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Financial Services UK
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January 14, 2026
Saba Capital Urges Workspace To Start Managed Wind-Down
U.S. hedge fund Saba Capital Management LP has called on the board of Workspace Group PLC, a U.K. provider of flexible office space, to pursue a structured end to the troubled company's operations.
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January 14, 2026
Osborne Clarke Steers £35M Pension Deal For Ferry Co.
A transport company has offloaded £35 million ($47 million) of its pension plan liabilities to insurer Just Group PLC in a deal steered by Osborne Clarke.
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January 13, 2026
Carter-Ruck Pro Seeks £914K From SRA Over OneCoin Case
A Carter-Ruck partner urged a disciplinary tribunal on Tuesday to order the solicitors' regulator to pay her almost £1 million ($1.35 million) in legal costs and tax over its allegation that she had improperly threatened a whistleblower who exposed the OneCoin cryptocurrency scam.
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January 13, 2026
Service Co. Says It Was Wrongly Blocked From Gov't Contract
A communications services provider argued at the start of a London trial Tuesday that the Department for Work and Pensions was wrong to exclude it from the procurement process for a videoconferencing contract because of its answer to a technical question.
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January 13, 2026
Pensions Body Warns MPs Over 'Salary Sacrifice' Reforms
The government's plan to cap salary sacrifice arrangements will pile additional costs on businesses and deter additional pensions saving, a trade body has warned lawmakers.
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January 13, 2026
Pinsent Masons Guides £213M Pension Deal For Siemens
Pension Insurance Corp. PLC said Tuesday it has concluded a £213 million ($287 million) full scheme buy-in to secure the retirement benefits for the U.K. employees of global medical technology group Siemens Healthineers AG.
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January 13, 2026
FCA Kick-Starts New 'Name And Shame' Enforcement Tactic
The Financial Conduct Authority has begun 2026 with a clear sign that it will use its newly won power to "name and shame" companies under investigation for suspected misconduct as it seeks to bolster protection for consumers.
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January 12, 2026
Ex-Goldman Exec Faces July FCPA Trial Over Ghana Deal
A Brooklyn federal judge Monday teed up a midsummer trial for a former Goldman Sachs banker accused of violating the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act by bribing Ghanaian officials to secure a power plant deal.
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January 12, 2026
Prosecutors Say Investors Lost Millions In Investment Scam
Four men defrauded two investors out of millions of dollars in "too good to be true" get-rich-quick investment schemes involving financial products, a prosecutor said during the opening of a London trial on Monday.
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January 12, 2026
FCA Warns Wealth Managers Sell ETPs To Wrong Consumers
The Financial Conduct Authority said Monday that investment businesses are failing to test consumers' knowledge adequately before selling them complex exchange-traded products without advice.
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January 12, 2026
'Stark Mismatch' Between Pension Expectations And Reality
Millions of Britons are on course for retirement with significantly lower income than what the industry considers to be adequate, a pensions provider has said.
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January 12, 2026
Chef Fairly Fired For Hygiene Failures At Bank Of America
A tribunal has rejected a claim by a former chef that a food services company unfairly dismissed him over food hygiene failures that his employer said could have jeopardized a flagship client contract with Bank of America.
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January 12, 2026
Dashboard Project To Set Up Group For Private Sector Portals
The organization behind the pensions dashboard project has set out plans to establish a working group to help private sector companies connect to the long-awaited system.
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January 12, 2026
UK Bitcoin Treasury Co. To Move To Main Market From Aquis
The Smarter Web Company PLC, which holds bitcoin as its primary reserve asset, said Monday that it plans to upgrade its listing to the main market of the London Stock Exchange from the Aquis growth market.
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January 09, 2026
SEC's 'Hack-To-Trade' Suit Was Unfairly Served, UK Man Says
An accused hacker in the U.K. seeks to shed U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission allegations he made $3.75 million trading on nonpublic information he improperly gained access to, arguing he'd been unfairly served in prison.
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January 09, 2026
Ex-Director Ordered To Pay £265K Over P2P Lender Fraud
A London judge ordered a former director of a peer-to-peer lender to pay £265,000 ($355,000) on Friday following the businessman's conviction for defrauding investors after the scheme failed.
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January 09, 2026
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen a collapsed investment firm revive a $15 million dispute with a hedge fund, major Hollywood studios bring an IP claim against the U.K.'s largest internet providers over illegal streaming, and the Department of Health and Social Care sue the law firm and barrister representing it in a pharma competition damages case.
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January 09, 2026
EU Sets New Risk-Based Rules For National Regulators
The European Union's financial markets regulator on Friday published new risk-based supervisory principles for national watchdogs, simplifying and cutting their workload.
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January 09, 2026
ASR Nederland To Buy Bovemij's Insurance Arm For €185M
Dutch insurer ASR Nederland NV said Thursday it has agreed to acquire the insurance operations of Bovemij NV, a local provider of transportation cover, for €185 million ($248.5 million) in cash.
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January 09, 2026
UK Private Funds Pose Stability Risk, Lords Committee Warns
A House of Lords committee warned Friday of risks to financial stability from the $185 billion in U.K. private market funds connected with banking and insurance.
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January 09, 2026
Debt Co. Issues New Claim Over DVLA £183M Contract
A debt collection company has hit the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency with a further claim over a failed bid to secure a £183 million ($245 million) vehicle tax enforcement contract, accusing it of failing to conduct a lawful evaluation process.
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January 09, 2026
Insurance Body Backs UK Plans For Pension Evaluation
Britain's insurance trade body has endorsed new proposals by the government and regulators to overhaul how workplace defined contribution pensions are evaluated, arming savers with better information on performance.
