GRC Report Staff

Spain’s Competition Regulator Clarifies How Compliance Programs Can Reduce Penalties

The Spanish competition regulator has revised one of its key compliance guidance documents, seeking to provide companies with greater clarity on how competition law compliance programs will be assessed and how those assessments may influence enforcement outcomes.

EBA Expands Oversight Role as DORA & MiCA Reshape European Banking Supervision

The European Banking Authority spent much of last year preparing to oversee companies that are not banks. That may sound like an administrative detail, but it isn't. For most of its existence, the EBA's job was largely to write rules, refine standards and help build the regulatory architecture that emerged after the global financial crisis. The institution became one of the principal architects of Europe's banking framework, translating political agreements into thousands of pages of technical requirements.

APRA Pushes Ahead With Governance Rewrite, Raising Expectations for Boards While Cutting Red Tape

Australian financial institutions may soon find themselves under stricter governance expectations, but with fewer forms to file. The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority released the latest draft of its overhauled governance standard, moving into the final stage of a review that has occupied the regulator for more than a year and generated extensive debate across banking, insurance and superannuation.

Italy Opens Investigation Into Apple Over Cloud Competition Under EU Digital Markets Rules

Apple's cloud business has become the latest test case for Europe's digital competition rules. Italy's Competition Authority said it has opened an investigation into Apple over whether the company is giving rival consumer cloud providers the same access to iPhone and iPad features that it reserves for its own iCloud service.

Shadow AI's Greatest Risk May Be the One Organizations Can't See

Somewhere inside a government agency, a public institution, or a private company, an employee is almost certainly pasting information into an AI tool that nobody formally approved. The employee is probably not trying to circumvent policy. They are trying to get through their workday. A chatbot can summarize a report in seconds. A coding assistant can solve a technical problem faster than a colleague can respond to a message. An automated note-taking application can generate meeting minutes before participants have even left the call. The attraction is obvious. So is the speed with which these tools have spread through workplaces.

ASX Admits Misleading Investors Over Troubled CHESS Replacement Project, Faces Proposed $13.3 Million Penalty

Australia's stock exchange operator has admitted it misled the market about the status of its long-running CHESS replacement project, setting the stage for a proposed $13.3 million (AUD $20.5 million) penalty and a further $1.95 million (AUD $3 million) contribution toward regulatory costs.

EIOPA Charts a Simpler, Faster Supervisory Agenda as Risks Multiply Across Europe

The past year offered no shortage of challenges for Europe's insurance and pensions sectors. Geopolitical tensions remained elevated, cyber threats continued to evolve, extreme weather events became more frequent, and advances in artificial intelligence forced regulators and financial institutions alike to confront new opportunities and new risks. The European insurance watchdog spent 2025 trying to balance two objectives that do not always sit comfortably together: strengthening oversight while reducing regulatory complexity.