Reforms to Money Market Fund Regulations
Why linked: Reforms to Money Market Fund Regulations gov.uk announcement — directly maps to the WMSs already on the thread.
The Government and FCA announce plans to reform UK Money Market Fund Regulations.
The Enhancing Financial Services Bill is the King's Speech 2026 vehicle for delivering key parts of the Leeds Reforms announced by the Chancellor in 2025: modernising the FSMA model of regulation, updating consumer protections (including reforms to the Financial Ombudsman Service), and embedding the sector's competitiveness and growth mandate.
Financial services account for around 20% of UK exports and the UK is the world's largest net exporter of financial services; the Bill is the principal legislative lever for the post-Brexit Smarter Regulatory Framework, FOS reform, payments architecture consolidation and the cryptoasset regime — areas that have been advanced through SIs and strategy papers but now need primary legislation to lock in.
The Bill was announced in the King's Speech 2026 and is at pre-legislative scrutiny stage; HM Treasury continues to deliver adjacent reforms through SIs and the Smarter Regulatory Framework programme, with the cryptoasset perimeter SI laid in early 2026 and PSR consolidation into the FCA having been consulted on in April 2026.
The Bill will modernise regulation of financial services, reform FOS, update consumer protections for the digital age, and deliver Leeds Reforms commitments to support competitiveness and growth.
HMT's central strategy framework for the sector plan under the modern industrial strategy; the Bill operationalises legislative components of this strategy.
HM Treasury's roadmap for replacing assimilated EU law through tailored UK rules made under FSMA — the workstream the Bill formalises and extends.
Outlines the principles and processes governing UK Overseas Recognition Regimes — successor to the EU equivalence framework — including HMT decision-making and lead regulators.
Foundational document setting out the UK's outcomes-based equivalence framework following the EU Withdrawal Act 2018.
MoU between HMT, BoE, PRA and FCA setting out how the ORR regime operates — a key piece of post-Brexit regulatory architecture.
HMT policy paper extending the FSMA model to UK CRR – central plank of prudential reform under the Smarter Regulatory Framework.
Sets out HMT's proposals for consolidating the PSR within the FCA — a structural reform likely to be delivered through the Bill.
Treaty laid before Parliament in February 2026 implementing the Berne Financial Services Agreement — a flagship Overseas Recognition Regimes use case.
MoU between HMT, Bank of England and PRA on resolution arrangements – updated tripartite crisis governance referenced by Bill reforms.
Joint policy statement reforming the remuneration regime — a Leeds Reform deliverable advanced through regulator rule-making rather than primary legislation.
SI 2026/102 establishing a regulatory perimeter for cryptoasset activities — a Leeds Reforms deliverable that the Bill is expected to backstop.
Designates Money and Mental Health Policy Institute under s.234C FSMA 2000 and s.68 FSBRA 2013 for super-complaints to the FCA and PSR.
Independent complaints commissioner report with regulator responses — relevant to FOS and complaints-scheme reforms in the Bill.
Committee report on governance and scrutiny of regulator rule-making — directly relevant to the Bill's accountability provisions.
Independent review whose recommendations on research unbundling feed listing-rules and capital-markets reforms now consolidated by the Bill.
PRA's statutory report on embedding its secondary competitiveness and growth objective – key empirical baseline for Bill measures.
Predecessor statute providing the revoke-and-replace machinery for assimilated EU law and regulators' growth/competitiveness secondary objective — the Bill builds on this framework.
Structural reform to be delivered through the Bill.
Strategy is the policy frame the Bill enacts.
The Enhancing Financial Services Bill will deliver key parts of the Leeds Reforms set out by the Chancellor in 2025. It will modernise how the sector is regulated, enable it to grow and to lend more to businesses, and make consumer protections fit for the digital age.
Why linked: Government legislative commitment defining the Bill's scope.
Why linked: Chancellor's 2025 Leeds Reforms set the policy programme the Bill enacts.
Why linked: Reforms to Money Market Fund Regulations gov.uk announcement — directly maps to the WMSs already on the thread.
