbrella underpays.

What this means for the next twelve months for financial services end-hirers

The phrase that fits this moment is consolidation, not duplication. Banks, insurers and asset managers, and the recruitment agencies serving them, will spend 2026 reconciling third-party files, labour supply chain files and procurement files that have historically lived in different places. The end state is one evidence record across labour and non-labour third parties, refreshed continuously, owned at board level.

Compliance is your asset. Evidenced, every day. The asset is the evidence file, and across 2026 the file an FCA examiner and an HMRC officer ask for is the same file.

OPRaaS Limited (On-Pay-Roll-as-a-Service) is approved on the UK Government Commercial Agency (formerly Crown Commercial Service) frameworks including RM6310 Audit & Assurance Services (Lots 2 & 4), RM6219 Learning & Training Services DPS and RM6237 Learning & Training Services DPS. Your next step, as both regimes settle in, is a thirty-minute scoping call to see how the OPRaaS VCD platform consolidates labour supply chain assurance into one operating layer that serves both the FCA file and the JSL file.

 

Compliance is your asset. Evidenced, every day.

 

Drawing on the Bank of England, PRA and FCA policy statements PS16/24 (November 2024) and PS7/26 (March 2026) on operational resilience, critical third parties and third-party reporting, alongside the April 2026 Joint and Several Liability regime under ITEPA Chapter 11.

Talk to OPRaaS about your supply chain.

Use the contact form in the sidebar, or email info@opraas.co.uk.

This article is provided for informational purposes only and is not intended as legal, tax, employment, accounting or regulatory advice. Compliance obligations vary by organisation, sector and supply chain. Readers should seek their own professional advice before acting on any of the points raised. Images are illustrative only. Third-party trademarks and brand names remain the property of their respective owners. Errors can occur; if you spot one, please report it to info@opraas.co.uk.

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LSCA Glossary of Terms

Glossary of Terms

Comprehensive definitions for Labour Supply Chain Assurance compliance terminology

