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Revolut Tests Pound Stablecoin

Revolut is set to begin testing a pound-denominated stablecoin as part of a regulatory trial overseen by the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority.

The initiative will take place within the regulator’s sandbox framework, which allows financial firms to experiment with new products under controlled conditions. The pilot will involve a limited group of participants and focus on potential applications such as payments and settlement processes.

Stablecoins are digital tokens designed to maintain a fixed value by being linked to traditional currencies. Interest in such instruments has grown globally, although major UK financial institutions have taken a cautious stance.

Regulators have indicated that trials like this are intended to explore how emerging technologies might enhance efficiency in financial services while maintaining safeguards.

Revolut plans to begin work on the project in the coming months, reflecting continued efforts to expand digital asset capabilities within established oversight structures.

Britain Needs AI Stress Tests for Financial Services, Lawmakers Say

British lawmakers are urging regulators to introduce artificial intelligence-specific stress tests for the financial sector, warning that current oversight is not sufficient to protect consumers or ensure market stability as AI adoption accelerates.

In a report on AI in financial services, the Treasury Committee said the Financial Conduct Authority and the Bank of England should move beyond a “wait and see” approach. The committee recommended running AI-focused stress tests to help firms prepare for potential market shocks triggered by automated systems.

Committee chair Meg Hillier said she was not confident the financial system could withstand a major AI-related incident, calling the situation worrying as increasingly autonomous systems influence decisions. Around three-quarters of UK financial firms now use AI in core functions such as insurance claims processing and credit assessments.

While acknowledging benefits, the report warned of significant risks, including opaque credit decisions, exclusion of vulnerable consumers through algorithmic targeting, fraud, and the spread of unregulated financial advice via AI chatbots. Lawmakers also highlighted potential threats to financial stability, including reliance on a small number of U.S. technology providers and the risk that AI-driven trading could amplify herding behaviour in markets.

The committee urged the FCA to issue guidance by the end of 2026 on how consumer protection rules apply to AI and what level of understanding senior managers must have of the systems they oversee. The FCA said it would review the report, while the Bank of England said it would consider the recommendations. Separately, Britain’s finance ministry appointed senior figures from Starling Bank and Lloyds Banking Group to help guide AI adoption in financial services.

UK and US launch joint taskforce to streamline capital markets, boost crypto cooperation

Britain and the United States will establish a new Transatlantic Taskforce for Markets of the Future aimed at cutting red tape for firms seeking to raise capital across both markets and strengthening cooperation on crypto assets, the UK Treasury announced Monday.

The taskforce was agreed by UK finance minister Rachel Reeves and U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent during President Donald Trump’s recent state visit to Britain. It will be jointly chaired by finance ministry officials from both nations, with regulators also participating. The body is expected to deliver its first recommendations within 180 days, focusing on short-term improvements to collaboration and exploring longer-term opportunities in wholesale digital markets.

The move reflects London’s push to reinforce its role as a global financial hub after losing ground in Europe post-Brexit, with many companies shifting stock listings to the U.S. It also marks an effort to align Britain’s emerging digital asset regulation with the U.S. model, which relies on applying existing financial rules rather than creating an entirely new framework, as the European Union has done.

By smoothing capital markets access and harmonizing crypto oversight, both governments aim to attract investment, reduce compliance burdens, and position themselves at the forefront of digital finance.