The Government and FCA announce plans to reform UK Money Market Fund Regulations.
Why linked: Official King's Speech legislative-programme source mentions this thread or its named Bill.
The full PDF of the King's Speech 2026 background briefing notes from the Prime Minister's Office, containing dedicated section on the Railways and Passenger Benefits Bill (p.75) setting out the rationale for establishing Great British Railways.
Why linked: The King's Speech 2026 and official briefing notes announce the Enhancing Financial Services Bill as part of the government's legislative programme.
The King's Speech 2026 bill for financial services reform, intended to support UK competitiveness, investment and the sector's contribution to growth while maintaining effective regulation.
Why linked: HMT-FCA performance review records — parallel accountability mechanism for FCA's competitiveness objective.
Records of the meetings between the Economic Secretary to the Treasury and the Chief Executive of the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) to discuss the FCA’s performance.
Why linked: HMT-PRA performance review records — operational accountability evidence for the secondary competitiveness objective.
Records of the meetings between the Economic Secretary to the Treasury and the Chief Executive of the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) to discuss the PRA’s performance.
Why linked: HMT policy paper extending the FSMA model of regulation to UK CRR — central plank of prudential reform under the Smarter Regulatory Framework.
Legislation to facilitate changes to the UK prudential banking framework, including implementation of Basel 3.1 and the Small Domestic Deposit Takers (SDDT) regime
Why linked: Memorandum of Understanding on financial crisis management (HM Treasury, BoE, PRA) – establishes regulatory coordination framework within scope
Memorandum of Understanding between His Majesty’s Treasury, and The Bank of England and Prudential Regulation Authority in respect of Resolution Planning and Financial Crisis Management
Why linked: Financial Services Regulators Complaints Commissioner Annual Report 2024-25 – oversight and accountability document on FCA/PRA operations relevant to regulatory governance
The annual report and accounts for the Financial Services Regulators Complaints Commissioner for the year ended 31 March 2025,and the responses provided by the Financial Conduct Authority and Prudential Regulation Authority.
Why linked: Memorandum of Understanding on Overseas Recognition Regimes (HM Treasury, BoE, PRA, FCA) – post-Brexit regulatory equivalence and divergence strategy within scope
Memorandum of understanding between HM Treasury, the Bank of England, the Prudential Regulation Authority and the Financial Conduct Authority on Overseas Recognition Regimes.
Why linked: Filled the "Post-Brexit financial services equivalence and regulatory divergence strategy" gap via web research
This guidance document outlines the principles and processes which govern the UK’s Overseas Recognition Regimes.
Why linked: PRA's Competitiveness and Growth second report 2024/25 – directly addresses embedding competitiveness objective within prudential regulation, core to Bill intent
The PRA’s second report on how it is embedding its secondary to facilitate, subject to aligning with relevant international standards, the international competitiveness of the economy of the United Kingdom (including in particular the financial services sector), and its growth …
Why linked: HM Treasury 'Next Phase' policy paper on Smarter Regulatory Framework (March 2024)—continuing legislative and regulatory roadmap
This note sets out the next phase of delivering a Smarter Regulatory Framework for the UK by replacing assimilated law on financial services.
Why linked: State of the sector: annual review of UK financial services 2023 — empirical baseline for competitiveness assessments.
This is the second annual report on the attractiveness and international competitiveness of UK financial services, prepared by the City of London Corporation, in partnership with HM Treasury.
Why linked: HM Treasury Delivery Plan for Smarter Regulatory Framework (July 2023)—implementation guidance and roadmap for regulatory reform
This plan sets out how the government is delivering a Smarter Regulatory Framework for the UK by replacing retained EU law on financial services.
Why linked: Investment Research Review (Rachel Kent review) – addresses competitiveness of UK investment research sector within financial services
The Investment Research Review, led by Rachel Kent, was launched on 9 March 2023, to consider levels of financial services investment research in the UK, and its contribution to UK capital markets competitiveness.
