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The following posts provide a snapshot of selected UK, EU and global financial regulatory developments of interest to banks, investment firms, broker-dealers, market infrastructures, asset managers and corporates.
  • HMT consultation response on reforms to OFSI civil enforcement processes
    29 January 2026

    HM Treasury (HMT) has published a consultation response and blog on proposed reforms to the UK Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation's (OFSI) civil enforcement processes. The reforms aim to increase efficiency in resolving enforcement cases and would apply solely to OFSI's civil enforcement powers concerning financial sanctions breaches, including Russia-related designated person asset reporting. They do not apply to criminal enforcement or non-financial sanctions. Following feedback to its July 2025 consultation, the OFSI confirms it will proceed with all proposals but with the following improvements:
    • Additional case assessment guidance, including a new case assessment matrix and a Voluntary Disclosure and Co‑operation discount of up to 30% of the baseline penalty.
    • 20% baseline penalty discount for subjects who settle under the new settlement scheme.
    Read more.
  • UK FCA updates on stablecoin sprint and new cryptoasset regulated activities applications
    28 January 2026

    The UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has published two separate updated webpages:
    • The first updated webpage confirms an extension to the application deadline for those wishing to participate in the stablecoin sprint on 4-5 March and the trade payments roundtable on 15 May. Applications must now be submitted by midnight on 8 February. The FCA will continue to notify applicants of the outcome by 13 February.
    • The second updated webpage confirms that the application period for firms wishing to undertake the new cryptoasset regulated activities will be open from 30 September until 28 February 2027.
  • ESMA MiCAR guidelines published in all official EU languages
    28 January 2026

    The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) has published official translations of its final guidelines under the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCAR) specifying the criteria for assessing the knowledge and competence of staff at crypto-asset service providers (CASPs). The guidelines, first published in July 2025, aim to promote greater convergence in the criteria for assessing the knowledge and competence of staff providing advice or information about crypto-assets or related services and their application. It offers key guidance to help CASPs meet their duty to act in their clients' best interests and to support competent authorities in assessing compliance. The guidelines will apply from 28 July. Competent authorities must notify ESMA by 28 March whether they comply or intend to comply with guidelines or, where relevant, provide ESMA with their reasons for non-compliance. CASPs are not required to report on whether they comply.
    Topic: FinTech
  • UK OFSI and partners crack down on the abuse of cryptoassets
    28 January 2026

    The UK Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation (OFSI) has published a blog confirming that it is working closely with UK law enforcement and regulatory partners to combat the abuse of cryptoassets and associated money laundering activities. OFSI has joined forces with the Crypto Cash Fusion Cell (CCFC), a pilot, multi-agency initiative bringing together the UK National Crime Agency, the Metropolitan Police Service, His Majesty's Revenue and Customs, the UK Financial Conduct Authority, City of London Police and OFSI, to target criminal funds linked to sanctions offences.

    Through this collaboration, OFSI shared detailed intelligence with the CCFC to enable joint working against specific, prioritised targets. This led to action against potential breaches of financial sanctions involving cryptoassets by UK-based individuals. OFSI wants the sector to know that the use of cryptoassets to evade sanctions will be treated no differently to the exploitation of traditional currencies.
  • ESMA signs MoU with the Reserve Bank of India
    27 January 2026

    The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) has announced the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Reserve Bank of India to support cooperation and information‑exchange for the recognition of Indian central counterparties (CCPs). The MoU fulfils the requirement under Article 25 of the European Market Infrastructure Regulation (EMIR) for a cooperation arrangement to be in place between ESMA and the relevant third-country authority whose legal and supervisory frameworks have been recognised as equivalent. This is a step towards restoring EU clearing members' access to Indian CCPs since certain CCPs had their recognition decisions withdrawn in 2022. ESMA also confirms that it will continue discussions with the Securities and Exchange Board of India and the International Financial Services Centres Authority with a view to establishing similar cooperation arrangements.
  • UK FCA call for input on the long-term impact of AI on retail financial services
    27 January 2026

    The UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has announced the launch of "The Mills Review", led by Sheldon Mills, the Executive Director of the FCA, looking at how advanced AI, including generative and agentic systems, could influence consumers, retail financial markets and firms by 2030. Accompanying the press release, the FCA published a call for input seeking views on four areas: (i) the future evolution of AI technologies, including the development of more autonomous and agentic systems; (ii) the future impact on markets and firms, including the changes to competition and market structure and UK competitiveness; (iii) the impact for consumers, including how consumers will be influenced by AI but also influence financial markets through new expectations; and (iv) how regulators may need to evolve to ensure that retail financial markets continue to work well. While wholesale markets and broader societal markets remain out of scope, any relevant indirect influences to retail financial services will be considered. Feedback will inform recommendations to the FCA Board in the summer, ahead of an external publication. The deadline for comments is 24 February.
  • UK FCA expectations of firms preparing for T+1 settlement transition
    26 January 2026

