Financial Services UK

  • February 27, 2026

    BA Owner To Return €1.5B To Shareholders As Revenue Rises

    British Airways owner IAG confirmed on Friday that it will roll out a new €1.5 billion ($1.8 billion) capital returns program to reward investors, starting with a share buyback program of up to €500 million in early March.

  • February 27, 2026

    FCA Warns Of Bad Practices In Sustainability Labeling

    The Financial Conduct Authority warned Friday that U.K. asset managers have sometimes been unclear how they comply with rules on sustainability labels for funds or whether required disclosures accurately reflect the underlying investments.

  • February 27, 2026

    UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London

    This past week in London has seen Linklaters sue a shipping company, high-street clothing giant Urban Outfitters hit with an intellectual property claim, Ithaca Energy sue rival Chrysaor, and cabaret club magnate Alex Proud face legal action with his nightclubs in financial turmoil.

  • February 27, 2026

    Texas Investment Co. Loses Strike-Out Bid In £3.7M Bond Row

    A Texas-based investment company has lost its bid to strike out a decision that a Bulgarian insurer was right to withhold payment of a £3.7 million ($5 million) bond linked to a British residential building project.

  • February 27, 2026

    EU Watchdog Moves To Harmonize Algorithmic Trading

    The European Union's financial markets regulator has issued a plan to boost consistent oversight of algorithmic trading across the bloc, in recognition of the risks that the rapid growth of increasingly complex automated trading poses to market integrity.

  • February 27, 2026

    5 Questions For Kennedys' Ash Daniells On FOS Reforms

    The government is reforming the Financial Ombudsman Service, which settles claims between consumers and regulated financial businesses. The reforms come after years of complaints that the ombudsman is not working efficiently, but the proposals have attracted wide criticism.

  • February 27, 2026

    Top Barclays Exec Named As Head Of UK Banking Watchdog

    The Bank of England said Friday that senior Barclays executive and former Treasury official Katharine Braddick has been appointed as the next head of the U.K.'s main banking watchdog. 

  • February 27, 2026

    Footballer's Biz Tackles Broker In £2M Property Clash

    A company owned by former Premier League footballer Scott McTominay has sued a U.K. mortgage broker for £2 million ($2.7 million), accusing it of misusing a loan and reneging on a settlement over a Portuguese property development.

  • February 26, 2026

    Broker Denies Tricking Investors Over ESMA Risk Before IPO

    Broker Plus500 Ltd. has denied in litigation with a group of institutional investors that it withheld information before going public, saying it was clear that impending European rules designed to protect retail investors could hurt the online trading platform's business.

  • February 26, 2026

    Gov't Actuary's Department Launches New Pensions Group

    The Government Actuary's Department has established a new public sector defined contribution pension scheme working group to strengthen governance and improve knowledge-sharing across public sector retirement plans, the department said Wednesday.

  • February 26, 2026

    Metals Magnate Denied Appeal In $500M Trafigura Fraud Case

    Prateek Gupta can't challenge a finding that he carried out a $500 million scam against Trafigura through sham nickel trades, after a judge rejected his argument on Thursday that the commodities trader was aware of the fraud.

  • February 26, 2026

    Upper Tribunal Blocks Financing Co.'s £94M Loss Tax Relief

    A London tribunal ruled in favor of the U.K. tax authority's decision to block nearly £94 million ($127 million) in tax relief to a financing company, saying the relief was improper because the losses dated back to before the business moved from Guernsey to mainland Britain.

  • February 26, 2026

    Willkie Leads Victory Capital's Rival Bid For Janus Henderson

    U.S. investment manager Victory Capital said Thursday that it is making an offer for asset management group Janus Henderson, which is 16% higher than a bid tabled by Trian Fund Management.

  • February 26, 2026

    Goodwin Procter-Led Banks To Buy $100M Trading Biz Stake

    A consortium of global banks has agreed to acquire a $100 million stake in OSTTRA from private equity giant KKR & Co. Inc., the London-based provider of post-trade services for international financial markets said Thursday.

