GOV.UK Financial Monitoring Commission — A statutory body
Official regulator — verify firms before you invest

Enforcement

The FMC investigates misconduct and holds firms accountable. Report a problem, track your case, or learn about the whistleblower program.

Report a firm to the FMC

File a confidential complaint in three guided steps and upload your supporting evidence.

Investigations · Final notices · Investor restitution

Recent Enforcement Actions

When firms or individuals break the rules, the Commission investigates and acts — to stop the harm, to return money to investors where it can, and to deter others.

128
Cases opened this year
£48m
Penalties imposed
£31.7m
Restitution returned to investors
19
Individuals banned from the industry

Concluded actions are published as final notices. The summaries below are illustrative of the conduct the Commission pursues:

MatterConductOutcome
In re: Withdrawal freezeSuspended client withdrawals without disclosure£4.2m restitution ordered
In re: Misleading marketingAdvertised \Licence suspended & £2.5m fine
In re: Commingled fundsClient money not segregated as required£1.8m penalty & remediation
In re: Unauthorised solicitationOperated without an FMC licenceCease-and-desist & asset freeze
In re: Unsuitable adviceRecommended high-risk products to cautious investorsTwo advisers prohibited & £1.1m fine
In re: Market manipulationLayering and spoofing on a regulated venue£3.4m penalty & referral

Powers & sanctions

The Commission has a graduated set of tools, applied in proportion to the seriousness of the breach and the harm caused:

SanctionWhen it is used
Private warningMinor, isolated breaches with no consumer harm
Public censureSerious breaches where a fine is not warranted
Financial penaltyDeliberate, reckless, or repeated misconduct
Restitution / redress orderTo return money or compensate affected investors
Requirement or restrictionTo limit, condition, or freeze a firm's activities
Suspension or cancellationTo remove a firm's permission to operate
Prohibition orderTo ban an individual from the industry
Court actionInjunctions, asset freezes, and recovery through the courts

How penalties are set

Financial penalties follow a transparent, five-step framework so that outcomes are consistent and proportionate:

  1. Disgorgement

    Any profit the firm made from the breach is removed first.

  2. Seriousness

    A figure is set by reference to revenue and the gravity of the misconduct.

  3. Aggravating & mitigating factors

    The figure is adjusted for cooperation, prior record, and consumer harm.

  4. Deterrence

    The penalty may be increased to ensure it is not treated as a cost of doing business.

  5. Settlement discount

    Firms that settle early may receive a reduction of up to 30%.

Whistleblower

Speak up — confidentially. Speak up — confidentially. Individuals who provide original information that leads to a successful enforcement action may be eligible for protection and a monetary award. Your identity is protected to the fullest extent permitted by law.

Who can report

Current and former employees, contractors, customers, competitors, and members of the public can all report concerns. You do not need proof — a genuine, reasonable suspicion is enough to come forward.

How your report is protected

What makes a useful report

The most actionable reports name the firm, describe the specific conduct, give dates and amounts, and attach any documents or screenshots you hold. The more concrete the detail, the faster we can assess it.

Submit information

The Enforcement Process

Every case follows a structured, fair process. Investigation and judgment are kept separate, and those facing action always have the right to make representations before a decision is taken.

  1. Intake & triage

    Complaints, tips, surveillance alerts, and firm notifications are received and prioritised by risk.

  2. Preliminary review

    Analysts assess whether there is a case to answer and whether the matter falls within the FMC's remit.

  3. Formal investigation

    The Division of Enforcement gathers evidence, compels documents, and interviews witnesses and subjects.

  4. Warning notice

    If action is proposed, the subject receives a warning notice and the right to make written and oral representations.

  5. Independent decision

    The Regulatory Decisions Committee — separate from the case team — decides whether and how to act.

  6. Sanction & publication

    A decision notice and, once effective, a final notice are issued; outcomes are normally published.

  7. Appeal

    The subject may refer the decision to the independent Financial Markets Tribunal, with an onward route to the courts.

Warning list: Warning list: the FMC publishes the names of firms and individuals operating without authorisation or impersonating licensed firms. If a firm is on the warning list, do not deal with it — and if you already have, tell us. tell us. enf_b87_after

Frequently asked questions

Will the FMC recover the money I lost?

We pursue restitution and asset recovery wherever possible and can order firms to compensate investors, but recovery is never guaranteed — especially against fraudsters who have moved money offshore. Eligible consumers of failed authorised firms may also claim from the compensation scheme.

Will I be told what happens to my complaint?

enf_b92_before case tracker enf_b92_after

How long does an investigation take?

It varies widely with complexity — from a few months to over a year for serious, cross-border cases. We prioritise matters that pose the greatest ongoing risk to investors.

Can I report a firm anonymously?

Yes. You may report anonymously, although giving us a way to contact you helps us ask follow-up questions and act more quickly.