    The UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has updated its webpage on T+1 settlement to set out actions it expects firms to take this year to update their systems and processes, and test those changes by year-end. This includes implementing and testing changes to operational systems and processes, agreements with third party providers and counterparty arrangements. The FCA also advises firms to implement appropriate automation to increase processing capacity, support quicker settlement and strengthen resilience during periods of high volumes or market stress. In parallel, the T+1 Accelerated Settlement Taskforce published a final quarterly review of 2025, including updates on readiness and the path ahead in 2026.
  • EC call for evidence on action plan for fighting online fraud
    26 January 2026
    The European Commission has issued a call for evidence on its forthcoming action plan to combat online fraud committed through the use of technology (whether online or by telephone). The initiative seeks to build on existing frameworks which already establish comprehensive anti-fraud measures, including the Payment Services Directive, the Instant Payments Regulation and the Digital Services Act. The plan aims to reduce the occurrence and impact of online fraud across the EU by reinforcing coordination, enhancing victim support and improving cross-border and multi-stakeholder cooperation. Its primary objective is to establish a more integrated approach to tackling online fraud. This includes strengthening the EU's 'follow-the-money' approach for detecting, tracing and disrupting fraud proceeds that are channelled through payment accounts, e-money and increasingly, crypto-asset transfers, leveraging EU requirements on supplying accompanying information with transfers of funds and certain crypto-assets. The deadline for feedback is 13 February.
  • AMLA data collection exercise to test risk assessment models for the financial sector
    26 January 2026

    The EU Authority for Anti‑Money Laundering and Countering the Financing of Terrorism (AMLA) has announced a data‑collection exercise expected in March to test and calibrate its risk‑assessment models. These models will inform the 2027 selection of up to 40 entities for AMLA's direct supervision beginning in 2028 and support consistent money laundering risk assessments by supervisors across the EU. The exercise, conducted with national supervisors and the private sector, will involve both financial institutions potentially eligible for direct supervision and a representative sample of entities likely to remain nationally supervised. National supervisors of both groups have been notified by the AMLA of those selected to participate in the exercise. After validating and calibrating the models in full, AMLA will finalise the list of eligible entities for direct supervision. In early 2027, national supervisors will collect data from those entities to inform AMLA's final supervisory selection. AMLA also published an accompanying explainer on its direct supervision framework, available here.
  • UK FCA consults on rules and guidance for regulated cryptoasset activities (part II)
    23 January 2026

    The UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has published a second consultation paper (CP26/4) on the application of the FCA handbook for regulated cryptoasset activities. This follows the earlier consultation published in September 2025 (CP25/5) and HM Treasury's draft statutory instrument intended to bring qualifying cryptoasset activities within the scope of the Regulated Activities Order 2001 and under the FCA's remit. The FCA intends to open its authorisation gateway for crypto permissions in September 2026, with the deadline for comments on this consultation being 12 March.

    Read more.
  • The Financial Services and Markets Act 2023 (Commencement No. 12 and Saving Provisions) Regulations 2026
    22 January 2026

    The Financial Services and Markets Act 2023 (Commencement No. 12 and Saving Provisions) Regulations 2026 were published. The Regulations, which were made on 13 January, use powers under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2023 (FSMA 2023) to revoke provisions in the UK Capital Requirements Regulation (UK CRR) and related legislation. They also make saving provisions relating to some of the revoked provisions The Regulations continue the process of revoking certain pieces of retained EU law relating to financial services and restating them into UK domestic law, including through regulator-made rules. You may like to read our article "A boost for UK Financial Services" for further information.

    Specifically:
    • Regulation 2 revokes, on 1 July, certain provisions of Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2016/1646 concerning main indices and recognised exchanges for the purposes of the CRR.
    • Regulation 3 revokes, on 1 January 2027, further provisions of the CRR on prudential requirements for credit institutions and investment firms, and related instruments.
    • Regulations 4 and 5 include extensive saving provisions ensuring continuity for firms by preserving permissions granted under revoked CRR provisions, so that from 1 January 2027 they continue to have effect as permissions under section 138BA FSMA 2000 or the equivalent UK Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) rules. They also include specific rules applying separately to small domestic deposit takers (SDDTs), SDDT consolidation entities and non-SDDT firms.
    Read more.
  • UK regulators publish joint 2025 CBEST thematic report
    21 January 2026

    The Bank of England, UK Prudential Regulation Authority and UK Financial Conduct Authority have published their 2025 annual CBEST thematic report. CBEST is a threat-led penetration testing assessment framework of cyber resilience, helping regulators, firms and financial market infrastructures (FMIs) identify vulnerabilities and take remedial action. This report summarises insights from recent CBEST assessments conducted across firms and FMIs. While it does not introduce any new or additional regulatory expectations, it articulates gaps, some of them foundational, observed in firms' and FMIs' cyber defences.

    Key messages for firms and FMIs to consider include:
    • To reduce the likelihood of severe cyberattacks, firms and FMIs should harden operating systems by patching vulnerabilities and securely configuring key applications.
    • The impact of unauthorised access to sensitive systems and information can be reduced by strengthening credentials management, enforcing strong passwords, considering the use of multi-factor authentication, preventing or detecting insecure credential storage and through appropriate segmentation of networks.
    ​Read more.
  • FSB 2025 resolution report
    21 January 2026

    The Financial Stability Board (FSB) has published its 2025 resolution report outlining global progress in implementing resolution reforms for banks, insurers and financial market infrastructures, and setting priorities to further strengthen global resolution frameworks and crisis preparedness in 2026. The report confirms that foundational resolution frameworks are largely in place and highlights progress of ongoing work to strengthen operational readiness, including the publication of a practices paper on transfer tools, the formation of a task force on bail-in execution and information sharing on funding in resolution. It also provides a summary of results from the resolvability assessments for global systemically important banks (G-SIBs) and central counterparties.

