Navigating the Financial Services Industry’s Compliance Priorities in 2025: Mid-Year Checkpoint Download By Carol Beaumier and Bernadine ReeseThe big picture: As we start the second half of the year, it seems appropriate to revisit the compliance landscape for the financial services industry and evaluate initial views made at the start of the year.Common priorities: We assess the industry’s progress regarding artificial intelligence, financial crime, privacy and security, operational resilience, third party risk management, consumer protection, compliance function optimisation, and resourcing.Assessing challenges: We gauge whether managing these priorities was proving to be in-line with expectations, more or less challenging.Go deeper: Read about idiosyncratic issues in North America that have emerged from heightened uncertainty due in no small part to the new presidential administration in the US. Download What did we miss?We don’t think we missed any specific challenge. We did, however, underestimate the extent of change that would occur in just months. Today, we think it is fair to say that one of the most pressing compliance issues facing the global financial services industry is the increase in regulatory fragmentation. Different jurisdictions continue to adopt divergent approaches to issues like digital assets, data privacy, ESG and more, making cross-border compliance more complex.For global institutions, this means higher compliance costs, operational complexity, and legal/regulatory uncertainty.For anyone old enough to remember the formation of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision in the mid-1970s with one of its stated goals being the harmonisation of global standards and all the work since then to achieve that goal, this seems to be a big step backward.How are compliance departments managing?Best-in-class compliance departments recognise that, although it may sound contradictory, they need to respond proactively during this period of uncertainty. They are stepping up their horizon scanning activities to track agency publications, speeches and government agendas to anticipate changes. They communicate more frequently with executive management and their boards of directors to ensure the institution is prepared to deal with multiple regulatory scenarios. They are using this time to invest in long-term sustainable improvements to their compliance programmes, leveraging AI and technology, and not just for quick fixes. . . . one of the most pressing compliance issues facing the global financial services industry is the increase in regulatory fragmentation. The Compliance Playbook: Navigating the Financial Services Industry’s Compliance Priorities in 2025 As we approach the new year, the financial services industry again faces increasingly diverse and complex compliance risks, driven by the continued rapid pace of technological innovation, geopolitical tensions, and national and regional priorities. Understanding and managing these risks is essential for maintaining stakeholder confidence, ensuring operational resilience, and identifying and exploiting competitive advantage. Read more Topics Cybersecurity and Privacy Risk Management and Regulatory Compliance Artificial Intelligence