About a-team Marketing Services
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry

A-Team Insight Blogs

FCA Sees Suspicious Transactions Decline for 2019

Subscribe to our newsletter

The UK financial watchdog has seen the number of suspicious transactions and order reports (STORs) go down for the first time since 2016, according to its latest STORs report for December 2019. The regulator suggests that more robust steps taken by firms to tackle financial crime risks could be part of the reason for the decline, along with its recent supervisory crackdown on compliance.

Chapter 8 of the FCA’s Financial Crime Guide, published in December 2018, highlighted firms’ obligations to counter the risk of being used to further financial crime, including the criminal offences of insider dealing and market manipulation. The steps taken by some firms, since then, include reviewing the suitability of clients whose trading may otherwise have been subject of a STOR and restricting their access to financial markets where appropriate.

“We believe these restrictions have resulted in less suspicious activity being facilitated by these firms, and consequently a reduction in STORs,” says the regulator.

The 2019 figures do however suggest that the number of commodity and fixed income STORs continue to rise. This reflects steps taken by firms to improve their detection capabilities, and the FCA has encouraged firms to continue developing their surveillance capabilities in this area.

“We have also seen an increase in the number of market observations received,” notes the FCA. “Market observations provide us with valuable intelligence and we encourage their submission where a STOR is not appropriate.”

Market Observations were launched in 2019, designed to provide a channel for firms to submit information about market activity they have observed which is not necessarily appropriate as a STOR.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: High noon for surveillance: resolving tension between the costs of false positives, challenges of calibration, and compliance

When it comes to trade surveillance, regulators want firms to do their own alert calibration, examine all alerts, and keep auditable records. Firms need to balance the real cost of false positives with the technical challenge and risk of self-calibrating and auto-calibrating, while compliance, IT and vendors have to grapple with the need for defensible...

BLOG

AI Everywhere at A-Team Group’s RegTech Summit (NYC) 2025

Artificial intelligence was the recurring theme this year’s A-Team Group RegTech Summit in New York. Across conversations on AI governance, agentic workflows, crypto compliance, surveillance, AML transformation and regulatory reporting, a single theme cut through: AI is becoming embedded in the regulatory fabric of financial services, but its adoption must remain grounded, explainable, and anchored...

EVENT

RegTech Summit New York

Now in its 9th year, the RegTech Summit in New York will bring together the RegTech ecosystem to explore how the North American capital markets financial industry can leverage technology to drive innovation, cut costs and support regulatory change.

GUIDE

The Global LEI System – Slow but Sure

After what looked like a slow start to the summer, the initiative to establish a global standard for legal entity identifiers (LEIs) took a series of significant leaps forward during August, that appears to have put the project firmly back on track. If the marketplace felt a little reticent in June and July, it could...