    Looking ahead, the FSB plans to conduct a peer review on public sector backstop funding mechanisms, and to publish a practices paper on funding resolution to support operational planning. The FSB is also planning to launch a strategic review of its crisis preparedness activities. In parallel, the FSB released an updated version of its good practices paper for crisis management groups (CMGs) which was first published in 2021. It identifies good practices that have helped CMGs to enhance their preparedness for the management and resolution of a cross-border financial crisis affecting a G-SIB. The update includes a supplementary note setting out implementation observations following the 2023 bank failures on communication with host authorities not members of a CMG.
  • UK PRA final policy on implementation of Basel 3.1 standards
    20 January 2026

    The UK Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) has published final policy statement PS1/26 on the implementation of the Basel 3.1 standards in the UK, together with associated supervisory statements, statements of policy and updated disclosure and reporting templates in the relevant appendices. Specifically, in this policy statement, the PRA confirms: (i) its one‑year deferral of Basel 3.1 to 1 January 2027 (with the Fundamental Review of the Trading Book internal model approach deferred to 1 January 2028); and (ii) finalises targeted amendments consulted on in 2025, including changes to the market risk framework, clarifications to credit risk, operational risk and output floor provisions, the replacement of certain Capital Requirement Regulation (CRR) definitions (such as probability of default, loss given default and conversion factor) with new PRA Rulebook glossary definitions and the revocation of residual CRR provisions via HM Treasury commencement regulations. 

    Read more.
  • UK PRA final policy on restatement of CRR requirements
    20 January 2026

    The UK Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) has published policy statement PS3/26, setting out the final rules that restate the remaining provisions of the UK Capital Requirements Regulation (CRR) within the PRA Rulebook and associated supervisory materials. Specifically, in this policy statement, the PRA confirms that the near‑final rules issued in PS19/25 (following the 2024 consultation paper CP13/24) have been adopted with only minor, non‑substantive amendments. These amendments include updates required to align with the PRA's final Basel 3.1 rules and the replacement of certain CRR definitions, such as probability of default, loss given default and conversion factor, with new PRA Rulebook glossary definitions. The final rules, together with the associated supervisory statements and statements of policy contained within the appendices, will apply from 1 January 2027. This aligns with the implementation date of Basel 3.1 in the UK.

    Alongside this policy statement, the PRA also published final policy, rules and supervisory expectations relating to Basel 3.1 implementation, retiring the Pillar 2A refined methodology and the final simplified capital regime for SDDTs.
  • UK PRA finalises policy on retiring Pillar 2A refined methodology
    20 January 2026

    The UK Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) has published policy statement PS2/26, finalising its decision to retire the "refined methodology" for Pillar 2A. Alongside this policy statement, the PRA also published final policy, rules and supervisory expectations relating to Basel 3.1 implementation (see updates above and below). Specifically, in this policy statement, the PRA confirms that no changes have been made between the near‑final policy issued in PS18/25 and the final policy, and it will proceed with clarifications to its Pillar 2A approaches for interest rate risk in the banking book and pension obligation risk. The PRA reiterates that the refined methodology will cease to apply from 1 January 2027, aligning with the implementation date of UK's Basel 3.1 standards and the introduction of the simplified capital regime for small domestic deposit takers (SDDTs). From 2027, all firms, including SDDTs, will calculate capital requirements under the Basel 3.1 standardised credit risk approach, rendering the refined methodology obsolete. The appendix to this final policy statement includes corresponding amendments to supervisory statement SS31/15 (on the internal capital adequacy assessment process and the supervisory review and evaluation process), which will also apply from 1 January 2027.

    Read more.
  • UK PRA policy statement on final simplified capital regime for SDDTs
    20 January 2026

    The UK Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) has published a final policy statement PS4/26, finalising the simplified capital regime and additional liquidity simplifications for small domestic deposit takers (SDDTs) and SDDT consolidation entities under the strong and simple framework. The regime for SDDTs, a layer of prudential regulation that will apply to the smallest banks and building societies, has been developed in two phases: Phase 1, which focused on liquidity and disclosure simplifications and was finalised in December 2023; and Phase 2, outlined in the 2025 near-final policy statement and which built on Phase 1 and incorporated feedback from the 2024 consultation.

    Read more.
  • UK FCA and PSR's joint reprioritisation statement on UKPI's cVRP scheme
    20 January 2026

    The UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and the UK Payment Systems Regulator (PSR) have issued a joint prioritisation statement clarifying their enforcement position on the UK Payments Initiative's (UKPI) centralised "access fee" pricing model being developed for commercial variable recurring payments (cVRP). After consulting the Competition Markets Authority (CMA), the regulators confirm that they will not, at this stage, prioritise investigations under Chapter I of the Competition Act 1998 in relation to specific pricing arrangements concerning UKPI's cVRP scheme.

    Read more.
  • UK Treasury Committee report expresses concern over current approach to AI in financial services
    20 January 2026

    The UK Treasury Select Committee has published a report on AI in financial services. The report expresses concerns that the Bank of England, the UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and HM Treasury (HMT) are exposing consumers and the wider financial system to potentially serious harm by maintaining a "wait‑and‑see" approach to AI in financial services. With over 75% of UK financial services firms now using AI, particularly insurers and international banks, the Committee acknowledges the potential benefits to consumers but concludes that regulators are not doing enough to mitigate emerging risks.

