Plans to implement a streamlined, principles-based approach to dealing with student complaints could open the door to a wider range of challenges for higher education providers, according to an expert.
Netherlands tightens rules on non-EU alternative investment funds
Non-EU alternative investment fund managers (AIFMs) face stricter conditions to market funds in the Netherlands following a regulatory update from the Dutch Authority for the Financial Markets (AFM).
Spotlight on compliance as UK and Ireland immigration digitises
Shara Pledger and Louise Shaw tell HRNews why employers operating across the UK and Ireland need to recognise that the digital immigration systems are evolving differently in each jurisdiction.
Thailand Approves First Virtual Bank Licence as Clicx Bank Set to Launch
Thailand has granted its first virtual bank operating licence to the Clicx bank consortium, paving the way for the country’s first digital-only banking institution under the Bank of Thailand’s newly adopted virtual banking framework.
According to Fintech News Singapore, the Bank of Thailand granted the licence on 14 May 2026, making Clicx the first approved virtual bank applicant in the country to secure an operating licence. The finance minister also approved commercial banking and regulated payment services for the entity, which is backed by Krungthai Bank, Advanced Info Service (AIS), and PTT Oil and Retail Business (the “OR” unit of the state-owned PTT Group) in a consortium that brings together banking, telecommunications, and energy retail expertise.
Clicx plans to serve underserved customers with irregular income or limited traditional financial records, including gig workers, small merchants, new workers, and other financially excluded segments. The bank will rely on artificial intelligence and non-traditional data sources to assess customer creditworthiness, incorporating data linked to everyday behaviour and service usage. This marks a significant departure from conventional collateral-based lending models that have long excluded large swathes of the Thai population from formal financial services.
Thailand approved three virtual bank applications in June 2025: the ACM Holding consortium, the Krungthai-AIS-OR consortium, and the SCB X-WEBANK-KakaoBank consortium. The regulator has allowed additional time for setup beyond the original one-year timeline, with Bank of Thailand Governor Vitai Ratanakorn indicating that at least two virtual banks should begin operations by the end of 2026. Clicx plans to launch services next month. Its approval marks a decisive progression in Thailand’s ambition to deepen financial inclusion through digital banking innovation, while establishing key precedents for AI-driven underwriting and alternative credit scoring in Southeast Asia.
Indonesia Urges ASEAN to Seal Digital Trade Deal Amid Rising Protectionism
Indonesia Urges ASEAN to Seal Digital Trade Deal Amid Rising Protectionism
By Asian Legal Review Staff | May 20, 2026
Indonesian Coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs Airlangga Hartarto has urged Southeast Asian nations to fast-track the completion of the ASEAN Digital Economy Framework Agreement (DEFA), calling the landmark regional pact critical to sustaining growth amid global economic uncertainty, geopolitical tensions and rising protectionism.
Speaking before business leaders during the Indonesia-Philippines business forum held in Lapu-Lapu City on May 7, 2026, Hartarto stressed that ASEAN must move quickly to finalize the agreement during the Philippines’ leadership of the regional bloc, warning that prolonged negotiations could delay opportunities in one of the fastest-growing sectors of the economy. “The whole world is looking at DEFA,” Hartarto said, noting that negotiations have already gone through around 20 rounds since discussions began under Indonesia’s ASEAN chairmanship in 2023. “We don’t need perfection, but we need to move on.”
The proposed agreement aims to establish a common framework for digital trade, electronic commerce, digital payments, data governance and other areas of the digital economy across the 10-member ASEAN bloc. Analysts say the deal could help harmonize digital regulations across Southeast Asia, lower business costs and accelerate cross-border investments, particularly in fintech, e-commerce, cloud computing and digital infrastructure. Hartarto described DEFA as the region’s response to growing economic risks including energy price volatility, food security concerns and global trade tensions. “This is the economy of the younger generation. This is the economy that is not prone to tariff war,” he said.
The Indonesian minister also revealed that Jakarta had already resolved its issues related to the agreement and called on other ASEAN members to compromise to complete negotiations. “We can always evaluate implementation for every country,” he said, adding that no single nation should dictate how others implement digital policies. Beyond digital cooperation, Hartarto pushed for stronger collaboration between Indonesia and the Philippines in nickel processing, special economic zones, agriculture and fertilizer supply as both nations seek to strengthen regional supply chains.
Source: SunStar Publishing Inc., “Indonesia urges ASEAN to seal digital trade deal” (May 19, 2026).
Indonesia Urges ASEAN to Seal Digital Trade Deal Amid Rising Protectionism
Indonesia Urges ASEAN to Seal Digital Trade Deal Amid Rising Protectionism
By Asian Legal Review Staff | May 20, 2026
Indonesian Coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs Airlangga Hartarto has urged Southeast Asian nations to fast-track the completion of the ASEAN Digital Economy Framework Agreement (DEFA), calling the landmark regional pact critical to sustaining growth amid global economic uncertainty, geopolitical tensions and rising protectionism.
