By
Adrianne Appel2025-12-12T16:58:00
Financial firms seeking guidance on AI, the threat of cyberattacks, market manipulation, or fraud targeting senior clients can turn to annual guidance issued by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.
The Regulatory Oversight Report is designed to assist firms in their quest to remain in, or move toward, compliance, FINRA said in releasing the report Tuesday. The report is one step in a series that FINRA plans to take to improve its ability to follow through on its mission of “protecting investors and safeguarding market integrity,” it said.
You are not logged in and do not have access to members-only content.
If you are already a registered user or a member, SIGN IN now.
2026-01-06T13:15:00Z By Ruth Prickett
What will be the critical tech issues for compliance in 2026? We asked experts what tech, digital, and cyber issues they believe compliance teams should be focusing on in the year ahead.
2025-12-24T19:04:00Z By Tom Fox
FINRA’s rules are intended to be technologically neutral. They apply when companies use GenAI or similar technologies in their businesses, just as they apply when companies use any other technology or tool. But what does that mean for a compliance professional using GenAI?
2025-12-19T20:33:00Z By Aaron Nicodemus
Greg Ruppert, Chief Regulatory Operations Officer at the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA), recently shared insights with Compliance Week regarding the self-regulatory organization’s use of Artificial Intelligence in monitoring trends in the market, spotting threats, and keeping its members informed.
2026-01-24T01:20:00Z By Ruth Prickett
The number of U.K. employment tribunal cases could rise following reforms in the Employment Rights Act 2025. Several changes take effect this year, including shorter unfair dismissal qualifying periods, day-one worker rights, stronger protections for pregnant women, and an end to exploitative contracts.
2026-01-21T20:51:00Z By Ruth Prickett
Long-awaited reforms to the U.K. audit regime have been “scrapped” from the government’s legislative plans. The decision has led to an outburst of disappointment and frustration from audit bodies and pension funds that argued the reforms would increase trust in companies and support growth.
2026-01-13T20:05:00Z By Oscar Gonzalez
Two months after the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau proposed a rule change to narrow anti-discrimination requirements for lenders, it has reversed previous guidance on noncitizen customers looking to borrow.
Site powered by Webvision Cloud