    The report recommends that: (i) the Bank of England and the FCA undertake AI‑specific stress testing to build firms' readiness for AI-driven market shocks; (ii) the FCA publishes comprehensive practical AI guidance for firms by year‑end covering: (a) how existing consumer protection rules apply to their use of AI and (b) accountability and the level of assurance expected from senior managers under the Senior Managers and Certification Regime for harm caused through the use of AI; and (iii) by year-end, HMT must designate the major AI and cloud providers as critical third parties for the purposes of the Critical Third Parties Regime. The Committee states it is unclear why HMT has been slow to use the new powers at its disposal, noting that the regime was established over a year ago. It further recommends that the Bank of England's Financial Policy Committee should monitor the regime's progress and, if needed, use its power of recommendation to HMT to ensure swift implementation.
  • EC consults on draft Delegated Regulations supplementing the ESG Rating Regulation
    20 January 2026

    The European Commission (EC) has published two draft Delegated Regulations (dated 16 October) supplementing Regulation (EU) 2024/3005, the environmental, social and governance (ESG) Rating Regulation, on the transparency and integrity of ESG rating activities. The first draft Delegated Regulation concerns the supervisory fees to be charged by the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) to ESG rating providers, setting out the types of fees, the matters for which they are due, the amounts, justifications and payment modalities, as required under Article 42(2) of the ESG Rating Regulation. The second draft Delegated Regulation establishes the procedural framework for ESMA’s imposition of fines and periodic penalty payments on ESG rating providers, specifying rules on rights of defence, conduct of infringement proceedings, access to files by persons to whom a statement of findings has been sent, limitation periods and the collection of fines, pursuant to Article 39(9) of the ESG Rating Regulation. The deadline for feedback on both draft Delegated Regulations is 13 February. The EC expects to adopt both Delegated Regulations during Q1 2026.
  • EBA and AMLA complete handover of AML/CTF mandates
    19 January 2026

    The European Banking Authority (EBA) has announced it has completed the transfer of all anti‑money laundering and counter‑terrorist financing (AML/CTF) mandates to the new Authority for Anti‑Money Laundering and Countering the Financing of Terrorism (AMLA) on 1 January. This transition, part of the EU's broader AML/CTF reform package, ends the EBA's stand‑alone AML/CFT mandate established in 2020 and places AMLA at the centre of a unified European supervisory framework. Key EBA tools and expertise, including the EuReCa database, supervisory insights and risk assessments, have been handed over, with all existing EBA AML/CTF guidelines and standards remaining in force until replaced by AMLA. Under the new regime, AMLA will complete the EU's Single Rulebook, advance supervisory convergence, coordinate the work of financial intelligence units and directly supervise 40 of the most complex financial institutions or groups in the EU. The EBA will continue to address money laundering risk through prudential regulation. The EBA has also published a fact sheet explaining the transition. A formal ESAs–AMLA Memorandum of Understanding was signed in June 2025, which underpins ongoing cooperation and information‑sharing between the authorities.
  • UK FCA letter to trade associations on establishing a Future Entity for open banking
    16 January 2026

    The UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has published a letter (dated 19 December 2025) to trade associations outlining next steps towards establishing the Future Entity (FE) that will serve as the UK's long‑term open banking standards‑setting body. The FCA reflects on progress made in 2025, noting industry collaboration on the multilateral agreement for variable recurring payments (VRP), the creation of the transitional multilateral agreement operator and associated governance arrangements, continued development of the VRP commercial model and broader industry preparation for the increased adoption of open banking and VRP services.

    Looking ahead, the FCA expects 2026 to be a landmark year, with live transactions flowing through the VRP scheme expected in Q1. It also anticipates that HM Treasury will introduce legislation under the Data (Use and Access) Act 2025 (DUAA) granting the FCA new rulemaking powers for open banking. The FCA plans to consult on new rules for the long‑term regulatory framework enabled by these powers. In parallel, the FCA expects industry to establish a body capable of becoming the FE, which it wants to be the UK's primary standards setting body for application programming interfaces (APIs). Subject to legislation, the FCA expects to use its powers under the DUAA to support this objective.

    Read more.
  • ESMA and UAE SCA sign MoU on supervision of credit rating agencies
    15 January 2026

    The European Securities and Markets Authority and the UAE Securities and Commodities Authority have published a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signed on 29 December 2025. The MoU establishes a framework for cooperation and information sharing in the supervision of credit rating agencies (CRAs) operating across both jurisdictions. While non binding in nature, it sets out principles for mutual assistance, including cooperation on registration and certification processes, ongoing supervision, enforcement actions, cross border on site inspections and the handling of emergency situations. It creates mechanisms for exchanging both solicited and unsolicited information, subject to confidentiality and data protection safeguards. It also outlines procedures for managing outsourced functions and maintaining professional secrecy. Both authorities commit to periodically reviewing the MoU and may amend or terminate it with appropriate notice.
  • UK FCA to host stablecoin sprint and trade payments roundtable
    15 January 2026

    The UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has announced the launch of a two-day stablecoin tech-sprint. The sprint, taking place on 4-5 March, will explore the use cases for stablecoins in domestic and international payments, covering retail and wholesale applications. A separate, smaller roundtable will take place on 15 May, focusing on use cases for stablecoins in trade payments, identifying risks, opportunities and where regulation would be beneficial. Follow-up roundtables are expected throughout 2026. Outputs from the sprint are expected to provide actionable insights to directly inform future FCA policy decisions on potential stablecoin payment regulation in the UK. The FCA invites participation from fintechs, payment institutions (including EMIs and acquirers), banks, technology providers, corporates, issuers, consultants and representative groups. A participation pack has been made available with more information on the format of the event and the problem statements the FCA expects to tackle. Applications are due by midnight on 4 February. The FCA will notify applicants by 13 February if they have secured a place at the sprint and/or roundtable.
  • EC consults on reform of venture and growth capital funds
    15 January 2026

    The European Commission (EC) has launched two consultations on reforming the rules for venture and growth capital funds. The consultations seeks to explore potential changes to the regulatory framework applying to such funds to support their development across the EU single market. This follows the identification of issues related to market fragmentation and unnecessary regulation.

