All Europe articles – Page 51

  • Goldman Sachs Tower
    Article

    FCA fines Goldman Sachs £34.3M for transaction reporting failures

    2019-04-01T18:47:00Z

    Compliance officers in the financial services industry can learn a lot from the failings of Goldman Sachs, which was fined £34.3 million (U.S. $45 million) by the U.K. Financial Conduct Authority for failing to provide accurate and timely reporting relating to 220 million transaction reports over a period of a ...

  • RussiaJusticeFeature
    Article

    Troika Laundromat reveals the gaps in AML compliance

    2019-04-01T18:36:00Z

    A recent report from several investigative journalists details the AML scandal behind Troika Dialog, once Russia’s largest private investment bank, and is just one small look into the much bigger problem of corruption across the globe.

  • US-UK-flagscrop
    Article

    SEC, U.K. strike post-Brexit cooperation deals

    2019-03-29T20:17:00Z

    The SEC and the United Kingdom’s Financial Conduct Authority have reaffirmed their commitment to cooperation and information sharing, even after the latter withdraws from the European Union.

  • Stockflag
    Article

    May loses another Brexit vote; EU calls 'no-deal' split 'likely'

    2019-03-29T20:14:00Z

    For the third time, the House of Commons has voted against British Prime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit proposal. The tight April deadline for completing a separation deal with the European Union is now looking doubtful, and a “no-deal” split more likely.

  • Article

    What Swedbank is saying about its multiple investigations

    2019-03-29T17:07:00Z

    It has been a tumultuous few weeks for Swedbank as it fends off several investigations, including for money laundering and insider trading, resulting in the dismissal of its chief executive officer.

  • Brexitdeadlock
    Article

    Brexit deadlock: Going through the motions

    2019-03-28T17:01:00Z

    With U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit deal twice defeated, Members of Parliament were tasked with finding an alternative solution through a series of eight “indicative,” non-binding votes. After all eight were rejected, what happens next?

  • Brexitsplit
    Article

    Companies walk judgment tightrope as Brexit doubts peak

    2019-03-27T21:54:00Z

    Preparers are facing some brutal accounting judgments as they approach the end of a reporting period straddling key dates in a chaotic Brexit.

  • theresamay_0
    Article

    May: Approve my Brexit plan, and I’ll resign

    2019-03-27T21:44:00Z

    With a bold—but likely inevitable political gambit—U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May has made a promise to Members of Parliament: Vote for her Brexit plan, and she will resign.

  • Brexitnewdate
    Article

    One more time: Brexit pushed back by two weeks

    2019-03-22T20:46:00Z

    U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May has gotten yet another reprieve, with the recent decision by European leaders to delay a decision on Brexit by two weeks. This gives May another chance to get the votes needed to pass her Brexit deal.

  • Article

    Nokia discloses Alcatel-Lucent compliance issues

    2019-03-22T15:06:00Z

    Following its 2016 acquisition of Paris-based telecommunications company Alcatel-Lucent, Nokia disclosed in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission that it has “been made aware of certain practices relating to compliance issues at the former Alcatel-Lucent business that have raised concerns.”

  • brexitmarch21
    Article

    Brextension, but only if deal approved

    2019-03-21T16:32:00Z

    After two rejections, U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May has sent a letter to European Council President Donald Tusk to ask for an extension on Brexit.

  • BigFour
    Article

    U.K. narrow-minded to think breaking up Big Four a good idea

    2019-03-20T18:37:00Z

    Big Four accounting expert James Peterson discusses ways in which the United Kingdom may dismantle the Big Four, the possible consequences of each of the proposals, and which he thinks is the better solution.

  • Article

    EC fines Google €1.49B over online advertising abuses

    2019-03-20T16:57:00Z

    The European Commission slapped Google with a €1.49 billion (U.S. $1.69 billion) fine for breaching competition rules—the third penalty in three successive years for the internet giant.

  • Globalbribery
    Article

    A global look at anti-bribery enforcement activity

    2019-03-20T15:14:00Z

    TRACE International’s 2018 Global Enforcement Report serves as an insightful resource for companies seeking information on which countries are enforcing anti-bribery laws and which countries are beleaguered by bribery and corruption issues.

  • Article

    FCA fines UBS £27.6M for transaction reporting failures

    2019-03-19T20:48:00Z

    The U.K. Financial Conduct Authority has fined UBS £27.6 million (U.S. $36.6 million) for failings relating to 135.8 million transaction reports.

  • AngryShareholders
    Article

    Interserve: Carillion Part II

    2019-03-19T18:33:00Z

    In an almost carbon copy of the Carillion collapse, peer contracting firm Interserve went into administration on Friday due to a majority of its shareholders rebelling against a debt cancellation deal that would have seen their investment at even lower levels than the deal that was finally agreed to.

  • Brexitclock
    Article

    U.K. votes to delay Brexit

    2019-03-14T21:38:00Z

    The United Kingdom’s Parliament voted 412-202 Thursday to ask the European Union for a delay to Brexit in yet another defeat for beleaguered Prime Minister Theresa May.

  • ClearCookies
    Article

    Dutch DPA: Forcing users to agree to ‘cookies’ violates GDPR

    2019-03-14T21:18:00Z

    The Dutch Data Protection Authority says giving visitors access to websites only if they agree to their internet browsing activities being tracked by so-called “cookies” or other tracking software does not comply with the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation.

  • Whistle
    Article

    EU whistleblower protections closer to fruition

    2019-03-13T20:27:00Z

    As EU whistleblower protections inch closer, Neil Hodge provides an in-depth look at exactly what they will cover.

  • Bribe
    Article

    Hempel resolves bribery case with European authorities for $33.3M

    2019-03-13T20:18:00Z

    Global coatings manufacturer Hempel has reached a settlement with Danish and German authorities and agreed to a fine of 220 million Danish krone (U.S. $33.3 million) concerning bribery payments made to ship managers in Germany.