Press release
19/01/26
More intensive supervision of cyber resilience and AI, strengthened approach to financial crime
In 2026, the Dutch Authority for the Financial Markets (AFM) will intensify its supervision of digital resilience and the responsible use of AI. In addition, the approach to financial crime will be strengthened, with a special focus on investment fraud and combating money laundering. These and other supervisory priorities for the coming year are further explained in the AFM Agenda 2026, published today.
In short
• AI: Responsible use
• Digital resilience: DORA in practice
• Financial crime: Targeted approach to investment fraud and money laundering
AI: responsible use
Opaque algorithms, bias, and misleading information pose risks to consumers and markets. That is why the AFM is expanding AI supervision. The aim is to make AI use more explainable and controllable and to protect customers from undesirable effects. The AFM asks institutions to map their AI applications, strengthen model risk management and data quality, record decision-making logic, and actively report incidents.Digital resilience: DORA in practice
Dependence on a few large IT suppliers and cyber threats can disrupt crucial processes in the financial sector. That is why the AFM is intensifying its supervision of the Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA), with extra attention to incident management, outsourcing, and testing digital resilience. This reduces the risk of failure and increases the continuity of the financial infrastructure.Financial crime: targeted approach to investment fraud and money laundering
Investment fraud and money laundering risks undermine confidence in financial markets. To tackle investment fraud effectively, the AFM works together with banks, acts against parties that facilitate fraud, and launches targeted information campaigns. Financial institutions play an important role in combating money laundering. The AFM focuses on risk-based supervision and clear, effective rules. In this context, it is also actively cooperating on new rules being developed by the European Anti-Money Laundering Authority (AMLA).Laura van Geest, Chair of the AFM Executive Board: ‘Trust in the financial markets cannot be taken for granted. With our supervisory priorities, we are taking clear steps to protect consumers, ensure responsible innovation and safeguard integrity in the sector.’
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SectorContact for this article
Charlene Zikmund
charlene.zikmund@afm.nl
+31 6 29 42 08 87
+31 6 29 42 08 87
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