    The targeted consultation requests input from key stakeholders such as fund managers, institutional investors, public authorities and supervisors. It seeks insight into the barriers faced by managers and considers how the European Venture Capital Fund (EuVECA), European Social Entrepreneurship Funds (EuSEF) and the Alternative Investment Fund Managers (AIFMD) regimes could be changed to facilitate the development of such funds. In particular, the consultation includes specific questions on the calibration of thresholds under the EuVECA and AIFMD regimes, which trigger certain requirements, and the practical functioning of the EuVECA and EuSEF regimes.

    Read more.
  • UK PRA outlines supervisory priorities for 2026 – UK deposit takers and international banks
    15 January 2026

    The UK Prudential Regulatory Authority (PRA) has published Dear CEO letters setting out its 2026 supervisory priorities for UK deposit takers and international banks and designated investment firms. Across both letters, the PRA highlights its continued focus and expectations across risk management, operational resilience, financial resilience and data governance. It states that these priorities should be considered alongside firm-specific feedback provided though a firm's recent periodic summary meeting (PSM). It also announced plans to move certain supervisory activity, including PSMs, to a two-year cycle. The letters explain that a firm's supervisory contact will provide details in due course of what this means for the timing of the firm's next PSM.
  • ECB response to targeted consultation on the market risk prudential framework
    15 January 2026

    The European Central Bank (ECB) has published its staff contribution to the European Commission's (EC) targeted consultation on the application of the market risk prudential framework (FRTB). The ECB welcomes the proposal to have the FRTB enter into force in the EU on 1 January 2027. It argues that further delaying the implementation of the FRTB would come with clear costs from a risk management and operational perspective. The ECB favours the three-year period of stability in the applicable market risk framework proposed by the EC. With respect to the temporary measures proposed for the delegated act, the ECB believes there is room to make these proposed amendments more risk-based and sound without adversely affecting the EC's objective of maintaining a level playing field with other jurisdictions. Regarding internal model-related requirements, the ECB agrees with using the Profit and Loss Attribution Test (PLAT) as a monitoring tool only, on the understanding that banks work on remediation in the event of highly concerning results. It considers the measures regarding the Risk Factor Eligibility Test (RFET) could be too far-reaching in their current form and would prefer this relief measure be limited to new risk factors. Equally, with regard to collective investment undertakings (CIUs), the ECB continues to consider that the proposal allowing banks to carry out the look-through on a quarterly basis for material exposures under both FRTB-AIMA and FRTB-ASA, rather than on a weekly basis as currently foreseen in the Capital Requirements Regulation, would not be sufficient to adequately capture the underlying risks of CIU exposures.

    Read more.
  • FMSB publishes 2026 workplan
    14 January 2026

    The Financial Markets Standards Board has published its 2026 workplan. The workplan covers a wide range of areas in relation to wholesale financial markets, and in 2026 the Board sets out the following focus topics:
    • In relation to market practices, work is being progressed on pre-hedging, grey market trading, market quotation mechanisms, conduct risks around risk management transactions for new issuances, and price discovery.
    • In relation to electronic trading and technology, the relevant committee will be looking at market-facing applications of AI and potentially the application of model risk management frameworks to electronic trading algorithms.

    Read more.
  • ESAs and UK regulators sign MoU on oversight of critical ICT third-party service providers under DORA
    14 January 2026

    The European Supervisory Authorities (comprising the European Securities and Markets Authority, the European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority and the European Banking Authority) have entered into a Memorandum of Understanding with the Bank of England (BoE), the UK Prudential Regulatory Authority and the UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA). The MoU seeks to strengthen cross-border oversight of critical third parties (CTPs) and critical ICT third-party service providers (CTPPs) under the Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA), including during incidents such as power outages or cyber-attacks. It sets out cooperation principles and procedures, information‑sharing arrangements and coordination of oversight activities between EU and UK regulators. To enable information sharing with a third country authority, the ESAs must first verify that the third country's confidentiality and professional secrecy regime is equivalent to that under EU law. Accordingly, prior to signing the MoU, the ESAs carried out an assessment confirming that the UK's regime meets the standards set out in DORA. Separate statements from the FCA and BoE announcing the signed MoU were published on the same day.
  • ESMA second thematic note on clear, fair and not misleading sustainability-related claims
    14 January 2026

    The European Securities and Markets Authority has published its second thematic note on clear, fair and not misleading sustainability-related claims in relation to environmental, social and governance (ESG) strategies. This note forms part of a broader thematic study to address greenwashing risks in support of sustainable investments and follows ESMA's first note on ESG credentials. The purpose of these notes are to provide market participants with information and build on observed market practices. As with the first note, this second note sets out four principles for making sustainability claims. In summary, claims should be: (i) accurate; (ii) based on accessible information; (iii) substantiated; and (iv) up to date. The note follows a similar format to the first, including practical "do's and don'ts" and examples of good and poor practice. It focuses on ESG integration, exclusions and strategies. While these notes do not create new disclosure requirements, they are intended to guide market participants on ensuring that communications, including non-regulatory oral and written communications, and those aimed at retail investors, are clear, fair and not misleading.
  • UK FCA consults on replacing ad hoc collection of R2B2 data with an annual regulatory return
    14 January 2026

