Global

Introduction

ESG is changing the landscape for financial institutions as stakeholders, including investors, increasingly expect them to make their operations more sustainable.

Financial services regulators also view ESG as a priority, embedding the principles of climate-related financial risks into their supervisory frameworks and dealing with greenwashing issues.

There is limited uniformity in regulation as financial

In this latest issue of Regulation Around the World, we look at some of the key regulatory developments that institutions operating in financial services should anticipate in 2026. The jurisdictions covered by this update include the United Kingdom, EU, France, Germany, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Italy, Türkiye, United States, UAE, Australia and China.

Read the full update here.

In the next instalment of our global horizon series (first instalment available here), our team observes a growing trend of increased international collaboration between regulators in different jurisdictions despite wider geopolitical tensions. 

Europe

The European Public Prosecutor’s Office (EPPO), the independent public prosecution office of the European Union has become increasingly active. It is

On 26 January 2026, the Investment Association published a report in relation to T+1 Settlement Navigating the UK EU and Swiss Transition (the Report).

Summary

The Report provides a roadmap of the UK and European Union securities markets from a trade-date-plus-two (T+2) to a trade-date-plus-one (T+1) settlement cycle, currently targeted

On 21 January 2026, the Financial Stability Board (FSB) published its 2025 Resolution Report (the Report).

Overview

The Report reviews the progress achieved on enhancing crisis readiness across banks, insurers and central counterparties (CCPs) in 2025 and the FSB’s priorities for 2026 to advance the operationalisation of resolution frameworks.

Building

On 14 January 2026, the Financial Conduct Authority, Bank of England and Prudential Regulation Authority signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the European Supervisory Authorities to enhance cooperation and oversight of critical third parties (CTPs) that fall under the UK’s CTP regime. The MoU establishes a framework for coordinating and

On 13 January 2026, the G7 Cyber Expert Group (G7 CEG) issued a statement on advancing a coordinated roadmap for the transition to post-quantum cryptography in the financial sector. The statement follows an earlier statement that the G7 CEG issued in September 2024 which highlighted the benefits and risks associated with quantum computing.