Financial Services UK

  • March 24, 2026

    Janus Agrees To Bolstered Trian, General Catalyst Proposal

    Janus Henderson said Tuesday it has agreed to a higher cash offer from Trian Fund Management and General Catalyst Group following its review of a competing proposal from Victory Capital Management.

  • March 24, 2026

    Audit Watchdog Floats Package For Small Biz Growth

    Britain's accounting regulator disclosed plans on Tuesday to support the growth of small and midsized businesses in the U.K. by cutting back on red tape.

  • March 24, 2026

    Odey Regrets Coming Across To Staff As 'Creepy Old Man'

    Crispin Odey said on Tuesday that he regrets coming across to young receptionists as a "creepy old man," as his challenge to a ban and fine of £1.8 million ($2.4 million) for thwarting an internal probe into sexual misconduct allegations continues.

  • March 24, 2026

    NCA, Police Arrest 557 In Anti-Fraud 'Operation Henhouse'

    Police arrested 557 individuals in February as part of the Operation Henhouse campaign against fraud, coordinated by the National Economic Crime Centre at the National Crime Agency and City of London Police, the NCA said Tuesday.

  • March 24, 2026

    Gateley Guides Medical Supplies Biz On £30M Pension Deal

    A medical supplies company has offloaded £30 million ($40 million) of its pension scheme liabilities to insurer Canada Life in a transaction steered by Gateley Legal.

  • March 24, 2026

    Bank Of London Fined £2M For Misleading Capital Claims

    The Bank of England said Tuesday that it has fined Bank of London £2 million ($2.7 million) for failing to act with integrity and misleading the regulator on its capital holdings, which included providing several fabricated documents.

  • March 24, 2026

    WTW Unit Plans To Launch Retirement CDC Pension Program

    Willis Towers Watson's LifeSight said on Tuesday that it plans to launch a retirement collective defined contribution program once government legislation goes live.

  • March 24, 2026

    M&A, Deregulation Bring Reset To UK Asset Management

    Consolidation of the asset management sector is ramping up as U.S. firms seek access to the domestic market and U.K. watchdogs loosen regulation in line with government-mandated pro-growth policies, which is expected to accelerate a spurt in dealmaking.

  • March 23, 2026

    Four Men Convicted Of Duping Investors Out Of Millions

    Four men accused of defrauding investors out of millions of dollars in get-rich-quick schemes have been convicted of fraud and money laundering, prosecutors said Monday.

  • March 23, 2026

    Modi Owes $10M For Diamond Firm Loans, Bank Of India Says

    Bank of India told a London court on Monday that jewelry magnate Nirav Modi has failed to pay it $10.7 million after he guaranteed to cover loans to his diamond company.

  • March 23, 2026

    FCA Issues Key Guidance For Firms Offering Targeted Support

    The Financial Conduct Authority outlined on Monday factors that financial services firms must consider when they create "consumer segments" to whom they can make tailored product recommendations under the "targeted support" regime.

  • March 23, 2026

    FCA Opens Its Data To Palantir In Fraud Crackdown

    The Financial Conduct Authority said Monday that it will give Palantir Technologies Inc. access to its regulatory data as part of its efforts to crack down on financial crime by using artificial intelligence as a resource. 

  • March 23, 2026

    Watchdog Tweaks Reserve Rules For Largest Pension Funds

    The Pension Regulator has overhauled its capital reserve rules for the £200 billion ($268 billion) master trust sector in a bid to fuel investment in the economy.  

  • March 23, 2026

    Targeted Co. Calls For Safeguards Against Activist Investors

    Edinburgh Worldwide Investment Trust urged the Financial Conduct Authority on Monday to review the regulatory framework to ensure stronger safeguards for the independence of boards, conflicts of interests and related-party transactions.

  • March 20, 2026

    Misconduct Reports To FCA Double In Number Since 2020

    The number of reports the FCA has received about misconduct by financial services firms has more than doubled in the last five years, law firm Littler has said.

