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Financial Services UK
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March 31, 2025
'Still Early Days': A Litigation Funder Stays Optimistic
As part of a series of interviews with lawyers, class representatives and litigation-funders to mark the 10-year anniversary of the collective proceedings order regime, Law360 spoke to Neil Purslow of Therium Capital Management about the future of litigation funding for CPOs in the wake of the Supreme Court's PACCAR ruling.
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March 31, 2025
Bank Says Caribbean Decision Blocks £415M VAT Fraud Case
A Caribbean bank argued in court Monday it could not be sued in England over a £415 million ($537 million) value-added tax fraud, because the matter had already been resolved by a judgment in Curaçao.
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March 31, 2025
Trade Body Seeks Consumer Duty Slack For Wholesale Banks
A financial services trade body on Monday is pressuring regulators to exempt wholesale banks servicing primarily corporate clients from the Consumer Duty regime to give companies easier access to capital.
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March 31, 2025
Lloyds Bank Covers £5.1B Pension Liabilities With Rothesay
The trustee of two Lloyds Banking Group pension schemes said Monday it has penned two insurance policies totaling £5.1 billion ($6.6 billion) with Rothesay Life PLC to cover the cost of unexpected increases in the life expectancy of their members.
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March 31, 2025
BoE Proposes Raising Deposit Protection Scheme Limit
The regulatory arm of the Bank of England set out proposals on Monday to raise the deposit protection limit of the Financial Services Compensation Scheme from £85,000 ($110,000) to £110,000, warning banks that they should prepare now.
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March 31, 2025
Akin Appoints White & Case Lawyer For Middle East Boost
Akin has hired Jennifer Riddle from White & Case as a project finance partner, a move it believes will bolster its growth plans for the Middle East.
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March 28, 2025
VistaJet Escapes VC Fund's Claim Over Investment Deal
A private jet company owner escaped allegations from a Guernsey venture capital fund that he secretly set up companies to leverage the resources of a business it had invested in, when a London court ruled Friday that the claim came too late.
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March 28, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen sparkling winemaker Nyetimber hit a rival distillery with an intellectual property claim, Newcastle United's former owner Mike Ashley target the club's ex-vice president for damages tied to a fraudulent investment, and a real estate agency file a legal claim against law firm Winston & Strawn LLP. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
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March 28, 2025
'We Didn't Have A Precedent': Lawyers Test New Regime
As part of a series of interviews with lawyers, class representatives and litigation-funders to mark the 10-year anniversary of the collective proceedings order regime, Law360 spoke to Boris Bronfentrinker and Ricky Versteeg — lawyers on opposite sides of the courtroom — about the watershed Mastercard swipe fees case.
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March 28, 2025
Santander Whistleblower Cannot Add FCA Info To Claim
An employment tribunal has rejected a former financial crime policy manager's bid to widen her second whistleblowing claim against Santander to include correspondence with the financial watchdog, ruling that the changes were too fundamental to the basis of her claim.
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March 28, 2025
Wealth Manager Beats €50M Investment Fraud Case
A wealth manager has defeated a €50 million ($54.1 million) investment fraud case brought by an Italian investment vehicle, after a London judge ruled Friday that the losses were the result of "market turmoil" caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.
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March 28, 2025
BoE Proposes To Adjust Capital Buffer For Certain Big Banks
The Bank of England proposed Friday to adjust the levels of asset holdings requiring large domestic banks to provide extra capital, supporting growth but risking financial stability.
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March 28, 2025
UK Pensions Watchdog Pledges To Cut Red Tape
The U.K.'s retirement savings watchdog on Friday committed to cutting the "burden" of unnecessary and outdated financial regulations that could be hampering pension savers' interests.
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March 28, 2025
FCA Tests 'Targeted Support' Model With 12 Finance Firms
The Financial Conduct Authority said Friday it has given 12 companies until April to give targeted support to consumers, an experiment ahead of a new regulatory model that will fill the gap between general guidance and advice for pensions and investments.
