
Publication
Regulatory investigations and enforcement: Key developments
The past six months have seen a number of key changes in the regulatory investigations and enforcement space.
Global | Publication | March 2020
As the UK financial services industry seeks to navigates the legal changes that come with the UK's departure from the European Union, Norton Rose Fulbright has contributed to a new Oxford University Press practitioner law publication, 'Brexit and Financial Regulation'.
Written before the UK left the EU at the end of January 2020, the book provides guidance on the legal complexities of Brexit as it applies to financial institutions through the eyes of leading lawyers. It considers, from a financial services perspective, the draft withdrawal agreement and political declaration on the future EU/UK relationship that was approved at the negotiators’ level on both sides in November 2018 and further amended in October 2019. It also navigates the future of the EU and UK's approach to bank and investment firm authorisation, the EU concept of equivalence and changes to key pieces of EU legislation.
The book was edited by Jonathan Herbst (global head of financial services) and Simon Lovegrove (global head of FS knowledge, innovation and products), who also authored a chapter on the withdrawal agreement and political declaration on the future EU/UK relationship. Members of the wider team also contributed their insights on a number of areas, including on the EU approach to authorisation in Germany, France, the Netherlands, the impact of the UK senior managers' regime, and the Solvency II Directive.
Published by Oxford University Press, it can be purchased/downloaded with a 20 per cent discount.
Publication
The past six months have seen a number of key changes in the regulatory investigations and enforcement space.
Publication
In a recent determination, the Ombudsman rejected a scheme member’s claim that the trustees should have conducted due diligence on the receiving scheme before making a transfer in in 2014, as there was no duty of care on the trustees at the time of transfer.
Publication
The Court of Appeal has confirmed that proof of disclosure to third parties is not required for data protection law breaches and that individuals’ rights are breached by unlawful “processing” alone.
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