Financial Services UK

  • May 05, 2026

    CMS, Squire Patton Guide Food Co. On £160M Pension Buy-In

    Bakkavor Foods Ltd. has completed a £160 million ($217 million) full scheme buy-in with its pension program, securing the retirement benefits of the plan's 2,216 members, U.K. pensions insurer Rothesay said Tuesday.

  • May 05, 2026

    Duane Morris Hires Clyde & Co. Corporate Trio In London

    Duane Morris LLP said Tuesday that it has hired a team of three lawyers from Clyde & Co. LLP to help rebuild the firm's corporate practice in London following attrition from retirements.

  • May 02, 2026

    Strait Of Hormuz Closure Hits UK With Energy Benchmark Fight

    Mercuria is suing the Baltic Exchange in London over losses it said are linked to an allegedly distorted key shipping benchmark that failed to reflect the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, marking the first major litigation in the U.K. to arise from the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran.

  • May 01, 2026

    Barclays Adds Ex-SEC Official From WilmerHale As New GC

    Barclays said Friday that it has hired a new general counsel who brings expertise as former vice chair and chair of WilmerHale's financial services department, along with years of financial and regulatory experience as a director at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

  • May 01, 2026

    FCA's Contested Car Finance Redress Hits Roadblocks

    Legal challenges to the Financial Conduct Authority's motor finance redress scheme fired off this week to the Upper Tribunal will lead to long delays, with some legal experts already doubting whether the cases can be argued successfully.

  • May 01, 2026

    UK Leads OECD In Taxing Wealth, Think Tank Says

    The U.K. raises more revenue from taxes on wealth than any other country in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, and implementing a wealth tax wouldn't generate as much money as existing levies, a think tank said in a report published Friday.

  • May 01, 2026

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

    The past week in London has seen a Swiss energy trader bring a Financial List claim against shipping benchmarking company Baltic Exchange, law firm Slater and Gordon sued by a former client, Slack and Salesforce hit Microsoft with an antitrust claim, and Stephen Fry bring a personal injury claim after he broke bones falling off a stage. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.

  • May 01, 2026

    Lender Wins Payout From Law Firm Over Botched Pub Loan

    A lender has won a £578,000 ($787,000) claim against its former solicitors after a London court found that the law firm failed to properly check and explain risks tied to a loan secured against two London pubs. 

  • May 01, 2026

    Pension Deals May See Price Shift In Reinsurance Crackdown

    Insurers could be forced to hike prices for bulk purchase annuity deals as a result of a crackdown by regulators on risky forms of offshore reinsurance, analysts said Friday.

  • May 01, 2026

    Tony Blair Think Tank Floats Radical UK Pensions Shake-Up

    The government must ditch the triple lock and radically reform the wider state pension system, a think tank said Friday.

  • May 01, 2026

    Johnson Matthey Beats Fraud Claim Over £325M Pharma Deal

    Johnson Matthey defeated on Friday a claim that it acted fraudulently in the £325 million ($444 million) sale of one of its pharmaceutical businesses, despite a finding by a London court that the chemicals business had failed to disclose to the buyer significant details about the transaction.

  • May 01, 2026

    FCA Clears Verdane's £186M London Fintech Acquisition

    Britain's financial regulator has approved Swedish investor Verdane Fund Manager AB's £185.7 million ($253 million) acquisition of Augmentum Fintech, the venture capital trust said Friday.

  • May 01, 2026

    FCA Vows Robust Defense Of Car Finance Redress In Court

    The Financial Conduct Authority said on Friday that it will mount a robust defense of its £7.5 billion ($10.2 billion) motor finance redress scheme against four legal challenges so far from lenders and a consumer group.

  • May 01, 2026

    Santander Completes £2.9B TSB Bank Acquisition

    Banco Santander SA said Friday it has finalized its £2.86 billion ($3.9 billion) acquisition of TSB from Banco de Sabadell, in one of the biggest deals in Britain's banking sector in years.