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Acronym Full Term Definition
CFA 2017 Criminal Finances Act 2017 UK legislation introducing Corporate Criminal Offence (sections 45/46): failure to prevent the facilitation of tax evasion. Requires businesses to implement 'reasonable prevention procedures' (RPP). The only defence is having adequate RPP or showing it was not reasonable to expect such procedures.
MSA 2015 Modern Slavery Act 2015 UK legislation mandating supply chain transparency and worker safeguarding. Section 54 requires commercial organisations with ≥£36m turnover to publish annual modern slavery statements (board-approved, signed by director, published on website with prominent homepage link).
IR35 Off-Payroll Working Rules Tax legislation determining whether a contractor should be treated as employed or self-employed for tax purposes. Since April 2021, medium and large private sector clients must determine contractor status and deduct employment taxes if inside IR35. Requires Status Determination Statement (SDS).
JSL Joint & Several Liability 2026 legislation imposing strict liability on agencies and end-hirers for umbrella company tax debts, even where due diligence checks have been undertaken. Makes supply chain participants jointly responsible for unpaid PAYE taxes.
AWR Agency Workers Regulations 2010 UK regulations giving agency workers the right to the same basic working and employment conditions as permanent employees after 12 weeks in a qualifying assignment (12-week parity rule).
Good Work Plan Good Work Plan 2020 UK employment law reforms requiring written 'section 1 statement' of employment particulars to be given to employees and workers on or before day 1 of engagement (effective 6 April 2020). Sets out key terms but is not itself the contract.
Construction Act Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 UK legislation governing payment practices in construction contracts. Section 113 renders "pay when paid" clauses ineffective (except where upstream payer is insolvent). Requires clear due dates, final dates for payment, and compliant payment/pay less notices.
Pensions Act 2008 Pensions Act 2008 UK legislation establishing workplace pension auto-enrolment requirements. Employers must automatically enrol eligible workers into qualifying pension schemes and make minimum contributions.
Acronym Full Term Definition
HMRC HM Revenue & Customs UK government department responsible for tax collection, payment of tax credits and benefits, and enforcement of tax law. Operates PAYE, CIS, RTI systems and conducts compliance audits. Business Tax Account provides reconciliation data.
GLAA Gangmasters and Labour Abuse Authority UK government body regulating labour providers in certain sectors (agriculture, horticulture, shellfish gathering, food processing/packaging) and investigating worker exploitation. Operates licensing regime and has criminal investigation powers. Hotline: 0800 432 0804 (03000 718234 out of hours).
ICO Information Commissioner's Office UK independent authority upholding information rights. Enforces UK GDPR and Data Protection Act 2018. Personal data breaches must be reported to ICO within 72 hours where there's risk to individuals' rights. Provides guidance on lawful bases, DSARs, and data-sharing.
CITB Construction Industry Training Board Industry body that collects levy from construction employers (payroll ≥£80k in PAYE in last tax year, or ≥£80k net CIS payments) and provides training grants. CITB levy compliance is audited in construction-focused compliance audits.
Acronym Full Term Definition
PAYE Pay As You Earn HMRC's system for collecting Income Tax and National Insurance Contributions from employees' wages. Employers deduct tax before paying employees, then remit to HMRC. Operates under Real Time Information (RTI) reporting requirements.
CIS Construction Industry Scheme Tax deduction scheme for payments to subcontractors in construction industry. Contractors must verify subcontractors with HMRC before first payment and make deductions (20% for verified, 30% for unverified) on labour element only (excluding VAT and allowable materials). CIS300 returns due by 19th following tax month.
GPS Gross Payment Status CIS status allowing subcontractors to be paid without deductions. Must apply to HMRC and meet compliance tests (business test, turnover test, compliance test). Contractors must verify GPS and keep evidence; continue to file CIS300 but make no deduction.
CIS300 CIS Monthly Return HMRC return submitted by contractors detailing total payments made to each subcontractor and CIS tax deductions applied. Must be filed by the 19th following the tax month (6th–5th). Should reconcile to subcontractor statements and bank payments.
CIS340 CIS340 Guidance HMRC's official guidance document defining what constitutes 'construction operations' for CIS purposes. Only work qualifying under CIS340 can legitimately be paid through the Construction Industry Scheme. Includes site preparation, construction, alteration, repairs, demolition.
