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Financial Services UK
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March 30, 2026
Permanent TSB Being Circled By Lone Star, Centerbridge
Permanent TSB confirmed on Monday that private equity houses Lone Star and Centerbridge have shown interest in a takeover after the government-owned Irish lender put itself up for sale in October.
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March 27, 2026
Split Fed Gives Morgan Stanley OK For European Arm Reorg
The Federal Reserve has narrowly granted its permission for Morgan Stanley to turn its European Union banking arm into a unit of its insured U.S. bank, a move that sharply divided the central bank's board amid concerns about straining the federal bank safety net.
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March 27, 2026
Crowe Liable For £100K Over Wine Investment Ponzi Audit
The liquidators of a failed wine investment company won just over £100,000 ($133,000) in their negligence case against an accounting firm after a court held Friday that the firm's directors' Ponzi scheme was the main reason for its loss.
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March 27, 2026
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
The past week in London has seen Apple hit back at a tech company's wireless charging patent claim, a flurry of businesses bring COVID-19 pandemic insurance claims as a key deadline draws closer and Ipulse Partners LLP file a claim against a luxury yacht company it represented in a trademark dispute. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
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March 27, 2026
Oligarch Fights To Reopen Tossed $14B Asset-Stripping Claim
Imprisoned oligarch Ziyavudin Magomedov asked a London appeals court on Friday to revive his $14 billion claim that he was the victim of a Russian state-led conspiracy to strip his assets in two major port operators.
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March 27, 2026
FCA Asks Gov't To Extend Reach Of Senior Managers Regime
The Financial Conduct Authority has renewed calls for the government to extend its senior managers regime to regulated payments businesses and stock exchanges in its annual perimeter report.
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March 27, 2026
Letter From Law Firm Partner Spurs Rebuke From SRA
A director at a City law firm has formally been sanctioned by the Solicitors Regulation Authority after he was found to have written a letter that undermined public confidence in the profession.
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March 27, 2026
FCA Hits Investment Bank With Fine For Monitoring Failures
The Financial Conduct Authority said Friday that it has fined Dinosaur Merchant Bank £338,000 ($449,000) for failing to maintain adequate systems to detect and report potential market abuse.
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March 27, 2026
FCA Failed British Steel Pensioners, Review Finds
The Financial Conduct Authority failed to protect former members of the British Steel Pension Scheme from foreseeable harm in a series of regulatory failings, the complaints commissioner has said.
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March 27, 2026
Pensions Watchdog Issues Guidance Over Virgin Media Ruling
The pensions watchdog has urged retirement scheme trustees to seek legal advice over how they comply with the findings of a landmark court case.
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March 27, 2026
Lloyds Banking Group IT Glitch Exposed 448K Accounts
Almost half a million Lloyds Banking Group customers had their personal data exposed in March because of a software failure, a parliamentary group said in a report published Friday, prompting fresh scrutiny from lawmakers over the resilience of Britain's online banking system.
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March 27, 2026
Eversheds Steers £32M Buy-In For Reebok UK Pension Plan
A pension plan for employees of sportswear giant Reebok in the U.K. has completed a £32 million ($42.6 million) full scheme buy-in with Just Group PLC, the financial services provider has said.
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March 26, 2026
UK Hits Crypto Network Tied To Cambodia Scam Hub
The U.K. sanctioned on Thursday a "key lieutenant" to the billionaire businessman behind Cambodia's scam centers as well as a major crypto marketplace catering to fraudsters in the latest crackdown on online threats that target Britons.
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March 26, 2026
FCA To Use AI To Spot Consumer Harm Faster In New Plan
The Financial Conduct Authority set out plans on Thursday to use artificial intelligence as a regulatory tool to authorize businesses and detect harm faster in its annual work program.
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March 26, 2026
Insurers Criticize FCA Over Rules On Charging For Advice
Insurers have hit out at the Financial Conduct Authority's refusal to budge on rules over subsidized financial advice.
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March 26, 2026
Odey Denies Threat To Shut Biz To Scupper Misconduct Probe
Crispin Odey denied at a tribunal on Thursday that he threatened to shut down his hedge fund to force executives not to impose restrictions on him to safeguard women at the firm after repeated allegations of sexual misconduct.
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March 26, 2026
EU Adopts Landmark Anti-Corruption Law
European Union lawmakers passed a new set of bloc-wide anti-corruption rules on Thursday that will streamline legal definitions and set out penalties for bribery, misappropriation and economic crimes as the bloc seeks to crack down on corruption across borders.
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March 26, 2026
Whistleblower Bank Exec Wins Costs In Welsh Bribery Feud
A bank in Wales must help pay a former senior executive's costs in a dispute over claims that it fired him for raising concerns that his line manager was allegedly accepting bribes from the CEO.
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March 26, 2026
UK Watchdog Revamps Audit Supervision In Quality Boost Bid
The accounting watchdog has launched a modernized supervisory framework for audit firms, centered on their systems of quality management used to deal with risks to audit quality.