Speaking before business leaders during the Indonesia-Philippines business forum held in Lapu-Lapu City on May 7, 2026, Hartarto stressed that ASEAN must move quickly to finalize the agreement during the Philippines’ leadership of the regional bloc, warning that prolonged negotiations could delay opportunities in one of the fastest-growing sectors of the economy. “The whole world is looking at DEFA,” Hartarto said, noting that negotiations have already gone through around 20 rounds since discussions began under Indonesia’s ASEAN chairmanship in 2023. “We don’t need perfection, but we need to move on.”
The proposed agreement aims to establish a common framework for digital trade, electronic commerce, digital payments, data governance and other areas of the digital economy across the 10-member ASEAN bloc. Analysts say the deal could help harmonize digital regulations across Southeast Asia, lower business costs and accelerate cross-border investments, particularly in fintech, e-commerce, cloud computing and digital infrastructure. Hartarto described DEFA as the region’s response to growing economic risks including energy price volatility, food security concerns and global trade tensions. “This is the economy of the younger generation. This is the economy that is not prone to tariff war,” he said.
The Indonesian minister also revealed that Jakarta had already resolved its issues related to the agreement and called on other ASEAN members to compromise to complete negotiations. “We can always evaluate implementation for every country,” he said, adding that no single nation should dictate how others implement digital policies. Beyond digital cooperation, Hartarto pushed for stronger collaboration between Indonesia and the Philippines in nickel processing, special economic zones, agriculture and fertilizer supply as both nations seek to strengthen regional supply chains. He also highlighted opportunities for closer bilateral cooperation in digital infrastructure, particularly in Mindanao, where Indonesia is developing a fiber optic landing station in Manado.
Source: SunStar Publishing Inc., “Indonesia urges ASEAN to seal digital trade deal” (May 19, 2026).
MAS Revokes Bsquared Technology Payment License Over Serious Breaches
Singapore’s Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) has revoked the payment services licence of Bsquared Technology Private Limited, marking a significant enforcement action in the city-state’s fintech regulatory landscape.
According to Fintech News Singapore, which published the report on May 20, 2026, the regulator cited “serious breaches” in its decision to strip the payments firm of its operating licence. The Revocation Notice, issued under the Payment Services Act (PSA), indicates that Bsquared Technology failed to meet mandatory compliance and operational standards required of licensed payment institutions in Singapore.
By revoking the licence, MAS has effectively halted Bsquared Technology’s ability to conduct any regulated payment activities in Singapore, including domestic and cross-border money transmission, issuance of digital payment tokens, and other payment services under the PSA framework. Entities operating without a valid payment services licence may face legal action, and customers of the firm should be alerted that their funds need to be recovered through the regulator’s enforcement process.
Regulatory enforcement actions like this signal MAS’s increasing vigilance in overseeing Singapore’s payments sector, which is one of the most active fintech ecosystems in ASEAN. The regulator has in recent years taken a firm but progressive stance on licensing and supervision, granting numerous payment institutions licences while simultaneously holding them to strict compliance standards. The revocation of Bsquared Technology’s licence underscores the stakes of regulatory non-compliance in Singapore’s tightly regulated financial centre.
This development is particularly noteworthy given Singapore’s role as the regional headquarters for numerous fintech firms and payment service providers operating across Southeast Asia. Industry observers will be watching closely to understand the specific compliance failures that prompted the regulator’s action, as it may set a precedent for how MAS oversees the payments sector going forward.
Source: Fintech News Singapore, May 20, 2026.
Singapore’s AI-job cuts debate flares over ‘lower-value human capital’ remark
Singapore’s push to prepare workers for artificial intelligence is facing a stern test after Meta and Standard Chartered announced lay-offs this week, fuelling debate over how far AI is already reshaping jobs in the city state.
The cuts have made one question more urgent for Singapore: can its goal to train workers to take on new or redesigned roles keep pace with increased use of AI and automation by companies as they reduce headcounts?
Meta employees in Singapore reportedly began receiving…
Why force majeure analysis differs in the UAE and England during Middle East conflict challenges
As the conflict in the Middle East continues to disrupt businesses in the region and beyond, force majeure clauses are increasingly being tested across a wide variety of commercial arrangements.
Indonesia’s Prabowo tightens state grip on palm oil, coal amid monopolistic fears
Indonesia will require exports of key commodities to pass through a state-appointed enterprise in a sweeping effort to curb revenue leaks, tighten oversight of natural resources and keep more foreign exchange earnings at home.
The policy, announced by President Prabowo Subianto in a rare address to parliament on Wednesday, would apply to palm oil, coal and ferroalloys – three major export earners for Southeast Asia’s largest economy.
Under the new regulation, producers would have to sell their…