Why linked: UK-EU Memorandum of Understanding on Financial Services Cooperation June 2023 - post-Brexit regulatory alignment and equivalence strategy
On 27 June 2023, the UK and EU signed the memorandum of understanding (MoU) on regulatory cooperation in financial services.
Why linked: HM Treasury policy paper 'Building a smarter financial services framework' (December 2022) setting out government approach to replacing retained EU law—core strategic document for the thread
This statement sets out the government’s approach to repealing and replacing retained EU law on financial services to deliver a comprehensive FSMA model of regulation tailored to the UK.
Why linked: Post-Legislative Scrutiny Memorandum: Financial Services – reviews implementation of Financial Services Act 2012 and related legislation
A post-legislative scrutiny memorandum covering the Financial Services Act 2012, the Financial Services (Banking Reform) Act 2013, and the Bank of England and Financial Services Act 2016.
Why linked: Foundational 'A new chapter for financial services' (Mansion House 2021) policy paper that sets the strategic frame inherited by the Leeds Reforms.
Published alongside the Chancellor’s Mansion House speech, this document sets out the government’s vision for the future of the financial services sector.
Why linked: Filled the "Post-Brexit financial services equivalence and regulatory divergence strategy" gap via web research
This guidance document outlines the principles and processes which govern the UK’s equivalence framework.
Why linked: Prudential standards policy statement 2020 - government's intention to implement Basel III standards, core prudential reform mechanism
The policy statement confirms the Government’s intention to implement the internationally agreed Basel III banking standards in the UK. The statement also announces the Government will take powers to enable the implementation of updated prudential rules for UK banks and …
Why linked: Financial Services (Implementation of Legislation) Bill policy note 2019 - regulatory implementation powers and framework
This policy note outlines the bill’s purpose, and provides detail on the EU legislative proposals to which it would apply.
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The Enhancing Financial Services Bill, announced in the King's Speech 2026 1, is the legislative vehicle for delivering the Chancellor's 2025 Leeds Reforms. The Bill will modernise the FSMA model of regulation, reform the Financial Ombudsman Service, update consumer protections for the digital age, and embed the sector's secondary competitiveness and growth mandate. It sits on top of a deep layer of secondary legislation already being delivered under FSMA 2023 powers — including the cryptoasset regime (SI 2026/102), the Overseas Recognition Regimes framework, and ongoing Smarter Regulatory Framework commencement 23. The Bill is expected to formalise consolidation of the Payment Systems Regulator into the FCA following HMT's April 2026 consultation outcome 4 and to recast Financial Ombudsman Service redress architecture. Pre-legislative scrutiny is the current stage; First Reading is not yet scheduled.
The Bill was announced in the King's Speech 2026 background briefing notes 1 but has not yet been introduced to Parliament. HM Treasury continues to deliver substantial parts of the policy package through secondary legislation and the Smarter Regulatory Framework programme set out in Building a Smarter Financial Services Regulatory Framework: Next Phase 2. The Financial Services Growth and Competitiveness Strategy — the policy frame within which the Bill sits — was developed through a call for evidence in 2024–25 34. Regulators have advanced their part of the package: the FCA's listing rules overhaul (PS24/6) 56, its joint remuneration reform with the PRA (PS25/15) 7, and its cryptoasset Handbook consultation (CP25/25) 8. The PRA's Second Competitiveness and Growth Report 2024/25 9 documents how it is operationalising the new secondary objective. Structural reform of payments architecture progressed via HMT's April 2026 streamlined-approach consultation outcome proposing PSR consolidation into the FCA. International openness is being delivered through Overseas Recognition Regimes: the ORR Guidance Document 10, the July 2025 ORR MoU 11, and the February 2026 UK/Switzerland Mutual Recognition Agreement (TS No.6/2026) 12.
