Categories
News

Polar Moment’s Payments Perspective: March 2026

Polar Moment’s Payments Perspective: March 2026

Welcome to the March edition of Polar Moment’s Payments Perspective. Here’s our take on this months’ payments news:

Pay360 London

Polar Moment director, John Rozek attended Pay360 London 2026, one of the UK’s key events for the payments industry.

John met with partners, clients, and industry peers to discuss the latest trends across retail payments, fraud prevention, and infrastructure.

John says it’s exciting to see how quickly the industry is evolving and the opportunities ahead. It’s aways a pleasure to reconnect with friends and colleagues. I’m already looking forward to what’s next!

Pay360
Online Crime

UK Government Launches Online Crime Centre

The UK government has announced a new online crime centre as part of its broader fraud strategy, aimed at improving how digital and financial crime is detected and tackled.

The initiative is designed to bring together intelligence, technology, and law enforcement capabilities in one place, helping to better coordinate the response to increasingly sophisticated online fraud.

For payments firms, this reinforces the direction of travel. Fraud prevention is no longer just a PSP or bank responsibility, but part of a wider ecosystem effort.

Revolut Granted Full UK Banking Licence

After previous delays highlighted in our October newsletter, Revolut has been granted a full UK banking licence by the Bank of England’s Prudential Regulation Authority.

This marks a significant milestone for the fintech, which has spent years operating in the UK without full banking status. A full licence allows Revolut to expand further into lending and deposit products, strengthening its position as a full-service financial provider rather than just a payments and FX platform.

Revolut
FCA

FCA Confirms New Incident and Third-Party Reporting Rules

The FCA has confirmed new rules requiring firms to report on both operational incidents, and reliance on third-party providers from March 2027.

The aim is to give the regulator clearer visibility when things go wrong. Firms will need to follow more structured reporting requirements, including when to report, what to include, and how incidents are assessed.

A key focus is third-party risk. As more payment providers and financial institutions rely on cloud services and external technology partners, the FCA wants better insight into where dependencies sit and how they could impact the wider system.

Click subscribe to receive next month's edition of Polar Moment's Payments Perspective straight to your inbox!

Get In Touch

At Polar Moment, we are committed to delivering payments consultancy and software development services that drive tangible business results. Whether you need strategic advice, technical implementation, or training, our team is here to help. Contact us today to discuss how we can support your business.

More From Polar Moment