Effects From Geopolitical Forces Documented in WOCCU 2026 Global Regulatory Update

MADISON, Wis.—The World Council of Credit Unions (WOCCU) has released its 2026 Global Regulatory Update, which it said outlines how geopolitical forces are fundamentally reshaping financial services regulation worldwide

“The report finds that financial institutions must now navigate a more complex environment where tariffs, sanctions and investment restrictions are increasingly used as tools of statecraft, transforming regulation from a focus on financial stability and consumer protection into a key instrument of global competition,” WOCCU said.

As a result, the organization said the global regulatory landscape is becoming more fragmented, with economic nationalism driving a patchwork of localized regulatory regimes across jurisdictions.

Three Key Trends

According to WOCCU, there are three key trends shaping the 2026 regulatory environment include:

  • Accelerating adoption of artificial intelligence. “AI is rapidly moving from experimentation to enforcement, with new regulatory frameworks such as the European Union’s AI Act, introducing stringent requirements for transparency, governance and accountability. For credit unions, AI is now a core compliance and risk management priority requiring board-level attention.”
  • Evolving approaches to digital currencies and payments. “Stablecoins and central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) are moving into more defined regulatory frameworks, creating both opportunities for innovation in payments and new risks related to compliance, interoperability and financial stability.”
  • The impact of deregulation initiatives in major jurisdictions. “A shift toward deregulation in key markets is reducing compliance burdens in some areas while introducing new risks, including increased competition, regulatory uncertainty and potential vulnerabilities in financial systems.”

Geopolitics as ‘Driving Force’

“Geopolitics is no longer a backdrop to financial regulation, it is a driving force shaping how financial systems operate,” Paul Andrews, WOCCU VP-international advocacy, said in a statement. “For credit unions, this means navigating a more complex regulatory environment while continuing to advocate for frameworks that recognize the cooperative model and support financial inclusion.”

According to WOCCU, the report also underscores the growing need for coordinated global advocacy, as regulatory decisions in one jurisdiction increasingly influence policy outcomes in others. In this environment, ensuring policymakers understand the cooperative difference is critical to maintaining inclusive, proportionate regulatory frameworks.

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