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Financial Services UK
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July 24, 2025
Munich Re Can't Nix Private Equity Firm's $491M IPO Claim
Munich Re Group failed Thursday to get a private equity firm's claim of approximately $491 million struck out, after a court found that it couldn't rule out the possibility that the German reinsurer had breached an agreement over the public listing of a U.S. company.
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July 24, 2025
Audit Watchdog Imposed £14.5M In Fines Last Year
Britain's audit watchdog said Thursday it levied £14.5 million ($19.6 million) in fines across a 12-month period ending in March that also saw it wrap the majority of its investigations in a more timely way than ever before.
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July 24, 2025
NCA Seizes £17M Tied To Suspected Illegal China Trades
The National Crime Agency revealed Thursday that a Chinese national has agreed to forfeit money and seven London properties worth £16.7 million ($22.6 million) which the agency suspects are the proceeds of criminal securities trading in China.
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July 24, 2025
Investment Biz Denies Financier's $3.5M Unpaid Loan Claim
An investment company and its director have denied they breached a contract for a $2 million loan issued by a financier for an investment in a drinks business, telling a London court that the money is not yet repayable.
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July 24, 2025
BoE Speeds Up Insurance Vehicle Approvals To Boost Growth
The Bank of England put into force Thursday rules speeding up authorizations for a type of insurer known as special purpose vehicles, slashing related compulsory senior manager applications with immediate effect to boost U.K. growth.
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July 24, 2025
SFO Charges 6 With Fraud Over £75M Pension Investments
The Serious Fraud Office charged six individuals with fraud and money laundering on Thursday over alleged misrepresentations made to investors who poured £75 million ($101 million) from their pensions into self-storage units.
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July 24, 2025
Lloyd's Grants Provisional Approval For South African Insurer
Specialist insurance market Lloyd's of London has granted "in principle" the go-ahead for Santam to launch a syndicate in London, a move the South African company said will fast-track its international growth.
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July 24, 2025
Chesnara Raises £140M To Fund HSBC Life Buy
British pensions company Chesnara PLC said Thursday that it has raised approximately £140 million ($190 million) to partly fund the £260 million acquisition of the specialist life protection and investment bond provider of banking giant HSBC.
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July 24, 2025
Brown & Brown To Buy UK Racehorse Insurance Broker
The European subsidiary of insurance broker Brown & Brown Inc. has agreed to acquire Weatherbys Hamilton LLP, a specialist U.K. broker that offers cover for farms, estates and racehorses.
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July 23, 2025
MPs Call For Gov't Strategy To Fix 'Pensioner Poverty'
A committee of lawmakers called on the government on Thursday to make it easier for people in retirement to claim benefits as the number of older citizens slipping into poverty continues to climb.
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July 23, 2025
PE Firm Says Ex-All Saints Chair In Contempt Over Share Sale
An arm of private equity firm Lion Capital urged a London judge on Wednesday to find the former chairman of All Saints had breached a court order by challenging a deal to sell his shares in the high street fashion chain.
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July 23, 2025
Hayes' Victory Leaves SFO Rate Rigging Convictions In Doubt
The decision by the U.K. Supreme Court to quash the convictions of two former traders accused of manipulating interest rates has opened the door for other bankers to challenge the fairness of their trials, lawyers say.
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July 23, 2025
Student Jailed For Selling Phishing Kits Used In £100M Fraud
A university student who sold more than a thousand phishing kits which were used to commit fraud worth at least £100 million ($135 million) globally has been jailed for seven years, the Crown Prosecution Service said Wednesday.
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July 23, 2025
Deloitte Faces UK Probe Over Glencore Audits
Britain's accounting watchdog said Wednesday that it had started an enforcement investigation into accounting firm Deloitte over audits into Glencore over an eight-year period that partially overlaps with the years the commodities and mining group ran a global bribery scheme.
