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Financial Services UK
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January 31, 2025
Ex-BigLaw Atty Can't Escape OneCoin Conviction At 2nd Circ.
The Second Circuit on Friday upheld a former Locke Lord LLP partner's conviction and 10-year sentence for helping launder roughly $400 million in proceeds from the multibillion-dollar OneCoin cryptocurrency scheme, rejecting the attorney's contention that a sole cooperating government witness' perjury and other purported errors warranted reversing his punishment.
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January 31, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen another claim by Woodford investors against Hargreaves Lansdown in the widening £200 million ($248 million) dispute over the fund's collapse, a solicitor barred for his role in a suspected advance fee fraud face action by a Swiss wholesaler, and The Resort Group, which markets investments in luxury hotel resorts, hit with a claim by a group of investors. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
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January 31, 2025
JPMorgan Sues WeRealize In Widening Dispute Over JV
A JPMorgan Chase & Co. unit has filed a new claim in the investment bank's protracted battle with fintech business WeRealize, saying the company is planning to breach the terms of a joint venture shareholder agreement by acquiring another fintech firm.
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January 31, 2025
EU Extends UK CCP Equivalence Regime By Three Years
The European Union's executive body said Friday it has adopted a decision to extend equivalence for U.K. central counterparties for three years until June 30, 2028, following agreement between the European Parliament and the Council of the EU.
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February 07, 2025
BCLP Adds Finance Regulatory Team From Parisian Firm
Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner LLP has hired a financial regulation and asset management team in Paris, as the U.S.-based firm takes a "significant next step" in its strategy of growing and diversifying its practice in France and Europe.
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January 31, 2025
Claims Management Sector Warned Over Misleading Adverts
The Financial Conduct Authority has written to claims management companies warning that it will respond to multiple cases of misleading advertising with new consumer protection measures.
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January 31, 2025
FCA Launches Survey To Gauge Opinion On Its Work
The Financial Conduct Authority has launched its annual market survey of regulated firms to gauge industry opinion on its performance, which comes amid calls from the financial sector for more growth-geared regulation.
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January 31, 2025
Banks, Insurers Told To Go Further On Managing Climate Risk
The regulatory arm of the Bank of England has said that the lenders and insurers it supervises have made progress on managing financial risks linked to climate change, but expects more ahead of a planned update to its expectations this year.
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January 31, 2025
FCA Warns Mortgage Firms Against Sales Target Culture
The Financial Conduct Authority has warned mortgage intermediaries that some companies have a "culture driven by sales targets," which motivates advisers to wrongfully sell products to consumers that pay higher commission or fees.
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January 31, 2025
Investment Manager Must Repay £6M To Ponzi Victims
A judge has ordered a former investment manager serving six years in prison for defrauding more than 200 investors to repay victims £5.9 million ($7.3 million), the Financial Conduct Authority said Friday.
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January 31, 2025
UK To Ease Bond Issuance By Firms To Draw Retail Investors
The finance watchdog set out plans on Friday aimed at encouraging individual investors to buy corporate bonds by making it easier for companies listed on the London Stock Exchange to raise money through smaller issuances.
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January 31, 2025
LSE Bets On Growth Firms To Secure Post-Brexit Status
The position of the London Stock Exchange as Europe's leading listings market has been challenged in the five years since Brexit, but lawyers believe that the removal of the venue's "super-equivalent" regime could make it a viable competitor for growth companies.
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January 30, 2025
Wise Reaches $2.5M CFPB Deal Over Disclosure, Fee Issues
In its first new enforcement action since President Donald Trump's return to office, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau on Thursday ordered Wise, a global money transfer fintech, to pay nearly $2.5 million on allegations it committed misleading fee marketing and disclosure-related violations.
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January 30, 2025
Chancery Tosses Last Of Deutsche Bank, Vik Debt Suit
A more than seven-year Delaware Court of Chancery battle tied to Norwegian billionaire Alexander Vik's alleged efforts to avoid a $236 million U.K. judgment in 2009 ended on Wednesday with a quiet fizzle.
