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Sign up for accessHow the Trend for Self-Funding Regulators is Reshaping Jurisdictional Competition
New Zealand’s new anti-money laundering (AML) levy signals a global shift towards “club-good” regulation, with developed markets increasingly treating supervisors as industry-funded service providers rather than state-funded public goods, impacting jurisdictions’ competitiveness.
Read articleRegulatory Influencer: Fraud Prevention Breaks Out Beyond Traditional Financial Crime Controls
The scale, speed and accessibility of modern payments have fundamentally altered the risk landscape, shifting fraud from an isolated criminal activity to a systemic challenge embedded in everyday financial services. European regulators are increasingly reframing fraud as a core consumer protection challenge rather than simply a financial crime risk. This is not limited to one segment of the market: banks, payment institutions, electronic money (e-money) firms and investment platforms are all exposed. Fraud comprises a spectrum of typologies that continue to evolve alongside technological and behavioural changes. Most prevalent forms across Europe include: Authorised push payment (APP) fraud. Social engineering and impersonation scams. Phishing and smishing attacks. Account takeover fraud. Romance scams. Artificial intelligence (AI) fraud. As payment journeys become more seamless and embedded, often designed to minimise friction, fraudsters are exploiting the same efficiencies to execute scams at scale, with reduced detection windows and greater cross-border reach. Several structural drivers that are involved in fraud acceleration include: Mobile wallets. Online banking and embedded
Read articleRegulatory Influencer: Bank Charters Disrupting Money Transmitter Licenses and the US Financial Services Market
Payment service providers (PSPs), fintechs, and digital asset firms have traditionally scaled by obtaining money transmitter licenses (MTLs) across many US states, each with its own rules and oversight. That model is now being challenged.
Read articlePACE Act Presents a Direct Challenge to the Bank-Centric US Payments Model
The newly proposed legislation represents one of the most ambitious attempts to date to break banks’ monopoly over US payments infrastructure by extending direct access to federal payment systems to qualified nonbank firms.
Read articleRegulatory Influencer: Stablecoins as the Trojan Horse for Federal Payments Reform in the US
New federal frameworks are reshaping US supervisory rules, and banks, nonbanks and fintechs will all need to recalibrate their strategies for a landscape focused more on activity than identity.
Read articleRegulatory Impact Summary: UK Senior Managers & Certification Regime Review
The Financial Conduct Authority's (FCA) changes to the Senior Managers & Certification Regime (SM&CR) are designed to reduce administrative burden and improve proportionality without weakening individual accountability. The reforms were developed jointly with the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) and apply to all SM&CR firms, and further updates are expected later in 2026, subject to legislative change by HM Treasury.
Read articleRegulatory Influencer: Modernizing US AML – The Burden of 'Simplification'
After years of industry advocacy and growing acknowledgment from regulators that the current anti-money laundering (AML) framework is not operating as effectively as it should, two significant proposals signal where the future of AML compliance may be headed in the United States.
Read articleIndia Considers Measures to Fight Rising Digital Payments Fraud
A Reserve Bank of India (RBI) discussion paper has proposed a series of measures to address rising fraud levels in digital payments and ensure that consumers adopting new modes of payment are not making themselves more vulnerable to scams.
Read articleRevised EU Payments Regulation Package Moves Closer With Release of Draft Texts
Regulated firms across Europe can start to prepare in earnest for the new payments regulation framework, as the long period of high-level speculation ends and the roadmap for implementation becomes clear.
Read articleFinland’s Crypto-Assets Ban Faces Long-Term Challenges
Finland’s new gambling laws ban crypto-assets to curb harm, yet this restriction may inadvertently drive players toward offshore sites, potentially clashing with EU MiCA regulations regarding digital payment parity.
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