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July 23, 2025
Jones Day Guides Corpay On $2.2B Alpha Group Acquisition
Jones Day-advised Corpay Inc. said Wednesday it has agreed to acquire Alpha Group International PLC in a deal that values the U.K.-based foreign exchange platform at approximately $2.2 billion (£1.6 billion), following a months-long courtship that included the rejection of a prior Corpay offer.
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July 23, 2025
Credit Suisse Gets Forex Cartel Fine Slashed To €28M
The European Union's General Court reduced on Wednesday a fine imposed on Credit Suisse for its part in a foreign-exchange trading cartel by approximately €54.3 million ($64 million).
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July 23, 2025
Fund Managers Ask EU Watchdog To Simplify Investing Rules
A trade body for European fund managers has urged the EU's financial markets regulator to streamline the "complex and time‑consuming" retail investment process, eliminating burdens that prevent savers from making better investments.
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July 23, 2025
BVI Investor Sues Bahamian Lender Over $18.6M Loan Loss
A British Virgin Islands investment company has alleged that it lost about $18.6 million after a Bahamian lender refused to let the company repay a loan that would have entitled it to redeem shares in a gold miner.
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July 23, 2025
Developer Accuses Payment App Of 'Cynical' Data Theft Claim
A former consultant with a company that provides card payment services to taxi drivers has accused it of "opportunistically" launching a legal claim to stifle his legitimate business, denying he stole proprietary information to develop his system.
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July 23, 2025
FCA Criticizes Firms For Slow Fixes To Reporting Failures
The Financial Conduct Authority warned regulated companies on Wednesday that it has found deficiencies in transaction reporting, with some taking too long to address compliance failings.
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July 23, 2025
Aviva Study Identifies Gender Gap In UK Pension Engagement
Insurance giant Aviva said Wednesday that men are more likely than women to see themselves as the pension planner in their household.
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July 23, 2025
Liquidators Win Bid To Enforce £102M Award Over Hotel Fraud
A businessman will be bound by a £102 million ($138 million) damages bill after he helped a property investor swindle secret profits, Britain's highest court ruled on Wednesday, rejecting his argument that the scheme had not caused financial harm to the defrauded company.
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July 30, 2025
Cooley Adds Ashurst Pro To Boost Tech M&A Practice
Cooley LLP has hired Jonathan Cohen from Ashurst LLP for its mergers and acquisitions practice, as he described his new firm as the "life and soul" of the technology and innovation space.
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July 23, 2025
Top UK Court Overturns Traders' Rate-Rigging Convictions
Britain's highest court quashed on Wednesday the convictions of two former traders imprisoned for interest rate rigging in a landmark decision that could open the door for upending historic prosecutions.
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July 22, 2025
Ex-Soldier Ran £1.3M Investment Ponzi Fraud, Jurors Told
A former British Army rifleman ran a Ponzi investment fraud which raised £1.3 million ($1.7 million) from 238 investors before collapsing, the U.K.'s financial regulator said at the beginning of a London criminal trial Tuesday.
Expert Analysis
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ECB Guide Targets Harmonized Cyber Testing Approach
The European Central Bank’s recently updated guidance for testing organizational resilience against sophisticated cyberattacks is a significant step forward, highlighting the importance of a unified approach to financial sector cybersecurity and alignment with Digital Operational Resilience Act requirements, say Simon Onyons and Nebu Varghese at FTI Consulting.
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Opinion
Prospects For New Fraud Prevention Prosecution Look Slim
With the Labour Party's inherited patchwork of Conservative Party corporate crime legislation for preventing fraud and corruption, the forthcoming Economic Crime Act’s failure to prevent fraud offense is unlikely to be successful in assisting prosecutors bring companies to justice, says Matthew Cowie at Rahman Ravelli.
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What's Next After FCA Drops Troubled 'Name And Shame' Plan
A closer look at the Financial Conduct Authority's recent decision to toss its widely unpopular proposal changing the test for announcing enforcement investigations may reveal how we got here, why the regulator changed course, and where it’s headed next, say lawyers at Hogan Lovells.