In May 2026 HM Treasury and the FCA jointly announced reforms to Money Market Fund Regulations via parallel written ministerial statements (HCWS1562 / HLWS1566) 12. In April 2026 the consultation outcome on a streamlined approach to payment systems regulation set the direction for consolidating the PSR within the FCA 3. February 2026 saw the laying of the cryptoasset Regulations under FSMA 2000 and the designation of Money and Mental Health Policy Institute as a designated consumer and representative body for FCA/PSR super-complaints. The UK/Switzerland Berne Agreement was presented to Parliament in February 2026. The financial crisis management MoU between HMT, the Bank of England and the PRA was updated in September 2025 4. The joint FCA/PRA remuneration reform Policy Statement PS25/15 was published in October 2025 5.
Three sequencing questions will shape practitioner work over the next twelve months. First, when the Bill is introduced and what its actual perimeter looks like: the King's Speech briefing names FOS reform and consumer protection modernisation 1 but is silent on whether SMCR reform (advanced through joint FCA/PRA Discussion Paper DP23/3) 2 will be carried in primary legislation or left to regulator rule-making. Second, the legislative mechanic for PSR consolidation: HMT's April 2026 consultation outcome 3 does not specify whether the merger will be effected by clauses in the Enhancing Financial Services Bill or by a free-standing instrument; affected firms will want clarity early. Third, the cryptoasset perimeter: SI 2026/102 establishes the regime under existing FSMA powers, but the Bill may extend or codify it — particularly in light of the Lords Financial Services Regulation Committee's January 2026 stablecoin inquiry. Practitioners should also watch the FCA's response to CP25/25 cryptoasset Handbook proposals 4 and the ongoing rollout of Smarter Regulatory Framework commencement regulations — the 13th tranche was already laid in February 2026. The PRA's next Competitiveness and Growth Report (expected mid-2026) will be the key empirical baseline against which the Bill's accountability provisions are assessed 5. Engagement with the EU-UK Financial Regulatory Forum 6 will also condition the pace and scope of UK divergence from retained EU rules.
The most significant uncertainty is the absence of Bill text: the King's Speech briefing is the only government source describing scope 1, so most analytical claims about content are forward-looking. Inferred from corpus gap: no Regulatory Policy Committee opinion on the Bill is yet in the corpus (one existed for the predecessor FSMB 2022 2), so cost-benefit analysis cannot yet be tested. FOS reform is named in the briefing but its mechanics are unspecified — the live concern raised in PQs about FOS precedent-setting is not yet addressed in government text. The treatment of equivalence/ORR provisions versus continued reliance on FSMA 2023 powers is unclear 34. Finally, the corpus contains no published industry response (UK Finance, AFME, TheCityUK) to the Leeds Reforms Bill announcement, so industry pressure points are inferred rather than evidenced.
This briefing focuses on the Enhancing Financial Services Bill as the King's Speech 2026 vehicle for the Leeds Reforms. It does not cover consumer credit reform (separate Bill workstream), pensions regulation reform (separate framework), or the AML/CTF supervisory consolidation question being progressed under a different regime. Where the Smarter Regulatory Framework programme is delivering reforms through SI under FSMA 2023 powers, those SIs are surfaced only where they are likely backstopped by the Bill.
Bills and Acts this regime substantively depends on. Links go to the bill's own thread on this site (where available) and to bills.parliament.uk.
Provides the FSMA model of regulation the Bill modernises — FCA/PRA objectives, rule-making powers, consumer-protection sections (s.234C) and statutory perimeter.
Established the twin-peaks FCA/PRA architecture and the complaints scheme under s.84 that the Bill builds on.
Created the PSR (subject to consolidation) and the s.68 designated representative body regime; the Bill is expected to amend both.
Provides the revoke-and-replace machinery for assimilated EU law and the secondary competitiveness and growth objective — the Bill is its primary-legislation companion.
The Bill itself — announced in the King's Speech 2026, not yet introduced to Parliament; will amend FSMA 2000, FSA 2012, FSBRA 2013 and FSMA 2023 to deliver the Leeds Reforms.
The Enhancing Financial Services Bill sits at the apex of a layered regulatory architecture. At base, the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 establishes the FSMA model of regulation: HM Treasury sets statutory perimeters, the FCA and PRA make rules within objectives set by Parliament, and the Bank of England carries macroprudential and resolution functions. The Financial Services Act 2012 added the twin-peaks architecture and complaints regime; the Financial Services (Banking Reform) Act 2013 added the PSR, ring-fencing and SMCR; and FSMA 2023 added the revoke-and-replace machinery for assimilated EU law plus the secondary competitiveness and growth objective.
