UK authorities believe that AI platforms from vendors like Palantir need to be applied to improve efficiency across national financial operations. The country’s financial regulator, the FCA, has launched a project to use AI to identify illegal activity.
FCA is currently testing Miami-based software vendor Palantir’s Foundry platform. The three-month pilot will cost more than £30,000 per week and will focus on mining the regulator’s internal data lake. This objective focuses on detecting money laundering, insider trading and fraud across the 42,000 financial services businesses supervised by the FCA.
Navigate unstructured data lakes
Traditional surveillance methods struggle to cope with the vast amount of information generated by modern markets. AI platforms excel at parsing the unstructured intelligence that regulators collect during investigations into harmful activities such as human trafficking and drug trafficking.
The information entered into these systems ranges from sensitive internal files and reports on troubled companies to Consumer Ombudsman complaints. Machine learning tools digest audio recordings from phone calls, social media activity, and email archives.
Uncovering patterns among this vast amount of input can help place enforcement resources precisely where they are needed most. Industry experts note that intelligence stored within regulatory agencies has historically been underutilized, making advanced analytics a valuable tool for tackling financial crime.
When validating AI models, there is often a debate about the merits of synthetic information versus real environments. While standard guidelines encourage the use of synthetic datasets for preliminary testing, the UK’s financial regulator has determined that the evaluation of AI software like Palantir requires real operational inputs.
Expansion into national security operations
This public sector implementation goes far beyond financial compliance. In September 2025, the UK government established an AI partnership with Palantir to accelerate military decision-making and targeting capabilities. Palantir will invest up to £1.5 billion to establish London as its European defense headquarters, which is expected to create up to 350 jobs.
As companies evaluate these platforms, the defense sector provides a high-stakes test environment for data fusion. Military planners use these tools to integrate open source sensitive information and quickly generate options to neutralize enemy targets. This forms the element of a digital targeting web that relies on a diverse supplier ecosystem.
Palantir and the military will work together to identify opportunities worth up to £750 million over five years. To encourage the growth of the wider ecosystem, the defense deal includes provisions to mentor local start-ups and help small UK technology companies enter the US market at no cost.
Bringing private AI like Palantir to UK financial operations
CDOs implementing AI solutions often struggle with balancing processing power with privacy obligations. In enforcement actions, regulators often force companies to provide extensive records.
Such datasets typically include personal bank details, phone numbers, and complete communication logs of individuals directly involved in the incident. It is important that software providers establish precise boundaries for how they interact with this intelligence. The FCA claims it carried out a competitive procurement process and established strict data protection controls before selecting Palantir from a shortlist of two vendors.
To reduce the risks associated with data breaches, the FCA entered into an agreement with Palantir to ensure that the vendor acts strictly as a data processor. Under this arrangement, the software provider operates only on instructions. The regulator has exclusive possession of the encryption keys for your most sensitive files, and all hosting and storage is kept securely within the UK.
Similar data sovereignty principles apply to defense partnerships, ensuring that military information is freely available across the Department of Defense, while remaining fully under state control.
Financial contracts explicitly prohibit vendors from copying the intelligence they capture to train their own commercial products. Once the pilot is over, the vendor must destroy the information. Intellectual property generated during the analysis stage automatically belongs to the regulatory authority.
Setting limits on data retention and processing privileges ensures that internal security standards are maintained while increasing efficiency by deploying private AI from vendors such as Palantir to improve UK financial operations.
See also: Visa prepares payment system for AI agent-initiated transactions
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