Financial Services UK

  • January 22, 2026

    Industry Calls For EU Rethink On Litigation Funders

    A group of major trade bodies has urged the European Commission to reconsider its decision not to regulate third-party litigation funders and called for a deeper review of the sector.

  • January 22, 2026

    Ethanol Biz Loses Bid To Overturn €48M Price-Fixing Fine

    A Swedish ethanol producer failed on Thursday to overturn a €47.7 million ($55.9 million) fine for colluding to maintain high prices by market manipulation after a European appeals court ruled that a competition watchdog did not presume it was guilty.

  • January 22, 2026

    Gov't Warned About Using Pensions To Fix UK Housing Crisis

    The government should be cautious about any plan to fix Britain's growing housing crisis by allowing workers to tap into their pensions savings early, a retirement savings provider said Thursday.

  • January 22, 2026

    Football Club Owner Textor Fails To Overturn $97M Ruling

    The owner of a portfolio of professional football clubs has failed to overturn a ruling that found he was in breach of a deal to buy back an investment vehicle's stake in his company for $97 million.

  • January 22, 2026

    Slaughter And May Aids Deutsche Börse's €5.3B Allfunds Deal

    Deutsche Börse AG has agreed to buy European fund distribution platform Allfunds Group PLC for €5.3 billion ($6.2 billion) as the German stock exchange operator moves to create a global player in the provision of financial markets infrastructure.

  • January 22, 2026

    M&G Posts 65% Growth In Pension Deal Business For 2025

    Savings and investment group M&G has said it penned £1.5 billion ($2 billion) in pension deals in 2025, almost 65% more than the amount it disclosed the year before.

  • January 22, 2026

    Pensions Regulator Seeks Trustee Input On Value Rules

    The U.K. retirement savings watchdog called on Thursday for greater industry feedback on sweeping value-for-money regulations for workplace benefit plans.

  • January 22, 2026

    Ropes & Gray, Vinge Guide EQT's $3.7B Coller Capital Deal

    Swedish private equity company EQT said Thursday that it will buy the U.K. secondaries firm Coller Capital for up to $3.7 billion in a bid to take advantage of the growing market for continuation vehicles as the PE sector continues to struggle to offload assets.

  • January 21, 2026

    BoE Plans More Bank Reporting Cuts, Limiting Climate Focus

    The Bank of England's regulatory arm hit back Wednesday against concerns raised by members of Parliament that the watchdog is failing to promote U.K. growth enough, adding it has limited climate risk focus and plans new reporting cuts.

  • January 21, 2026

    London Brokers Call For Light Touch On Consumer Rules

    The Financial Conduct Authority should strip back consumer protection rules for parts of the insurance market that primarily serve large commercial businesses, a trade body said Wednesday.

  • January 21, 2026

    SFO Director's Surprise Exit Reignites Debate Over Its Future

    Nick Ephgrave's surprise retirement from the Serious Fraud Office could turn up the heat on a simmering debate about the future of the agency and a potential merger with other law enforcement authorities such as the National Crime Agency, lawyers say.

  • January 21, 2026

    UK Investment Trust Rejects Saba's Bid To Unseat Board

    Shareholders in Edinburgh Worldwide Investment Trust PLC have rejected a slate of resolutions from U.S. activist investor Saba Capital Management LP, affirming confidence in the existing board and its strategic direction, the company has said.

  • January 21, 2026

    Gov't Overhaul Plan For CMA Merger Reviews Sparks Doubts

    Proposals by the government to abolish the Competition and Markets Authority's independent decision-making panel without replacing it with easier mechanisms to appeal rulings might ultimately harm the businesses that Whitehall wants to attract, experts have warned.

  • January 20, 2026

    Court Backs HMRC Over Healthcare Co.'s Late VAT Appeal

    A private healthcare company has to meet strict conditions to appeal HM Revenue & Customs' value-added-tax assessments and a penalty of over £1 million ($1.3 million) after filing its appeal late, a London court ruled.

