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    1. Home
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    3. >Exclusive-Meta vowed to stop illegal financial ads in Britain. It failed 1,000 times in a week
    Finance

    Exclusive-Meta Vowed to Stop Illegal Financial Ads in Britain. It Failed 1,000 Times in a Week

    Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®

    Posted on March 18, 2026

    5 min read

    Last updated: March 18, 2026

    Exclusive-Meta vowed to stop illegal financial ads in Britain. It failed 1,000 times in a week - Finance news and analysis from Global Banking & Finance Review
    Tags:FinanceBankingRegulationScamstechnology

    Quick Summary

    Britain’s financial regulator found Meta failed over 1,000 times in a single week in November to block illegal financial promotions from unauthorised advertisers, despite commitments to prevent them. Over half originated from repeat offenders already flagged by the FCA.

    Table of Contents

    • FCA Review Reveals Ongoing Issues with Illegal Financial Ads on Meta Platforms
    • FCA Investigation and Findings
    • Increasing Threat of Online Trading Scams
    • Repeat Offenders and Ongoing Engagement
    • Legal and Regulatory Challenges
    • LEGAL BLACK HOLE
    • Focus on High-Risk Financial Products
    • International Comparison of Meta's Ad Blocking
    • ROGUE AD RUNS IN BRITAIN, BLOCKED IN AUSTRALIA

    Meta Failed to Block Over 1,000 Illegal Financial Ads in UK, FCA Finds

    FCA Review Reveals Ongoing Issues with Illegal Financial Ads on Meta Platforms

    By Phoebe Seers, Tommy Reggiori Wilkes and Jeff Horwitz

    FCA Investigation and Findings

    LONDON/SAN FRANCISCO, March 18 (Reuters) - U.S. tech giant Meta has repeatedly failed to stop illegal ads for high-risk financial products running on its platforms in Britain, despite committing to block them, according to a review by the country's financial regulator.

    Britain's Financial Conduct Authority found that during one week in November, 1,052 ads for currency trading and certain complex financial instruments were posted on Meta's platforms by advertisers not authorised by the regulator to promote them.

    What's more, 56% of those ads were from an unspecified number of unauthorised advertisers the FCA had already flagged to Meta, according to the results of the review seen by Reuters and reported here for the first time.

    Worldwide, billions of users of Meta's platforms have been exposed to ads for fraudulent e-commerce and investment schemes, illegal online casinos and banned medical products, according to internal Meta documents previously reported by Reuters.

    Increasing Threat of Online Trading Scams

    Britain's FCA warned last year that people were increasingly being targeted on social media by online trading scams where fraudsters offer currency trades. Its review was an attempt to see how successful Meta has been at weeding out the rogue ads.

    Asked about the FCA's findings, Ryan Daniels, a spokesperson for Meta, said it fights fraud and scams aggressively on a global level and takes swift action on the vast majority of reports within days.

    The regulator focused on Meta's platforms - which include Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp - because they carry a disproportionate amount of suspicious financial ads, a person familiar with the FCA's work said. 

    "Fraud is the most common crime in the UK," an FCA spokesperson said. "With over half of some scams originating on their platforms, it's vital Meta steps up and uses its tools to protect users from scam content."

    Repeat Offenders and Ongoing Engagement

    The regulator repeated its review of posts on Meta for another week in December. It again found that a small number of repeat offenders were responsible for the majority of the illegal ads it discovered, the person familiar with the FCA's work said, without giving a breakdown of the number of illegal ads or repeat offenders.

    The person said that despite regular engagement with Meta over the issue of scam ads, the FCA has failed to see a material difference in its approach and will continue to test the company's controls and monitoring systems.

    "Any suggestion that we ignore FCA reports misrepresents our ongoing efforts to protect people," Meta's Daniels said.

    The company said further that advertisers running financial services ads in Britain were required to be authorised by the FCA and were responsible for complying with applicable law. 

