LexRegPulse Daily

Weekly Digest - Jun 1, 2026

15 min · 1. juni 2026
episode Weekly Digest - Jun 1, 2026 cover

Description

ALEX: You're listening to the Bank Regulatory Pulse weekly digest for the week of May 26 through May 29, 2026. I'm Alex. MORGAN: And I'm Morgan. Here's what mattered this week. ALEX: Let's start with the week's defining structural story — the Federal Reserve's proposed Payment Account framework. We covered the proposal when it opened for comment last week. This week compliance teams actually started working through what the binary choice means operationally. MORGAN: And it is genuinely binary. Payment Account holders earn zero interest on balances, are barred from Excess Balance Account participation, and lose all discount window access — primary, secondary, and seasonal. One account type per Reserve Bank. That makes this a contingency funding plan decision that flows directly into stress-test assumptions, not just a regulatory filing exercise. ALEX: So institutions aren't just choosing a payment rail. They're choosing a liquidity architecture. MORGAN: Exactly. And the downstream implications are significant. If you hold a Payment Account, your stress scenarios can't include discount window borrowing as a backstop. That has to be reflected in your liquidity coverage assumptions, your resolution planning, your ALCO frameworks. This isn't a form you file and forget. ALEX: And for fintechs already in the application pipeline, there's a live timing problem on top of that. MORGAN: The Board has paused Tier 3 application decisions pending finalization of the framework. So institutions already in that queue are in genuine limbo until the July 27 comment deadline resolves the structure. The comment period is the window to shape balance limits and eligibility criteria — particularly whether the interest prohibition and the discount window bar are fixed features or whether the Board has left room to modify them in response to comment. ALEX: That's the practical question for institutions deciding whether to engage: is there actually something to shape here, or is the design locked? MORGAN: The Board's framing suggests the core tradeoff — streamlined access in exchange for no Fed facilities — is intentional policy, not a drafting artifact. But the specific parameters around balance limits and eligibility thresholds are where comment record pressure can move the outcome. That's where institutions should focus their submissions before July 27. ALEX: The second major structural development was the FDIC's stablecoin BSA/AML proposed rule, published May 23. It lands as the stablecoin market cap hits $294 billion — Tether alone holds $141 billion in US Treasuries. MORGAN: And the scale of that market is exactly why the supervisory signal embedded in this rule matters more than the legal text. The rule formalizes existing BSA, AML, and sanctions compliance obligations for FDIC-supervised stablecoin issuers — it doesn't create new legal requirements. But the operational consequence is real: FDIC examination findings on stablecoin programs will now route to FinCEN. ALEX: Which changes the stakes of an exam deficiency considerably. MORGAN: It does. A deficiency finding that previously stayed within the FDIC examination process now has a FinCEN referral pathway. That's a different risk profile for institutions running stablecoin programs, and it should change how compliance teams resource those reviews. ALEX: There's also a design gap the rule doesn't close — the PSP intermediary layer. MORGAN: Right, and this is the question that needs comment record pressure before the framework hardens. The rule doesn't resolve where compliance responsibility falls between the stablecoin issuer and the payment service providers facilitating end-user access. That same ambiguity exists in the GENIUS Act. If you're an institution with exposure to that intermediary layer, the comment period is your window to press for clarity on which entity owns the obligation at each point in the transaction chain. ALEX: Let's move to the OCC comment deadlines that closed Thursday. Two rules — the IFPA preemption and the national bank non-interest charges rule — both hit their May 29 deadline before taking effect June 30. You've flagged the IFPA preemption as the more consequential one. MORGAN: It is. The rule establishes federal authority over debit card interchange economics in Illinois, displacing state law directly. For banks with Illinois debit card programs, the state's interchange fee prohibition does not apply under the preemption. But the comment record still matters even though the rule takes effect regardless of what's in it. ALEX: Because of litigation risk. MORGAN: Exactly. A challenge to the preemption is a foreseeable next step — state attorneys general, consumer advocacy groups, potentially the state legislature itself. A thin administrative record is a vulnerability in that litigation. Banks that submitted comments supporting the preemption's legal basis contributed to a more defensible record. The window closed Thursday, but institutions should be tracking the litigation timeline now. ALEX: The national bank non-interest charges rule closed the same day — narrower in scope, but same deadline. MORGAN: Same deadline, same dynamic. If you had comments on either rule, Thursday was the hard stop. The practical takeaway now is that institutions with Illinois debit card programs need to have updated their compliance frameworks to reflect the preemption before the June 30 effective date, and they should be watching the litigation calendar closely. ALEX: Shifting to the enforcement and examination arc — the June 9 Congressional hearing on Chinese money laundering networks and cartel financing is the next beat in the Community Federal Savings Bank story we covered last week. MORGAN: And it has a direct operational implication that's easy to underestimate. Congressional hearings on BSA/AML failures don't just produce headlines. They produce examination records that FinCEN, OCC, FDIC, and the Fed use to calibrate MRA focus across the industry. The hearing will define what regulators treat as the current standard for program maturity on China-nexus transaction monitoring. ALEX: So institutions with gaps in that area have roughly two weeks from this broadcast. MORGAN: Two weeks to document current program maturity — not to fix everything, but to demonstrate they know where