  • February 26, 2026

    FCA Tests Global Reach In HTX Crypto-Exchange Litigation

    The landmark legal case brought by the Financial Conduct Authority against HTX, which the regulator says has promoted crypto-asset services to U.K. consumers without authorization, will be a litmus test, establishing whether it has the teeth for enforcement against overseas crypto-exchanges, lawyers say.

  • February 26, 2026

    Finance Cos. Say Lender Misled Them On Tax Refund Loans

    Two investment companies have sued a tax refund lender and its directors for more than £4.3 million ($6 million) in unpaid debt, alleging that the company made false statements about the performance of loans tied to U.K. tax refunds.

  • February 25, 2026

    BasePoint's £543M Offer For Lender Sweetened With Dividend

    Lender International Personal Finance said Wednesday that it can pay a special dividend to its shareholders in order to boost a £543 million ($736 million) takeover offer from American specialist finance group BasePoint Capital.

  • February 25, 2026

    FCA Selects 4 Firms To Trial Stablecoin Rules

    The Financial Conduct Authority has selected four companies, including Revolut, to test how their stablecoin offers will work under the watchdog's proposed regulations as it prepares new rules for the sector.

  • February 25, 2026

    Taylor Wessing Steers £186M Bid For Fintech Fund

    European investor Verdane said Wednesday that it has offered to acquire Augmentum Fintech, a financial technology investment fund, in a cash deal worth about £185.7 million ($252 million).

  • February 25, 2026

    ​​EU Watchdog To Change Senior Manager Suitability Rules

    European financial regulators on Wednesday launched a consultation proposing major changes to how banks and investment firms assess the fitness and propriety of their leaders and key executives.

  • February 25, 2026

    FCA Moves To Close Gaps In Borrowers' Credit History

    The City watchdog proposed new rules on Wednesday aimed at improving the way consumer credit information is shared and used across U.K. lending markets in a bid to strengthen competition.

  • February 25, 2026

    DLA, Slaughter And May Steer £270M Media Biz Pension Deal

    M&G PLC said Wednesday that it has completed a £270 million ($365 million) buy-in transaction with a pension program sponsored by Reach PLC, the owner of the Mirror, the Express and other newspapers.

  • February 25, 2026

    SFO To Claw Back 'Mere Fraction' From £226M Ponzi Fraud

    A judge ordered a property developer convicted of running a £226 million ($305.5 million) Ponzi scheme to pay back just £283,000 on Wednesday after concluding that the vast majority of the investors' money was lost or siphoned off as a family "money pot." 

  • February 25, 2026

    NFT Merchants Sue Crypto Co. Over €2M In Withheld Funds

    Two British e-commerce companies have sued a Malta-based crypto-payments provider at the High Court in London, alleging it unlawfully withheld €2.18 million ($3 million) in customers' money.

  • February 25, 2026

    Consultant Settles £1.4M Insurance Row With Wealth Manager

    A former consultant has settled her £1.4 million ($1.9 million) claim against a financial consultancy after she sued it for allegedly failing to arrange adequate insurance cover, which she claims left her short of money during serious illness and surgery.

Expert Analysis

  • How New Companies House ID Rules Affect Businesses

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    Lawyers at Shepherd & Wedderburn discuss the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act’s new mandatory identity verification requirements for all company directors and persons with significant control, set to go live next week, which aim to curb fraud by improving the reliability of information held by Companies House.

  • What EU Securitization Proposals Signal For Risk Transfers

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    If implemented, recent amendments to the European Union securitization framework are expected to have an unambiguously positive effect on significant risk transfer markets, providing greater consistency and necessary flexibility, say lawyers at McDermott.

