The Financial Conduct Authority’s visit to the Middle East reflects the UK regulator’s commitment to tackling money laundering and terrorism financing through enhanced international cooperation.
The Financial Conduct Authority has reinforced its commitment to combating financial crime by deepening partnerships with United Arab Emirates government, regulatory, and law enforcement authorities. Executive Director Steve Smart led the delegation in a series of high-level meetings designed to advance collaboration on shared priorities in the global fight against illegal financial activity.
The visit underscores the growing importance of international coordination in tackling financial crime. As financial networks become increasingly complex and cross-border, regulators and law enforcement agencies across jurisdictions must work together to identify suspicious activity, share intelligence, and disrupt illicit funding flows. The FCA’s engagement with UAE counterparts reflects this operational reality, placing the UK regulator at the centre of international efforts to strengthen financial systems against money laundering, terrorism financing, and sanctions evasion.
Why UAE partnership matters nowThe timing of the FCA delegation is significant. The UAE has undergone substantial regulatory reforms in recent years, positioning itself as a committed partner in international financial crime prevention efforts. In August 2024, the Emirates introduced transformative amendments to its anti-money laundering laws, establishing new coordinating bodies including a National Committee for Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing, supported by a dedicated General Secretariat. These structural reforms aim to improve coordination between financial institutions, designated non-financial businesses, and law enforcement agencies across the country.
The UAE’s efforts gained international recognition when the Financial Action Task Force, the global standard-setter for anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing regulation, removed the country from its Grey List in February 2024. This delisting reflected genuine progress in implementing international standards and marked a turning point in the UAE’s regulatory standing.
Following this achievement, the UAE’s Cabinet approved a comprehensive National Strategy for Anti-Money Laundering, Counter-Terrorism Financing, and Proliferation Financing for 2024-27. The strategy addresses emerging threats including trade-based money laundering, virtual assets, cybercrime, and sophisticated legal structures designed to obscure beneficial ownership. By aligning its regulatory framework with global best practices, the UAE has positioned itself as a serious partner for institutions like the FCA seeking to strengthen the international financial system.
Strengthening cross-border cooperationThe FCA’s visit reflects the UK’s broader strategy of deepening regulatory cooperation with key financial centres. International coordination on financial crime is essential because criminal networks exploit gaps between jurisdictions, moving illicit funds across borders through complex webs of transactions designed to obscure their origins. Money laundering undermines the integrity of financial systems, distorts markets, and can facilitate more serious crimes including drug trafficking, human trafficking, and terrorism.
The FCA, established under the Financial Services and Markets Act, is responsible for regulating conduct across the UK financial system and combating financial crime. Through overseas missions like the UAE visit, the regulator shares best practices, learns from international peers, and builds the intelligence networks necessary to detect suspicious cross-border transactions affecting UK firms and customers.
For UK businesses operating in the Middle East, stronger regulatory cooperation offers practical benefits. Clearer standards, improved information sharing between authorities, and coordinated enforcement reduce compliance uncertainty and create a more level playing field. UK financial institutions, asset managers, and professional services firms with UAE operations benefit when regulators on both sides understand each other’s expectations and can share information efficiently.
Implications for UK financial regulationThe FCA’s engagement with UAE regulators also signals the UK’s post-Brexit approach to financial regulation: maintaining influence through bilateral relationships and multilateral forums rather than through EU membership. By building direct relationships with major financial centres, the UK regulator can shape international standards and ensure British interests are represented in discussions about emerging threats like cryptocurrency-related money laundering and sanctions evasion linked to geopolitical tensions.
Domestically, stronger international partnerships help the FCA combat financial crime affecting UK taxpayers. Money laundering inflates housing costs, distorts commercial real estate markets, and can fund criminal enterprises that harm communities. According to estimates from HM Treasury and law enforcement bodies, hundreds of billions of pounds may be laundered globally each year, with significant sums flowing through or affecting UK financial institutions.
Source: @TheFCA
Key Takeaways
- The FCA’s delegation to the UAE reflects the critical importance of international regulatory cooperation in combating sophisticated, cross-border financial crime in an increasingly interconnected global financial system.
- The UAE has substantially strengthened its anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing frameworks, gaining international recognition through its delisting from the Financial Action Task Force Grey List and earning status as a credible partner for UK regulators.
- Enhanced cooperation between UK and UAE authorities helps UK businesses navigate regulatory requirements, improves intelligence sharing to detect suspicious activity, and strengthens defences against money laundering, terrorism financing, and sanctions evasion affecting UK financial stability and integrity.
What This Means for Kent Residents
For Kent residents and UK households generally, stronger international regulatory partnerships directly support financial system stability and help prevent criminal proceeds from corrupting local property markets, businesses, and communities. Kent’s significant cross-Channel trade relationships and proximity to London’s financial markets mean the county benefits from robust UK regulatory standing internationally. The FCA’s proactive engagement with partners like the UAE ensures that UK banks, payment providers, and investment firms operating abroad can operate efficiently whilst maintaining the high compliance standards that protect consumer deposits and market confidence. By deepening partnerships with advanced regulators, the FCA also helps prevent illicit funds from entering UK property and business transactions, ultimately protecting the integrity of markets and institutions on which Kent households and workers depend.


