Compliance & Ethics

Australian Court Orders Record $193 Million in Penalties Over CFD Scheme That Targeted Vulnerable Investors

The Federal Court of Australia has imposed $193 million (AUD $300.2 million) in penalties against collapsed contracts-for-difference issuer Union Standard International Group and two former authorized representatives after finding they engaged in systemic unconscionable conduct that left customers with losses exceeding $53 million (AUD $83 million).

MFSA Finds Marketing Compliance Weaknesses Across Insurance & Investment Firms

Marketing disclosures are often treated as the final step in a product launch. A disclaimer is added, compliance signs off, the campaign goes live, and attention moves elsewhere. The Malta Financial Services Authority's latest supervisory review suggests that approach remains more common than regulators would like.

Brazil Fines Denso $19.5 Million in Long-Running Auto Parts Cartel Case

Brazil's antitrust authority has fined Japanese automotive supplier Denso Corporation approximately $19.5 million (100.8 million reais), concluding a case that traces back more than a decade and centers on allegations of coordinated conduct in the market for wire harnesses and other automotive electrical components.

Italy Fines Philip Morris €7 Million Over 'Smoke-Free' Marketing Claims

The Italian Competition Authority has fined Philip Morris €7 million after finding that the company's advertising for combustion-free tobacco products misled consumers into believing the products were harmless to health or less harmful than other tobacco products.

Ahold Delhaize Agrees to Pay $40 Million to Resolve Allegations of Inflated Prescription Drug Pricing

A discount program is supposed to lower the price of a prescription. The dispute at the center of a newly announced $40 million settlement is what happens when those discounts exist for customers but are not reflected in the prices reported to government healthcare programs.

California Regulator Hits Navitas With $4 Million Penalty Over Unlicensed Lending

A Florida-based commercial lender has agreed to pay a $4 million penalty and provide refunds to California borrowers after state regulators found the company engaged in lending activities without the required license, according to an enforcement action announced Monday by the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation (DFPI).

Government Contractors Pay $21.3 Million Over Veteran-Owned Contract Scheme

Broadway Electric and Cornerstone Contracting, two New York-based government contractors, along with its CEO and President, have agreed to pay $21.3 million to resolve allegations that they used service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses and other qualifying firms as vehicles to secure federal contracts that otherwise would have been out of reach.