GRC Report Staff

FTC Finalizes $1.5 Million Settlement With Publishing.com Over Alleged Deceptive Earnings Claims

There is a familiar rhythm to businesses that promise financial independence. The details change with technology but the promise remains durable. There is a system, the system works, and ordinary people need only follow it. The Federal Trade Commission argues that Publishing.com sold precisely that story, and on Thursday the agency formally closed the case with a final order designed to ensure the company cannot tell it the same way again.

AMF Says Market Resilience Has Not Dispelled Geopolitical, Cyber & Private-Market Risks

In its 2026 Markets and Risk Outlook, the Autorité des marchés financiers said geopolitical and cyber risks remain central concerns. Financial markets, it said, have stayed broadly orderly and resilient despite a correction and heightened volatility following the outbreak of the conflict with Iran. That resilience is not presented as a clean bill of health. It is the backdrop against which the regulator now sees familiar vulnerabilities becoming more exposed.

Australian Court Says ASX Misled Market on CHESS Project, Orders $13.5 Million Penalty

The Federal Court of Australia has ordered ASX to pay a civil penalty of $13.5 million (AUD 20.5 million) after the exchange admitted that a market announcement misled investors by stating the Clearing House Electronic Subregister System (CHESS) replacement project was "progressing well." The court also ordered ASX to pay $2.0 million (AUD 3 million) toward the Australian Securities and Investments Commission's legal costs, bringing another chapter of the long-running project to a close, though not one likely to be forgotten quickly.

EU Adopts Streamlined Sustainability Reporting Standards as Omnibus Reforms Advance

The European Commission has adopted revised European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS), delivering the most substantial simplification of the European Union's sustainability reporting framework since the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) began reshaping corporate disclosure obligations.

Japan Shifts AML Focus From Compliance Frameworks to Demonstrable Effectiveness

The work of fighting money laundering has always invited a certain temptation: to mistake the existence of controls for the existence of control. Japan's Financial Services Agency is now pushing firmly against that instinct. In its latest assessment of anti-money laundering, counter-terrorist financing and financial crime efforts, the regulator makes clear that the question facing financial institutions is no longer whether they have built the necessary frameworks. It is whether those frameworks can withstand contact with the world as it actually is.

Sustainability Has a Finance Problem, Not an Awareness Problem, KPMG Says

For years, the complaint was that boards did not understand sustainability. KPMG's latest research suggests that argument has largely expired. The problem now lies somewhere less visible and, perhaps because of that, more difficult to solve. Executives understand the risks, and they understand the opportunities. What many still cannot do is express either in financial terms that withstand scrutiny inside the investment committee or the finance function.

FTC Secures $35 Million Settlement Over Hopper's Alleged Hidden Fees and Misleading Travel Services

The Federal Trade Commission announced that Hopper has agreed to pay $35 million to settle allegations that they charged consumers fees without their informed consent while misleading users about the cost of bookings and the benefits of some of the company's paid services. The proposed settlement also bars the company from deceiving consumers about fees and requires it to clearly disclose the total price of goods and services, the fees and charges associated with them, and the final amount consumers will pay before completing a transaction.