the gaps are and have a credible remediation timeline. That documentation posture is what distinguishes an MRA from a consent order. An examiner who sees a gap alongside a documented awareness of that gap and a timeline to close it is in a different conversation than one who finds a gap with no evidence the institution knew it existed. ALEX: The FDIC published its April 2026 enforcement orders on May 29. You've been tracking the pattern across quarters. MORGAN: This is the third quarter running where both the OCC and FDIC enforcement releases have included actions tied to fintech partner bank relationships. At some point a pattern stops being a coincidence and becomes a supervisory priority signal, and we're past that threshold. ALEX: What's the specific shift you're seeing? MORGAN: Supervisors are treating BaaS and payment-processing partnerships as a distinct examination category — not a subset of general BSA/AML review, not a footnote in third-party risk management. It's its own examination lens with its own set of expectations. Banks that haven't updated their third-party risk frameworks to reflect that elevated scrutiny are behind the curve, and the April enforcement release is another data point that the scrutiny is not letting up. ALEX: Let's turn to the macro picture. Oil swung sharply across the week — from above $107 to briefly below $90 on Iran deal signals before partially reversing. MORGAN: The deal signals are real but the resolution is incomplete. What's been reported is a ceasefire framework, but the nuclear negotiation track and questions around Strait of Hormuz transit remain open. So the oil market is pricing partial relief, not resolution, and that distinction matters for how you read Thursday's PCE data. ALEX: Walk us through why that matters for the PCE interpretation. MORGAN: The April PCE print reflects the oil environment of prior weeks — the elevated prices that were in place before any deal signals moved the market. So the inflation read shows persistence that is partly supply-side and energy-driven, but the data doesn't yet capture any relief from where crude is trading now. The practical implication is that you can't look at Thursday's print and conclude the inflation picture is improving. The data is structurally backward-looking relative to the current oil environment. ALEX: And that feeds directly into the rate path question, which now has an additional political dimension. MORGAN: It does, and that's worth naming carefully. Kevin Warsh's first rate decision as Chair carries explicit political attention from the White House — there have been public statements from administration advisors tying deal resolution to conditions favorable for rate action. That's a pressure dynamic that should be entirely separate from what the data says, but it's part of the environment Warsh is operating in. For bank ALM desks, the operative planning assumption is that the 30-year Treasury holding above 5.19% is the stress scenario until the Iran situation resolves clearly in one direction. Any ALM framework or deposit pricing model that incorporated 2026 Fed easing should be revisited before mid-year ALCO reviews. ALEX: There's also a Treasury enforcement action from May 29 worth flagging — targeting an Iranian network accused of defrauding US firms to supply Tehran's military. MORGAN: That action is directly relevant to sanctions screening programs. The Treasury designation targets a network using commercial relationships with US firms as a supply chain vector — which means the compliance exposure isn't just for institutions with direct Iran-related activity. It's for institutions whose commercial clients may have supply chain relationships that connect, even indirectly, to designated entities. That's a harder screening problem than name-based SDN matching, and examiners are increasingly aware of the gap between what name-based screening catches and what these network-based designations require. ALEX: So the practical ask for compliance teams is to look at the supply chain exposure of commercial clients, not just direct counterparty relationships. MORGAN: Correct. And to document that you've done that analysis. The documentation posture we talked about in the BSA/AML context applies here too — an examiner who finds a gap alongside evidence of a structured review process is in a different conversation than one who finds no evidence the institution looked at the question at all. ALEX: Let's close with the forward calendar. The Federal Reserve Payment Account comment deadline is July 27. That's the primary window remaining to shape the framework. MORGAN: Balance limits, eligibility criteria, and the parameters around the interest prohibition — those are the specific areas where comment record pressure can influence the final rule. Institutions that are still in the Tier 3 application queue have the most direct stake in that outcome, but any institution evaluating its Fed account strategy should have a position on the comment record. ALEX: The FDIC stablecoin BSA/AML comment deadline falls approximately 30 to 60 days from the May 23 publication date. MORGAN: And the PSP intermediary obligation question is the specific gap that needs comment record pressure. If the framework finalizes without clarity on where compliance responsibility sits between issuer and payment service provider, institutions in that intermediary layer will be operating with structural ambiguity that examiners will resolve case by case — which is the worst possible outcome for program design. ALEX: And the June 9 Congressional hearing on Chinese money laundering networks is two weeks out. MORGAN: Documentation of program maturity now — not remediation, documentation — is the right posture. Know where your gaps are, have a timeline to close them, and make sure that analysis is in writing before the hearing sets the examination calibration for the rest of the year. ALEX: For daily updates and the full briefings behind everything we covered, head to lexregulatory dot com. MORGAN: And if you want to go deeper — research documents, track regulatory changes, build your own analysis — check out The Regulator at lexregulatory dot com. ALEX: Thanks for listening. Have a great week. --- Your weekly regulatory roundup from LexRegPulse. The most important developments, charter news, enforcement actions, and what to watch next week. Stay compliant, stay informed at lexregpulse.com

