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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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EBA Slams Fintechs Over Lax Compliance In New AML Risk Assessment

In its latest risk assessment, the European Banking Authority (EBA) has warned that poor practices and a lack of experience at fintechs, including payments and crypto firms, are undermining efforts to tackle financial crime.
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Payments Players Set To Rise To Challenge Of Trump's Tariffs

With merchants expected to take a hit and the world’s outlook increasingly volatile, payments firms have put on a brave face, suggesting that now more than ever there is an opportunity for competitive advantage.
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Payments

FiDA Soldiers On But Ballooning Scope Remains A Problem

Although the EU’s Financial Data Access (FiDA) framework did not get axed as had been anticipated, many of the critiques of the EU’s potential open finance rules remain.
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Payments

Lithuania Targets Resilience And Security In New Payments Strategy

In its latest payments strategy, Lithuania has followed jurisdictions such as Sweden in emphasising operational resilience and cybersecurity.
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Payments

U.S. Gaming Industry Working To Understand Federal Commodities Regulator

The sudden prominence of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission with regard to the rise of sports-event contracts has forced the U.S. gaming industry to work outside its normal channels before Congress and the federal government.
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Gambling

California Tribes Decry 'Breach Of Trust' Over Sports-Betting Meeting

Two of the largest tribal gaming associations in California have dismissed a report that suggested that tribes and commercial operators had reached an agreement on a plan to legalize sports betting.
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Gambling

Brazil Operators Facing Multifront Enforcement Risk

A seven-figure fine issued in São Paulo has underlined the prospect of online betting operators facing enforcement actions by state consumer protection agencies, as well as the multitude of regulatory agencies sketching out their role in Brazil’s newly licensed market.
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Gambling

Regulatory Influencer: UK Gambling Market Heralds New Era of Regulation

In April 2023, under the Sunak Conservative government, Lucy Frazer, the then secretary of state for culture, media and sport, finally published the long-awaited gambling white paper, ushering in a new era of regulation in the UK gambling market.
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Gambling

Social Media Encouraging Legal Action Against Online Operators In Romania

Romanian gamblers have launched legal action against online operators after being misled by social media videos and other false reports that they could receive compensation for alleged self-exclusion failings.
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Gambling

FinCEN Issues Warning On Terrorism Financing

Payments firms must look out for red flags indicating that they are being used to transfer funds to terrorist group ISIS and its global affiliates, US Financial Crimes Enforcement Network has said.
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Payments

UK And Netherlands Report Major Surge In Card Payments

The latest data shows that consumers in both countries continued their shift away from cash in 2024, with card payments dominating transactions.
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Payments

European Commission Accuses 13 Member States Of Missing DORA Deadline

The European Commission has launched infringement proceedings against 13 EU member states for failing to fully transpose the flagship Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) into national law by the January 17 deadline.
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Payments

News In Brief: March 31-April 4, 2025

An Alabama senator files legislation to legalise several forms of gambling.
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Gambling

Polish Lawmaker Sees 'Big Need' To Address Poker Regulation

Lawmakers from both Polish parliamentary chambers are developing a draft bill to open up the country’s poker market to allow Polish-based consumers to play outside casinos and online in a move intended to lure players away from the black market.
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Gambling

Regulatory Influencer: UK Financial Conduct Authority's New Five-Year Strategy Emphasises Growth, Digitisation And Battle Against Financial Crime

The UK’s financial services regulator, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has launched a new five-year strategy for regulatory oversight, intended to improve trust in the country’s financial services sector, create the right environment for growth, and address the growing threat of financial crime.
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Payments

Payments And Crypto Groups Lobby Downing Street To Embrace Digital Assets

A coalition of payments and crypto groups wants the UK government to adopt a more crypto-friendly stance, warning that rival jurisdictions are taking the lead in the global race to attract investment and innovation in digital assets.
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Payments

PSR Targets Mastercard And Visa with Proposed Remedies To Tackle High Fees

The Payment Systems Regulator (PSR) has unveiled a set of new remedies in response to its conclusions that the UK card market is not working well.
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Payments

