Purpose
A conflict of interest arises when a QS's duty to act in the best interests of one client conflicts — or may be seen to conflict — with their duty to another client, or with a personal interest. Managing conflicts of interest properly is a fundamental professional obligation.
The RICS Conflicts of Interest Professional Statement (1st edition, effective 1 January 2018) sets out the mandatory requirements that all RICS members and regulated firms must follow globally.
Key Principles
- The Conflicts of Interest Professional Statement identifies two main types: (1) Own Interest Conflict — where the firm's own interests conflict with a duty to a client; (2) Confidential Information Conflict — where information held about one client could disadvantage another.
- Party Conflicts arise when the firm acts for two or more parties with opposing interests on the same or related matter.
- RICS requires that firms have documented systems and controls for identifying, recording, and managing conflicts of interest.
- Informed Consent: where a conflict is identified, the firm may be able to proceed with the written informed consent of all affected parties — but only if the conflict is manageable and both parties fully understand the situation.
- Some conflicts cannot be resolved by consent alone. Where there is a risk that confidential information held for one client would materially disadvantage another, an Information Barrier (Chinese Wall) must be established — but this is only effective in larger firms with properly implemented procedures.
- KYC (Know Your Client) and AML (Anti-Money Laundering) checks are part of the due diligence process and must be completed before accepting a new instruction.
Practical Application
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Not running a conflict check before accepting an instruction — this is a fundamental compliance failure.
- Assuming that because a conflict has not caused a problem before, it does not need to be addressed.
- Obtaining verbal consent for a conflict rather than written informed consent.
- Failing to maintain a conflicts register — RICS regulatory visits frequently identify this as a compliance gap.
- Not completing KYC/AML checks for new clients — increasingly a regulatory requirement regardless of firm size.
APC Competency & Quick Reference
This topic is relevant to: Business Management (Level 1–2), Client Care (Level 1–2), RICS Rules of Conduct, Ethics & Professional Practice.
Pre-Appointment Checklist
CPD Learning Outcomes
- Identify the key categories of conflict of interest and the circumstances in which informed consent may or may not be sufficient.
- Apply KYC and AML due diligence procedures before accepting a new instruction.
- Maintain a conflicts register and file evidence that demonstrates compliance with the RICS Conflicts of Interest Professional Statement.
Further Reading
- RICS Conflicts of Interest Professional Statement (1st edition, effective 1 January 2018)
- RICS Rules of Conduct (Global, October 2021)
- Money Laundering Regulations 2017 (as amended)
- RICS Anti-Money Laundering Guidance Note
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