Economy & Markets
9 min read
UK FCA Insider Dealing: Individual Faces Fines and Ban
A&O Shearman
January 20, 2026•2 days ago

AI-Generated SummaryAuto-generated
The UK's Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) fined and banned Neil Sedgwick Dwane for insider dealing. Dwane, an advisor at ITM Power Plc, sold shares while possessing non-public information about manufacturing issues. He later repurchased shares at a lower price, profiting £26,575. The FCA determined his actions were deliberate and dishonest, citing his experience and position of trust.
What happened?
Neil Sedgwick Dwane was Capital Markets Adviser in the Investor Relations Team of ITM Power Plc (ITM), an AIM-listed energy storage and clean fuel company.
The company encountered manufacturing issues and increased aftersales warranty costs. Internal discussions concluded that an unscheduled Regulatory News Service (RNS) announcement was needed, and the company issued a Trading Update on 27 October 2022.
The FCA found that on 26 October 2022, Mr Dwane – in possession of inside information in 25 and 26 October 2022 drafts of the Trading Update – sold all of his and a close family member’s ITM shares. The day after the Trading Update he purchased a larger volume of ITM shares at a substantially lower price, profiting by £26,575. He failed to seek permission from the firm before dealing.
The FCA constructed a timeline of events from his work and personal email, messaging and conferencing services, mapping his two tranches of share sales to relevant communications; for example, the first tranche took place two minutes and 20 seconds after a call between Mr Dwane and a senior ITM manager.
A low threshold for inside information
Over Mr Dwane’s denial that he possessed inside information at the relevant times, the FCA found the following constituted sufficient inside information:
At the time of his first share sale, he knew a Teams call entitled “Warranty RNS” was about to be held that might lead to an announcement in the near future concerning warranty provisions.
At the time of his second share sale, he knew that a draft RNS had been prepared that might lead to an announcement in the near future concerning warranty and/or manufacturing issues, thereby enabling him to anticipate a likely significant effect on ITM’s share price.
Importantly, the FCA did not consider that it needed to find that he saw the draft RNS or had substantial information about it.
Relevant experience
The FCA found that Mr Dwane had substantial relevant experience, with significant time spent as an Approved Person and multiple often senior roles in financial services including as a portfolio manager, Chief Investment Officer and Global Strategist. Further, he declared his awareness of the company’s relevant internal policies, repeatedly received potentially price-sensitive information in his role and repeatedly failed to obtain clearance for share transactions. From this the FCA concluded that his conduct was deliberate and dishonest.
In view of these factors and also his position of trust (the company involved him in RNS discussions to help gauge market reaction) the FCA assessed his breaches as seriousness level 4, though did not uplift the penalty for aggravating factors (noting his prior clean record) or deterrence.
Key lessons
Rate this article
Login to rate this article
Comments
Please login to comment
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!
