GRC Report Staff

APRA Sees a Different Kind of Financial Risk Taking Shape

The latest System Risk Outlook from the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority is, on paper, a reassuring document. Australia’s financial system remains strong. Banks are well capitalized. Insurers hold solid liquidity positions. Stress testing suggests the system can withstand severe shocks, including a deep global recession combined with funding stress and operational disruption.

FTC Escalates Take It Down Enforcement With New Warnings to AI Image Platforms

On Tuesday, the FTC said it had warned 12 companies that they appear to be failing to comply with the Take It Down Act, the federal law that officially entered enforcement this week after a one-year compliance period. The problem, according to the FTC, is not especially complicated. The companies allegedly do not appear to provide victims with a legally compliant process for requesting the removal of nonconsensual intimate images appearing on their platforms.

AUSTRAC Puts Australia’s Gambling Sector Under Scrutiny With Bankstown Sports Club Audit Order

On Wednesday, the Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre ordered Bankstown District Sports Club to appoint an external auditor after raising concerns that the club’s anti-money laundering controls may not be strong enough to prevent criminal exploitation.

Singapore’s Climate Finance Pitch Turns Toward Resilience, Risk, & Harder Questions About Readiness

There was a line in Chee Hong Tat’s speech that probably would have sounded strange to anyone expecting the usual polished climate conference choreography.

Swiss GRC Day 2026 Puts Heat Maps, Quantification, & Governance Culture Under the Microscope

A debate over heat maps was always going to draw attention at SWISS GRC DAY 2026. Not because anyone in governance genuinely loves them anymore, but because they still sit everywhere, from inside board decks, quarterly reports, audit presentations, and risk committee updates long after many organizations quietly stopped trusting them.

Canadian Steel Firms & Executive Agree to $19 Million Settlement Over Alleged Customs Duty Evasion

Two Canadian steel companies and one of their top executives have agreed to pay $19 million to resolve allegations that they evaded customs duties by falsely declaring the origin of imported steel products entering the United States. Canada-based Farjess, Royal Canadian Steel, and part-owner and president Feroz Jessani allegedly avoided paying duties on flat-rolled steel products by misrepresenting their countries of origin to U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

OCC Moves to Scale Back Supervisory Burden on Community Banks

The OCC has outlined a series of supervisory and regulatory changes aimed at reducing burden on community banks while preserving what the agency described as a risk-based approach to oversight. The reforms touch everything from Community Reinvestment Act examinations to capital calculations, model risk management, and cybersecurity reviews.