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Financial Services UK
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May 07, 2025
Finance Trade Body Warns AI Can Amplify Misconduct Risk
A U.K. trade body for financial firms warned a group of members of Parliament at a hearing Wednesday that artificial intelligence amplifies the risk that banks could screen out unwanted customers without anyone knowing, in defiance of the Consumer Duty.
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May 07, 2025
EU Agrees Position On One-Day Securities Settlement
The executive arm of the European Union approved its plan to halve the time it takes to settle transactions in transferable securities to one business day on Wednesday, as the bloc seeks to strengthen its financial sector and align it with international markets.
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May 07, 2025
FCA Seeks Industry Input To Simplify UK Mortgage Rules
The Financial Conduct Authority launched a consultation with lenders on Wednesday to examine how the watchdog can help simplify its mortgage framework to make homeownership in the U.K. "easier, faster and cheaper."
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May 07, 2025
EU Watchdog To Advise Tightening Insider Dealing Rules
The EU markets watchdog specified on Wednesday in advice to the European Commission on insider dealing rules for companies listing shares that profit warnings must be disclosed immediately rather than delay until accounts are produced.
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May 07, 2025
Accounting Firm MHA To Buy Baker Tilly Unit For €24M
Accounting company MHA PLC said Wednesday that it plans to buy the southeast Europe subsidiary of tax adviser Baker Tilly in a cash and shares deal worth up to €24 million ($27.3 million) as it eyes growth in the region.
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May 07, 2025
Top UK Court Expands Fraud Liability In Carbon Credits Case
Britain's highest court ruled Wednesday that a major brokerage firm can be held liable for millions of pounds owed to Britain's tax collector from a carbon credits tax fraud, a decision that could expand the reach of insolvency proceedings.
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May 06, 2025
Trade Body Calls For Swift Action On Pension Surplus Plan
The U.K. must act swiftly in developing a new regime to allow businesses to tap into well-funded pension plans to invest in themselves or the wider economy, a trade body urged Tuesday.
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May 06, 2025
Financial Complaints Skyrocket After Motor Finance Ruling
The U.K.'s financial complaints watchdog said Tuesday that it received more than 140,000 reports about financial businesses in the last six months of 2024, up almost 49% on the same period a year earlier, after a landmark ruling that requires motor finance lenders to disclose commissions.
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May 06, 2025
HSBC Settles Reporting Whistleblowing Fight With Ex-Exec
HSBC Bank PLC on Tuesday settled its dispute with a former senior employee who had accused the retail banking giant of firing him for making protected disclosures about the lender's alleged capital reporting failings.
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May 06, 2025
Money Laundering Surges To £377M In UK Amid Fall In Fraud
Money laundering was the biggest source of fraud and economic crime by value in the U.K. in 2024, with the average value of individual cases increasing 10-fold compared with 2023, a professional services firm reported Tuesday.
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May 06, 2025
Marsh Blamed For $143M Loss On Greensill As Trial Opens
The investment firm White Oak said it would never have invested in a financial scheme set up by now-collapsed Greensill Capital if it had not relied on misleading statements provided by the insurance broker Marsh about its cover, the firm's lawyers said at the opening of an almost $143 million trial Tuesday.
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May 06, 2025
Bahamas Businessmen Challenge £2.7M Yacht Sale Verdict
Two Bahamas businessmen told the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Tuesday that the undervalued sale of a yacht intended to pay off their loan to a subsidiary of Caterpillar Inc. left them unfairly liable for the extra cash that the deal should have covered.
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May 06, 2025
EU Watchdog Proposes New Rules For ESG Ratings Firms
The European Union's markets watchdog has proposed new rules for providers of ESG ratings in a move to prevent conflicts of interest and improve their disclosures.
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May 06, 2025
Greensill, Gupta Get 2027 Trial Date Over $400M Row
Administrators overseeing part of the collapse of Lex Greensill's empire will head to trial in October 2027 to seek $400 million from a Swiss insurance giant that has accused the financier and one of his major former clients, Sanjeev Gupta, of fraud.
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May 06, 2025
Freshfields-Led Fintech Alpha Snubs Bid From Payments Biz
U.K. financial services provider Alpha Group International PLC said Tuesday that it has "unanimously rejected" a takeover offer from Corpay Inc., an American business payments company.
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May 02, 2025
Santander Wins Bid To Narrow AML Whistleblower Allegations
Santander succeeded in trimming a former financial crime policy manager's employment claim on Friday, when a tribunal judge dismissed several whistleblowing allegations but refused to ax other claims that Santander argued the ex-employee had already unsuccessfully sought to advance.