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March 27, 2025
Citibank Settles Ex-Exec's Maternity Discrimination Claims
Citibank has agreed to pay £215,000 ($278,000) to a former assistant vice president to settle her claims that the bank discriminated against her when she was passed up for promotion on her return from maternity leave.
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March 27, 2025
'A Challenge We Have To Rise To': Class Reps Take The Stage
Launching a series of interviews with lawyers, class representatives and litigation-funders to mark the 10-year anniversary of the collective proceedings order regime, Law360 spoke to Justin Gutmann and Rachael Kent about how the role of class reps has evolved in the decade since CPOs were introduced
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March 27, 2025
Hayes Thought Libor Submissions Were Legal, Lawyer Argues
Counsel for Tom Hayes urged Britain's top court Thursday to overturn the trader's conviction for rate rigging, arguing his client didn't believe that there was a law "which absolutely prohibits" the consideration of trading advantage when making submissions.
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March 27, 2025
6 Insurers Penned £5B-Plus In Pension Deals In 'Record' 2024
Six insurers wrote over £5 billion ($6.5 billion) each in pension deals for the first time in 2024, Lane Clark & Peacock LLP said Thursday, highlighting a risk transfer market "firing on all cylinders" with new entrants increasing competition.
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March 27, 2025
Russian Pol's Wife Says Sanctions Breach Allegation 'Fantasy'
The wife of a former Russian politician said Thursday during her London trial for allegedly breaching sanctions against her husband that she did not know at the time that the U.K. and EU had separate sanctions regimes.
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March 27, 2025
Former Barclays Exec Fights For £3.5M Deferred Bonus
A former head of credit trading at Barclays has argued that he is owed a £3.5 million ($4.5 million) bonus package after he left the bank and joined a hedge fund following his son's diagnosis with a rare disease.
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March 27, 2025
RPC-Led Stock Market Tracker To Delist From AIM
Stock price provider ADVFN PLC said Thursday that it intends to exit the London Stock Exchange's junior market and go private amid concerns about "significant headwinds" for the broader stock market.
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March 27, 2025
InvestAcc Group To Buy AJ Bell Pension Unit For £25M
Investment platform company AJ Bell said Thursday it will sell its pensions administration arm to InvestAcc Group Ltd. for £25 million ($32.5 million), amid a business restructure.
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March 27, 2025
UK Aims To Boost Competitiveness With Derivative Rule Cuts
Britain's two largest finance watchdogs Thursday proposed extending exemptions to margin requirements to cover unfavorable price movements for traders of some derivatives contracts, looking to keep the U.K. globally competitive.
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March 27, 2025
Warehouse REIT Leans Toward Blackstone's £489M Offer
Warehouse Real Estate Investment Trust PLC, a logistics property company, said Thursday that it is inclined to accept the provisional takeover offer of approximately £489 million ($633 million) made this week by private equity giant Blackstone Inc.
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March 27, 2025
5 Questions For Norton Rose's Global Head Of Corporate
Raj Karia, Norton Rose Fulbright's new global head of corporate, M&A and securities, has spent his entire legal career at the firm after a childhood watching boats on Africa's Lake Victoria propelled him to a training contract with a shipping focus.
Expert Analysis
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What Lawyers Can Learn From FDI Screening Report Findings
The recent European Commission report on the screening of foreign direct investments into the EU reveals how member states need to balance national security concerns with openness, and with more cross-border transactions subject to screening, lawyers must be alert to jurisdictional variances, says Jonathon Gunn at Faegre Drinker.
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UK Review May Lead To Lower Investment Screening Burden
The government’s current review of national security investment screening rules aims to refine the scope of mandatory notifications required for unproblematic deals, and is likely to result in much-needed modifications to minimize the administrative burden on businesses and investors, say lawyers at Simpson Thacher.
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Economic Crime Act Exposure: What Companies Can Expect
The intention of the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act is to make it easier to attribute criminal liability to companies if a senior manager has committed an offense, but the impact on corporate criminal convictions depends on who qualifies as a senior manager and the evidential challenges in showing it, say Hayley Ichilcik and Julius Handler at MoFo.
