Financial Services UK

  • December 08, 2025

    Lawyers In Crosshairs In New Anti-Corruption Crackdown

    Corrupt lawyers, accountants and bankers "will be hunted down" under a new anti-corruption strategy unveiled by the government on Monday, which will crack down on enablers facilitating bribery and illicit finance in the U.K.

  • December 08, 2025

    Pension Reforms Could Boost UK Investment By £220B

    The government could raise £220 billion ($293 billion) in additional investment in Britain over the next decade through a series of reforms to pensions, insurance and home building, an insurer said in a report on Monday.

  • December 08, 2025

    FCA Releases Landmark Reforms To Boost Retail Investment

    The Financial Conduct Authority published on Monday a landmark package of measures to encourage investments by consumers to help U.K. growth, giving businesses new clarity on when they are dealing with professionals.

  • December 08, 2025

    More Than 3M Savers Hit By Salary Sacrifice Budget Change

    The government's plan to cap pension salary sacrifice arrangements will worsen the growing crisis of pension under-saving, a former pensions minister has warned, after an official report found that at least 3.3 million workers will be affected.

  • December 08, 2025

    BNP Paribas Ups Stake In Ageas With €1.1B Investment

    French banking giant BNP Paribas said on Monday that its insurance subsidiary has increased its stake in Belgian multinational insurer Ageas Group SA to 22.5% from 14.9% with the injection of €1.1 billion ($1.28 billion) in new share capital.

  • December 05, 2025

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

    This past week in London has seen Mozambique sue the late tycoon Iskandar Safa's family and Privinvest amid the wider $1.9 billion "tuna bond" fraud case, Entain face a claim from a major U.S. pensions agency, and a Mexican lawyer accused of embezzlement bring legal action against Travelers Insurance Co. 

  • December 05, 2025

    UK Watchdog Intervenes In Food Co.'s Pension Plan

    Britain's retirement savings watchdog said on Friday its intervention, sparked by concern for members of a pension arrangement sponsored by a food manufacturer, has prompted the business to commit to putting around £300 million ($400 million) into the plan.

  • December 05, 2025

    Goldman Sachs' Investor Petershill Leaves LSE

    Petershill Partners PLC, a private equity investor owned by Goldman Sachs, said Friday that it will no longer trade on the London Stock Exchange after "significant" macroeconomic and geopolitical headwinds forced it to announce the decision in September.

  • December 05, 2025

    Nordic Capital Denies Addere Entitled To Hargreaves Deal Fee

    Nordic Capital has denied it is liable to pay £15 million ($20 million) to Addere Capital as a success fee for its takeover of wealth manager Hargreaves Lansdown, saying in a London court filing that the financial adviser had not come up with the idea.

  • December 05, 2025

    Ex-Barclays VP's Discrimination Suit Trimmed Further

    A London tribunal has further whittled down a discrimination case brought by a former Barclays vice president, slamming the financier's failure to furnish his "scattergun" allegations with sufficient detail.

  • December 05, 2025

    UK Watchdogs Plan To Spur £223B Mutual Financial Sector

    Two finance watchdogs unveiled plans to boost growth in the U.K. mutual banking and insurance sector on Friday, part of the government's plan to double the size of the £223 billion ($297.5 billion) market.

  • December 05, 2025

    StanChart Settles Investors' £1.5B Iran Sanctions Claim

    Standard Chartered announced Friday it has agreed to a settlement in a £1.5 billion ($2 billion) claim brought by investors who said they suffered losses after the bank made allegedly untrue or misleading statements about its noncompliance with Iranian sanctions.

  • December 04, 2025

    Lending Biz CEO Settles Share Transfer Row With Ex-Director

    The chief executive of a lending company has settled his claim in a London court that a former business partner forced him to hand over shares in the company by inventing a fraud allegation.

  • December 04, 2025

    ICO Challenges Tribunal's Ruling On Dixons Data Breach

    The U.K. Information Commissioner's Office asked an appeals court Thursday to overturn a tribunal finding that pseudonymous information stolen from electronics retailer Dixons Carphone in a privacy breach was not covered by data protection rules.