  • March 20, 2026

    UBS Gets Final OCC Nod For US Arm To Be National Bank

    The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency has granted final approval for UBS Group AG to convert its U.S. depository subsidiary into a national bank, a move the Swiss banking giant is touting as a boon for its stateside growth ambitions.

  • March 20, 2026

    FCA Halts Co.'s Operations Due To Manager's 10-Year Ban

    The U.K.'s finance regulator said Friday that it had ordered a consumer credit company to stop operating and to return funds to clients, saying it found that a senior manager at the company had been banned from running a company for a decade.

  • March 20, 2026

    OneCoin Investors Agree To Lift Financier's Asset Freeze  

    Investors pursuing litigation over the alleged $4 billion OneCoin cryptocurrency fraud have struck a deal to lift a worldwide freezing order against a British financier. 

  • March 20, 2026

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

    The past week in London has seen an ex-professional footballer revive a dispute with Charles Russell Speechlys, Virgin Media face a group data protection claim after hundreds of thousands of customers' personal details were exposed online for months, and Mishcon de Reya sued by a real estate private equity firm founded by a former Morgan Stanley executive.

  • March 20, 2026

    MFS Faces FCA Probe After Collapse With £1B Debts

    The City watchdog said Friday that it has launched an enforcement investigation into Market Financial Solutions Ltd., a U.K. provider of property loans that collapsed in February with debts of more than £1 billion ($1.3 billion).  

  • March 20, 2026

    Ombudsman Poised To Take Consumer Duty Power From FCA

    Pending legislative reforms to the Financial Ombudsman Service could hand the dispute-arbitrator power to assess whether businesses have complied with the consumer duty and other broad rules set by the Financial Conduct Authority, regulatory lawyers say.

  • March 20, 2026

    FCA Warns Pension Sector Over New Transfer Demands

    The Financial Conduct Authority warned pension administrators Friday to be ready for a surge of inquiries on savings transfers when groundbreaking new online portals go live.

  • March 20, 2026

    Adviser Can't Get Success Fee For Fund's €150M Investment

    A London court dismissed a real asset advisory firm's claim that the founder of an investment fund owes it a success fee for helping secure a €150 million ($173 million) seed investment, finding on Friday that no such agreement ever existed.

  • March 20, 2026

    Upper House Strips Pensions Bill Of Investment Mandate

    The House of Lords has voted to remove a controversial measure from forthcoming pensions legislation mandating that retirement plans commit to certain investments, a step criticized as government overreach by the political opposition and the financial sector.

  • March 19, 2026

    EU Insurers Want Stripped-Down Financial Services Regs

    European policymakers must introduce a "focused, high-impact simplification agenda" that would strip out a string of superfluous and overlapping regulations hindering the competitiveness of the bloc, an insurance trade body has said.

Expert Analysis

  • A Look At Factors Affecting Ombudsman Complaint Trends

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    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.

  • What To Know About FCA's Short Selling Regime Proposals

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    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.

  • How BoE Stablecoin Proposals May Reshape UK Payments

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    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.

  • Why EU's FDI Screening Proposals Require Careful Balance

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    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.

  • OFSI Proposals Signal Greater Focus On Enforcement Activity

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    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.

  • How Restructuring Reforms Will Streamline Insolvency Plans

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    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.

  • How 2nd Circ. Decision Extends CFTC's Extraterritorial Reach

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    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.

  • EBA Proposals Signal Overhaul Of EU 3rd-Party Risk Rules

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    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.

  • FCA Proposals Reduce Consumer Duty Compliance Burden

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    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.

  • How New Companies House ID Rules Affect Businesses

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    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.

  • What EU Securitization Proposals Signal For Risk Transfers

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    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.

  • Role Of UK Investment Act Is Evolving In M&A Deals

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    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.

  • What To Know About EU's Reimposition Of Sanctions On Iran

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    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.

  • FCA Crypto Proposals Herald Tougher Oversight For Firms

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    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.

  • EU Investment Reporting Rules Letup Signals Pragmatic Shift

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    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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