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UK Refusal Of US Extradition Request May Set New Standard
The recent U.K. Supreme Court ruling in El-Khouri v. U.S., denying a U.S. extradition request, overturns a long-held precedent and narrows how U.K. courts must decide such requests, potentially signaling a broader reevaluation of U.K. extradition law, say lawyers at Dechert and Kingsley Napley.
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Insights On ESMA's Alternative Investment Fund Consultation
Aaron Mulcahy at Maples Group discusses key points from the European Securities and Markets Authority’s recent consultation on open-ended loan-originating alternative investment funds, highlighting the growth in semi-liquid evergreen funds and explaining ESMA’s proposed standards.
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How UK Supreme Court May Assess Russia Sanctions Cases
In two recent U.K. Supreme Court cases challenging the U.K. Russia sanctions regime, the forthcoming judgments are likely to focus on proportionality and European Convention on Human Rights compatibility, and will undoubtedly influence how future challenges are shaped, says Leigh Crestohl at Zaiwalla.
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New UK Order Offers Welcome Clarity To Crypto Staking Rules
The recently effective Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 Amendment Order clarifies that arrangements for qualifying crypto-asset staking do not amount to a collective investment scheme, and by addressing an issue that curtailed staking activities in the U.K., facilitates the use of that practice, says Andrew Henderson at Goodwin.
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How EU's Anticoercion Tool May Counter New US Tariffs
The never-before-used anticoercion instrument could allow the European Union to respond to the imposition of U.S. tariffs, potentially effective March 12, and gives EU companies a voice in the process as it provides for consultation with economic operators at different steps throughout the procedure, say lawyers at Crowell & Moring.
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Takeaways From BoE Progress Updates On UK Digital Pound
The Bank of England’s recent update on a decision concerning a digital pound indicates that there is scope for innovation in the payments landscape that can help to boost economic growth, while keeping the U.K. firmly in the global conversation on digital currency development, say lawyers at Hogan Lovells.
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Key Themes From New PRA Supervisory Letters
Two recent supervisory letters from the Prudential Regulation Authority outline priorities for international banks and U.K. deposit takers for the year ahead, including the need to strengthen risk culture, manage credit risk and govern data integrity, all of which indicate that banks will face greater regulatory interest in their internal controls, say lawyers at Skadden.
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Banker Remuneration Proposals Could Affect More Than Pay
The Financial Conduct Authority and Prudential Regulation Authority’s pending proposals to reduce banker remuneration restrictions bring obvious personal financial advantages for bankers, but may have repercussions that result in increased scrutiny of bonus payments and wider changes to workplace culture and overall accountability, say lawyers at Fox Williams.
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Rethinking 'No Comment' For Clients Facing Public Crises
“No comment” is no longer a cost-free or even a viable public communications strategy for companies in crisis, and counsel must tailor their guidance based on a variety of competing factors to help clients emerge successfully, says Robert Bowers at Moore & Van Allen.
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EU Report May Influence Regulation Of Decentralized Finance
The European supervisory authorities’ recent report on decentralized finance highlights the major regulatory challenges and increased cybersecurity risks of this ecosystem, and will likely provide useful guidance on how the market could be regulated to limit potential risks for investors, say Hubert de Vauplane and Hugo Bordet at Morgan Lewis.
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Market Infrastructure Regs Aim To Reinvigorate EU Trading
The recently amended European Market Infrastructure Regulation, imposing a requirement on certain financial and nonfinancial institutions to maintain an active EU counterparty account, hopes to incentivize the central clearing of trades, although there are concerns that higher compliance costs will lead to a decrease in competitiveness, say lawyers at McDermott.
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Decoding Arbitral Disputes: Equal Rights Limit State Immunity
The Court of Appeal of England and Wales' recent determination that Spain’s London embassy could not dodge a former U.K.-based employee’s discrimination claims by invoking sovereign immunity reaffirms its position that employment and human rights should come before the privileges of foreign powers, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray’s Inn.