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January 30, 2025
Amex GBT Calls Judge's Sept. DOJ Trial 'Manifest Injustice'
American Express Global Business Travel Inc. asked a New York federal judge Wednesday to reconsider waiting until September to hear the U.S. Department of Justice challenge to its planned $570 million purchase of CWT Holdings LLC, arguing it needs an answer much sooner.
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January 30, 2025
JPMorgan, Fintech Each Claim Victory On Appeal In JV Spat
A JPMorgan Chase & Co. unit and fintech business WeRealize on Thursday both claimed victories in their dispute over the valuation of a joint venture following a mixed judgment by the Court of Appeal that settled complex issues between the two sides.
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February 06, 2025
Hogan Lovells Adds 5 Pros From White & Case In Italy
Hogan Lovells has recruited a team of five corporate and finance lawyers from White & Case LLP in Italy, its latest group hire, as it looks to keep building in the country.
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January 30, 2025
Osborne Clarke Guides Aviva's £23M Pension Deal
Insurance giant Aviva has taken on £23 million ($28.7 million) of retirement savings liabilities from The Colthrop Board Mill Pension Scheme in a deal guided by Osborne Clarke, according to lead advisers on the transaction Thursday.
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January 30, 2025
FCA Says Ban On Pension Advice Contingent Charging Works
The Financial Conduct Authority said Thursday that almost 200 financial advisers stopped offering pension transfer services after it changed its rules on contingent charging five years ago.
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January 30, 2025
Denmark Cuts British Trader's Tax Fraud Prison Sentence
A British hedge fund trader convicted of defrauding Denmark's tax authority out of more than 320 million Danish krone ($47 million) in a sham trading scheme to reclaim tax has had his prison sentence shortened by an appeals court.
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January 30, 2025
Growth Stocks Need Rule Changes, City Group Says
The government and regulators need to rewrite the rulebook for growth stocks in share trading, including an urgent review of "hampering" regulations like the Consumer Duty and "Dear CEO" letters, a leading City trade body said Thursday.
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January 30, 2025
UK Gov't Vows To Overhaul Pension Lifeboat Levy
The government said Thursday that it is considering allowing the Pension Protection Fund more flexibility over how it sets its levy, as it looks at further measures to boost economic growth.
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January 30, 2025
OFSI's 'Troubling' Licensing Regime Dents Sanctions Win
The government ran a slow and "troubling" process for approving the basic living expenses of sanctioned individuals that forced an oligarch's wife to choose between breaking the law and feeding her children, but the system was nevertheless lawful, an appeals court has said.
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January 30, 2025
City Struggles With Compliance Amid Post-Brexit Rule Shifts
Brexit paved the way for Britain to rip up the EU's financial services rule book and create a more U.K.-friendly regime — but some regulatory analysts say the process is taking too long, which imposes a bigger compliance burden on companies.
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January 29, 2025
Pension Plans Seek Trader's Testimony In $2B Tax Fraud Suit
Pension plans and individuals who Denmark's government alleges received fraudulent refunds have asked a New York federal court to allow U.K. court testimony into the record from a trader who Danish authorities say masterminded a $2.1 billion tax fraud, saying it shows he deceived other participants.
Expert Analysis
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Emerging Trends From A Busy Climate Litigation Year
Although many environmental cases brought in the U.K. were unsuccessful in 2023, they arguably clarified several relevant issues, such as climate rights, director and trustee obligations, and the extent to which claimants can hold the government accountable, illustrating what 2024 may have in store for climate litigation, say Simon Bishop and Patrick Kenny at Hausfeld.
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Regulating Digital Platforms: What's Changing In EU And UK
Lawyers at Mayer Brown assess the status of recently enacted EU and U.K. antitrust regulation governing gatekeeper platforms, noting that the effects are already being felt, and that companies will need to avoid anti-competitive self-preferencing and ensure a higher degree of interoperability than has been required to date.
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How Boards Can Mitigate Privacy, Cybersecurity And AI Risks
In 2023, data privacy, cybersecurity and AI persist as prominent C-suite concerns as regulators stepped up enforcement, and organizations must develop a plan for handling these risks, in particular those with a global footprint, say lawyers at Latham.
