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Logo of the Financial Reporting Council. The UK Corporate Governance code, formerly known as the Combined Code [1] (from here on referred to as "the Code") is a part of UK company law with a set of principles of good corporate governance aimed at companies listed on the London Stock Exchange.
It is the corporate governance code adopted by the majority of companies on the AIM market in the UK. London Stock Exchange rules allow companies on AIM to choose which code they adopt and referenced two options as "recognised corporate governance codes". [1] These are: The QCA Corporate Governance Code; The UK Corporate Governance Code
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... QCA Corporate Governance Code; C. ... UK Corporate Governance Code This page was last ...
Companies on London Stock Exchange's Main Market are obliged to apply the UK Corporate Governance Code. Companies on London Stock Exchange's AIM market are able to choose which code they apply: [2] 89% apply the QCA Corporate Governance Code; 6% apply the UK Corporate Governance Code; 5% apply a range of other codes, such as those of non-UK ...
Corporate governance is concerned primarily with the balance of power between the two basic organs of a UK company: the board of directors and the general meeting. The term "governance" is often used in the more narrow sense of referring to principles in the UK Corporate Governance Code.
The Hampel Report (January 1998) was designed to be a revision of the corporate governance system in the UK. The remit of the committee was to review the Code laid down by the Cadbury Report (now found in the Combined Code). It asked whether the code's original purpose was being achieved.
Pdf here; Hampel Report (1998), review of corporate governance since Cadbury, pdf here and online with the EGCI here; Myners Report (2001), Institutional Investment in the United Kingdom: A Review on institutional investors, Pdf file here and Review of Progress Report here; Higgs Report (2003) Review of the role and effectiveness of non ...
The Financial Reporting Council (FRC) is an independent regulator in the UK and Ireland based in London Wall in the City of London, responsible for regulating auditors, accountants and actuaries, and setting the UK's Corporate Governance and Stewardship Codes. The FRC seeks to promote transparency and integrity in business by aiming its work at ...