Key players: HM Treasury leads implementation under the Sanctions and Anti-Money Laundering Act 2018; UK Parliament (House of Lords/Commons) for approval; Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) for cryptoasset oversight and changes in control (aligning with FSMA 2000); supervisory authorities, Registrar of Companies, and Financial Regulators Complaints Commissioner for expanded cooperation. Affected sectors include banks, cryptoasset businesses, trust/company service providers, and insolvency practitioners; no specific companies or individuals named.[1][3][4][7][10]
Context and timeline: Stemming from HM Treasury's 2024 consultation on MLR effectiveness (response implemented here), with September 2025 technical feedback refinements (e.g., pooled accounts clarifications). Builds on post-Brexit FATF alignment and 2017 MLRs; prior drafts published 26 March 2026. Most provisions effective late June/early July 2026 (21 days post-making), others (e.g., crypto counterparty DD, trusts) in 2027 (e.g., September 2027 deadlines).[1][3][4][5][10]
Newsworthy now: Fresh parliamentary laying (1 April 2026) triggers imminent debate/approval amid rising crypto-enabled crime, FATF compliance pressures, and UK economic security push; impacts high-risk sectors with tight implementation timelines, heightening enforcement risks as firms adapt to refined risk-based rules.[3][8][10]