The latest investigation by UK regulators has uncovered structural issues in the governance of financial advertising on social media platforms.
The FCA's review of Meta's platforms, including Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, found that over 1,000 unauthorized financial ads went live within a week, involving high-risk derivatives and forex trading.
More critically, over half of these ads came from "known violators," reflecting deficiencies in the current risk control system's repeat identification and banning mechanisms.
The regulatory and institutional environment also provides an important backdrop. Although the Online Safety Bill has come into effect, regulatory powers over paid fraudulent ads have not yet been established, expected to be enforceable only by 2027, leaving current governance primarily reliant on platform self-regulation.
Comparisons across countries reveal significant differences in regulatory intensity. In Australia, Meta could face fines of up to 50 million Australian dollars due to stricter financial ad verification requirements, with a noticeably more rigorous review process; whereas, in the UK, similar ads can go live without sufficient verification.
Industry data indicates that the issue of fraudulent ads on Meta's platforms is significant in scale. Third-party organization Reset Tech estimates that about 51% of suspicious ads involving banking brands carry the risk of fraud.




