With regulation, customer expectations and tech converging, 2026 is a tipping point for UK insurers—demanding measurable proof, not better narratives.
Private markets drive asset management growth, but valuation governance decides credibility as regulators sharpen focus and weak frameworks risk trust and fees.
Payments in 2026 is a balancing act - innovating at full speed while controls tighten just as fast.
Financial services firms face tougher outcome-based scrutiny as regulations shift from intent to demonstratable effectiveness.
Banking in 2026 is a race between reinvention and resilience — and firms are being judged on both.
Selective capital, resilient income and ESG‑ready assets: Ian Guthrie outlines where UK real estate is heading in 2026—and how our advisory team helps you act.
Build an effective transaction monitoring framework: risk assessment, data, rules, validation, alert handling, oversight and calibration in one end‑to‑end guide.
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
Non‑financial misconduct becomes a regulatory risk from 2026. Learn what the FCA expects and how firms can strengthen governance, oversight and culture.
Whistleblowing is entering a new phase. Recent legislative changes, including updates under the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act and the Employment Rights Act, are reshaping what effective reporting and response look like for large organisations.
Investigations are often viewed as a way to uncover a single, definitive truth. But in practice, they are rarely black and white.
The UK banking sector is undergoing rapid transformation. Chris Laverty discusses how these changes are driven by regulatory pressure, competitive dynamics, and shifting consumer expectations.
The insurance sector is under pressure from new regulatory expectations, economic uncertainty, and the growing impact of climate change and technological disruption. Chris Laverty breaks down the key challenges and offers solutions.
Discover why early expert involvement in dispute resolution can reduce costs, refine strategy, and improve outcomes.
When a dispute proceeds to a hearing, expert testimony becomes critical. Chris Tune discusses what it takes to give evidence.
The changes to the Civil Procedure Rules in England and Wales on 1 October 2024 mean that judges must actively consider mediation or other forms of alternative dispute resolution (ADR). Sarah May explores why it's often a better option than litigation.
