The Creditcorp mark nears the end of its opposition window

The new Creditcorp wordmark (UK00004379570), applied for by CM Beyer Limited on 28 April 2026 and published in the UK Trade Marks Journal issue 2026/020 on 15 May 2026, is approaching a procedural milestone: the close of its two-month opposition window, which falls around 15 July 2026. This is a short, factual note on what that milestone is — and, just as importantly, what it is not.
What the opposition window is
When the UK Intellectual Property Office accepts a trade-mark application, it publishes it in the weekly Trade Marks Journal. That publication opens a fixed window — normally two months, extendable to three on a filed notice of threatened opposition — during which any third party who believes the mark should not be registered can oppose it. The window is a deliberate pause built into the system: the register is a public record, and publication gives the public a chance to be heard before a mark goes on it. For the Creditcorp application, published on 15 May 2026, that window runs to roughly 15 July 2026.
What passing the window would mean — and what it would not
If the opposition window closes without an opposition being filed, the application proceeds toward registration in the ordinary course. That is a real step forward, but it is worth being precise about it: as at the date of this note, the mark remains an application, published and awaiting the close of the opposition period — status “Application Published” on the register. It is not yet a registered mark, and we will not describe it as one until the register itself does. When the position changes, we will record it here with the date, on the same primary-source basis as every other update on this site. Until then, the accurate statement is the one we have used throughout: Creditcorp is published and pending registration.
How it sits beside the registered Credicorp mark
None of this disturbs the existing, registered Credicorp mark (UK00004156742), held by Credicorp Limited and registered on 23 May 2025. The two marks are held by two related UK companies under one director, and the way they sit side by side is set out in the written coexistence agreement signed on 30 April 2026. The Creditcorp application moving through its opposition window is the newer mark advancing on its own track; the established Credicorp mark continues in force exactly as before.
Why we are recording it
Milestones in a trade-mark file are dull by design — that is their virtue. Each one is a dated, verifiable event on a public register, and keeping a plain record of them is how this site earns the right to be believed on the more contested parts of the story, such as the DRS 29140 domain decision. The full sequence, from incorporation to filing to this window, is laid out on the group timeline, and the marks themselves are compared on the trade-marks page.
The honest summary
The Creditcorp wordmark, filed by CM Beyer Limited and published on 15 May 2026, is nearing the close of its two-month opposition window around 15 July 2026. If the window closes cleanly the application proceeds toward registration; until the register shows it as registered, it remains published and pending. The registered Credicorp mark is unaffected. Nothing about how the lender at credicorp.co.uk works changes with any of this — it is the name advancing on the register, not the business behind it.
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