  • January 20, 2026

    UK Launches Service To Combat Cyber Crime And Fraud

    The U.K. has launched a national reporting and intelligence service for fraud and cyber crime intended to help protect victims and tackle billions of pounds lost each year, a police force announced Tuesday.

  • January 20, 2026

    Ex-Entain Execs Lose Privacy Claim Against Watchdog

    Two former executives at the predecessor of betting giant Entain have lost their claim that Britain's gambling regulator wrongly published private and confidential information about them in its announcement of regulatory review.

  • January 20, 2026

    BoE Chief Warns Of Financial Fallout If AI Bubble Bursts

    The governor of the Bank of England cautioned Tuesday the U.K. economy could get swept up in market turmoil if there is a major correction in artificial intelligence tech stock. 

  • January 20, 2026

    Gov't Scraps Long-Awaited UK Audit Sector Reforms

    The government said on Tuesday that it would not push ahead with long-awaited audit and governance reforms designed to improve trust in the sector after a string of high-profile accounting scandals.

  • January 20, 2026

    UK Regulators Sideline Probes Into Open Banking Fees

    U.K. finance watchdogs said Tuesday they will not prioritize competition law investigations into future bank fees on varying regular bill payments, opting to avoid uncertainty in open banking operations.

  • January 20, 2026

    'Mortgage Prisoners' Fight To Revive Core Of £800M TSB Case

    Hundreds of former customers of Northern Rock suing TSB for £800 million ($1.1 billion) challenged on Tuesday a ruling that TSB did not breach their mortgage contracts by charging higher interest rates for loans the lender took over after Northern Rock's collapse.

  • January 20, 2026

    Chubb Rejects Investor's Negligent Property Advice Claim

    Chubb has denied that it must pay out around £259,000 ($348,200) to cover a now-insolvent conveyancing firm accused of negligence by a Saudi investor, arguing the dissolved business acted within its legal remit during the purchase of student accommodation in the U.K.

  • January 20, 2026

    Osborne Clarke Pro Overturns SDT's Zahawi SLAPP Ruling

    An Osborne Clarke partner has overturned a disciplinary tribunal's finding of misconduct over his attempts to prevent a blogger from disclosing a defamation threat by former chancellor Nadhim Zahawi, as a London court found on Tuesday the decision lacked sufficient reasons and was "unfair."

  • January 19, 2026

    Lax AI Policy In UK Finance Sector Risks Harm, MPs Warn

    The absence of clear guidance from the government and regulators on the use of artificial intelligence by finance companies could cause "serious harm" to consumers and the financial system, lawmakers warned on Tuesday as they set out the steps needed to erect guardrails.

  • January 19, 2026

    Slaughter And May Guides Zurich's £7.7B Bid For Beazley

    Swiss insurance giant Zurich said Monday that it has made a £7.7 billion ($10 billion) proposed offer for London-listed Beazley PLC after the British rival rejected a lower offer earlier in January.

  • January 19, 2026

    Pensions Provider TPT Picks New Chief Compliance Officer

    British pensions provider TPT Retirement Solutions said Monday that it has hired Helen Taylor as its new chief legal, risk and compliance officer.

Expert Analysis

  • Return-To-Office Policy Considerations For UK Employers

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    As the Financial Conduct Authority reviews its hybrid working policy and other organizations increasingly require employees to return to the office, employers should weigh the costs and benefits of these decisions while considering the nuances of work-from-home rights in the U.K., say lawyers at Shoosmiths.

  • Catching Up On Simplified EU Sustainability Disclosure Rules

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    A recent proposal to streamline implementation of the EU’s Taxonomy Regulation contains measures that would reduce companies’ sustainable investment reporting and compliance requirements, and better support the EU’s climate and environmental goals, say lawyers at Proskauer.

  • Fraud Law Puts Fund Managers Under Compliance Spotlight

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    The new failure to prevent fraud offense, effective Sept. 1, may not represent a material departure from most managers’ duties to exercise due care in preventing loss to the assets they manage, but the prospect of criminal liability should sharpen their compliance focus, says Andrew Henderson at Goodwin Procter.

