The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) initiated legal proceedings on Monday against former fund manager Neil Woodford and his investment service, W4.0, alleging that the pair provided regulated investment advice and conducted financial promotions without the required authorisation.
In its filing the regulator said it is seeking an injunction to prevent Woodford and W4.0 from continuing what the FCA describes as potentially unlawful activity. The move signals the regulator's intent to use the courts to stop the conduct while legal questions about authorisation and promotion are resolved.
W4.0 operates as an online subscription-based service that Woodford launched last year. The company is registered in the United Arab Emirates. According to material on W4.0 s own website, the service exists to explain active investment strategies rather than to provide financial advice or to act as an investment manager. The website explicitly states that the company is not regulated by the FCA or any other regulatory body and that it does not provide financial advice, describing that position as a deliberate choice.
The FCA s lawsuit follows a prior enforcement action: in August 2025 the regulator fined Woodford and his firm, Woodford Investment Management, a combined A345.9 million for management failures linked to a flagship fund that collapsed in 2019. That prior penalty is cited in the context of the current proceedings but the lawsuit specifically targets the alleged unauthorised provision of advice and promotional activity by W4.0.
Officials are pursuing the injunction as a tool to halt the activities the FCA considers to fall within regulated conduct. The agency s complaint focuses on whether the content and conduct of W4.0 amount to regulated advice or financial promotions requiring authorisation in the UK market.
Context and implications
The case raises questions about the regulatory boundaries for subscription-based financial information services that are registered overseas yet target or may reach UK clients. W4.0 s public statements that it does not offer regulated advice are central to the factual dispute the FCA has brought before the court.
The outcome of the injunction request will determine whether Woodford and W4.0 can continue to operate in their current form while the legal process unfolds.