Skip to content
Legal Business
  • Home
  • Law firms
        • Law Firms

        • Full list of law firms
        • More from the Legal 500

        • Comparative Guides
        • Financials

        • Global100
        • LB100
  • In-House
        • All In-House content

        • In-House
        • GC Powerlist

        • United Kingdom
        • Green Powerlist
        • All Powerlists
  • International
        • Jurisdictions

        • United Kingdom
        • United States
        • Europe
        • Africa
        • Middle East
        • APAC
  • Practice areas
        • Practice Areas

        • All
        • Corporate and M&A
        • Disputes
        • Employment
        • Energy and infrastructure
        • Financial services
        • Private capital
        • Real estate and construction
        • Restructuring
        • Tax
        • TMT
        • White-collar
  • Law firm data
  • Legal 500 data
  • Events
        • Our Awards

        • Legal Business Awards
        • ESG Awards
  • Green Ambassadors
        • Green Ambassadors by region

        • Europe 2025Meet the sustainability legal leaders championing the green transition across Benelux, DACH, France, Iberia, Ireland, and the Nordics.
        • Asia Pacific 2025Meet the sustainability legal leaders championing the green transition across Australia, Hong Kong, and Singapore.
        • United Kingdom 2025Meet the sustainability legal leaders championing the green transition in the United Kingdom.
        • United States 2025Meet the sustainability legal leaders championing the green transition in the United States.
        • Latin America 2025Meet the sustainability legal leaders championing the green transition across Latin America.
        • Methodology: how we select Green Ambassadors
        • Global Green Hub Archive

        • Green Guide Asia Pacific 2025
        • Green Guide Latin America 2025
        • Green Guide United Kingdom 2025
        • Green Guide United States 2025
        • Green Guide EMEA 2024
  • About
  • Newsletter

FCA fines triple to £1.5bn in 2014 but drop off expected as regulators switch focus to individuals

FCA fines triple to £1.5bn in 2014 but drop off expected as regulators switch focus to individuals
Author Avatar
Legal Business
17 June 2015
RegulatoryFinance

After the landmark fines issued to banks over Libor and foreign exchange market manipulation, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) saw the total value of penalties triple to £1.47bn in 2014. However, the increase looks to set a high-water mark as enforcement agencies switch attention to individuals.

Your limit of 1 article in 30 days is up. Please login for full access or subscribe. Corporate users - click here for simple access (no password needed). For more information, please contact jasmine.glass@legalbusiness.co.uk

Related ContentMore in this category

line-up

Comment: Are stressed junior lawyers being struck off too easily? It’s time for watchdogs to consider a more flexible approach

Freshfields denies wrongdoing in tax advice amid €50m settlement payout

Gilbert + Tobin

Sponsored briefing: Hayne, ASIC, banks, penalties and the price of shifting risk

‘A true win’ – Baker McKenzie on record Ecuador $1.6bn debt-for-nature swap and winning Finance Team of the Year

Financial Regulatory and Disputes Summit: Stranger than fiction

City of London

Greenberg expands finance team in the City with Weil hire

Revolving doors: Simpson Thacher, Latham, Sidley lead New Year London moves

‘Seize every opportunity’ – Paul Hastings partner Reena Gogna on City law, Suits and poetry

Jeremy Hoyland

Five partners vie to succeed Hoyland as Simmons managing partner

© 2025 Legal Business Magazine

Legalease Ltd, 188 Fleet Street, London, EC4A 2AG

T: +44 (0)20 7396 9313 | E: jasmine.glass@legalbusiness.co.uk

About & Contacts | Privacy Policy | Cookie Policy | Subscriptions