A staggering 450 investigations were launched into unauthorized entities last year, marking a historic high for Swiss financial oversight. FINMAâs 'Warning List'âthe public directory of potential scammers and rogue providersâexploded with over 300 new entries in 2025. To manage this massive workload, the authority has undergone a significant muscular expansion. The regulatorâs workforce surged to 617 full-time positions, up from 554 in 2024, as it absorbs the massive task of supervising 10,000 insurance intermediaries. This personnel growth is a direct investment in Swiss credibility. However, a significant hurdle remains: transparency. Despite the increase in proceedings, FINMA remains hamstrung by 'very limited legal requirements for active communication.' In many cases, the regulator was silenced by the courts or restrictive laws, preventing it from naming and shaming the bad actors it had already caught. This tension between aggressive enforcement and Swiss privacy laws remains the central conflict of the 2025 regulatory landscape, as FINMA fights for the right to speak more openly about the risks it uncovers.