Barclays Fined $56 Million for Money-Laundering Failures
U.K. regulators fined the bank more than 39 million pounds, equivalent to $52 million, for failing to detect and manage money-laundering risks in its yearslong relationship with Stunt & Co., a gold firm run by socialite James Stunt. It received a separate £3 million fine Wednesday for its dealings with a failed wealth-management firm, WealthTek.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
8 minutes ago
- Yahoo
‘High risk' sex offender jailed for breaching orders
A 'high risk registered sex offender' has been jailed for persistently breaching an order to prevent further offences by using aliases online. The 24-year-old, who appeared on the court list as Luke Hardy but identifies as Zoe Hardy and was referred to using female pronouns during the sentencing hearing, breached Sexual Harm Prevention Orders (SHPO), Teesside Crown Court heard. The first order was imposed in 2022 after Hardy was sentenced to a community order for three counts of making indecent images of children, including eight of the most serious kind, which were found on his mobile phone. Hardy breached that order in 2023 by deleting his internet history on his phone, including erasing dating apps from the handset, which was against the provisions of the order. Later that same year, Hardy breached the order by registering on a pornography site using the name Lucy which was prohibited as that was an alias which he had not notified the police about. The court heard that Hardy explained to police at the time how he was 'struggling with her sexuality, sometimes feeling like Luke, sometimes like Lucy'. Saba Shan, prosecuting, said the latest breach occurred in July when officers visited Hardy's home in Yarm Lane, Stockton after officers had designated him a 'high risk sex offender', and found he had used the name 'Zoe' as part of his identification on a dating app, in an email account and his name on a mobile game. It was understood that the breach occurred because Hardy did not inform police about any use of an alias online. Judge Richard Clews jailed Hardy for eight months for breaching the SHPOs and an extra month when he activated part of previous suspended sentences. He told the defendant: 'It is appropriate to describe the breaches of the Sexual Harm Prevention Order as persistent and deliberate.' He sentenced on the basis that there had been no harm caused to anyone else by Hardy breaching the orders.
Yahoo
8 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Exchange Bank Promotes Jamie Hidalgo to Senior Vice President, Risk Management
SANTA ROSA, Calif., August 05, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Exchange Bank (OTC: EXSR) is pleased to announce the promotion of Jamie Hidalgo to Senior Vice President, Risk Management. Since joining the Bank in March 2021 as Vice President, Risk Management Officer, Jamie has played a pivotal role in transforming the Bank's compliance infrastructure and enhancing its overall risk management framework. With over 22 years of community banking experience, Jamie has consistently demonstrated deep expertise across key areas including regulatory compliance, internal audit, fraud prevention, and third-party risk management. Her previous roles as Head of Compliance, and Compliance and BSA Officer at local institutions have positioned her as a respected leader in the industry. "Jamie's vision and commitment to building a strong risk culture have been instrumental in elevating the Bank's risk oversight and compliance programs," said Shari DeMaris, Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer. "Her collaborative leadership style and focus on empowerment align perfectly with the Bank's values and long-term objectives." In her new role, Jamie will continue to lead efforts to strengthen Exchange Bank's enterprise risk strategy, ensuring a forward-looking approach to risk governance and resilience. Jamie holds certifications as a Certified Regulatory Compliance Manager (CRCM) and Certified Anti-Money Laundering Specialist (CAMS) and is actively pursuing her Certified Enterprise Risk Professional (CERP) designation from the American Bankers Association. A hands-on and communicative leader, Jamie is known for her strong coaching skills, cross-functional collaboration, and accountability. She fosters alignment and support within her teams, ensuring the Bank is well-positioned to navigate the evolving risk landscape. Beyond her professional