    Legal and Regulatory Challenges

    LEGAL BLACK HOLE

    Britain's Online Safety Act, which allows regulators to fine social media companies up to 10% of global revenue for running illegal user-generated content, started coming into force in March 2025. However, the provision giving them power to take action over scam ads which have been paid for has been delayed until at least 2027.

    In the absence of legislation, Meta made a voluntary commitment back in 2022 to only allow firms authorised by the financial regulator to run financial services advertisements and updated its UK policy to reflect that commitment.

    The FCA has no power to take action against Meta itself, because it is regulated by communications watchdog Ofcom. When it comes to paid-for scam ads, Ofcom also remains powerless until the provision in the Online Safety Act comes into effect.

    "We're working at pace to implement this. The timeline has been affected by factors beyond our control, in particular a legal challenge against the government," an Ofcom spokesperson said, adding that it had proposed social media companies use automated technology to detect and remove fraudulent content.

    The FCA can take action against unauthorised advertisers for running financial ads on social media platforms, although many of them are outside Britain.

    It issues alerts to consumers to avoid unauthorised firms, has charged and fined unauthorised influencers in Britain for promoting high-risk products on social media and regularly asks social media platforms to take down illegal financial ads.

    Britain's National Crime Agency, meanwhile, has successfully taken down financial scam networks targeting Britons on social media platforms from countries such as Nigeria. 

    Fraud Minister David Hanson said he would continue to raise the issue of the need for tech firms to do more to tackle scams with Meta and other platforms until the fraudulent ad provision in the Online Safety Act comes into force.

    "In the meantime ... I expect them to go further and faster in standing up to this threat," he told Reuters.

    Focus on High-Risk Financial Products

    The FCA's review was limited to ads for foreign exchange trading and contracts for difference (CFDs) because it has identified such products as being of particularly high risk of harming consumers, the person familiar with the FCA's work said.

    CFDs are complex derivative products used to speculate on price movements on a wide range of assets, including currencies. Because losses can far exceed initial investments, the FCA mandates strict protections for investors, such as requiring firms to disclose what proportion of their clients lost money.

    Reuters was unable to determine the total number of currency and CFD ads posted on Meta's platforms during the weeks the FCA reviewed. Meta did not respond when asked for a weekly tally.

    International Comparison of Meta's Ad Blocking

    ROGUE AD RUNS IN BRITAIN, BLOCKED IN AUSTRALIA

    To test how effective Meta is at blocking potential scams under different regulatory regimes, a Reuters reporter created a suspicious investment promotion to run on Facebook teasin

    Key Takeaways

    • •In one November week, 1,052 ads for high‑risk financial products ran on Meta’s platforms by advertisers not authorised by the FCA, and 56% were from repeat violators already flagged (fca.org.uk).
    • •Despite a voluntary 2022 pledge by Meta to only allow FCA‑authorised financial services ads, enforcement gaps persist, and the FCA sees no material improvement (fca.org.uk).
    • •The UK’s Online Safety Act empowers Ofcom to penalise platforms up to £18 million or 10% of global turnover—but full application to paid scam ads is delayed until at least 2027 (keoghs.co.uk)

    References

    • FCA steps up action against misleading financial adverts | FCA
    • Government sharpens focus on fraud | Keoghs

    Frequently Asked Questions about Exclusive-Meta vowed to stop illegal financial ads in Britain. It failed 1,000 times in a week

    1How many illegal financial ads did Meta fail to block in the UK?

    Meta failed to block 1,052 illegal financial ads in the UK during one week in November, according to the Financial Conduct Authority.

    2Which platforms were included in the FCA review of Meta's ad practices?

    The review covered Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, all owned by Meta.

    3What percentage of flagged ads came from repeat offenders?

    56% of the illegal ads were from advertisers already flagged by the FCA as unauthorised.

    4Can the FCA or Ofcom currently fine Meta over scam ads?

    No, current legislation does not allow the FCA or Ofcom to fine Meta for paid-for scam ads until the Online Safety Act provisions take effect.

    5What has Meta stated in response to the criticisms?

    Meta says it aggressively fights fraud and scams globally and requires UK financial advertisers to be FCA-authorised.

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