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EU Edges Closer To New Payments Framework With PSD3 And PSR Agreement

The details of the updated EU payments regime are becoming clearer, with negotiators aiming to deliver a more open and competitive payments sector that places strong emphasis on consumer protection.
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Europe Advances Plans For Real-Time Payments Connectivity With Asia

By linking its TARGET Instant Payment Settlement (TIPS) system with India and Southeast Asia, the European Central Bank (ECB) is accelerating real-time payments globally and challenging European payment service providers (PSPs) to prepare for faster flows and competitive pressures.
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Prolonged Limbo On Open Banking Leaves US Financial Sector Navigating Uncertainty

A renewed push from Democratic senators highlights how the stalled Personal Financial Data Rights (PFDR) rule is forcing banks and fintechs to rethink strategy, as shifting political priorities threaten a stable data-access framework for the long term.
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US Open Banking Rule Highlights Industry Divisions Over Data And Fees

By defining who can access consumer data, whether fees are allowed and compliance timelines, the Personal Financial Data Rights final rule (PFDR Rule) underscores continuing legal and market tensions between banks and fintech innovators.
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UK Government Payments Plan Draws Mixed Response

The UK government’s priorities following the Payments Landscape Review are welcome, but they cannot pin hopes on authorities such as Pay.UK being able to deliver them, payments insiders have cautioned.
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Payments

CFPB Picks Up Slack With New Bigtech Inquiry

Living up to his reputation, Rohit Chopra is giving the teeth back to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) as he launches an inquiry into bigtech payment platforms.
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Payments

Confirmation Of Payee Readies For Phase Two, But It Is No Silver Bullet

Phase one of the Confirmation of Payee (CoP) implementation has had a positive impact, the UK's Payment Systems Regulator said, which is now considering the extension of the service to more payment service providers. However, CoP alone will not be enough to prevent fraud.
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Payments

ESAs Score National Authorities Well, But Hint At New Convergence Requirements

The European Banking Authority and the other supervisory authorities outline improvements needed for national competent authorities.
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Payments

California Crafts Policy To Report Non-Prosecuted Cardroom Financial Crimes

Policymakers in California are considering creating a new reporting system to make it more difficult for cardroom employees who were fired or quit their jobs for financial crimes to continue working in the gaming industry.
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Gambling

New Italian Gambling Chief Vows Action

Italy’s new gambling minister has promised action on tender extensions and said that the country’s gambling laws are not fit for a “civilised” society.
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Gambling

Top Macau Lawyer Warns Judiciary In 'Subservient' Decline

The long-time head of Macau’s lawyers association has publicly attacked creeping politicisation of the casino hub’s judiciary, warning of damage from magistrates who “tout” patriotism.
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Gambling

UK Treasury Opens BNPL Consultation

The buy now, pay later (BNPL) phenomenon comes to loggerheads with regulators as HM Treasury opens a consultation on how it should be overseen.
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Payments

Swedish Banking Watchdog Sets Danske Bank AML Deadline

Danske Bank must rectify its anti-money laundering (AML) and counter-terrorist financing deficiencies by June 30, 2022, the Finansinspektionen has warned.
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Payments

Week In Brief - October 22, 2021

A short roundup of some of the week's payments news you may have missed.
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Payments

FCA To Fill Gaps After Identifying Payments Firms Outside Its Reach

As innovation is changing the traditional payments landscape, the UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has identified areas where new market players can escape its regulatory reach. In its new Perimeter Review, the FCA advises the government on how to fill these gaps.
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Payments

U.S. Supreme Court To Hear Texas Tribal Gaming Case

For years, gaming tribes viewed the U.S. Supreme Court as a hostile forum but the court’s decision this week to hear arguments in a Texas Indian gaming case shows the tide may be shifting and commercial casinos could benefit.
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Gambling

Ireland Publishes Plan For Gambling Regulation

Ireland has finally published its long-awaited General Scheme of Gambling Regulation Bill, after it was approved by the government earlier this week.
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Gambling

German Court Says Sports-Betting Tax Is Not Unconstitutional

Germany’s Federal Fiscal Court has ruled that the country’s hefty online sports-betting tax rate is not “suffocating” and does not violate German or European law.
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Gambling

News In Brief: October 18-October 22, 2021

The UK regulator is moving forward with a project to overhaul its prevalence surveys, uncertainty in California and more Maryland casinos get sports betting go ahead.
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Gambling

EBA Suggests Re-Authentication Overhaul In Latest API Feedback

The European Banking Authority (EBA) has conceded that the 90-day account renewal rule has hindered customer retention for account information service providers and has announced that it will be making an amendment.
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Payments

News In Brief - October 21, 2021

Authorities in the UK, US and Switzerland fine Credit Suisse after financial crime blunder.
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Payments

FinCEN Working With Fintechs To Fight Crypto Exploitation - DC Fintech Week

Him Das, acting director of the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), believes that protecting the U.S. financial system has to be a shared effort between fintechs and his agency. FinCEN is actively engaging with the industry to understand the potential exploitation of the technology.
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Payments