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The Outlook For UK Restructuring Plans At Home And Abroad
The U.K. continues to be a center for large-cap, cross-border restructurings, though its competitive edge over the EU in this regard may narrow, while small and medium-sized enterprises are already likely to avoid costly formal processes by reaching out to their secured lenders for restructuring solutions, say Paul Keddie and Timothy Bromley-White at Macfarlanes.
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Foreign Assets Ruling Suggests New Tax Avoidance Approach
The U.K. Supreme Court's recent ruling in His Majesty's Revenue & Customs v. Fisher, which found that the scope of the transfer of foreign assets is narrow, highlights that the days of rampant tax avoidance have been left behind, and that the need for wide-ranging and uncertain tax legislation is lessening, says James Austen at Collyer Bristow.
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Lessons To Be Learned From 2023's Bank Failures
This year’s banking collapses, coupled with interest rate rises, inflation and geopolitical instability have highlighted the need for more robust governance, and banks and regulators have learned that they must adequately monitor and control liquidity risk to protect against another financial crisis, say Juliette Mills and Alix Prentice at Cadwalader.
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An Overview Of European Private Investments in Public Equity
Although still fairly rare, private investments in public equity may continue to be an attractive option for some European issuers seeking to secure equity financing, and advisers planning such an investment should consider the various local options, requirements and norms, say lawyers at Sullivan & Cromwell.
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Cos. Must Monitor Sanctions Regime As Law Remains Unclear
While recent U.K. government guidance and an English High Court's decision in Litasco v. Der Mond Oil, finding that a company is sanctioned when a designated individual is exercising control over it, both address sanctions control issues, disarray in the law remains, highlighting that practitioners should keep reviewing their exposure to the sanctions regime, say lawyers at K&L Gates.
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Unpacking The UK's Proposals To Regulate Crypto-Assets
Recent proposals for crypto-asset regulation in the U.K. demonstrate support for crypto's potential, but there is concern around the authorization process for organizations undertaking crypto-asset activities, and new regulations will require a more detailed assessment of firms' compliance not previously addressed, say Jessica Lee and Menelaos Karampetsos at Brown Rudnick.
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The Top 7 Global ESG Litigation Trends In 2023
To date, ESG litigation across the world can largely be divided into seven forms, but these patterns will continue developing, including a rise in cases against private and state actors, a more complex regulatory environment affecting multinational companies, and an increase in nongovernmental organization activity, say Sophie Lamb and Aleksandra Dulska at Latham.
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UK Takeover Code Changes: Key Points For Bidders, Targets
Newly effective amendments to Rule 21 of the U.K. Takeover Code, which remove legal and administrative constraints on a target operating its business in the ordinary way during an offer, will add clarity for targets and bidders, and are likely to be welcomed by both, say lawyers at Davis Polk.
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Russia Ruling Shows UK's Robust Jurisdiction Approach
An English High Court's recent decision to grant an anti-suit injunction in the Russia-related dispute Renaissance Securities v. Chlodwig Enterprises clearly illustrates that obtaining an injunction will likely be more straightforward when the seat is in England compared to when it is abroad, say lawyers at Linklaters.
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How New Loan Origination Regime Will Affect Fund Managers
Although the recent publication of the Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive II represents more of an evolution than a revolution, the leverage limitations applicable to loan-originating funds are likely to present practical challenges for European credit fund managers, say attorneys at Fried Frank.
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How EU Sustainability Directive Will Improve Co. Reporting
The need for organizations to make nonfinancial disclosures under the recently adopted EU Sustainability Reporting Standards will significantly change workforce and human rights reporting, and with the objective of fostering transparency, should bring about an increased focus on risks, policies and action plans, say Philip Spyropoulos and Thomas Player at Eversheds Sutherland.
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PPI Ruling Spells Trouble For Financial Services Firms
The Supreme Court's recent decision in Canada Square v. Potter, which found that the claimant's missold payment protection insurance claim was not time-barred, is bad news for affected financial services firms, as there is now certainty over the law on the postponement of limitation periods, rendering hidden commission claims viable, say Ian Skinner and Chris Webber at Squire Patton.