  • April 30, 2026

    FRC To Set Tougher Audit Standards On Fraud Risks

    The Financial Reporting Council published its final revision on Thursday to incoming auditing standards for assessing the risk of fraud and a company's ability to keep operating in the foreseeable future, highlighting a demand for greater transparency in audit reporting.

  • April 30, 2026

    FCA Charges Ex-Mortgage Broker For Flouting Ban

    The financial services watchdog hit a former mortgage broker with criminal charges on Thursday over allegations that he was arranging mortgage contracts after being banned.

  • April 30, 2026

    SoftBank Unit Says Ex-Directors Duped It Into £2.5M Deal

    SoftBank Robotics UK has accused two former directors of a firm it co-owned of inflating earnings to trick it into buying their shares, hitting back at their £8 million ($11 million) claim that it wrongly forced them out.

  • April 30, 2026

    Pensions-Backed Schroders Fund Invests £100M Into UK Cos.

    Schroders Capital has said one of its investment vehicles has committed more than £100 million ($135.2 million) of pension capital and government-backed money to a range of British technology and artificial intelligence startups.

  • April 30, 2026

    Imprisoned Oligarch Denied Appeal Over $14B Asset Seizure

    Imprisoned oligarch Ziyavudin Magomedov can't 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, after an appeals court rejected his latest challenge on Thursday.

  • April 30, 2026

    Gov't Vows To Broaden Scope Of Captive Insurance Regime

    The government has said it will introduce reforms to allow existing capital market structures to be used for the U.K.'s planned new captive insurance regime.

  • April 30, 2026

    Lazard To Buy HSF Kramer-Led Campbell Lutyens For $575M

    Lazard Inc. said Thursday that it will buy London-based Campbell Lutyens for $575 million to create a global private capital advisory unit.

  • April 29, 2026

    Ex-Jusan COO Claims He Blew Whistle On Embezzlement

    A former executive at Jusan Technologies, the British financial services holding company, is accusing the company of withholding money he was owed because of his whistleblowing on embezzlement.

  • April 29, 2026

    More UK Businesses Face Crisis Over Taxes, War, Report Says

    The number of U.K. businesses near collapse increased by almost 37% with rising taxes ahead of the economic fallout of the Iran war, an insolvency firm warned in a report Wednesday.

  • April 29, 2026

    Solicitor Fined Over £237M LC&F Mini-Bond Scheme Conflict

    A senior solicitor has been fined by a tribunal over an "obvious" conflict of interest by serving as both a bondholder trustee and as a legal adviser to a firm behind a collapsed £237 million ($320 million) mini-bond scheme that defrauded investors.

  • April 29, 2026

    Mercedes, VW Challenge FCA's £7.5B Motor Finance Plan

    Mercedes-Benz and Volkswagen have joined a group of four other entities challenging the lawfulness of the Financial Conduct Authority's £7.5 billion ($10 billion) motor finance redress system.

Expert Analysis

  • What UK Procurement Act Delay Will Mean For Stakeholders

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    The Procurement Act 2023’s delay until February 2025 has sparked debate among contracting authorities and suppliers, and the Labour Party’s preference for a broader reform package demonstrates the challenges involved in implementing legislative changes where there is a change in government, say lawyers at Shoosmiths.

  • How Energy Scheme Is Affecting Large Co. Fund Investment

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    The latest phase of the Department of Energy and Climate Change's Energy Savings Opportunity Scheme implicates funds with investments in large companies by establishing significant and complex changes to the reporting cycle for mandatory assessments, say lawyers at Macfarlanes.

  • How Companies House Enforcement Powers Are Growing

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    Companies House's recently increased ability to assess what material is submitted to the U.K. register of companies, and to proportionately enforce where violations have occurred, may require some degree of cultural shift within many companies, say lawyers at Greenberg Traurig.