MPs Demand Clarity On FCA’s Five-Year AML Prosecution Of NatWest

The chair of the UK House of Commons’ Treasury Committee has written to the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) requesting further information on the prosecution of NatWest for money laundering.
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Payments

U.S. Senators Rise Up Against Facebook’s Novi Pilot

Following numerous turns in Facebook’s plans to enter the digital payments market, the technology company is now launching a pilot for its digital wallet with Paxos stablecoin, but the move has sparked opposition from Democratic senators.
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Payments
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Regulatory Influencer: The UK’s Regulatory Pivot - Bringing Crypto Oversight Into the FSMA Perimeter

On September 17, 2025, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) published Consultation Paper CP25/25: Application of the FCA Handbook to Regulated Cryptoasset Activities. The paper sets out the FCA’s proposed framework for extending key provisions of the FCA Handbook that are applicable to existing firms regulated under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (FSMA) to firms undertaking regulated crypto-asset activities. CP25/25 represents a significant shift into full-scope crypto UK supervision to date, moving the sector from a registration-only model towards a comprehensive authorisation and oversight regime. This positions crypto-asset service providers (CASPs) on a regulatory footing far closer to that of traditional financial institutions.
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Regulatory Influencer: Deprioritised, Not Discarded - EU’s Deprioritisation Agenda Hits a Regulatory Pause

On October 6, 2025, the European Commission published a letter addressed to the European Supervisory Authorities (ESAs), detailing its intention to deprioritise Level 2 acts in financial services legislation. During the period from 2019 to 2024, the Level 1 legislation adopted by the co-legislators has empowered the commission to adopt 430 Level 2 acts, with such a large number being a concern to stakeholders. In its aim to deliver more effective and efficient implementation of EU policies, the commission has elected to deprioritise 115 of the 430 Level 2 acts it has been empowered to adopt, deeming them “non-essential” for the effective functioning of Level 1 acts and for the achievement of EU policy objectives.
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ESAs’ List Of Critical ICT Providers Marks A Key Milestone For DORA Implementation

The designation of systemic providers marks the beginning of a significant operational shift for financial institutions, which will need to strengthen their understanding of third-party dependencies and the risks that accompany them.
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Visa–Mastercard US Fee Settlement Faces Strong Retailer Opposition

The proposed resolution to decades-old swipe-fee litigation is under fire from merchant groups, intensifying pressure on lawmakers and regulators to intervene in the card-payments market.
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ISO 20022 Is Set To Redefine Global Payment Messaging Standards - Are You Ready?

The global transition to ISO 20022, the new international standard for electronic data interchange between financial institutions, has entered its home stretch, following confirmation from the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (Swift), the European Central Bank (ECB) and the US Federal Reserve regarding full migration timelines for all high-value payment systems. The move establishes ISO 20022 as the single, data-rich format for global payments and securities messages, replacing decades-old MT formats. Swift’s co-existence period between the MT (message type) and ISO 20022 messages will end in November 2025, after which non-compliant institutions will no longer be able to send or receive certain categories of message types. According to Swift, it connects 11,500 institutions across more than 200 countries with 53m+ FIN messages sent every day on average, so for firms engaging in cross-border payments, a risk of non-compliance with ISO 20022 will result in significant operational deficiencies.
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Interactive Map: MTMA Adoption Across US States

The Model Money Transmission Modernization Act (MTMA) is a set of nationwide standards and requirements that were approved by the Conference of State Bank Supervisors (CSBS) in August 2021. This map outlines state-level adoption of the MTMA.
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BRICS and SCO Efforts To Build Alternative Payment Infrastructure Face Significant Obstacles

To establish functional and widely used independent payment services, the blocs of emerging economies must overcome a range of challenges, including inter-alliance disputes, variation in foreign policy priorities and geopolitical pressures.
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ASIC’s 2026 Enforcement Priorities Spotlight Pricing And Reporting Risks

As Australia moves towards a new regulatory regime for payment service providers (PSPs), the regulator’s focus on pricing, reporting and exploiting financial difficulty challenges organisations to embed stronger controls and forward-looking governance.
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Regulatory Influencer: Ukraine Makes Steps Towards EU-Style Digital Identity Bolstering Consumer Trust and Competition

On August 13, 2025, the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU) launched a consultation on proposed amendments to the Regulations governing the BankID NBU System. The purpose of these amendments is to bring Ukraine’s digital identification framework into closer alignment with Regulation (EU) No. 910/2014 on electronic identification and trust services (eIDAS) and the Law of Ukraine on Electronic Identification and Trust Services. The consultation closed on August 25, 2025 and, to date, there has not yet been any regulatory movement. The draft text introduces harmonised definitions, sets out detailed contractual obligations and requires the creation of termination plans. By mirroring EU eIDAS standards on digital identity and trust services, these reforms aim to foster greater consumer trust, enhance competition and lay the groundwork for a secure and interoperable open banking system in the country.
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Regulatory Influencer: The UK’s Proposed Regulatory Framework For Stablecoins Aims To Balance Stability With Commercial Viability

The Bank of England’s (BoE) consultation on stablecoins, launched in November 2025, could represent a pivotal moment in determining how digital currencies will function within the UK financial system.
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