    The UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has published consultation paper CP26/3 proposing to replace its ad hoc retail banking business models (R2B2) data requests with a mandatory annual regulatory return for banks and building societies meeting specified thresholds. This forms part of a phase two use case for the transforming data collection programme which seeks to transform data collection from the UK financial sector. The proposed return would require in‑scope firms to submit sub-product level financial and volumetric data across mortgages, personal and business banking, lending and wholesale funding, as well as whole‑bank reconciliation data. The FCA also proposes to include an "off-the-shelf" request for firms to provide various readily available business documents. The return is proposed to apply to banks and building societies with more than 200,000 UK customer relationships and at least GBP5 million revenue in the relevant periods. Those that do not meet these thresholds will not have to send the FCA this data. The first mandatory submission would be due in November, with the FCA planning to publish anonymised annual statistics and review the data collection after five years. The deadline for comments is 4 March with a final policy statement expected later this year.
  • Evolution of the BoE's approach to resolution
    14 January 2026

    The Bank of England (BoE) has published a speech by Dave Ramsden, deputy governor, markets and banking, on the evolution of the BoE's approach to resolution. The speech discusses the balance to be struck in optimising ex ante resilience and ex post costs and the response to recent events and the changing environment. Mr Ramsden states that in terms of bank resolution, assuming no unexpected developments, the BoE has now implemented the key policy developments he expects it to – certainly in his remaining term as Deputy Governor, which ends in September 2027. Later this year, the BoE expects to publish an operational guide to the transfer resolution strategies and an update to its operational guide to bail-in. Subject to the findings of the third RAF assessment which begins later this year and market developments, the BoE expects to confirm the timing of the fourth assessment as not being before 2029-30. There is more to do to operationalise the central counterparty (CCP) resolution regime and later this year the BoE expects to consult on resolvability standards for CCPs.

    Read more.
  • ESMA launches digital and data strategies to support supervision of EU financial markets
    13 January 2026

    The European Securities Markets Authority (ESMA) has announced the adoption of its new digital strategy 2026–2028 and an updated data strategy 2023–2028, signalling a continued shift toward technology‑driven supervision and streamlined regulatory reporting. The new digital strategy sets out a roadmap focused on: enhancing EU‑wide digital synergies; strengthening the digital capabilities of both ESMA and the European System of Financial Supervision; improving operational efficiency; and ensuring a secure and future‑ready supervisory ecosystem.

    The updated data strategy emphasises burden reduction and more integrated data management, with key new actions including major initiatives to streamline supervisory reporting, expansion of the ESMA data platform, further development of the MiCAR joint supervisory tool for crypto‑market monitoring and finalisation of the European Single Access Point. These goals are in line with its wider simplification and burden reduction initiative launched in 2025. ESMA's data and digital work will be guided by the roadmaps under both strategies. By 2029, ESMA expects to converge the two into one unified strategy.
  • UK equity consolidated tape consultation extended and CBA published
    13 January 2026

    The UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has published an updated webpage on its consultation paper proposing a framework for introducing an equity consolidated tape in the UK, operated by a consolidated tape provider. The FCA confirms that the deadline for comments on the proposals has been extended to 13 February. It also published a separate note outlining the cost benefit analysis methodology, following a request for further information.
    Topic: MiFID II
  • ESMA final updated guidelines on stress test scenarios under MMF Regulation
    13 January 2026

    The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) has published its final report with guidelines on stress test scenarios under the Money Market Funds Regulation (MMF Regulation). ESMA updates these guidelines at least annually. These new guidelines follow the previous version published in January 2025, along with their official translations in February 2025. This report sets out revised stress test scenarios and risk parameters to ensure that MMF managers have the necessary information to complete the reporting template required under Article 37 of the MMF Regulation and Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 2018/708. The report's annex contains the full text of the updated guidelines and scenario calibrations for 2025 (with amendments shown in red). Once the official translations of the guidelines are published on ESMA's website, national competent authorities will have two months to confirm whether they will comply, after which the updated guidelines, including the new 2025 parameters, will apply. From that point, MMF managers must report results based on the new parameters in their quarterly submissions; until then, they should continue using the parameters set out in the 2024 guidelines. Separately, the European Systemic Risk Board published the adverse financial market scenario for the stress-testing exercise (dated 4 December 2025) that ESMA used to update the risk parameters in the guidelines.
  • G7 CEG roadmap for transition to post-quantum cryptography in financial services
    13 January 2026

    HM Treasury has published a statement from the G7 Cyber Expert Group (CEG) setting out a high‑level, non‑binding roadmap for a coordinated financial‑sector transition to post‑quantum cryptography (PQC). Building on its previous 2024 statement, the CEG highlights while quantum computing promises significant new capabilities for financial services, these advanced computers will be capable of breaking widely-used cryptographic protocols that protect systems and data. Therefore, the CEG explains how the financial sector should start preparing for this in advance of risks. The roadmap outlines a phased approach for both financial sector entities and public authorities for planning and coordination. It highlights key migration activities including awareness and preparation, discovery and inventory, risk assessment and planning, migration execution, testing and ongoing validation and monitoring. Although not legally binding, the CEG encourages firms to begin planning now. It notes that many jurisdictions currently reference 2035 as an overall target for full migration, with the most important systems ideally upgraded earlier (around 2030–2032). While the trajectory of quantum computing development is uncertain, the statement conveys it may be helpful for organisations to establish comparable migration timelines to ensure their milestones can be achieved prior to the availability of cryptographically relevant quantum computers. The CEG further encourages ongoing monitoring, cross sector information sharing and close coordination with international standard setting bodies to support a harmonised transition to PQC.
  • UK PRA and FCA consult on the FSCS MELL for 2026/27
    13 January 2026

    The UK Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) and the UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) have published consultation paper CP1/26, proposing a management expenses levy limit (MELL) of GBP113 million for the UK Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS) for 2026/27. The MELL ensures the FSCS has enough funding to carry out its functions.

