Bank of London: Troubled UK bank fined ยฃ2 million for misleading financial watchdog
The Bank of Englandโs banking watchdog has imposed a ยฃ2 million fine on the Bank of London and its parent company, Oplyse Holdings, for “failing to act with integrity” and misleading the regulator regarding its financial position.
The Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) stated this marks the first instance it has penalised a firm specifically for failing to conduct its business with integrity.
While the breaches were deemed to warrant a significantly higher penalty of ยฃ12 million, the PRA reduced the fine to ยฃ2 million after the companies demonstrated that “such a penalty would cause serious financial hardship.”
The clearing bank, launched in 2021 with an initial valuation of $1.1 billion (ยฃ820 million), has faced considerable financial difficulties in recent years. Its latest accounts reveal widening losses, reaching almost ยฃ24 million in 2024.
Notably, former Labour grandee Peter Mandelson served on the groupโs board of directors until 2024.
The PRA detailed on Tuesday that the bank had misled the watchdog concerning its capital position, failed to uphold integrity, neglected to be open and cooperative, and did not maintain adequate financial resources.

The regulatory breaches occurred between October 2021 and May 2024.
Bosses at The Bank of London said the breaches took place under previous ownership and management.
Sam Woods, deputy governor for prudential regulation at the Bank of England and chief executive of the PRA, said: โTrust in banking in the UK requires integrity and open communication with the PRA from all banks, regardless of their size.
โThe Bank of London Group Limited and Oplyse Holdings Limited fell well below our standards, resulting in todayโs penalty which marks the PRAโs first finding against a firm for acting without integrity.โ
A spokesman for the Bank of London said: โThe Bank accepts the PRAโs findings and regrets the failings identified.
โAs is acknowledged in the final notice, since the change in ownership, the Bank has changed its management team and invested heavily in processes and controls and engaged third parties to assist in their remediation activity.
โThe Bank has been implementing a comprehensive remediation programme, and is continuing work to strengthen further its governance and risk management arrangements, and its financial and regulatory reporting controls.
โThe Bank, its new management and its investors remain committed to an open, transparent and constructive relationship with the PRA and FCA.
โThe board and leadership team are confident that, with these legacy matters settled and with the backing of its investors, the Bank will continue to enhance trust and be able to return to growth in 2026.โ
