Wolters Kluwer: ‘Enforcement pullback exceeds even the most aggressive predictions’

Chart courtesy of Wolters Kluwer.
New information from Wolters Kluwer about how much the regulatory landscape has changed since President Trump started his second term prompted experts to say, “this enforcement pullback exceeds even the most aggressive predictions.”
According to new data from Wolters Kluwer Financial & Corporate Compliance’s Regulatory Violations Intelligence Index, regulatory enforcement actions against financial services firms experienced an “unprecedented” decline in the first half of 2025, with violation volumes plummeting 37% compared to the previous six months.
Issued semi-annually, Wolters Kluwer explained its index leverages advanced analytics and comprehensive enforcement data to provide actionable insights on regulatory trends impacting U.S. commercial banks, insurers, broker-dealers, and other financial services firms.
Wolters Kluwer reiterated the latest index analysis of federal enforcement data revealed a “seismic” shift in the regulatory landscape, with monetary penalties dropping 32% across key violation categories tracked by the index.
Analysts pointed out that competition-related penalties (including anti-trust violations) experienced the most dramatic decline, falling an “extraordinary” 97% in dollar value during the first six months of 2025.
“We’re witnessing a fundamental transformation in federal enforcement priorities,” said Chuck Ross, vice president and segment leader with investment compliance solutions and compliance program management at Wolters Kluwer.
“While deregulation was anticipated under the new administration, the velocity and magnitude of this enforcement pullback exceeds even the most aggressive predictions,” Ross continued in a news release.
Ross noted that the federal retreat is creating a regulatory vacuum that states are rapidly moving to fill, particularly in blue states.
“Financial institutions face a greater patchwork of state-level enforcement that could be even more complex and burdensome than the federal framework it’s replacing,” Ross said.
Other key findings from the analysis include:
Competition-related offenses
Enforcement actions cut in half (50% decline)
Penalty values virtually eliminated (97% decline)
Consumer protection violations
Enforcement volume down 22%
Monetary penalties reduced by 21%
Financial offenses
Violation volume dropped 53%
Penalty amounts decreased 24%
Wolters Kluwer went on to mention its analysis comes as federal agencies undergo significant restructuring and budget reallocations following the Trump administration’s “10-to-1” deregulatory initiative, which mandates the elimination of 10 existing regulations for every new regulation implemented.
Simultaneously, analysts added the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s withdrawal of 67 guidance documents has created regulatory gaps that state attorneys general and regulators are actively working to fill.
“This isn’t just a modest adjustment. It’s a complete recalibration of the enforcement ecosystem,” Ross said. “The data shows federal enforcement has essentially fallen off a cliff in certain areas, particularly around competition-related violations where penalties have been reduced to a trickle.
“But nature abhors a vacuum, and we’re already seeing states step into this void with their own enforcement priorities and approaches,” he added.
Wolters Kluwer noticed the reduction in federal enforcement activity is being rapidly offset by increased state-level regulatory activity, creating a more complex compliance landscape for organizations operating across multiple jurisdictions.
Industry experts noted that states — particularly those with historically robust regulatory frameworks — are expanding their enforcement capabilities to address perceived gaps in federal oversight.
“The shift from centralized federal enforcement to a fragmented, state-by-state approach represents a significant operational challenge,” Ross said. “Organizations that previously dealt with a single set of federal requirements now face potentially 50 different enforcement regimes, each with their own priorities, procedures, and penalties.”
Elaine Duffus is a senior specialized consultant with Wolters Kluwer.
“We’re seeing state regulatory activity surge, particularly in areas where federal agencies have scaled back rules, guidance or enforcement. This uptick is also driven by evolving consumer protection priorities, and the desire of states to fill perceived regulatory gaps,” Duffus said.
“For organizations operating across multiple jurisdictions, this means their regulatory change management systems must be more agile and robust than ever to keep pace with the expanding and increasingly complex landscape of state-level requirements,” she continued.
Powered by Wolters Kluwer’s proprietary enforcement database and AI-driven analytics, the Regulatory Violations Intelligence Index can enable compliance professionals to benchmark their programs, anticipate regulatory shifts, and make data-driven decisions about resource allocation and risk management strategies in an increasingly complex state-federal regulatory landscape.
“History shows us that enforcement pendulums swing,” Ross said. “Organizations that maintain robust compliance frameworks during periods of light federal enforcement while adapting to the emerging state-level requirements are best positioned to weather future shifts.
“Those who mistake the current deregulatory regime as the new normal do so at their own peril, especially as states fill the enforcement void,” he concluded.