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January 09, 2026
WH Ireland Investors Back £13M Buy Of Rival Asset Manager
Shareholders of WH Ireland Group PLC have voted almost unanimously for the asset manager's proposed acquisition by a rival, Team PLC, in an all-share deal that values the company at £12.7 million ($17 million).
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January 08, 2026
HSBC To Pay €300M To Settle French Tax Fraud Probe
HSBC has agreed to pay French authorities more than €300 million ($350 million) in fines and unpaid taxes to settle a criminal probe into how the bank's Paris branch handled dividend arbitrage transactions between 2014 and 2019, public prosecutors revealed Thursday.
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January 15, 2026
Pinsent Masons Hires Litigation Pro From Close Brothers
Pinsent Masons has hired a senior in-house solicitor from Close Brothers to boost its services to companies and financial services institutions in complex litigation.
Expert Analysis
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Preparing For The Next 5 Years Of EU Digital Policy
The new European Commission appears poised to build on the artificial intelligence, data management and digital regulation groundwork laid by President Ursula von der Leyen's first mandate, with a strong focus on enforcement and further enhancement of previous initiatives during the next five years, say lawyers at Steptoe.
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Key Takeaways From EU's Coming Digital Act
The European Union's impending Digital Operational Resilience Act will necessitate closer collaboration on resilience, risk management and compliance, and crucial challenges include ensuring IT third-party service providers meet the requirements on or before January 2025, says Susie MacKenzie at Coralytics.
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Cross Market Drill Highlights Operational Resilience Priorities
The U.K.’s recent cross-market major infrastructure failure simulation exercise, demonstrates that operational resilience of the financial sector is high on the regulatory agenda, and the findings should ensure that the sector develops collective capabilities to deliver improvements, say lawyers at Taylor Wessing.
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What Partners Should Know About Net Asset Value Loans
The increasing popularity and evolution of net asset value facilities means they continue as an important financing tool to generate liquidity for funds’ portfolios, so general partners looking to capitalize on this expanding market should be mindful of their limited partners' concerns to maximize their value, says Anthony Lombardi at Dechert.
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What The Future Of AI In Financial Services Looks Like
Artificial intelligence is rapidly transforming the global financial services industry, with a hybrid model likely to evolve where AI handles routine tasks and humans focus on strategy and decision-making, so financial institutions should work with regulators to establish ethical standards and meet regulatory expectations without stifling innovation, say lawyers at Womble Bond.
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FCA Survey Results Reveal Rise In Nonfinancial Misconduct
After a Financial Conduct Authority survey recently reported a significant rise in nonfinancial misconduct, there are a number of preventive steps firms should take to create a healthy workplace environment and mitigate the risk of increased regulatory scrutiny, say lawyers at WilmerHale.
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When Investigating An Adversary, Be Wary Of Forged Records
Warnings against the use of investigators who tout their ability to find an adversary’s private documents generally emphasize the risk of illegal activity and attorney discipline, but a string of recent cases shows an additional danger — investigators might be fabricating records altogether, says Brian Asher at Asher Research.
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What UK Security Act Report Indicates For Future Gov't Policy
Following the recent publication of the National Security and Investment Act report on the scrutiny of proposed investments, it will be interesting to see how the act’s powers fit into a government policy that plans to cut regulatory obstacles, while maintaining a hard line on national security, say lawyers at Katten Muchin.
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Examining UK And EU Approaches To Sanctions Enforcement
In light of the Financial Conduct Authority’s recent £28.9 million fine of Starling Bank for its lax sanctions screening processes, businesses should understand both the U.K.’s and the European Union’s enforcement approaches, the larger sanctions landscape and the importance of cooperation, says Angelika Hellweger at Rahman Ravelli.
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Factors Driving EU Competition Policy For The Next 5 Years
Teresa Ribera Rodríguez’s recent nomination as the new European Union commissioner for competition prompts questions about policy and enforcement, with goals to enhance competition in business, implement stronger and faster enforcement, and promote and fund decarbonization likely in her sights during a five-year term, say lawyers at Linklaters.
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What UK Procurement Act Delay Will Mean For Stakeholders
The Procurement Act 2023’s delay until February 2025 has sparked debate among contracting authorities and suppliers, and the Labour Party’s preference for a broader reform package demonstrates the challenges involved in implementing legislative changes where there is a change in government, say lawyers at Shoosmiths.
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How Energy Scheme Is Affecting Large Co. Fund Investment
The latest phase of the Department of Energy and Climate Change's Energy Savings Opportunity Scheme implicates funds with investments in large companies by establishing significant and complex changes to the reporting cycle for mandatory assessments, say lawyers at Macfarlanes.
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How Companies House Enforcement Powers Are Growing
Companies House's recently increased ability to assess what material is submitted to the U.K. register of companies, and to proportionately enforce where violations have occurred, may require some degree of cultural shift within many companies, say lawyers at Greenberg Traurig.
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How New Sanctions Office Will Affect UK Trade Landscape
The recent launch of the Office of Trade Sanctions Implementation will help to create a more comprehensive civil enforcement terrain, but the potential for multiple investigations means businesses should reassess their systems to ensure they do not inadvertently incur civil liability, says Julia Pearce at Robertson Pugh.
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FCA Savings Update Focuses On Good Customer Outcomes
The Financial Conduct Authority’s recent cash savings update emphasizes its expectations of firms to deliver fair value to consumers by documenting the rationale for actions at each stage, considering customer communications and demonstrating that potential harms are acted upon, say Matt Handfield, Charlotte Rendle and Caroline Hunter-Yeats at Simmons & Simmons.