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March 26, 2026
Financial Redress Body To Use AI Tech For 'Routine Tasks'
The Financial Services Compensation Scheme said Thursday that it wants to automate routine tasks with artificial intelligence technology in the next five years.
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March 26, 2026
Employers Urged To Address Risks From Pension Shortfalls
A greater understanding by workers of the looming threat posed by inadequate pension savings will place increasing pressure on employers to offer more compelling retirement plans, Hymans Robertson has said.
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March 26, 2026
Fraud Plan Puts FCA At Forefront Of UK Crypto-Crackdown
The Financial Conduct Authority has been given a lead role in targeting money laundering, crypto-assets and money transfer scams in a government fraud strategy involving multiple agencies, which lawyers expect will boost enforcement action and heap a new compliance burden on financial institutions.
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March 25, 2026
Modi Can't Block India Extradition Over Torture Fears
A London court declined on Wednesday to stop the extradition to India of jewelry magnate Nirav Modi over an alleged $2 billion fraud after accepting diplomatic assurances he wouldn't be tortured.
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March 25, 2026
Odey Denies Trying To Silence Groping Victim In FCA Probe
Crispin Odey told a London tribunal on Wednesday that he denied trying to stop a member of staff who he had groped from speaking to the Financial Conduct Authority while it investigated his conduct at the hedge fund.
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March 25, 2026
FCA Eyes Simpler Advice Rules To Broaden Consumer Access
The Financial Conduct Authority proposed rule changes on Wednesday that would enable financial businesses to give more simplified advice to consumers on pensions and investments, aiming to revitalize financial services take-up.
Expert Analysis
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Navigating Legal Privilege Issues When Using AI
The recent explosion in artificial intelligence has led to prompts and AI outputs that may be susceptible to disclosure in proceedings, and it is important to apply familiar principles to assess whether legal privilege may apply to these interactions, say lawyers at HSF.
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A Look At Factors Affecting Ombudsman Complaint Trends
Lawyers at Womble Bond provide an analysis of the Financial Ombudsman Service's complaint trends in 2025, highlighting the impact of changes within the FOS and external factors on the financial sector's redress system.
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What To Know About FCA's Short Selling Regime Proposals
Although the Financial Conduct Authority’s recent proposals for changes to the U.K. short selling regime do not materially alter the rules, targeted reforms designed to reduce the administrative burden placed on position holders will be welcomed by market participants, say lawyers at McDermott.
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How BoE Stablecoin Proposals May Reshape UK Payments
The Bank of England’s proposals for a sterling-denominated systemic stablecoin system amount to a substantial new regime, but it has a low-risk appetite for any change that would result in payment obligations migrating to a private stablecoin ledger and its tentativeness toward wholesale settlement is disappointing, say lawyers at Norton Rose.
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Why EU's FDI Screening Proposals Require Careful Balance
The European Commission’s proposals to harmonize EU foreign direct investment screening regimes at the member state level require a trilogue between the commission, Parliament and council, which means political tensions need to be resolved in order to reach agreement on the five key reforms, say lawyers at Arnold & Porter.
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OFSI Proposals Signal Greater Focus On Enforcement Activity
The Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation’s proposed financial sanctions reforms, with risks of higher penalties and more stringent disclosure requirements for U.K. banks and companies, reflect the agency’s evolution into a more sophisticated and robust enforcement regulator, says Irene Polieri at Gibson Dunn.
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How Restructuring Reforms Will Streamline Insolvency Plans
The recently published revised practice statement on schemes of arrangement and restructuring plans promises midmarket businesses efficiency without diluting safeguards, positioning schemes as inclusive tools rather than elite options, say lawyers at Addleshaw Goddard.
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How 2nd Circ. Decision Extends CFTC's Extraterritorial Reach
The Second Circuit recently concluded in U.S. v. Phillips that the Commodity Exchange Act extends to entirely foreign conduct if a victim of the conduct is based in the U.S., suggesting there is a heightened risk that foreign swap transactions will be susceptible to U.S. regulation when U.S. counterparties are involved, say attorneys at Skadden.
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EBA Proposals Signal Overhaul Of EU 3rd-Party Risk Rules
The European Banking Authority’s plans to extend third-party risk controls to non-ICT services, which may be finalized by the end of the year, will place a significant compliance and operational burden on in-scope entities, which should not be underestimated, say lawyers at Travers Smith.
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FCA Proposals Reduce Consumer Duty Compliance Burden
The Financial Conduct Authority’s recent proposals to streamline the consumer duty regime represent a pragmatic response to industry concerns, with a move toward sector-specific supervision and potentially narrowing its scope for wholesale and cross-border business, say lawyers at Simmons & Simmons.
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How New Companies House ID Rules Affect Businesses
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.
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What EU Securitization Proposals Signal For Risk Transfers
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.
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Role Of UK Investment Act Is Evolving In M&A Deals
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.
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What To Know About EU's Reimposition Of Sanctions On Iran
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.
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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.