RTI Real Time Information HMRC system requiring employers to report PAYE information at or before each pay run. Consists of Full Payment Submission (FPS) for regular pay data and Employer Payment Summary (EPS) for adjustments/recoveries. Must reconcile to payslips and Business Tax Account.
FPS Full Payment Submission RTI submission reporting gross taxable pay, Income Tax, and NICs for each employee on each payday. FPS values must match payslips. Should not be used to mask under-deductions.
EPS Employer Payment Summary RTI submission used only for adjustments, such as recoveries, statutory payments, employment allowance claims, or apprenticeship levy. Should not be used to mask PAYE under-deductions.
Bacs Bankers' Automated Clearing Services UK electronic payment system used for direct debits and credits, including salary payments. Net pay on payslip must match Bacs transfer to worker's bank account. Never use "BACS" (incorrect).
UTR Unique Taxpayer Reference 10-digit number issued by HMRC to identify individuals and businesses for tax purposes. Required for CIS verification and self-assessment tax returns. Note: UTR alone isn't proof of CIS verification; contractor must verify with HMRC before first payment.
NIC / NICs National Insurance Contributions UK social security tax paid by employees (via PAYE), employers (as on-costs), and the self-employed (Class 2/4 via self-assessment). Funds state benefits including state pension, statutory sick pay, and maternity allowance. CIS deductions are payments on account of Income Tax and Class 4 NICs.
NMW National Minimum Wage Legal minimum hourly rate employers must pay workers in the UK. Rates vary by age band. Post-deduction pay (after deductions for employer's own use/benefit) must not fall below NMW. Records must be kept for 6 years.
NLW National Living Wage Higher rate of National Minimum Wage for workers aged 21 and over. Often referred to together as "NMW/NLW". Different from voluntary Real Living Wage calculated by Living Wage Foundation.
AE Auto-Enrolment (Pensions) Workplace pension scheme where employers must automatically enrol eligible workers (aged 22+ to state pension age, earning ≥£10k annually) into a qualifying pension. Minimum contributions, opt-out rights, and re-enrolment (every 3 years) required.
P45 P45 (Leaving Employment) HMRC form given to employees when they leave employment, showing pay and tax details for the year to date. New employer uses P45 to operate correct tax code. Emergency codes (e.g., 1257L W1/M1) apply without P45/P6.
Acronym Full Term Definition
DRC Domestic Reverse Charge (VAT) VAT mechanism for construction services where the customer accounts for VAT instead of the supplier. Applies to most construction services under CIS340. Designed to combat missing trader fraud in construction supply chains.
Kittel Kittel Principle EU/UK legal principle that a taxpayer who knew or should have known their transaction was connected to VAT fraud may be denied the right to deduct input VAT. Creates due diligence obligations for supply chain participants.
DR Disguised Remuneration Tax avoidance arrangements designed to pay individuals while avoiding income tax and NICs, often involving loans, offshore entities, or trusts. HMRC actively targets such schemes. Loan charge applies to outstanding loans.
Acronym Full Term Definition
SDC Supervision, Direction or Control Key factor in determining employment status under agency rules (ITEPA 2003 s44). If a worker is under supervision, direction or control by any person (client, agency, end-hirer) over how they work, PAYE must be operated. SDC alone is not the general CIS status test—apply usual status tests (control, substitution, mutuality).
MOO Mutuality of Obligation Employment status indicator examining whether the employer is obliged to provide work and the worker is obliged to accept it. Absence of MOO suggests self-employment; presence suggests employment.
SDS Status Determination Statement Document required under IR35 reforms (April 2021) where medium/large clients must provide written reasons for their determination of a contractor's employment status for tax purposes. Must be given before contract starts or worker begins work.
CEST Check Employment Status for Tax HMRC's online tool for determining whether a worker should be classified as employed or self-employed for tax purposes. Results are binding on HMRC if information provided is accurate and not relating to highly complex arrangements.
PSC Personal Service Company Limited company through which a contractor provides their services. Often used by contractors working outside IR35, but subject to IR35 rules if the underlying relationship is one of employment. Requires SDS from medium/large clients.
KID Key Information Document Plain-English factsheet (not a contract) that agencies must give to workers before they agree to an assignment (Conduct of Employment Agencies and Employment Businesses Regulations 2003). Includes worked pay illustration, deductions, who pays the worker, benefits. Must be updated within 5 working days of any change.
ITEPA 2003 Income Tax (Earnings and Pensions) Act 2003 UK tax legislation governing employment income. Section 44 contains agency rules requiring PAYE where worker is under SDC. Section 61N–61R cover off-payroll working (IR35) for public sector and (from 2021) medium/large private sector.