US House Republicans Push For Roll-Back Of Biden Era Fintech Policies

Republican lawmakers on the House Financial Services Committee aim to rescind several Biden-era financial regulations, citing concerns over their impact on competition, innovation and consumer access to digital payments and fintech services.
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Payments

EU Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive Transposition Analysis

The Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) is a new European Union (EU) directive that requires small, medium and large companies operating in Europe to disclose their environmental, social and governance (ESG) impacts on society as part of an annual non-financial reporting duty. This report assesses the transposition status of the CSRD across EU member states, as well as European Economic Area and European Free Trade Association jurisdictions. This report also analyses a number of jurisdictions that have significantly expanded the application and scope of the EU’s CSRD, including Denmark, Finland, France, Ireland, Italy, Romania, Sweden and Norway.
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Payments

Interactive Map: Transposition of EU Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD)

The Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) is a new European Union (EU) directive that requires small, medium and large companies operating in Europe to disclose their environmental, social and governance (ESG) impacts on society as part of an annual non-financial reporting duty. This map outlines the transposition of the CSRD across EU member states, as well as European Economic Area and European Free Trade Association states.
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Payments

New Zealand Warns Social Media Influencers Over Promoting Foreign Gambling Websites

New Zealand social media influencers are being read the riot act over affiliate-style promotion of foreign gambling websites, with the gambling regulator warning it will prosecute and fine violators.
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Gambling
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Vixio’s Lessons Learned: Australia’s Cybersecurity Wake-Up Call, Insights from the FIIG Decision

In February 2026, the Australian Federal Court ordered FIIG Securities Limited (FIIG), an investment firm, to pay A$2.5m in civil penalties, plus A$500,000 in costs, following the Australian Securities and Investment Commission’s (ASIC) proceedings due to sustained cybersecurity failures at FIIG. The court found that, over a four-year period, FIIG breached core Australian Financial Services Licence (AFSL) obligations under the Corporations Act 2001, including failing to provide services efficiently, honestly and fairly, to maintain adequate resources, and to implement effective risk management systems. These failures were exposed by a 2023 cyber intrusion that resulted in the theft of approximately 385GB of sensitive data, affecting around 18,000 customers, with some of the information later appearing on the dark web. FIIG failed to: Allocate sufficient financial and technological resources to ensure suitably qualified and experienced personnel were available to manage cybersecurity. Implement adequate cybersecurity measures, including multi-factor authentication for remote access users, strong passwords and access controls for privileged accounts, appropriate firewall and security
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FCA’s Investigation of PayPal Signals Newly Unified Digital Competition Strategy

By scrutinising the digital wallet provider’s arrangements with US payment networks, the UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) is aligning with the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) in challenging global giants.
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Australian Consultation on A2A Payments Signals Move to Open Access

A transition period is looming as regulators seek to redefine the structure and governance of account-to-account (A2A) payments, aiming to update the country’s ageing infrastructure and embed competition and interoperability requirements.
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Vixio’s Verdict: The MiCA Transition Clock Is Running Out

On April 17, 2026, the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) published a statement on the end of transitional periods under Regulation (EU) 2023/1114 (Markets in Crypto-Assets – MiCA). Given the July 1, 2026 ending of the MiCA transition period, and the finalisation of the state of interplay between MiCA and PSD2, this Vixio’s Verdict will examine the implications of the regulators’ statements.
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Turkey’s Planned Crypto Tax Shift to Turn Exchanges into Fiscal Intermediaries

The proposed overhaul, currently under review, would require crypto-asset service providers (CASPs) to integrate real-time tax withholding into their operations, a move that could trigger capital flight to non-custodial or offshore venues.
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Global Crackdown on Rogue Financial Promotions Signals Growing Regulatory Scrutiny

The increasing focus on the activity of so-called “finfluencers” means payments and financial services firms should review their promotional content carefully, as regulators look to extend accountability beyond the individuals themselves to the organisations commissioning them.
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How 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.
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Regulatory 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
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Regulatory 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.
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PACE 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.
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