KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • The SEC rewired its enforcement process for speed and leverage: Wells notice recipients will ordinarily get four weeks to submit, and Wells meetings will be scheduled within four weeks after a submission, with senior Enforcement leadership in the room.
  • The SEC restored a settlement tactic that changes deal math: parties can ask the Commission to consider settlement offers and waiver requests at the same time, reducing “collateral consequence” uncertainty that can derail acquisitions, licensing, and fundraising.
  • U.S. financial-crimes enforcement is escalating into “capital events,” not just fines: FinCEN issued an $80 million civil money penalty against a broker-dealer for long-running AML failures, while a parallel self-regulatory action added another $20 million fine — a reminder that multi-agency stacks are becoming standard.
  • Kenya’s central bank is moving to update core statutes to expand supervisory reach into digital banking and fintech, as enforcement actions and account freezes have already hit sector players amid money-laundering allegations.
  • Africa’s funding stack keeps shifting toward creditor discipline: a tracker estimates African startups raised ~US$705 million in Q1 2026 across 59 disclosed deals, with debt funding overtaking equity and fintech leading deal count — a signal that compliance and reporting maturity will decide who can refinance.
  • Diaspora infrastructure finance is getting bigger, more structured, and more procurement-heavy: the Caribbean Development Bank says a Bahamas water-sector climate-resilience initiative totals US$65.2 million in combined support (grant + loans + in-kind), creating bankable work for contractors, utilities, and fintechs that can underwrite municipal cashflows.

STORIES THAT MATTER


UNITED STATES — The SEC’s Enforcement Manual Update Is a Strategy Shift, Not a Process Memo

Regulators rarely admit when internal procedure becomes market structure.