  • CMA Pricing Guide Signals Shift In UK Consumer Protection

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    The Competition and Markets Authority’s recent draft price transparency guide, as part of a wider reform introduced by the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act 2024, represents a significant change in U.K. consumer protection by targeting unfair trading practices and strengthening enforcement mechanisms, says Felicity Forward at Shoosmiths.

  • 8 Compliance Team Strategies To Support Business Agility

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    Amid new regulatory requirements across the globe, compliance functions must design thoughtful guardrails that help business leaders achieve their commercial objectives lawfully — from repurposing existing tools to using technology thoughtfully — instead of defaulting to cumbersome protocols that hinder legitimate business, says Theodore Edelman at GCE Advisors.

  • What To Note From FCA, Gov't Financial Growth Proposals

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    Recent Financial Conduct Authority and government proposals for financial services reform are positive developments for firms, signaling a drive to push forward growth and a willingness to be flexible in areas of regulation that the industry has long raised as barriers, say lawyers at Simmons & Simmons.

  • What Gov't Report Tells Lawyers About Continuing AML Risks

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    The U.K. government’s recent national money laundering risk assessment maintains conveyancing, company service work and misuse of client accounts as key threats, underscoring that law firms should expect renewed scrutiny and higher expectations in these high-risk areas, says Harriet Holmes at Thirdfort.

  • Petrofac Ruling Shifts Focus To Fairness In Restructurings

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    The recent Court of Appeal overturning of Petrofac's restructuring plans demonstrates a change of direction that will allow previously ignored out-of-the-money creditors a share in the benefits, and means companies must review the fair treatment of different creditor classes, say lawyers at King & Spalding.

  • Europe's New Defense Push Creates Investment Prospects

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    Recent increases in European defense expenditure and governments' desire to innovate are creating a compelling environment for investment and merger and acquisition activity, especially for small and midsize enterprises at the forefront of emerging technologies, say lawyers at Skadden.

  • Key Considerations For Issuers In FCA Prospectus Reform

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    The Financial Conduct Authority’s forthcoming reform of the U.K. prospectus regime should be attractive to both debt and equity issuers because it limits the circumstances in which a costly prospectus is required, making it easier and cheaper for listed companies to raise capital, say lawyers at Sullivan & Cromwell.

  • How Top Court Ruling Limits Scope Of Motor Finance Claims

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    The U.K. Supreme Court’s recent ruling in a landmark case concerning car finance commissions clarifies when and how a dealership’s fiduciary duties arise, considerably narrowing that path for mass consumer litigation and highlighting how an upcoming Financial Conduct Authority redress scheme will seek to balance consumer, lender and market interests, say lawyers at Cadwalader.

  • FCA Misconduct Guide Will Expand Firms' Duty To Investigate

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    The Financial Conduct Authority's recent proposals on workplace nonfinancial misconduct will place a greater onus on compliance and investigations teams, clarifying that the question to ascertain is whether the behavior is justifiable and proportionate, say lawyers at Ashurst.

  • Lessons From Landmark UK Supreme Court Libor Ruling

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    The U.K. Supreme Court’s recent quashing of former traders Hayes and Palombo’s interest rate rigging convictions on the ground of jury misdirection raises concerns about failings in the criminal appeal process, and whether encouraging institutions to accept regulatory settlements can create conditions for miscarriages of justice, says Ellen Gallagher at Vardags.

  • Mansion House Speech Heralds New Financial Regulatory Era

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    The chancellor of the exchequer's recent Mansion House speech introduced a sweeping commitment to modernize regulation, which will require U.K. retail banks and building societies to revisit core assumptions, and allow lawyers to play a key role in shaping the new rules, say lawyers at Addleshaw Goddard.

  • Challenges For Managers In Navigating Continuation Funds

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    With continuation vehicles becoming an increasingly popular alternative to traditional private equity investment exit routes, managers and lenders should be confident that they understand a transaction’s structure and how it interacts with existing debt arrangements, says Jason Larkins at Travers Smith.

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