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the LexRegPulse Daily community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

58 episodes

episode Weekly Digest - Jun 22, 2026 artwork

Weekly Digest - Jun 22, 2026

ALEX: You're listening to the Lex Reg Pulse Weekly for the week of June 15 through June 22, 2026. I'm Alex. MORGAN: And I'm Morgan. Here's what mattered this week. ALEX: The stablecoin era just got its first hard compliance edge. Five federal regulators — the Fed, FDIC, OCC, NCUA, and FinCEN — jointly proposed on June 18 that permitted payment stablecoin issuers run customer identification programs equivalent to those banks already maintain. A 117-page notice, comments due August 17, and the first concrete rulemaking to give the GENIUS Act framework actual teeth. MORGAN: The mechanism matters. The proposal classifies stablecoin issuers as financial institutions under the Bank Secrecy Act — meaning the same know-your-customer obligations that govern chartered banks would now apply to token issuers, closing the gap that let issuers operate outside bank-grade anti-money-laundering requirements entirely. ALEX: Last week we covered the OCC's proposed reporting forms for supervised stablecoin issuers. This week's joint proposal is the next layer — the AML and customer identification layer sitting on top of that reporting architecture. MORGAN: Right, and the burden for banks isn't primarily on their own balance sheets. It's on counterparty diligence. Any institution exploring stablecoin custody, issuance, or payment integration will face examiner scrutiny over whether their issuer partners maintain compliant programs. So the question isn't just "are we compliant" — it's "can we document that our partners are." ALEX: There's a leadership signal embedded here too. Former Chair Powell backed the proposal while Warsh abstained — one day after his first FOMC meeting as Chair. MORGAN: That abstention is the tell. It leaves room for the final rule to soften before it lands, and watching how Warsh engages this rulemaking is probably the clearest early read on how far his deregulatory instincts reach into digital-asset supervision. ALEX: And the incumbents aren't waiting to find out. State Street and Fidelity both launched GENIUS Act-aligned money market funds for stablecoin reserves this week — institutions with existing charters and rails already positioning for exactly the compliance architecture this proposal contemplates. MORGAN: Which is the throughline. Issuance and reserve custody are consolidating among chartered institutions best positioned to absorb the customer-identification load. Banks weighing a token or reserve-custody program should benchmark against those moves and price in the AML monitoring obligation now. ALEX: The FOMC decision was the other major development midweek. Unanimous hold at 3.5 to 3.75 percent — the fourth straight — but the rate wasn't the news. Warsh stripped forward guidance from the statement entirely, the dot plot turned sharply hawkish, nine of eighteen officials penciling in at least one hike this year, and roughly 1.2 trillion dollars in S&P 500 market cap evaporated within two hours. MORGAN: For asset-liability management teams, the reaction function is now harder to read. Deposit-beta assumptions and securities-mark planning built around a single rate path carry more model risk than they did two weeks ago. Both hold-and-hike scenarios need to stay live simultaneously. ALEX: The Iran accord collapsing over the weekend compounds that. Iran conditioning Strait of Hormuz transit on permission and fees, the administration disowning the framework — that restores an energy risk premium that had started draining out of the market, reinforcing the hawkish case the Fed cited. MORGAN: And on sanctions — the diplomacy doesn't change the compliance posture. Existing OFAC designations don't unwind with a failed accord. The June 18 Hizballah names stand in full, blocked-property reports due within 10 business days for institutions with Middle East correspondent exposure. ALEX: The capital comment window also closed — three interlocking proposals covering a comprehensive framework for the largest banks, a revised standardized approach, and a reset of the GSIB surcharge. The filed record is sharply polarized. MORGAN: The Bank Policy Institute