contributions, Jamie remains deeply involved in the community. She currently serves on the board and finance committee of United Cerebral Palsy and has a long-standing commitment to volunteerism, including working with Mentor Me Petaluma and as a graduate of Leadership Petaluma. About Exchange Bank Headquartered in Sonoma County and founded in 1890, Exchange Bank is a full-service community bank with assets of $3.27 billion. Exchange Bank provides a wide range of personal, commercial, and trust and investment management services with 17 retail branches in Sonoma County, a retail branch in Roseville and Trust & Investment Management offices in Santa Rosa, Roseville, Marin County and Silicon Valley. The Bank's legacy of financial leadership and community support is grounded in its core values of commitment, respect, integrity, and teamwork. Exchange Bank is known for its people who care about their customers, their company, and the communities where they live and work. Exchange Bank is a 19-year winner of the North Bay Business Journal's Best Places to Work survey and a 13-time winner of the Best Bank of Sonoma County by the Press Democrat's Readers' Choice 2024 awards. Exchange Bank was named Best Consumer Bank by the NorthBay biz Magazine's Best of the North Bay readers' poll and Best Local Bank by The Petaluma Argus Courier People's Choice Awards 2025. Exchange Bank is also a winner of the 2024 San Francisco Business Times Corporate Philanthropy award, and the Bohemian Magazine's Best of the North Bay 2024 named Exchange Bank Best Business Bank and Best Consumer Bank. Member FDIC — Equal Housing Lender — Equal Opportunity Employer View source version on Contacts Suzanne Knowlton, VP/Director of Marketing & Community RelationsExchange BankPO Box 403Santa Rosa, CA Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
8 minutes ago
- Yahoo
BP fuels FTSE 100 but soft US data tempers gains
The FTSE 100 climbed on Tuesday boosted by another day of well-received earnings, with Smith & Nephew, Diageo and BP all in favour, although weak US data saw progress fade late in the trading session. 'Strong corporate results are helping as they show businesses can still thrive despite the turbulent backdrop,' said Russ Mould, at AJ Bell. The FTSE 100 Index closed up 14.43 points, 0.2%, at 9,142.73. It had earlier traded as high as 9,177.95. The FTSE 250 ended 42.19 points higher, 0.2%, at 21,901.69, and the AIM All-Share ended up 4.59 points, 0.6%, at 763.48. Well-received earnings provided a lift in London, with index heavyweights BP and Diageo to the fore. Oil major BP rose 2.8% after better-than-expected second-quarter results. The strong earnings, coming on the back of a major hydrocarbon discovery in Brazil, will improve the investment mood music and be helpful for management credibility, analysts said. Underlying replacement cost profit of 2.35 billion dollars was well ahead of company compiled consensus for 1.82 billion dollars but 15% below 2.76 billion dollars a year ago. Alastair Syme, at Citi, said: 'After several quarters where earnings have not lived up to expectations, BP's 2Q25 is significantly better than market forecasts.' 'In the space of two days – yesterday's potentially highly material Bumerangue discovery in Brazil and today's earnings trajectory – we believe there are credible reasons for the investors to revisit the BP investment story,' he added. On Monday, BP reported new oil and gas findings at its Bumerangue offshore mining block, calling the discovery its 'largest in 25 years'. Alongside results, BP said it will conduct a thorough review of its businesses, including targeting further cost cuts. The company is two quarters into a 12-quarter plan and chief executive Murray Auchincloss said he was 'encouraged' by the early progress, but added 'we know there's much more to do'. Diageo climbed 4.9% after full-year results provided some reassurance, although they failed to sway some commentators. The London-based brewer and distiller, which owns brands ranging from Guinness stout to Johnnie Walker whisky, on Tuesday reported a decline of more than a third in its bottom line in the financial year that ended in June, as a slight decline in net sales was compounded by impairment and restructuring costs, unfavourable currency movements, and narrowed operating margins. Even so, Diageo said its results were in line with guidance. Bank of America said: 'While the environment remains challenging, it is clear that management is stepping