The digital assets sector faces major regulatory and reporting changes from 2026. Learn what CARF, new FCA rules and rising financial‑crime risks mean for firms
The new UK regulations that bring CRS 2.0 and CARF into force are live and most of the new obligations commence on 1 January 2026. Under the new UK regulations we now have an enhanced penalty regime and mandatory registration for UK financial institutions, combined with increasing interactions with HMRC around data quality and compliance frameworks.
Billions in overpaid tax may be sitting unclaimed across Europe and UK funds, and life insurance companies are entitled to their share. Martin Killer explores why now is the time for institutional investors to act, driven by recent tax and legal developments, as well as ongoing fiduciary responsibilities.
Discover how CRS 2.0 and CARF are transforming global tax reporting. Learn what financial institutions must do now to stay ahead of crypto compliance.
The IRS is tightening scrutiny on dividend-equivalent payments tied to equity derivatives. Martin Killer outlines what firms must know and how to prepare.
Qualified intermediaries are preparing for the 2027 IRS certification cycle, with new reporting requirements and greater regulatory scrutiny.
The EU’s FASTER Directive simplifies cross-border withholding tax relief with digital tools, urging financial firms to act early to ensure compliance by 2030.
In our latest operational tax update, Martin Killer highlights the key points from the 2023 Qualified Intermediary (QI) Agreement.
Your guide to managing coming changes in the operational tax landscape, including the Crypto Asset Reporting Framework.
