LexRegPulse Daily
Morgan here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Tuesday, June 30, 2026. The Supreme Court handed down two companion rulings Monday that split the banking regulatory world in a precise and consequential way. The Federal Reserve's independence held. The broader doctrine protecting agency heads did not. That combination defines the regulatory landscape for the rest of this administration and beyond. In Trump v. Cook, a five-four majority blocked the President from removing Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook, grounding her protection in the Fed's unique historical standing — not a general principle. The Court declined to define the "for cause" removal standard and sent the case back for further litigation. President Trump immediately signaled he will press the removal effort again. The Fed's independence is intact for now, but not settled. In the companion case, Trump v. Slaughter, the Court overruled Humphrey's Executor — the 1935 precedent that protected multimember commission heads from at-will dismissal for nine decades. That decision extends presidential removal authority over the FTC and comparable bodies. The read-through to the CFPB, FDIC, OCC, and SEC is direct. Leadership at the agencies that supervise and examine banks now sits closer to executive discretion. For institutions running multi-year compliance roadmaps, policy continuity at those agencies should be treated as less certain than before. Watch examination posture and rulemaking tempo for early signals. The FDIC's late-June deregulatory package formally opened for public comment today with three proposals published in the Federal Register. The most significant raises the threshold separating small and large institutions for deposit insurance assessment purposes — from ten billion dollars in assets to thirty billion. Alongside that, base assessment rates would fall two basis points for small banks and one for large institutions, with a new resolution-readiness adjustment worth up to one basis point. Hundreds of mid-sized banks would be reclassified under the new threshold. A parallel proposal raises the resolution-plan trigger and eliminates credibility assessments and capabilities-testing for institutions above fifty billion in assets. A third proposal liberalizes how banks share confidential supervisory information with affiliates and service providers without prior FDIC approval. All three carry an August 31 comment deadline. Finance and treasury teams at banks near the ten-to-thirty-billion-dollar range should model assessment costs under both regimes before that window closes. On the charter front, the OCC granted conditional approval for a Morgan Stanley national trust charter focused on digital assets. The trust must hold at least fifty million dollars in tier one capital and obtain the OCC's non-objection before changing its business or directors. The approval continues a pattern of large institutions securing federal trust charters to anchor crypto custody and settlement under direct OCC supervision rather than state licensing regimes. Bank of New York Mellon added Circle's USDC stablecoin to its institutional digital-asset custody platform, including minting and redemption services. JPMorgan separately added five Asia-Pacific currencies to its Kinexys blockchain deposit platform, extending 24/7 cross-currency settlement across eight currencies — while also publicly warning that stablecoin yield and reward features could recreate shadow-banking risks. Several rules take effect today and tomorrow with no transition period. The OCC's interim order preempting Illinois' Interchange Fee Prohibition Act, OCC and NCUA rules on non-interest charges, and the interagency Community Bank Leverage Ratio framework on July 1. Capital and operations teams at qualifying community banks should confirm readiness before quarter-end. Two near-term deadlines deserve attention. The CFTC and SEC joint request for comment on harmonizing portfolio and cross-margining across securities and derivatives publishes today, with comments due August 25 — trading desks running matched books should engage. And Treasury's CDFI Bond Guarantee Program carries compressed deadlines: CDFI certification by July 2, qualified-issuer applications by July 7, and guarantee applications by July 8. For the full analysis, check your Lex Reg Pulse daily briefing in your inbox, or catch Lex Reg Pulse Weekly every Sunday. I'm Morgan. 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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