LexRegPulse Daily
Alex here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Wednesday, July 1, 2026. The stablecoin market shifted structurally yesterday. More than 140 firms — Visa, Mastercard, American Express, BNY, BlackRock, Google, Stripe, Coinbase, and Ripple among them — backed a new dollar stablecoin called Open USD, run by an independent company called Open Standard. The design breaks from incumbents: user-governed, zero-fee, and revenue-sharing, meaning reserve earnings flow back to institutions using the network rather than staying with the issuer. That model attacks the foundation of Circle's USDC business directly. Circle shares declined roughly fifteen percent on the news. For banks and payment firms, the competitive terms for stablecoin infrastructure are being set now — months ahead of full GENIUS Act implementation. The economics matter. Circle's value rests on retaining reserve yield. Open USD promises to return that yield to distributors and enterprise users, reframing stablecoins as shared utility rails rather than a proprietary product. Analysts trimmed price targets on Circle, and industry observers noted that Coinbase faces a strategic tension: it benefits from its existing Circle arrangement but now has stronger incentive to build its own payments stack as a hedge. MetaMask's parallel launch of a stablecoin money account paying up to four percent yield with card spending sharpens the deposit-substitution picture. Checking-style balances and lending-based savings are converging in a single app. Banks modeling stablecoin exposure should factor in both the issuer-economics pressure and the yield-bundling dynamic that product illustrates. On the regulatory side, five agencies — FinCEN, the Federal Reserve, the OCC, the FDIC, and the NCUA — jointly proposed Customer Identification Program requirements for permitted payment stablecoin issuers on June 18. The rules require risk-based written CIP programs, identity verification, recordkeeping, and terrorist-list screening. They cover primary-market relationships but exclude secondary-market transactions. Federal Reserve Governor Barr flagged illicit-finance risk in that gap, and regulators are soliciting comment on expanding scope. Comments close August 21. Any institution weighing stablecoin issuance should run a gap analysis now and consider whether to weigh in on the secondary-market question. Treasury's enforcement arm was active June 30. OFAC sanctioned two Mexican nationals and nine entities tied to the Cartel de Jalisco Nueva Generación's cross-border fuel theft, customs fraud, and tax-evasion schemes. FinCEN issued a supplemental alert detailing what it calls fiscal fuel theft — known as huachicol — with specific red flags. A prior FinCEN alert from May 2025 generated more than 160 suspicious activity reports covering seven billion dollars in flagged activity within a year, concentrated in Texas and Florida. Banks serving oil, gas, fuel-distribution, and transportation customers near the southern border should update transaction-monitoring rules, screen customer bases against the new designations, and consider a lookback on recent activity. Two items round out the week's regulatory picture. The OCC, FDIC, and Federal Reserve released the 2026 list of distressed or underserved nonmetropolitan middle-income geographies qualifying for Community Reinvestment Act credit through June 30, 2027. Banks with rural footprints should map service areas against the new designations. Separately, the FDIC proposed an overhaul of its resolution planning rule for insured depository institutions, shifting from comprehensive documentation toward the information the agency considers most critical to execution — liquidity analysis, critical operations, and counterparty dependencies. Comments close August 31. One item for risk and operations teams: EY terminated two employees on assignment at Commonwealth Bank of Australia after they allegedly accessed the Australian Prime Minister's personal account without authorization, with one facing criminal charges. The episode is a direct signal for any US bank granting consulting firms privileged access to core systems. Examiners scrutinize third-party access controls under the GLBA Safeguards Rule. An access audit is a proportionate response. Fed Chair Kevin Warsh speaks today — his clearest near-term signal on the rate path as he advances a reform agenda with prices at a three-year high. For the full analysis, check your Lex Reg Pulse daily briefing in your inbox, or catch Lex Reg Pulse Weekly every Sunday. I'm Alex. This has been Lex Reg Pulse Daily. --- Your daily 5-minute briefing on banking regulations, compliance updates, and enforcement actions. Stay compliant, stay informed with LexRegPulse Daily.
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