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اردو
UK Regulators Tighten Oversight of Technology Risks and Financial Crime
Abstract:UK regulators launch oversight of critical technology providers and continue enforcement against unauthorized firms, fraud, and market misconduct in financial services.

UK financial regulators have introduced new measures covering critical technology providers while continuing enforcement actions against unauthorized firms, fraud, and market misconduct.
From July 2026, the Bank of England, the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA), and the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) will begin supervising designated critical third parties that provide essential services to financial institutions.
At the same time, the FCAs latest enforcement data shows continued action against financial crime, including unauthorized investment activities, market abuse, and compliance failures.
New Rules Cover Critical Technology Providers
The Treasury has designated the first group of critical third parties under the new framework.
These providers supply technology infrastructure used by financial firms. Regulators said failures or major disruptions at such companies could affect multiple institutions at the same time, creating risks beyond individual businesses.
The new oversight regime will focus on how these providers manage operational risks, respond to incidents, and communicate with regulators and financial firms that rely on their services.
However, financial institutions will remain responsible for their own third-party risk management, including supplier checks, contingency planning, and oversight of outsourced services.
FCA Increases Action Against Unauthorized Activities
The FCA continued its enforcement efforts against firms and individuals involved in financial misconduct.
In 2025, the regulator issued 2,329 warnings related to unauthorized firms or suspected scams, compared with 2,240 in the previous year.
The FCA also secured convictions in cases involving insider trading, fraud, money laundering, and other offences. Several individuals received prison sentences, while market abuse cases resulted in significant financial penalties.
The regulator also imposed fines related to weak transaction reporting systems and compliance failures.
Online Investment Fraud Remains a Focus
The FCA has increased attention on online investment fraud and misleading financial promotions.
Through cooperation with overseas regulators, the authority has targeted illegal financial influencers and online campaigns promoting unauthorized services.
The actions included criminal proceedings, public warnings, and requests to remove problematic content from social media platforms.
For retail trading markets, the move reflects continued regulatory concern over online channels being used to attract investors toward unregulated services.
Regulatory Reform Moves Forward
Alongside enforcement, the FCA is continuing work on several regulatory initiatives.
These include final rules for buy now, pay later products, changes related to mortgage affordability assessments, and the expansion of innovation programs focused on financial technology.
The regulator has also received applications for its artificial intelligence-focused regulatory sandbox, allowing firms to test new technologies under supervision.
For forex and CFD providers, the latest developments highlight two areas receiving increasing attention from regulators: operational resilience and consumer protection.
As trading businesses rely more heavily on technology infrastructure and digital marketing channels, regulators are placing greater emphasis on system reliability, compliance controls, and transparency.
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