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FCA Promotions Review Sends A Strong Message To Firms
The recent FCA review into firms' compliance with the rules on promoting high-risk investments to retail clients clarifies that it expects the letter and the spirit of the rules to be followed, and given the interplay with the consumer duty, there are wider implications at stake, say Marina Reason and Chris Hurn at Herbert Smith.
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When Can Bonuses Be Clawed Back?
The High Court's recent decision in Steel v. Spencer should remind employees that the contractual conditions surrounding bonuses and the timing of any resignation must be carefully considered, as in certain circumstances, bonuses can and are being successfully clawed back by employers, say Merrill April and Rachael Parker at CM Murray.
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The State Of UK Litigation Funding After Therium Ruling
The recent English High Court decision in Therium v. Bugsby Property has provided a glimmer of hope for litigation funders about how courts will interpret this summer's U.K. Supreme Court ruling that called funding agreements impermissible, suggesting that its adverse effects may be mitigated, says Daniel Williams at DWF Law.
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UK Shareholding Report A Missed Opportunity For New Tech
The recommendations in the U.K. Digitization Taskforce's recent report on digitizing and improving the U.K. shareholding framework are moderate but not revolutionary, and its failure to recommend digital ledger technology will impede a full transformation of the system, say Tom Bacon and Andrew Tsang at BCLP.
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Tools M&A Deal Makers Can Use To Bridge Valuation Gaps
As macroeconomic headwinds reset valuation expectations, parties to merger and acquisition are increasingly looking to methods such as earnouts, vendor financing and minority transactions to bridge the valuation gap and get deals done, says Philip Herbst at Cleary.
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Navigating The Novel Challenges Facing The Legal Profession
The increasing prominence of ESG and AI have transformed the legal landscape and represent new opportunities for lawyers, but with evolving regulations and the ever-expanding reach of the Solicitors Regulation Authority, law firms should ensure that they have appropriate policies in place to adapt to these challenges, say Scott Ashby and Aimee Talbot at RPC.
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Deal Over Jets Stranded In Russia May Serve As Blueprint
In the face of a pending "mega-trial" over leased airplanes held in Russia after its invasion of Ukraine, a settlement between leading aviation lessor AerCap Holdings NV and NSK, the Russian state-controlled insurance company, could pave the way for similar deals, say Samantha Zaozirny and Timeyin Pinnick at Browne Jacobson.
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Economic Crime Act Brings Changes For Limited Partnerships
The recently passed Economic Crime Act introduces significant financial transparency obligations for new and existing U.K. limited partnerships, and with criminal consequences for noncompliance, a degree of advance consideration is strongly advised, say Amelia Stawpert and Alex Jones at Hogan Lovells.
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ESMA Report Offers A Glimpse At EU's Securitization Future
The European Securities and Markets Authority’s recent overview of the EU securitization sector suggests a growing market for both investors and businesses and offers useful insight into future regulatory priorities, says Alan Bunbury at Matheson.
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What The Auto-Enrollment Law Means For UK Workforce
In a welcome step to enhance retirement savings, the U.K. government is set to extend the automatic enrollment regime by lowering the eligibility age and reducing the lower qualifying earnings limit, but addressing workers' immediate financial needs remains a challenge, says Beth Brown at Arc Pensions.
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UAE Bank Case Offers Lessons On Enforcing Foreign Rulings
The High Court recently clarified in Invest Bank v. El-Husseini that foreign judgment debts may be enforceable in England, despite being unenforceable in their jurisdiction of origin, which should remind practitioners that foreign judgments will be recognized in England if they are final and conclusive in their court of origin, say lawyers at Macfarlanes.
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Revised OECD Guidelines Key In Shaping Business Standards
The OECD’s recent revised guidelines on responsible business conduct, supported by a domestic government agencies’ grievance referral mechanism, have already influenced EU due diligence standards, and enterprises engaging in the unique procedure will benefit from case-specific nuances, parallel proceedings and the availability of confidentiality protections, say lawyers at Debevoise.