Illegal Finfluencers – Industry welcome for FCA’s international crackdown 

Illegal Finfluencers – Industry welcome for FCA’s international crackdown 


Todays other news

England faces historic housing shortfall – households set to surge 17% by 2040

The number of households in England is projected to rise...

Landbay launches new Small HMO remortgage products 

Specialist buy-to-let lender, Landbay, has announced the launch of new...

Society expands BTL flexibility with 40-year term

Nottingham Building Society, the mortgages and savings mutual, has announced...
Shocking figures show extent of conditional selling scandal 
Shocking figures show extent of conditional selling scandal 

There’s been widespread support across the industry for the latest actions by the Financial Conduct Authority against illegal so-called ‘finfluencers’.

The FCA – as well as regulators from Australia, Canada, Hong Kong, Italy and the United Arab Emirates – have agreed to take co-ordinated action. 

In the UK, the FCA has issued 50 warning alerts, which the regulator said will result in more than 650 take down requests on social media platforms and more than 50 websites operated by unauthorised finfluencers. It has also sent seven ‘cease and desist’ letters, and invited four finfluencers for interview. The FCA said it has also made thee arrests with the support of the City of London Police and authorised criminal proceedings against three people.

This has all been warmly praised by legal and financial services industry figures. 

Terry Green, social media partner at international law firm Katten Muchin Rosenman LLP says: “Whilst there has been a lot of coverage on protecting people from harmful behaviours and illegal materials online, the Online Safety Act’s wide remit also mandates the protection of people from fraud and financial offences. This includes rogue financial promotions especially in social media and messaging services.

“Online platforms will be expected to assess the risk of people being defrauded or being taken advantaged of by people carrying out regulated activities when they have not been authorised by the FCA, such as providing financial advice or conducting financial promotions. The Online Safety Act specifically highlights this as one of the 17 types of illegal content and online platforms must conduct a risk assessment on in relation to the likelihood and harm of this occurring on their platform. They must also outline and put in place ways in which these risks and harms are mitigated. These risk assessments should have been in place from March 2025 and measures are expected to be in place from September 2025.

“Whilst the FCA has targeted specific social media users, Ofcom will go after the social media and online platforms that are enabling this. We may expect to see more cooperation between the FCA and Ofcom to tackle these types of content online.”

Caroline Black, consultant at Gherson Solicitors, adds: “This is a hugely positive development in the important role that Regulators have in protecting the public from rogue traders and fraudsters. Although social media platforms are notoriously difficult to police, the deterrent effect of a criminal investigation should not be underestimated.  We can expect more action of this type to come”.

And Karl Foster, financial services partner at Spencer West LLP says: “Regulators have taken an increased interest in the activities of the so-called ‘finfluencers’ as the power and popularity of social media evolves, particularly with younger demographics. Those pushing stories of how large portfolios can be amassed and profits made, may not realise that once they begin to reference products, specific stocks, or tokens, they venture into giving investment advice which is a regulated activity. Unauthorised financial promotion in the UK is a criminal offence, punishable by a fine and/or up to two years in prison.

“From an FCA perspective, the protection of consumers from harm and ensuring the integrity of the financial system are overriding statutory duties. Therefore, taking action against non-regulated individuals who could cause harm (willingly or unwittingly) is likely to encourage the adoption of regulatory oversight by those who wish to continue practicing or even the cessation of unregulated activity by those who don’t. For a number of years now, the reduction in high-risk investment by those with a low tolerance of risk (think general prohibition on promotion of cryptoassets for example) has been a goal of the FCA; this latest action is complimentary to and enabling of that goal. Only a few months ago, the Treasury raised the issue of fraud and finfluencers the with the FCA.”

Share this article ...

Join the conversation: Login and have your say

Want to comment on this story? Our focus is on providing a platform for you to share your insights and views and we welcome contributions. All comments are screened using specialist software and may be reviewed by our editorial team before publication. Introducer Today reserves the right to edit, withhold or delete comments that violate our guidelines, including those that harass, degrade, or intimidate others. Users who post such content may be banned from commenting.
By commenting, you agree to our Commenting Terms of Use.
Recommended for you
Related Articles

Companies House disciplines over 100 staff for compliance breaches

Companies House disciplines over 100 staff for compliance breaches...
Broka reaches 50-broker milestone in just weeks

Most ID checks still manual, warns compliance team

SmartSearch claims 54% of identity checks are still manual....

Help for lenders navigating complex ESG regulation

An API solution designed to help lenders navigate ESG regulation...
FCA confirms easing of remortgaging rules 

Industry split over regulatory change prospects in 2026

Lenders are split according to new research from Target Group....

How far could ‘Trumpflation’ drive new mortgage average rates?

This is the latest analysis by Moneyfacts...

Government massive retrofit programme backed by lenders and institutions

Lenders and finance houses have thrown their weight behind a...

Expert predicts trouble for Rachel Reeves as CGT receipts drop

HMRC figures spell trouble for the Chancellor...
Recommended for you
Latest Features

England faces historic housing shortfall – households set to surge 17% by 2040

The number of households in England is projected to rise...
Sponsored Content

95% LTV Second Charge Mortgages, NO ERC’s and Fixed Rates starting from 3.65%

Historically second charge mortgages or secured loans as they are...

One low rate

Lenders must say what they mean and mean what they...

Send to a friend

In order to send this article to a friend you must first login. Click on the button below to login or sign up.