DBS Disclosure and Barring Service UK government service providing criminal record checks for employment purposes (particularly roles working with children or vulnerable adults). Processing DBS data requires DPA 2018 Schedule 1 condition and appropriate policy document.
Acronym Full Term Definition
Umbrella Umbrella Company Employment intermediary that employs agency workers and contractors. Handles PAYE, pension, and employment administration while the worker performs assignments for end-clients arranged through agencies. Employer NICs/apprenticeship levy must be funded from assignment rate, not charged to workers as deductions.
MUC Mini Umbrella Company Fraudulent scheme where multiple small umbrella companies are created to exploit employment allowances and avoid tax obligations. Often phoenixing after accumulating tax debt. A significant compliance risk that supply chain audits help detect.
Phoenix Phoenix Company Scheme Fraudulent practice where a company accumulates tax debts, is dissolved, and re-emerges as a new entity to escape liabilities. A key risk factor in supply chain due diligence. Tolerance of phoenix suppliers by end users enables fraud cycle.
Purported Purported Umbrella Company Entity presenting itself as a legitimate umbrella company but failing to meet compliance standards, potentially operating tax avoidance schemes or misclassifying workers.
Hybrid Hybrid Payment Model Pay arrangement combining different payment methods (e.g., PAYE + CIS, or PAYE + PSC). Requires careful status assessment to avoid disguised remuneration or employment status breaches.
Acronym Full Term Definition
UK GDPR UK General Data Protection Regulation UK data protection law (retained EU law post-Brexit) governing processing of personal data. Requires lawful basis (Art 6), data minimisation, security, transparency (Arts 13-14), and respect for data subject rights. Works alongside Data Protection Act 2018.
DPA 2018 Data Protection Act 2018 UK legislation supplementing UK GDPR. Schedule 1 sets conditions for processing special category data (health, biometric, union membership) and criminal offence data (e.g., DBS checks). Provides exemptions (crime prevention, tax collection, legal professional privilege).
DSAR Data Subject Access Request Individual's right under Art 15 UK GDPR to obtain copy of their personal data. Must respond within one month (extendable by 2 months for complex requests). Usually no fee. Must verify identity proportionately.
DPO Data Protection Officer Required role for public authorities or organisations conducting large-scale systematic monitoring or processing special category data (Art 37). Oversees data protection compliance, advises on DPIAs, and acts as contact point for ICO and data subjects.
LIA Legitimate Interests Assessment Assessment required when relying on legitimate interests (Art 6(1)(f)) as lawful basis. Three-part test: identify legitimate interest → demonstrate necessity → balancing test (interests vs individual rights). Appropriate for audit/assurance; avoid consent for audits.
DPIA Data Protection Impact Assessment Required assessment where processing is likely to result in high risk to individuals (Art 35). Must complete for large-scale, systematic monitoring or extensive special category data processing. Documents risks, mitigation measures, and necessity/proportionality.
RoPA Records of Processing Activities GDPR requirement (Art 30) documenting all personal data processing activities. Must include purposes, lawful bases, data categories, recipients, retention periods, security measures, and international transfers. Must be available to ICO on request.
IDTA International Data Transfer Agreement UK mechanism for lawfully transferring personal data outside the UK (replacing EU Standard Contractual Clauses post-Brexit). Required unless recipient country has adequacy decision or other derogation applies. Alternative: UK Addendum to EU SCCs.
SCCs Standard Contractual Clauses EU Commission-approved contract templates for international data transfers. For UK data exports, use UK Addendum to EU SCCs or UK IDTA.
Art 28 DPA Article 28 Data Processing Agreement Mandatory contract between controller and processor (Art 28 UK GDPR). Must cover: subject matter, duration, data types, processing instructions, confidentiality, security, sub-processors, data subject rights assistance, breach notification, data deletion/return, audit rights.
Art 26 Article 26 (Joint Controllers) UK GDPR provision for parties who jointly determine purposes and means of processing. Requires arrangement setting out respective responsibilities, data subject rights, and contact points. Different from controller-processor (Art 28) or controller-controller data-sharing.
Controller Data Controller Organisation that determines the purposes and means of processing personal data. Bears primary GDPR obligations. Agencies, umbrellas, and end-hirers usually act as independent controllers for their own audit/compliance purposes.
