Banking Industry

Article ID: 830901ca267234876f351fb90b52ebf0a778e3ba9e35101e5946a4e96dbd5926

Source ID: primary:newsnow.co.uk

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URL: http://newsnow.co.uk/h/Industry+Sectors/Banking

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About our Banking news
Latest news on banking, covering UK banks, interest rates, financial regulation, fintech, mortgages, loans, and the latest industry developments.
The UK banking sector is one of the most significant financial ecosystems in the world, home to institutions including Lloyds Banking Group, Barclays, NatWest, HSBC and Santander UK, alongside a growing cohort of digital challengers such as Monzo and Revolut. With the Bank of England's base rate decisions influencing everything from mortgage costs to savings returns, the sector sits at the heart of the British economy — directly affecting millions of households and businesses.
The motor finance mis-selling scandal remains the most pressing issue facing UK lenders. Following a landmark Supreme Court ruling in August 2025, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) launched a consultation on an industry-wide compensation scheme covering undisclosed commission arrangements on car loans between 2007 and 2024. Final rules are expected in early 2026, with compensation payments — estimated at an average of around £700 per eligible customer across roughly 14 million drivers — anticipated to begin later in the year. The total industry liability is estimated at between £9 billion and £18 billion, drawing comparisons to the PPI scandal.
Regulatory reform is reshaping the competitive landscape. A new corporate offence of "failure to prevent fraud" came into force in September 2025, holding large firms criminally liable if they lack adequate safeguards. Buy-now-pay-later (BNPL) products are due to come under full FCA regulation by July 2026, while the broader Smarter Regulatory Framework is replacing retained EU financial rules with UK-specific standards. Banks are also contending with rising fraud losses — UK Finance recorded £1.17 billion stolen through payment fraud in 2024 — even as the industry prevented a further £1.45 billion in unauthorised fraud.
Technology is fundamentally changing how people bank. Open banking recorded 351 million payments in 2025, a 57% annual increase, with 16.5 million UK users now connected to the ecosystem. Neobanks are maturing: Monzo posted its first annual profit in 2024, and digital-first institutions now account for more than 20% of new primary banking relationships. Meanwhile, 75% of financial firms are already deploying artificial intelligence, primarily for data analytics, fraud prevention and anti-money laundering — a transformation the Bank of England is monitoring closely for both opportunity and systemic risk.
UK banking has deep historical roots — the Bank of England was founded in 1694, and the City of London has been a global financial centre for centuries. That heritage now coexists with a post-Brexit regulatory divergence from the EU, where third-country firms face new restrictions on offering core banking services to European customers without an in-region subsidiary. Domestically, the longstanding "Big Four" high street banks face increasing pressure from digital entrants, forcing a strategic rethink around branch networks, fee income and SME lending.
Whether you follow interest rate decisions, FCA enforcement actions, fintech innovation, or consumer rights issues such as the motor finance redress scheme, the NewsNow Banking feed delivers a constant stream of the most important headlines from across the industry. Bookmark the feed to stay informed about the regulatory, economic and technological forces shaping the future of UK and global banking.

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