  • December 04, 2025

    Ex-Oil Biz Director's Claim Trimmed In €143M Case

    A London judge has blocked two men's claims against a Singaporean oil company's directors in a €143.8 million ($166.8 million) forgery and payment diversion case, but allowed part of their case against a man they allege controlled the company to continue.

  • December 04, 2025

    EU Parliament Urged To Act On Gaps In Pensions Savings

    European savers deserve better returns and stronger consumer protections to ensure they have adequate pension pots, policy advocates have claimed, warning that reform is necessary to ensure citizens have sufficient resources in retirement.

  • December 04, 2025

    Smaller Audit Firms Gaining UK Market Share, Watchdog Says

    Smaller auditors are starting to challenge the dominance of the Big Four firms for scrutinizing the finances of the country's biggest and most important companies, the accounting watchdog said Thursday.

  • December 04, 2025

    Gov't To Address Pension Inflation In New Bill

    The government has said it will use its current set of pension reforms to push through long-awaited inflation-linked increases to the retirement benefits of older workers.

  • December 04, 2025

    EU Reveals Plan To Boost Financial Market Integration

    The European Commission unveiled a package of financial market reforms on Thursday, aimed at dismantling long-standing barriers to trade and creating a streamlined single capital market within the bloc of 27 nations.

  • December 04, 2025

    Credit Suisse Settles $99M Margin Call Dispute

    Credit Suisse's English broker-dealer entity has reached a settlement in a $99 million claim brought by an investment company that had alleged it breached a prime brokerage agreement by unlawfully selling off shares in a South African mobile phone company.

  • December 04, 2025

    Legal Challenge Withdrawn After Gov't Pensions U-Turn

    Campaigners fighting for compensation over historical failings on payments of women's state pensions have scored a win after the government agreed to reconsider its decision not to create a redress program within 12 weeks.

  • December 03, 2025

    EU Adds Russia To Money-Laundering Blacklist

    The European Commission said Wednesday that it has added Russia to a list of high-risk countries in order to protect the European Union against financial crime.

  • December 10, 2025

    Hargreaves Lansdown Hires New GC From Direct Line

    Hargreaves Lansdown said Wednesday that it has hired a new chief legal officer and company secretary from insurer Direct Line Group, months after the wealth manager was acquired by a private equity consortium.

  • December 03, 2025

    Payments Firm Denies Suspecting LC&F Funds Tied To Fraud

    A payments processing business has denied being liable to the administrators of London Capital & Finance for allegedly allowing £20.3 million ($27 million) to be diverted to the defunct investment firm's former directors and others.

  • December 03, 2025

    Ex-Barclays Trader Loses Fight Over Firing For Hiding Error

    A London tribunal has ruled that Barclays did not unfairly sack an assistant vice president after he deliberately concealed a risk that the bank had overcharged its trading fees to a client over several years.

Expert Analysis

  • 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.

  • Key Points From EU Proposals To Ease Securitization Rules

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    The European Commission’s recently proposed securitization framework amendments aim to relax existing rules, such as by reducing due diligence requirements and removing the need for investors to conduct certain prescribed compliance verifications by sponsors or original lenders, say lawyers at McDermott.

  • Challenges Law Firms Face In Recruiting Competitor Teams

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    Since the movement of lawyer teams from a competitor can bring legal considerations and commercial risks into play, both the target and recruiting firms should be familiar with the relevant limited liability partnership deed to protect their business, say lawyers at Fox & Partners.

  • High Court Elects Substance Over Form In Arbitration Dispute

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    The High Court recently found that an arbitral tribunal has jurisdiction over the dispute in Ras Al Khaimah Investment Authority v. India, underscoring the importance of aligning treaty interpretation with the goal of fostering investment, while rejecting interpretations that unduly limit investor protections, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray's Inn.

  • What New UK Stub Equity Rules Will Mean For PE Bidders

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    The U.K. Takeover Panel’s recent guide to making stub equity offers, for the first time formally harmonizing the approach to be taken, should be helpful for both private equity bidders and practitioners, and not unduly restrictive, say lawyers at Davis Polk.

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