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Financial Services UK
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June 11, 2025
37% Of Romania Cos. Fall Short On EU Reporting Standard
Almost 40% of businesses filing public country-by-country reports in Romania are failing to fully comply with the European Union's reporting standard, according to a report by a nonprofit organization.
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June 11, 2025
UBS Sues Chelsea Group For $20.6M Over Greensill Deal
UBS' asset management unit has brought a $20.6 million claim in an English court against three companies in a Cyprus-based group alleging unpaid debt resulting from a supply chain finance deal with the now-defunct Greensill Capital.
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June 11, 2025
Accountant Gets Maternity Bias Payout Boosted To £32K
A property development company must pay its former accountant £31,900 ($43,200) for maternity discrimination after she won her appeal against an initial figure of £5,000, a tribunal has ruled.
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June 11, 2025
EU Lawmakers Urged To Boost Share Settlement Competition
A trade body for financial institutions in Europe has asked lawmakers to prioritize making clearing and settlement service more competitive in plans to integrate and grow European Union capital markets.
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June 11, 2025
FCA Warns Financial Advisers Of Retirement Advice Failings
The City watchdog said Wednesday that it has found that companies providing retirement income advice are failing to record clients' financial situations or revisit their attitude to risk in a thematic review.
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June 11, 2025
Nearly 80% Of Trustees Plan To Access Pension Surplus
More than three-quarters of retirement savings plan trustees have said they are planning to use new powers floated by the government that will allow them to distribute surpluses tied up in their schemes, a consultancy has said.
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June 10, 2025
Innsworth Seeks Review Of £200M Mastercard Settlement Split
Litigation funder Innsworth announced Tuesday it was launching a High Court challenge to how the Competition Appeal Tribunal decided to distribute a £200 million ($270 million) settlement reached between Mastercard and Walter Merricks to end litigation over credit card fees.
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June 10, 2025
CMS Faces £10M Negligence Claim Over Investec Debt Advice
A property developer has alleged that law firm CMS owes him at least £10 million ($14 million) for negligent advice concerning a debt-restructuring plan that he says he never would have agreed to if he had been given proper warning.
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June 10, 2025
Greensill Says He Was Trapped In Katerra Restructuring Deal
Lex Greensill said Tuesday that he was "between a rock and a hard place" in a restructuring deal involving his eponymous firm and SoftBank, a Japanese investment company, as the former banker gave evidence in a $440 million trial in London of a claim brought by a collapsed Credit Suisse fund.
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June 10, 2025
UK Treasury Committee Warns HMRC Over Phishing Attack
A British treasury committee warned HM Revenue & Customs in a letter published Tuesday that its failure to report details of a breach affecting around 100,000 taxpayers is unacceptable.
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June 10, 2025
Apple, Sony Fight Class Reps Over New Legal Funding Deals
Apple, Visa, Mastercard and Sony told the Court of Appeal Tuesday that funding agreements driving multiple competition class action claims in the U.K. are unlawful and unenforceable.
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June 10, 2025
Insolvency Service Hires Crypto-Specialist To Aid Recoveries
A U.K. government agency responsible for investigating company insolvencies has appointed its first crypto-specialist to help recover digital assets such as bitcoin for creditors.
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June 10, 2025
Expanding FCA Taps Ex-Crime Agency Exec As Deputy CEO
The Financial Conduct Authority said Tuesday that it has appointed Sarah Pritchard, a qualified litigator and former director of the National Economic Crime Centre, as deputy chief executive to handle its expanding remit.
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June 10, 2025
FCA's Rathi Tries To Gauge Gov't Risk Appetite For Crypto
The Financial Conduct Authority warned a cross-party group of MPs on Tuesday it needed a steer on the government's risk appetite for crypto-assets amid the push for U.K. competitiveness and economic growth.