The Bill operationalises the Leeds Reforms set out by the Chancellor in 2025 and announced as a legislative programme in the King's Speech 2026 1. It is the primary-legislation companion to a large body of secondary legislation being delivered under FSMA 2023 powers — including the cryptoasset perimeter (SI 2026/102), the ORR designations framework (SI 2025/1154-equivalents and the ORR Guidance), and capital-requirements transitional provisions (SI 2026/...). Where regulator rule-making suffices, reforms are delivered through FCA/PRA policy statements (e.g. PS25/15 remuneration reform, PS24/6 Listing Rules) rather than statute.
Three doctrinal layers are particularly engaged. First, consumer protection: the Bill commits to modernising redress arrangements and FOS, building on the s.234C FSMA / s.68 FSBRA super-complaints regime (most recently used to designate Money and Mental Health Policy Institute). Second, market infrastructure: the April 2026 consultation outcome proposes consolidating the PSR into the FCA, which requires primary legislation given the PSR's statutory basis. Third, international openness: the UK/Switzerland Berne Agreement and the ORR Guidance Document constitute the post-Brexit replacement for EU equivalence — outcomes-based, regulator-advised, withdrawable by HMT.
The Bill cannot dispense with FSMA: it amends it. Practitioners should expect the Bill to grant new HMT powers, retune regulator duties (particularly around consumer redress and FOS precedent), restructure payments regulation by absorbing the PSR, and provide statutory backstop for the cryptoasset and ORR regimes that have been constructed via SI.
A statutory secondary objective requiring the FCA and PRA to facilitate the international competitiveness of the UK economy and its growth, subject to aligning with relevant international standards.
HMT's programme for revoking assimilated EU financial services law under FSMA 2023 and replacing it with tailored UK rules made by the FCA, PRA and HMT.
UK successor to EU equivalence: HMT designation regime allowing reliance on overseas regulatory frameworks where outcomes are equivalent, based on technical advice from lead regulators.
Body designated by HMT under s.234C FSMA 2000 / s.68 FSBRA 2013 able to make super-complaints to the FCA or PSR about features of a market significantly damaging consumer interests.
First Reading / introduction of the Enhancing Financial Services Bill following the King's Speech announcement.
Further SIs under FSMA 2023 commencement powers continuing the Smarter Regulatory Framework rollout (commencement regs No.13 already laid in February 2026).
PSR consolidation legislative steps following the April 2026 consultation outcome — likely to be folded into the Bill.
FCA finalisation of cryptoasset Handbook rules following CP25/25 (closed September 2025).
Lords Financial Services Regulation Committee stablecoin inquiry report likely to feed into Bill scrutiny.
Sponsor of the Bill; frames it as delivering the Leeds Reforms to modernise regulation, expand consumer protection for the digital age, reform FOS, and embed the sector's competitiveness — while maintaining high regulatory standards.May 2026Jul 2025Mar 2024
On the competitiveness objective: PRA's Second Competitiveness and Growth Report 2024/25 actively evidences how it is embedding the secondary objective into rule-making, while emphasising alignment with international prudential standards.Jun 2025
On Leeds Reforms delivery: FCA is delivering substantial reform packages via Handbook rules — listing rules overhaul (PS24/6), remuneration reform (PS25/15) and the cryptoasset Handbook (CP25/25) — anchoring the regulator-rule-making leg of the Bill's package.Oct 2025Sep 2025Jul 2024
On PSR consolidation: subject (not author) of HMT's April 2026 streamlined-approach consultation outcome proposing consolidation into the FCA — institutionally affected rather than positioned.Apr 2026
On regulator accountability: pressed for a stronger parliamentary scrutiny framework for financial services regulations, with governance and oversight arrangements proportionate to the regulators' expanded post-Brexit rule-making powers.Jun 2022