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May 02, 2025
Law Firm Can't Ax €213M Action Over Claim Form Blunders
A London court ruled Friday that an asset manager can amend its €213 million ($241 million) professional negligence claim against the London arm of an international law firm, as it would be unjust to strike out the action merely because the claim form had been prepared with "a remarkable lack of care."
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May 02, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen Premier League football club Newcastle United FC sue the owner of the land next to its stadium, Laurence Fox face a defamation claim by TV presented Narinder Kaur and a further sexual assault claim filed against actor Kevin Spacey.
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May 02, 2025
FCA Proposes Curb On Purchase Of Crypto-Assets On Credit
The Financial Conduct Authority proposed on Friday to restrict how far cryptocurrency companies could go in allowing consumers to buy crypto-assets on credit, part of its planned regulatory regime for the sector.
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May 02, 2025
EY Can Reveal $9.7B Settlement At UAE Health Biz Fraud Trial
EY won an attempt on Friday to reveal a $9.66 billion settlement inked by a United Arab Emirates health care business and senior company officers accused of a $4 billion fraud as it defends itself against allegations it failed to stop the alleged wrongdoing.
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May 02, 2025
US Tariffs Spark Concerns for Unhedged Pension Assets
European pension funds that have significant unhedged dollar assets could be in trouble, experts warned Friday, as unprecedented market volatility was sparked imposition of U.S. trade tariffs.
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May 02, 2025
Pension Deal Insurance Capacity Outstrips Demand
Eight out of 10 pension deals last year involved a scheme with less than £100 million ($133 million) in assets, due to a major increase in insurer capacity, a consultancy said Friday.
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May 02, 2025
Bank Sues Fintech Execs For Fraud Over £4M Investment
A German specialist property lender has sued the co-founders of a financial technology startup for £4.2 million ($5.6 million) in London over claims that the former investment bankers hid the fact they had obtained additional investment in their business prior to its collapse.
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May 01, 2025
Janus Analyst Accused Of Insider Trading Denies Hiding Deals
Prosecutors dismissed a former Janus Henderson analyst's claim he had not disclosed trades allegedly made with insider information because he regarded his employer's trading compliance policies to be "window dressing," saying on Thursday that the "simple explanation" was that he had wished to keep them secret.
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May 01, 2025
UK Pension Funds Face Scrutiny Over Investment Plans
A parliamentary committee will quiz pensions chiefs as part of a wider probe into whether the £3 trillion ($4 trillion) retirement savings sector can invest more in U.K. assets to better support the country's economic growth.
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UK Supreme Court Boosts Creditor Protection In Fraud Cases
Britain's highest court has handed administrators more power to pursue businesses that turn a blind eye to fraud, with a ruling on Wednesday that will bolster protection for creditors and could raise the stakes for companies flying too close to the wind, lawyers say.

Draft UK Crypto-Regulations Facing Teething Troubles
The government's new crypto-assets regime will be unenforceable across borders and could deter fledgling companies from working in the country, meaning that the financial watchdog will face early challenges to its attempts to protect British consumers in a volatile global marketplace.
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FCA Set To Get Enforcement Boost From New Fraud Offense
The new "failure to prevent" fraud offense that comes into force in September will indirectly boost the Financial Conduct Authority's opportunities for enforcement against corporate senior managers, countering its recent retreat from plans to "name and shame" companies it is investigating, lawyers say.

Tariff Wars Cloud UK Plan To Harness Pensions For Growth
The U.K. government has laid out plans for Britain's £3 trillion ($4 trillion) pensions sector to unleash more retirement assets into the real economy to boost growth and jobs — but a series of market shocks from proposed global trade tariffs have overshadowed reform plans.
Editor's Picks
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5 Questions For Spencer West Partner Karl Foster
The Financial Conduct Authority's approach to enforcement and consumer protection has come up against government economic growth priorities and resistance from the sector to its proposals to "name and shame" companies early on during regulatory probes.
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UK Draft Pay Fraud Rules Open Tricky Legal Liabilities
The government's new draft legislation, which will give banks longer to investigate suspicions of fraud before they send payments instructed by customers, will create a wave of new legal liabilities and lead to regulatory hurdles, according to lawyers.
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FCA Fires Warning Shot Over City's Consumer Duty Failings
The Financial Conduct Authority has sent out a fresh warning to financial services companies highlighting how some of them are failing to comply with its Consumer Duty regime. But experts have told Law360 that the expectations are unclear.
Expert Analysis
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Key Questions As Court Mulls Traders' Libor Convictions
The U.K. Supreme Court is considering whether to overturn two traders’ Libor and Euribor manipulation convictions, with the appeal reinvigorating debate over the breadth of English common law’s conspiracy to defraud offense and raising questions about the limits of a judge’s role in criminal jury trials, says Ellen Gallagher at Vardags.