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June 10, 2025
Ex-Sky Sports Host Gets 11-Year Director Ban Over £10M Debt
Former Sky Sports presenter Alan Bentley has been banned from running companies for 11 years after his football betting business collapsed with debts to investors of more than £10 million ($13.5 million), the Insolvency Service revealed Tuesday.
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June 10, 2025
FCA Unveils Rules For Private Stock Market Launch
The Financial Conduct Authority set out rules on Tuesday for its world-first regulated stock market for private companies in the latest bid by Britain to boost growth and provide alternatives to London's ailing equity capital market.
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June 09, 2025
Media Biz Chair Who Misled Investors Told To Buy Out Shares
The chairman of a media company has been ordered to buy out a minority shareholder after a London appeals court said Monday that he had deliberately deceived investors about his attempts to work towards selling the company.
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June 09, 2025
Lex Greensill Claims SoftBank Hid Deal With 'Code Of Silence'
Lex Greensill testified in a $440 million London trial Monday that SoftBank, a Japanese investment company, had designed a restructuring agreement involving his firm to avoid putting potential losses on its accounts in his first public appearance since his eponymous firm's collapse.
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June 09, 2025
Investment Biz CEO Hit For £2.8M Over Exec's Drinks Loan
A former executive at a U.S. subsidiary of a London investment fund is suing the firm and its founder for about $3 million after they allegedly failed to repay a short-term loan to cover the costs of the company's investment in a drinks company.
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June 09, 2025
Ex-Commerzbank Analyst Denies Faking Sex Assault Claims
A former Commerzbank analyst on Monday fought claims that he lied to a court by making false sexual assault allegations in his failed harassment case against the bank, telling a London court he was being truthful.
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June 09, 2025
UK Leads Europe On FDI In Financial Services, EY Says
The U.K. continues to be Europe's most attractive destination for foreign direct investment into financial services, despite a drop in the number of projects across the region, Ernst & Young said on Monday.
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June 09, 2025
FCA Proposes Reporting Changes For Fund Managers
The Financial Conduct Authority has proposed that it will reduce requirements for U.K. fund managers on how they report on value for investors, a move that would enable significant cost cuts.
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June 09, 2025
Broking Group Howden Buys Peruvian Reinsurance Biz
Howden Group said Monday that it has bought Peruvian reinsurance broker Innova Re, marking a further broadening of the insurance broking giant's footprint in Latin America.
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June 09, 2025
FCA, NVIDIA Team Up To Launch AI Testing Sandbox
The Financial Conduct Authority said Monday it will launch a supercharged sandbox in collaboration with multinational technology company NVIDIA to help firms experiment safely with artificial intelligence to support innovation.
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June 06, 2025
Reality TV Gallery Owner Gets 2½ Years On Terrorism Charges
An art gallery owner and reality TV art expert was sentenced to over two years' imprisonment at a London criminal court on Friday for failing to report his suspicions when selling around £140,000 ($189,400) worth of art to a suspected terrorist financier.
Expert Analysis
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Exploring The EU's Draft Standards On Crypto Authorization
The European Securities and Markets Authority’s recently published draft standards aim to promote fair competition and a safer environment for crypto providers and investors, detailing precisely the information to be provided to national authorities in charge of screening the acquisitions of a qualifying holding, says Mathieu de Korvin at Norton Rose.
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How FCA Guidance Aligns With Global Cyberattack Measures
The U.K. Financial Conduct Authority’s recent guidance on preparing for cyberattacks aligns with the global move by financial regulators to focus on operational resilience, highlighting the importance of proactive strategies and robust resilience frameworks to mitigate disruptions, while observing a disappointing level of engagement by the industry, say Alix Prentice and Grace Ncube at Cadwalader.
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Takeaways From Regulators' £61.6M Citigroup Trading Fine
Following the Financial Conduct Authority and Prudential Regulation Authority’s recent significant fining of Citigroup for its catastrophic trading error, and with more enforcement likely, institutions should update their controls and ensure system warnings do not become routine and therefore disregarded, says Abdulali Jiwaji at Signature Litigation.