  • How New Sanctions Office Will Affect UK Trade Landscape

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    The recent launch of the Office of Trade Sanctions Implementation will help to create a more comprehensive civil enforcement terrain, but the potential for multiple investigations means businesses should reassess their systems to ensure they do not inadvertently incur civil liability, says Julia Pearce at Robertson Pugh.

  • FCA Savings Update Focuses On Good Customer Outcomes

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    The Financial Conduct Authority’s recent cash savings update emphasizes its expectations of firms to deliver fair value to consumers by documenting the rationale for actions at each stage, considering customer communications and demonstrating that potential harms are acted upon, say Matt Handfield, Charlotte Rendle and Caroline Hunter-Yeats at Simmons & Simmons.

  • 5 Takeaways From UK Justices' Arbitration Jurisdiction Ruling

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    The U.K. Supreme Court's recent judgment in UniCredit Bank v. RusChemAlliance, upholding an injunction against a lawsuit that attempted to shift arbitration away from a contractually designated venue, provides helpful guidance on when such injunctions may be available, say attorneys at Fladgate.

  • FCA's Broad Proposals Aim To Protect Customer Funds

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    The Financial Conduct Authority’s proposed changes to payments firms’ safeguarding requirements, with enhanced recordkeeping and fund segregation, seek to bolster existing regulatory provisions, but by introducing a statutory trust concept to cover customers’ assets, represent a set of onerous rules, says Matt Hancock at Greenberg Traurig.

  • Takeaways From Upcoming Payment Fraud Delay Legislation

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    Lawyers at Hogan Lovells discuss what to know about new legislation that will allow payment service providers to delay payments when third-party fraud is suspected, and share pointers for providers to consider ahead of the Oct. 30 effective date.

  • Modernizing UK Trade Settlement Standard: The Road Ahead

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    Andrew Tsang and Tom Bacon at BCLP consider the rationale and challenges of a potential U.K. trade settlement acceleration, part of an initiative to modernize the financial market infrastructure, and suggest that incorporating distributed ledger technology as a synchronized recording system would facilitate the move.

  • Analyzing The Implications Of 1st FCA Crypto ATM Crackdown

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    The Financial Conduct Authority’s recent criminal prosecution of Olumide Osunkoya, its first enforcement action against a crypto-asset trading firm's owner, is an unambiguous sign of the regulator’s commitment to actively pursue transgressors, but may be a hindrance to the U.K. crypto industry, says Asim Arshad at Lawrence Stephens.

  • Draft Merger Control Guidance Allows CMA To Cast Wide Net

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    The Competition and Markets Authority's recent draft merger control guidance, reflecting the regulator's strengthened powers under the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumer Act, introduces extensive change and potential procedural improvements, specifically concerning reviews of private equity firms, say lawyers at Travers Smith.

  • Key Points From Cayman's Beneficial Ownership Regime

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    While recent expansion of the Cayman Islands Beneficial Ownership Act's scope means it now encompasses many entities with previously minimal obligations, the changes ensure a welcome level playing field with workable alternative routes to compliance, says Lucy Frew at Walkers Global.

  • HMRC Transfer Pricing Guide A Vital Resource For Businesses

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    HM Revenue & Customs' recent guidelines on common transfer pricing compliance risks should be required reading for affected businesses in indicating HMRC's expected benchmark for documents and policies, say Tomoko Ikawa and Kapisha Vyas at Simmons & Simmons.

  • Insights From FRC's Report On Good Corporate Governance

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    Although the Financial Reporting Council’s recent report on private companies opting to follow the Wates principles has identified improvements, it is important for organizations to provide transparent disclosures and avoid boilerplate, tickbox filings, says Tessa Hastie at BCLP.

  • What To Know About The UK Overseas Funds Regime

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    The U.K.’s overseas funds regime is now open for applications, providing a simplified way of offering a foreign fund to U.K. retail investors, and the Financial Conduct Authority's clear policy statement on implementation should ease the transition process from the existing scheme, say lawyers at Dechert.

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