up what it can control, and we believe these results will reassure.' Richard Hunter, at interactive investor, said there are 'emerging glimmers of hope'. But James Edwards Jones, at RBC Capital Markets, said the results do not 'advance the investment case – positive or negative – materially'. Smith & Nephew was the best blue chip performer, up 15%, as it said revenue growth accelerated in the second quarter of 2025. The Watford-based medical devices maker said pre-tax profit jumped 43% to 362 million dollars in the half year that ended June 28 from 253 million dollars a year prior. Revenue increased 4.7% to 2.96 billion dollars in the half year from 2.83 billion dollars a year ago, including a 1.55 billion dollar contribution in the second quarter, up 7.8% from 1.44 billion dollars last year. Chief executive Deepak Nath called it a 'strong performance'. The transformation of Smith & Nephew is starting to deliver 'substantial value', Mr Nath added. In Europe on Tuesday, the CAC 40 in Paris fell 0.1%, while the DAX 40 in Frankfurt rose 0.4%. In New York, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 0.3%, the S&P 500 was 0.6% lower, and the Nasdaq Composite declined 0.8%. Palantir jumped 5.9% after it raised annual guidance after quarterly revenue hit one billion dollars for the first time, while drugs firm Pfizer climbed 4.5% and also raised its annual outlook after 'another strong quarter'. But Wall Street fell back overall after figures showed the US service sector slowed down in July. Wells Fargo noted the Institute for Supply Management service sector index fell to 50.1 in July from 50.8 in June, the third-lowest reading since the pandemic year of 2020, and below consensus which had expected an improvement to 51.5. TD Economics said the softer trend in ISM services is 'indicative of slowing US economic activity – a theme that we anticipate will become more entrenched in the third quarter'. 'While the Fed will have to tread carefully with ongoing signals of an uptick in price pressures ahead, growth-related concerns are likely to dominate and should get the Fed moving when it comes to easing monetary policy,' it added. The dollar was mixed after the data. The pound rose to 1.3301 dollars late on Tuesday afternoon in London, compared with 1.3287 dollars at the equities close on Monday. The euro traded at 1.1579 dollars, higher against 1.1568 dollars. Against the yen, the dollar was trading higher at 147.42 yen compared with 147.30 yen. The yield on the US 10-year Treasury was at 4.20%, trimmed from 4.22%. The yield on the US 30-year Treasury was 4.77%, narrowed from 4.81% from Monday. Data showed growth in the UK's key service sector slowed but beat expectations in July, amid an 'unfavourable global economic backdrop' while optimism improved as US tariff concerns faded. The S&P Global UK services purchasing managers' business activity index fell to 51.8 points in July from 52.8 in June, but beat the July 24 flash reading of a sharper fall to 51.2 in July. The composite PMI meanwhile eased to 51.5 in July from 52.0 in June, outperforming the 51.0 flash reading. On the FTSE 250, Northampton-based building materials provider Travis Perkins climbed 5.6% as it reported improving revenue trends at its Merchanting business, while well-received results, including strong orders, supported industrial flow control equipment manufacturer Rotork up 6.6%. Close Brothers rose a further 6.8% after the favourable motor finance ruling but Domino's Pizza was off the menu, down 18%, after it lowered its annual outlook, with 'weak' consumer confidence keeping a lid on sales growth. Brent oil was quoted lower at 68.04 dollars a barrel in London on Tuesday, down from 69.20 dollars late on Monday. Gold firmed to 3,385.82 dollars an ounce against 3,372.82 dollars. The biggest risers on the FTSE 100 were Smith & Nephew, up 177 pence at 1,331p, Fresnillo, up 86p at 1,520p, Diageo, up 89p at 1,904p, Melrose Industries, up 26.8p at 575p, and BP, up 11.4p at 417.4p. The biggest fallers on the FTSE 100 were Relx, down 90p at 3,814p, Lloyds Banking Group, down 1.8p at 80.7p, 3i, down 84p at 4,029p, Games Workshop, down 300p at 16, Experian, down 70p at 3,859p. Wednesday's local corporate calendar has half-year results from miner Glencore, insurance broker Hiscox and insurer Legal & General. The global economic calendar on Wednesday has eurozone retail sales and construction PMI readings in the UK and across Europe. Contributed by Alliance News