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Factors For London Cos. To Consider If Adding US Listings
Recent reports of a continuing valuation gap between London and New York have resulted in some London-listed companies considering U.S. listings to gain an increased investor base, but with various obligations and implications involved in such a move, organizations should consider whether there is a real benefit from trading there, say lawyers at Winston & Strawn.
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Assessing The Energy Act 2023, Eight Months On
Although much of the detail required to fully implement the Energy Act 2023 remains to be finalized, the scale of change in the energy sector is unprecedented, and with the U.K. prioritizing achieving net-zero, it is likely that developments will continue at pace, say lawyers at Paul Hastings.
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Opinion
Why Timing Makes UK Libor Judgments Controversial
The recent U.K. Court of Appeal decision in the R v. Hayes and Palombo appeal against Libor convictions demonstrates that had U.K. regulators probed with the facts known today, civil claims in all jurisdictions would be dismissed and a decadelong wasted investigation should be put to rest, says Charles Kuhn at Clyde & Co.
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Tips For Orgs Using NDAs In Light Of New UK Legislation
The recent passage of the Victims and Prisoners Act follows a crackdown on the misuse of nondisclosure agreements, but although NDAs are not prohibited and regulators recognize their legitimate justification, organizations relying on them must be able to clearly explain that justification if challenged, say attorneys at Macfarlanes.
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What Alternative Fuel Proposals Mean For EU Infrastructure
The European Union’s proposed Alternative Fuels Infrastructure Facility, covering activities in the transport sectors supporting the decarbonization process, sets ambitious standards regarding the deployment of adequate supply infrastructure and offers new funding opportunities for port operators and shipowners, says Christian Bauer at Watson Farley.
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Continuation Funds: What You Need To Know
As the continuation fund market matures, the structure and terms of these transactions have become increasingly complex, presenting challenges that should be carefully navigated by participants to ensure a successful transaction process, say lawyers at Skadden.
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EU Anti-Greenwashing Guide Analyzed For Fund Managers
Anna Maleva-Otto and Matthew Dow at Schulte Roth explain how the European Securities and Markets Authority’s new guidelines on sustainability-related terms in fund names aim to protect European Union investors from unsubstantiated claims, and how they provide quantifiable criteria for determining which terms can be used to promote their funds.
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FCA 'Finfluencer' Trial Exposes Social Media Promo Risks
The upcoming Financial Conduct Authority prosecution of nine individuals for Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 violations is the first time an online influencer will be tried for using social media to promote investments, demonstrating the need to be wary of the specific legal requirements surrounding financial product promotion, says David Claxton at Red Lion.
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A Look At US-EU Consumer Finance Talks' Slow First Steps
The unhurried and informal nature of planned discussions between the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the European commissioner for justice and consumer protection suggests any coordinated regulatory action on issues like AI and "buy now, pay later" services is still a ways off, say attorneys at DLA Piper.
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FCA Doubles Down On New Priorities With Target ID Plan
Respondents to the Financial Conduct Authority’s recent consultation on its plan to publicly name subjects under investigation are concerned that the regulator’s cost-benefit analysis has not adequately considered the risks, but the FCA is holding firm, and it seems likely the changes will be implemented, says James Tyler at Peters & Peters.
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Examining Senior Managers' Accountability For AI Use
With the Financial Conduct Authority's artificial intelligence update and the Prudential Regulation Authority’s letter to the government offering key guidance on the Senior Managers and Certification Regime, Senior Managers in these organizations need to show they have taken steps to prevent breaching requirements in order not to be held personally accountable, says Jennifer Holyoake at DLA Piper.
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FCA Brokerage Changes Offer Asset Managers Wider Options
The Financial Conduct Authority’s fast-tracked plan to lift its controversial ban on joint payments to broker-dealers for third-party services will be welcomed by many asset managers wishing to return to a soft commission structure, say Richard Frase and Simon Wright at Dechert.