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Expect Complex Ruling From UK Justices In Car Dealer Case
While recent arguments before the U.K. Supreme Court in a consumer test case on motor finance commissions reveal the court’s take on several points argued, application of the upcoming decision will be both nuanced and fact-sensitive, so market participants wishing to prepare do not have a simple task, says Tom Grodecki at Cadwalader.
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How UK Proposals Would Simplify Fund Manager Regime
The ongoing HM Treasury consultation and Financial Conduct Authority call for input on the future regulation of alternative investment fund managers indicate that deliberate steps are being taken to make the AIF regime more suitable for the U.K. market, with the aim of encouraging growth and competitiveness, says Leonard Ng at Sidley.
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FCA's Regulatory Plans Signal Cause For Cautious Optimism
The Financial Conduct Authority’s latest strategy document plans for less intrusive supervision, a more open and collaborative approach, and a focus on assertive action where needed, outlining a vision of deepened trust and rebalanced risk that will be welcomed by all those it regulates, says Imogen Makin at WilmerHale.
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What Latest VC Model Document Revisions Offer UK Investors
Recent updates to the British Private Equity and Venture Capital Association model documents, reflecting prevailing U.K. market practice on early-stage equity financing terms and increasing focus on compliance issues, provide needed protection for investors in relation to the growth in global foreign direct investment regimes, say lawyers at Davis Polk.
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FCA's Odey Decision Is Wake-Up Call For Financial Firms
The Financial Conduct Authority recently banned hedge fund boss Crispin Odey from working in financial services, underscoring the critical importance the regulator places on whether individuals are fit and proper to perform regulated activities, and the connection between nonfinancial misconduct and the integrity of the financial markets, say lawyers at Pallas Partners.
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What To Know About FCA's UK Listing Rules Proposal
A recent consultation paper from the Financial Conduct Authority aims to streamline the securities-listing process for U.K.-regulated markets, including by allowing issuers to submit a single application for all securities of the same class, and aligning the disclosure standards for low-denomination and wholesale bonds, say lawyers at Debevoise.
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New UK Short Selling Rules Diverge From EU Regs
Although forthcoming changes to the U.K.’s short selling regulatory regime represent a welcome relaxation of restrictions and simplification of reporting processes, participants active in both the U.K. and EU markets will need to ensure compliance with two quite different sets of rules, says Ezra Zahabi at Akin.
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What Latest FCA Portfolio Letter Means For Payments Firms
Charlotte Hill at Charles Russell discusses the Financial Conduct Authority’s recent portfolio letter to CEOs of payments firms, outlining the regulator’s expectations, and the steps that these companies may now need to take to ensure compliance and operational effectiveness.
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ECB Guide Targets Harmonized Cyber Testing Approach
The European Central Bank’s recently updated guidance for testing organizational resilience against sophisticated cyberattacks is a significant step forward, highlighting the importance of a unified approach to financial sector cybersecurity and alignment with Digital Operational Resilience Act requirements, say Simon Onyons and Nebu Varghese at FTI Consulting.
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Opinion
Prospects For New Fraud Prevention Prosecution Look Slim
With the Labour Party's inherited patchwork of Conservative Party corporate crime legislation for preventing fraud and corruption, the forthcoming Economic Crime Act’s failure to prevent fraud offense is unlikely to be successful in assisting prosecutors bring companies to justice, says Matthew Cowie at Rahman Ravelli.
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What's Next After FCA Drops Troubled 'Name And Shame' Plan
A closer look at the Financial Conduct Authority's recent decision to toss its widely unpopular proposal changing the test for announcing enforcement investigations may reveal how we got here, why the regulator changed course, and where it’s headed next, say lawyers at Hogan Lovells.
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UK Refusal Of US Extradition Request May Set New Standard
The recent U.K. Supreme Court ruling in El-Khouri v. U.S., denying a U.S. extradition request, overturns a long-held precedent and narrows how U.K. courts must decide such requests, potentially signaling a broader reevaluation of U.K. extradition law, say lawyers at Dechert and Kingsley Napley.
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Insights On ESMA's Alternative Investment Fund Consultation
Aaron Mulcahy at Maples Group discusses key points from the European Securities and Markets Authority’s recent consultation on open-ended loan-originating alternative investment funds, highlighting the growth in semi-liquid evergreen funds and explaining ESMA’s proposed standards.
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How UK Supreme Court May Assess Russia Sanctions Cases
In two recent U.K. Supreme Court cases challenging the U.K. Russia sanctions regime, the forthcoming judgments are likely to focus on proportionality and European Convention on Human Rights compatibility, and will undoubtedly influence how future challenges are shaped, says Leigh Crestohl at Zaiwalla.