Acronym Full Term Definition
LSCA Labour Supply Chain Assurance Due diligence framework ensuring compliance with tax, employment, and ethical standards throughout the labour supply chain. Covers PAYE/CIS compliance, modern slavery, CFA 2017, worker rights, and IR35. Aims to detect exploitation, fraud, and phoenixism.
PSL Preferred Supplier List Vetted list of approved suppliers (typically umbrella companies or agencies) that meet compliance standards. Key governance control for managing supply chain risk. Should be reviewed regularly and require re-certification.
End-Hirer End-Hirer / End Client The organisation where agency or contract workers ultimately perform their work. Under current regulations, medium/large end-hirers have IR35 status determination responsibilities and supply chain due diligence obligations.
CCO Corporate Criminal Offence CFA 2017 offence: failure to prevent facilitation of tax evasion by an associated person. Three-stage liability: (1) taxpayer evades tax, (2) associated person criminally facilitates it, (3) organisation failed to prevent. Only defence: reasonable prevention procedures (RPP).
RPP Reasonable Prevention Procedures The only defence to Corporate Criminal Offence under CFA 2017. HMRC's six principles: risk assessment, proportionate procedures, top-level commitment, due diligence, communication (training), monitoring & review. Must be risk-based and documented.
SRO Senior Responsible Owner Senior person accountable for CFA 2017 compliance, risk assessments, and implementation of reasonable prevention procedures. Provides top-level commitment and board oversight.
MSAT Modern Slavery Assessment Tool UK Government tool (Home Office/Cabinet Office) for assessing modern slavery risks in supply chains. Free to organisations registered on UK Government Supplier Registration Service.
Acronym Full Term Definition
ASCA Agency Self-Certification Audit Most comprehensive audit form with 174 questions across 18 sections. Enables recruitment agencies to self-assess compliance with tax, employment, and supply chain obligations including PAYE, CIS, Modern Slavery, CFA 2017.
AUCIS Agency Umbrella CIS Audit Audit evaluating recruitment agencies' compliance with CIS requirements when engaging umbrella companies, ensuring proper tax treatment and supply chain integrity.
AUPAYE Agency Umbrella PAYE Audit Audit assessing recruitment agencies' oversight of umbrella companies' PAYE compliance, including tax deductions, National Insurance contributions, and payroll accuracy.
EHUCIS End-Hirer Umbrella CIS Audit Audit evaluating end-hirers' due diligence when engaging umbrella companies under CIS, ensuring supply chain compliance and proper contractor treatment.
EHUPAYE End-Hirer Umbrella PAYE Audit Audit assessing end-hirers' oversight of umbrella PAYE arrangements, covering payroll transparency and worker rights compliance.
EHSA End-Hirer Self-Assessment Audit Audit enabling end-hirers to self-assess their compliance with supply chain, tax, and employment obligations.
EHAA End-Hirer Assurance Audit Audit providing end-hirers with an independent assessment of their supply chain compliance, risk management, and due diligence practices.
UMBCIS Umbrella CIS Audit Audit evaluating umbrella companies' compliance with CIS requirements, including proper contractor treatment, tax deductions, and verification processes.
UMBPAYE Umbrella PAYE Audit Audit assessing umbrella companies' PAYE compliance, payroll integrity, and worker protection standards. Contains 21 sections (Section 1 info-only, Sections 2-20 audit, Section 21 declaration) vs 18 for most other audits.
Self-Cert Self-Certification Audit Generic term for labour supply chain compliance audits where organisations self-assess against tax, employment, and ethical standards. Provides documented evidence of due diligence for HMRC inspections.
Acronym Full Term Definition
Instance Audit Form Instance Individual audit submission. Users can create unlimited instances, each stored as WordPress custom post type with responses in wp_opraas_audit_responses table. Assigned to logged-in user via post_author field.
Completion Completion Score Frontend metric showing percentage of questions answered (any answer counts). Includes ALL sections: Section 1 checkbox, Section 2 (8 fields), Declaration (7 fields), and all audit questions. N/A responses count as answered.
Compliance Compliance Score Backend metric measuring quality of compliance. Scoring: Yes=5 points, No=0 points, N/A=0 points (excluded from maximum), Don't Know=1 point. EXCLUDES Sections 1, 2, and Declaration entirely. ≥80% = Compliant, 60-79% = Partially Compliant, <60% = Non-Compliant.
Evidence Evidence Files Supporting documents uploaded to substantiate audit responses. Stored in AWS S3 via WP Offload Media plugin, with Evidence Table providing S3-aware ZIP downloads that temporarily download from cloud before adding to archives.
Red Flags Red Flags Warning indicators in audit questions identifying practices that may indicate non-compliance, fraud risk (phoenixism, MUCs, disguised remuneration), or regulatory breaches requiring immediate attention and remediation.