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UK’s BNPL Clampdown: FCA’s CP25/23 Explained
Buy Now Pay Later exploded by trading soft credit checks for softer regulation: lenders advanced £60 million in 2017 and more than £13 billion in 2024, almost entirely outside the Financial Conduct Authority’s rule-book. That run-way just shortened. On 18 July 2025, the FCA published its 112-page “CP25/23 – Deferred Payment Credit” consultation, the first
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Agentic Banking: The Rise of a Single-Brain Fintech
For decades, banks have tried to stitch together siloed channels, product systems, and data marts into something that feels like a single institution. In 2025, the ambition is finally getting a name—and a blueprint: agentic banking’s “single brain”. Think of a fabric of specialised AI agents (risk-scoring, treasury-optimising, fraud-hunting, portfolio-rebalancing) all plugged into one shared
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FedNow Instant-Payment Fraud Lands on Washington’s Agenda: Why the OCC Is Crowdsourcing Fixes for FedNow and RTP
America loves its fast money. Two years after launch, the FedNow Service counts more than 1,000 participating financial institutions and now clears over a million payments a day, thanks in part to a February rules change that lifted the single-transaction ceiling to US$10 million. Yet the same rail that lets wages settle in seconds is
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Anti-CBDC Act: Could a Privacy Backlash Derail America’s Digital Dollar Ambitions?
As part of “Crypto Week,” the US House of Representatives just passed the “Anti-CBDC Surveillance State Act” (H.R. 1919), a measure that would bar the Federal Reserve from issuing, pilot-testing or even researching a retail central-bank digital currency (CBDC) digital dollar capable of being held by the public. Speaker Mike Johnson says the vote will
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Basel’s Climate Climb-Down: Voluntary, Not Binding, Disclosures Signal the End of Capital Harmony
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The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) spent three years promising a global template for climate-risk disclosure that would anchor prudential rules just as Basel III anchors capital. On the 13th June 2025, it blinked. The final text, published as a “voluntary framework”, invites jurisdictions merely to “consider” adopting its metrics. In one stroke, the
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Data-Sovereign Clouds: Google’s UK Residency Controls May Finally Unblock Regulated-Industry AI
Last week at Google Cloud Summit London 2025, the hyperscaler promised something far less flashy than a new model, but far more consequential for banks and insurers: every request to its flagship Gemini 2.5 Flash and Agentspace can now be processed on data-sovereign compute clusters physically located in London or Manchester, never crossing the U.K.
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Australia’s New ‘Confirmation of Payee’ Goes Live – Is it the Blueprint Asia Needs to Stop Real-Time Payment Scams
As Australia’s New Payments Platform (NPP) enables money to move in seconds, scams are accelerating, and reversing a fraudulent transaction can take days, if it’s even possible. The country is seeing a surge in authorised push payment scams, where victims are tricked into sending money to accounts controlled by criminals. The financial industry is now
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MiCA’s First Regulated Dollar: Why Paxos’s USDG stablecoin Could Redraw Cross-Border Settlement
The euro zone just gained a fully regulated U.S-dollar stablecoin. On 1 July 2025, Paxos announced that its Global Dollar (USDG) is live across the European Union, issued by Paxos Issuance Europe OY under the direct oversight of Finland’s Financial Supervisory Authority and backed one-for-one with cash and cash-equivalent Treasuries. Kraken, Gate, Zodia Custody, and
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“One-Stop RegTech”: The UK’s New Regulatory Innovation Office Wants to Turn Red-Tape Headaches into a Competitive Edge
When Britain’s Technology Secretary Peter Kyle unveiled the country’s Regulatory Innovation Office (RIO) on 1 July 2025, he framed it as an Regtech antidote to “the regulatory maze that slows world-class ideas at the moment they need to scale.” The press note promises one central shop where start-ups can test products, decode overlapping rulebooks, and
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Mexican Digital Bank Klar’s $190 Million Raise Signals Latin America’s Cash-to-Card Inflection Point
Mexico’s four-year-old challenger digital bank Klar just landed a US $190 million Series C — US $170 million in equity plus US $20 million in venture debt — led by returning backer General Atlantic and joined by IFC, Prosus, Mouro Capital, Quona Capital and new strategic investors from the Santander and Televisa groups. The injection