  • Role Of UK Investment Act Is Evolving In M&A Deals

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    With merger and acquisition activity likely to increase in light of the government’s new defense industrial strategy, the role of the National Security and Investment Act will come into sharper focus, and its recent annual report confirms that scrutiny is intensifying, say lawyers at Kingsley Napley.

  • What To Know About EU's Reimposition Of Sanctions On Iran

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    Lawyers at Steptoe discuss the European Union’s recent reimposition of trade and financial sanctions against Iran, which will introduce legal and operational constraints that affect EU companies' commercial activities in the region.

  • FCA Crypto Proposals Herald Tougher Oversight For Firms

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    The Financial Conduct Authority’s recent proposals to extend regulation to crypto-asset activities will bring parity, but implementation of the operational resilience requirements and enhanced financial crime controls will present compliance challenges, says Michelle Kirschner at Gibson Dunn.

  • EU Investment Reporting Rules Letup Signals Pragmatic Shift

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    While investment companies remain subject to far-reaching disclosure obligations under the Foreign Subsidies Regulation, new guidance from the European Commission on reporting passive limited partner commitments represents a drastic simplification and burden reduction, say lawyers at Paul Weiss.

  • SFO's 2-Year Transformation Signals Crackdown On Fraud

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    Two years after Nick Ephgrave’s appointment as director of the Serious Fraud Office, the introduction of new corporate criminal offenses and strengthened investigative methods sends a clear message to corporations that the agency is delivering on its promise to be bolder and more proactive about tackling fraud, say lawyers at BCL Solicitors.

  • What To Know About Interim Licenses In Global FRAND Cases

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    Recent U.K. court decisions have shaped a framework for interim licenses in global standard-essential patent disputes, under which parties can benefit from operating on temporary terms while a court determines the final fair, reasonable and nondiscriminatory terms — but the future of this developing remedy is in doubt, say attorneys at Fish & Richardson.

  • How EU And UK Consumer Loan Protections Are Shifting

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    As market evolution and digitalization motivate both the European Union and the U.K. to revamp consumer protections around lending, the potential for divergence between these rules will pose new challenges for cross-border consumer credit lenders, say lawyers at Skadden.

  • EBA Guidance Shakes Up EU Securitization Market Practices

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    Although the European Banking Authority’s recent questioning of the common use of conditional sale agreements to season assets when setting up securitizations has come as an unwelcome surprise, competent regulators are expected to follow the EBA guidance, even though as a Q&A response it is not legally binding, say lawyers at Debevoise.

  • Landmark VAT Ruling Should Shift HMRC Reply On Guidance

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    The recent decision in Hotelbeds Ltd. v. Revenue and Customs Commissioners on the recovery of input tax, confirming that HMRC is bound to comply with its own guidance, will make the agency rethink its usual response to allegations that the policy was not law, say lawyers at Kennedys.

  • Evolving General Partner Stakes Market Brings Opportunities

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    The rapid increase in investment in general partner stakes by private capital managers indicates its advantages over both strategic sales and initial public offerings, including the ability to retain greater operational control over the business and to avoid the scrutiny that accompanies a listing, says Nicholas Page at Macfarlanes.

  • How UK Proposal On Late Payments Could Affect SMEs

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    The U.K. government’s ongoing late payments consultation would claw back much-needed leverage for small and midsize enterprises negotiating with large organizations, should the reforms be implemented as proposed, say lawyers at Shoosmiths.

  • Waldorf Ruling Signals Recalibration For Restructuring Plans

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    The recent High Court landmark judgment refusing to sanction Waldorf Production PLC's restructuring plan underscores a change in the way courts assess whether such plans are fair, indicating not their demise but a pivotal moment in their evolution, say lawyers at Simpson Thacher.

  • Key Points From UK And Japan's Antitrust Cooperation Pact

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    The memorandum of cooperation recently signed between the U.K. and Japan to promote collaboration in competition law enforcement is a meaningful step that offers cross-border businesses an improved foundation for earlier alignment and better risk management, say lawyers at Steptoe.

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