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Financial Services UK
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January 15, 2026
Revolut, Mastercard, Visa Lose Challenge To Fee Cap
Mastercard, Visa and Revolut lost their fight on Thursday to block regulators from enforcing a price cap on some transaction fees after a London court rejected their case that the watchdog didn't have the power to impose limits.
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January 15, 2026
Real Estate Investor Sues Insurance Broker Over Unpaid Loan
A real estate investment company and an affiliate firm have sued an insurance broker and its sole director for their alleged failure to repay a loan worth almost £227,000 ($304,000) and breaches of obligations linked to the businesses.
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January 15, 2026
Gov't Drops Planned Probe Into UK Pensions Ombudsman
The government confirmed it has dropped a pledge to carry out a review of the U.K.'s pension arbitration body, in the wake of the Atomic Energy Agency Technology retirement fund scandal.
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January 15, 2026
Pensions Watchdog Hires Treasury Mandarin As Policy Chief
The Pensions Regulator said Thursday it has appointed as its new policy chief one of the leading architects behind the government's push for retirement funds to invest more in the economy.
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January 15, 2026
BoE To Streamline Big Firms' Risk Reviews With 2-Year Cycle
The regulatory body of the Bank of England said Thursday that larger businesses will have to attend formal risk reviews only every two years as it moves to streamline their supervision.
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January 15, 2026
Pensions Co. Vidett Acquires London Governance Biz
Governance and pensions services provider Vidett has acquired Bridgehouse Company Secretaries, an outsourced corporate governance business, as it strengthens its position in an evolving corporate services market.
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January 14, 2026
Swedbank Says DOJ Has Closed AML Probe Without Action
Swedbank, one of the biggest banks serving Europe's Baltic region, said Wednesday that the U.S. Department of Justice has released it from a long-running anti-money-laundering-related investigation, removing another U.S. legal cloud hanging over the lender.
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January 14, 2026
City Council Sues Hermes Over Gamble On Wind Farms
A Scottish local authority is suing the managers of its pension fund at the High Court over a decision to invest £104 million ($140 million) in a "highly risky" portfolio of Swedish wind farms that led to substantial losses.
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January 14, 2026
UK, EU Ink MoU On Overseeing Third-Party Service Providers
British and European regulators will coordinate regulation of third-party service providers in the financial sector to guard against market disruptions, according to a memorandum of understanding published Wednesday.
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January 14, 2026
Alleged UK Hacker Can Be Extradited To US Over Illicit Trades
A British man accused of hacking into the email accounts of American executives and using sensitive information to make $3.75 million in illicit trades can be extradited to the U.S. to stand trial, a London judge ruled Wednesday.
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January 14, 2026
New TPR Chair Floats 'Rule-Making' Powers For Watchdog
The Pensions Regulator should be granted new rule-making powers similar in scope to the Financial Conduct Authority, the incoming chair of the watchdog told MPs on Wednesday.
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January 14, 2026
SFO Launches Bribery And Fraud Probe Into Property Investor
The Serious Fraud Office said Wednesday that it has opened a criminal investigation into the former management of a major housing company over suspicions of fraud and bribery worth an estimated £300 million ($403 million).
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January 14, 2026
FRC To Continue Removing 'Unnecessary' Business Burdens
Britain's accounting watchdog said Wednesday it will continue its efforts to reduce "unnecessary" reporting and regulatory requirements on businesses as part of its broader bid to support growth in the U.K.
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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.
Expert Analysis
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FCA Crypto Proposals Herald Tougher Oversight For Firms
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.
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EU Investment Reporting Rules Letup Signals Pragmatic Shift
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.
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SFO's 2-Year Transformation Signals Crackdown On Fraud
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.
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What To Know About Interim Licenses In Global FRAND Cases
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.
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How EU And UK Consumer Loan Protections Are Shifting
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.
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EBA Guidance Shakes Up EU Securitization Market Practices
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.
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Landmark VAT Ruling Should Shift HMRC Reply On Guidance
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.
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Evolving General Partner Stakes Market Brings Opportunities
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.
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How UK Proposal On Late Payments Could Affect SMEs
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.
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Waldorf Ruling Signals Recalibration For Restructuring Plans
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.
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Key Points From UK And Japan's Antitrust Cooperation Pact
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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Opinion
New US-UK Tech Deal Offers Opportunities To Boost Growth
The recently announced U.S. and U.K. Technology Prosperity Deal, encouraging businesses on both sides of the Atlantic to work together toward technological advance, will drive both investment in U.K. capabilities and returns for U.S. investors, says Peter Watts at Hogan Lovells.
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What Draft AML Reforms Mean For UK Financial Sector
HM Treasury’s recently published draft regulations amending the U.K. Money Laundering Regulations, although not as material as expected, are a step toward a targeted risk-based approach, which the industry will welcome, say lawyers at Ropes & Gray.
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What Key EU Data Ruling Means For Cross-Border Transfers
The European Union Court of Justice’s recent judgment in European Data Protection Supervisor v. Single Resolution Board takes a recipient-specific approach concerning pseudonymized information, but financial services firms making international transfers should follow the draft EU Data Protection Board guidelines’ current stricter approach, says Nathalie Moreno at Kennedys Law.
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EU-US Data Transfer Ruling Offers Reassurance To Cos.
The European Union General Court’s recent upholding of the EU-U.S. Data Privacy Framework in Latombe v. European Commission, although subject to appeal, provides companies with legal certainty for the first time by allowing the transfer of European Economic Area personal data without relying on alternative mechanisms, say lawyers at Wilson Sonsini.