pressing for full recalibration, Better Markets warning the package would invite bank failures and taxpayer bailouts. The GSIB surcharge is the swing factor — most likely to move required capital and return on equity at the largest institutions. With the record closed, large banks should pivot from advocacy to scenario planning on both the surcharge and standardized-approach outcomes. ALEX: There's also a fair-lending development that landed with immediate effect earlier this week. The CFPB's rescission of its December 2020 special purpose credit program advisory opinion closed a five-year safe harbor for targeted-lending programs. MORGAN: The exposure is immediate and broad. Read alongside the Bureau's April final rule, the change bars for-profit lenders from using race, national origin, or sex as program eligibility criteria except where a lender can demonstrate a specific, documented inability to access credit — a narrow exception most existing program designs were not built to clear. Affirmative-lending programs built for CRA outreach are directly in scope. ALEX: Does that mean programs need to be restructured or simply wound down? MORGAN: Both options are on the table, but the evidentiary bar for restructuring is high enough that wind-down may be the more realistic path for programs that keyed eligibility to protected-class membership without that documented necessity standard. Institutions need to audit eligibility design, marketing, and underwriting documentation before the next examination cycle. ALEX: On June 18, OFAC designated 11 individuals and entities targeting a Hizballah-aligned finance network — Lebanese officials Sleiman Frangie and Mahmoud Qamati alongside financier Alaa Hamieh's business network spanning Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, and Oman, a structure that generated roughly 10 million dollars through contracts with the former al-Assad regime. MORGAN: The Fed also barred Thomas Engelbrecht, former CEO of Bank of Eufaula and S N B Bancshares, on June 18 — a 125,000-dollar penalty for steering imprudent credit to a relative's company and fabricating board minutes. Individual action, not an institutional finding, but a pointed reminder that related-party lending controls and authentic governance records remain examination priorities. ALEX: Bank of America, on the other side of the ledger, exited a Biden-era OCC consent order tied to pandemic-relief processing — clearing one of the period's last supervisory overhangs from that era. MORGAN: The SEC and CFTC jointly opened comment on June 18 on harmonizing derivatives product definitions and swap data-reporting under Dodd-Frank Title VII — the agencies conceding current ambiguities have stifled fair competition. Banks with large derivatives books face possible mixed-swap reclassification but stand to gain real operational savings if dual-reporting converges. ALEX: Looking ahead — three comment windows are live simultaneously. The stablecoin customer identification proposal formally published June 22, starting the clock to August 17. The SEC-CFTC derivatives harmonization windows close around the same date. And the CFTC fintech partnership request for information closes around July 7 — a narrow window for banks to flag specific friction points on the record. MORGAN: The Senate housing bill cleared cloture 84 to 8 and carries meaningful provisions for community and mid-size institutions: easier treatment of reciprocal deposits, a higher examination-cycle asset threshold, and a bar on the Fed issuing a central bank digital currency through 2030. And the Senate Banking Committee examines John Crews for the NCUA board on June 25 — his testimony on credit-union capital and technology-enabled lending is the read for competitive positioning in auto, mortgage, and small-business credit. ALEX: For daily updates and the full briefings behind everything we covered, head to lex reg pulse dot com. MORGAN: And if you want to go deeper — research documents, track regulatory changes, build your own analysis — check out The Regulator at lex reg pulse dot com. ALEX: Thanks for listening. Have a great week. --- Your weekly regulatory roundup from LexRegPulse. The most important developments, charter news, enforcement actions, and what to watch next week. Stay compliant, stay informed at lexregpulse.com