    The proposed MELL comprises a GBP108m management expenses budget, a GBP4.4m increase from 2025/26, broadly in line with inflation, and an unlevied reserve of GBP5m. Excluding the cost of the FSCS's revolving credit facility (RCF), which is being expanded to GBP3bn to support the Bank of England's recapitalisation powers and ensure faster depositor payouts, the proposal represents a nominal and real‑terms reduction in the FSCS budget.

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    Topic: Fees / Levies
  • UK FCA Primary Market Bulletin 61 – POATRs regime
    12 January 2026

    The UK Financial Conduct Authority has (FCA) published Primary Market Bulletin 61 (PMB 61), outlining proposed changes to the FCA Knowledge Base in preparation for the incoming Public Offers and Admissions to Trading Regulations (POATRs) regime, taking effect on 19 January. The Knowledge Base contains the FCA's technical guidance (comprising technical and procedural notes) on primary markets regulatory topics relating to listing, prospectuses, disclosure and transparency.

    The new POATRs regime reforms the current UK Prospectus regime (which was inherited from the EU) in three fundamental ways: it creates a prohibition-and-exceptions model for public offers; greater rule-making flexibility for the FCA on admission to trading; and targeted recalibration of liability and disclosure to facilitate efficient issuance. Due to the extensive changes being brought in by the regime, the FCA is required to update its technical guidance and make other changes to its Knowledge Base. The FCA consulted on these changes in October, in PMB 58.

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    Topic: Securities
  • UK FCA findings on complex ETPs
    12 January 2026

    The UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has published findings from its multi‑firm review on the distribution of complex exchange traded products (ETPs) to retail consumers, highlighting both good practice and areas requiring improvement under the consumer duty. These products are a small but growing segment of the wider ETP market. The FCA observed significant growth in retail trading of complex ETPs, including leveraged and inverse products, and assessed whether execution‑only distributors are meeting obligations relating to product governance, appropriateness testing, price and value, consumer understanding and outcomes monitoring.

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    Topic: Derivatives
  • ESMA principles on risk-based supervision
    9 January 2026

    The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) has published its non-binding principles for risk-based supervision to promote a common and effective EU-wide supervisory culture and strengthen the EU single market. These principles apply to national competent authorities (NCAs) and ESMA when exercising direct supervision, covering the identification, assessment, prioritisation and mitigation of risks across all mandates (markets, entities and products) within an authority's remit. While acknowledging that different models for risk-based supervision exist, ESMA introduces an entity-based approach that can be adapted to other models (such as transaction or product-based approaches) depending on an authority's supervisory processes. The principles are intended to guide supervisory practice rather than prescribe a single supervisory model or operate as a full manual. As non-binding guidance, they are intended to be implemented practically under the relevant authority's existing framework. ESMA and NCAs will work together to advance implementation and promote high quality supervisory outcomes for market participants.
  • UK House of Lords Committee report on growth of UK private markets and impact on financial stability
    9 January 2026

    The House of Lords Financial Services Regulation Committee has published a report titled "Private markets: Unknown unknowns". The report highlights the rapid global expansion of private markets and raises concerns about the implications of this growth for the UK's financial stability. The Committee's inquiry focused on identifying the drivers of the expansion of private markets and assessing its potential consequences. The report should also be read alongside the accompanying letter (dated 18 December) from the Economic Secretary to the Treasury, which forms HM Treasury's (HMT) evidence to the inquiry.

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  • EBA ancillary services undertakings final guidelines and report on prudential consolidation under CRR
    9 January 2026

    The European Banking Authority (EBA) has published its final guidelines on ancillary services undertakings. It specifies criteria for identifying activities referred to in Article 4(1)(18) of the Capital Requirements Regulation (CRR), which was amended by Regulation 2024/1623 (CRR III), to clarify the definition of ancillary services undertaking. The guidelines define how to identify: (a) activities that should be considered a "direct extension of banking"; (b) activities that should be considered "ancillary to banking"; and (c) "other similar activities" that the EBA may consider similar to those referred to in the CRR.

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  • UK FCA update on advice guidance boundary review – targeted support policy sprint
    9 January 2026

    The UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has published an update on its advice guidance boundary review – targeted support policy sprint. The six-week sprint, launched in February 2025, brought together 12 firms, including retail banks, investment platforms and wealth managers, to test the FCA's targeted support proposals. As a reminder, the new regulated activity of targeted support aims to allow authorised firms to provide recommendations for pre-defined consumer segments with common needs or objectives. The regime is outcomes-focussed, with bespoke rules in the FCA handbook and further underpinned by the consumer duty and product governance rules.

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  • ESAs final joint guidelines for ESG stress testing
    8 January 2026

    The European Supervisory Authorities (ESAs, comprising the European Banking Authority, European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority and the European Securities and Markets Authority) has published a final report with joint guidelines for integrating environmental, social and governance (ESG) risks into financial stress tests for banks and insurers. These guidelines, mandated by the Capital Requirements Directive (CRD) and the Solvency II Directive, aim to harmonise how competent authorities across the EU consistently incorporate ESG risks into their supervisory frameworks.

    Following feedback to the June consultation, the ESAs refined the drafting but did not change the overall structure or approach. Notable amendments include: clarifying the materiality assessment to make it more forward looking and not limited to relative exposure measures; enhancing proportionality language; increasing the time horizon to 10 years for or a more forward looking and comprehensive materiality assessment of ESG risks for competent authorities to identify; and other minor adjustments. The guidelines will be translated into all official languages of the EU in Q1 and published on the ESAs' websites. The deadline for competent authorities to notify the respective ESA whether they comply or intend to comply with the guidelines will be two months after the publication of the translated guidelines. The joint guidelines apply from 1 January 2027.
  • EBA final draft RTS for third-country branches under CRD VI
    8 January 2026

    The European Banking Authority (EBA) has published two final draft RTS under the Capital Requirements Directive 2013/36 (CRD IV), as amended by Directive 2024/1619 (CRD VI), relating to the regulatory requirements for third-country branches (TCBs). The RTS relate to: (i) cooperation and colleges of supervisors for TCBs; and (ii) the booking arrangements that TCBs are to apply. The revised drafts consider feedback from the July consultations, in particular:
    • The draft RTS on supervisory cooperation contains a revised Article 14 on the information to be exchanged on the supervisory review and evaluation process (SREP). The elements of information to be exchanged are linked to the relevant provisions of CRD in order to accommodate future developments at the level of the SREP Guidelines (a revised version of which is currently under consultation). 
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  • UK FCA publishes new suite of webpages on upcoming UK cryptoassets regime
    8 January 2026

    The UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has published a new suite of webpages outlining its approach to the upcoming regulatory regime for cryptoasset activities. The regime will be implemented under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (FSMA), through the draft statutory instrument laid before Parliament in December. The regime's go-live date is 25 October 2027.

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    Topic: FinTech
  • UK DBT update to FCA to finalise UK sustainability reporting standards
    8 January 2026

    The UK Department for Business and Trade (DBT) has published a letter (dated 5 January) sent to the UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) providing an update on finalising the UK versions of the International Sustainability Standards Board's (ISSB) sustainability reporting standards (UK SRS), ahead of the FCA's planned January 2026 consultation on adopting the standards for listed companies. The letter confirms that consultation feedback largely supported the draft UK SRS S1 and S2, but stakeholders strongly recommended providing entities with sufficient time to implement the more challenging requirements and sought clarity on the interaction between embedded transitional reliefs and FCA rules.

    To address this, the government will remove specific time references from the standards and instead allow timing and availability of reliefs to be set through government regulations (Companies Act 2006), FCA rules or by any other relevant authority. It will also clarify how statements of compliance apply to reporters where reliefs are used. The government will review the ISSB's updates to the international financial reporting standard S2 (climate related disclosures) for incorporation into the final UK SRS S2, which is expected to be published early in 2026.
  • Delegated regulation to simplify EU taxonomy reporting and screening criteria published in OJ
    8 January 2026

    Commission Delegated Regulation 2026/73 has been published in the Official Journal of the European Union (OJ). The Delegated Regulation, adopted on 4 July, amends Delegated Regulation (EU) 2021/2178 to simplify reporting requirements for environmentally sustainable activities under the EU Taxonomy Regulation. It also amends Delegated Regulations 2021/2139 and 2023/2486 to simplify certain technical screening criteria for determining whether economic activities cause no significant harm to environmental objectives. These include materiality-based exemptions, reduced and simplified key performance indicators and streamlined reporting templates. The Regulation enters into force on the twentieth day following publication in the OJ, applying from 1 January. Undertakings may, however, apply Delegated Regulations (EU) 2021/2178, (EU) 2021/2139 and (EU) 2023/2486 as applicable on 31 December 2025 for the financial year that starts between 1 January and 31 December 2025.
  • ESMA report on marketing requirements on cross-border distribution of funds
    6 January 2026

    The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) has published its third report on marketing requirements and marketing communications under the regulation on cross border distribution of funds. Drawing on data submitted by national competent authorities, ESMA confirms that there have been no significant changes to national marketing rules since its previous 2023 report. The report now incorporates, for the first time, statistics on cross border fund marketing notifications. The new statistical insights show that Luxembourg and Ireland remain the dominant jurisdictions for notifying cross border fund marketing activity, representing 59% and 30% of notifications, respectively. Undertakings for collective investment in transferable securities account for the majority of notifications (56%), with alternative investment funds comprising the remaining 44%.
  • ESMA launches selection of CTP for OTC derivatives
    5 January 2026

    The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) has announced the launch of its first selection procedure for a consolidated tape provider (CTP) for over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives. ESMA encourages interested entities to register and submit their requests to participate by 11 February. The CTP aims to enhance transparency and efficiency in the OTC derivatives market by consolidating post-trade data from trading venues and other contributors into a single, continuous electronic stream. This consolidated view of market activity is intended to support more accurate and timely information access, improve price discovery and contribute to EU initiatives such as the Savings and Investment Union.

    The CTP will collect and disseminate OTC derivatives data in line with ESMA's proposals set out in its final report on transparency for derivatives. Regarding next steps, ESMA will assess the requests it receives against the applicable exclusion and selection criteria and invite successful candidates to submit full applications. Any queries during the application phase will be handled through the EU Funding & Tenders Portal, which also has the contract notice and procurement document available. A reasoned decision on the selected CTP is expected by early July, after which the chosen provider will operate the OTC derivatives tape for a five‑year term, subject to ESMA authorisation and supervision.
    Topics: DerivativesMiFID II
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