22. juni 202615 min
episode Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 20, 2026 artwork

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 20, 2026

Alex here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Saturday, June 20, 2026. The lead today is the stablecoin supervisory framework, which gets its next concrete milestone Monday. The Iran accord collapse is real and consequential for sanctions and trade-finance desks — we'll cover it — but the five-agency customer identification proposal hitting the Federal Register is the development with the broadest structural implications for how banks approach digital-asset products. Starting with stablecoins. Monday, June 22, the Federal Reserve, FDIC, OCC, NCUA, and FinCEN jointly publish a proposed rule requiring permitted payment stablecoin issuers to run bank-grade customer identification programs. The rule classifies those issuers as financial institutions under the Bank Secrecy Act. That classification matters: it brings stablecoin issuers into the same anti-money-laundering and know-your-customer framework banks already operate under. The comment window opens Monday and closes August 17. Banks weighing custody, issuance, or payment integration should map their partners' anti-money-laundering readiness against this proposal now, before the window closes. Alongside that, the Bank for International Settlements published analysis distinguishing two ways exchanges deliver yield to stablecoin holders. The first: reserve-based remuneration that tracks policy rates. The second: activity-based structures funded from an exchange's own trading book. The GENIUS Act bars issuers from paying interest directly but says nothing about the exchange layer delivering yield by other routes. The activity-based design is the structure regulators are most likely to scrutinize. Banks structuring or distributing stablecoin products should map which model their partner arrangements use before the comment period closes. The OCC is also publishing Monday. Its bulletin clarifies decision-making standards for bank filings, revises its minority depository institution policy, and proposes reporting forms for OCC-supervised stablecoin issuers under the GENIUS Act. Banks with minority depository institution designations or partnerships should track the policy revision as it publishes. Now to the Iran framework. The accord that markets celebrated through Friday's close has unraveled. Iran declared ships cannot transit the Strait of Hormuz without its permission and floated "insurance fees" — effectively a tolling regime on roughly a fifth of global seaborne oil. President Trump publicly disowned the framework. For banks, the compliance posture is straightforward: the OFAC designations already on the books do not unwind. The June 18 action against the Hizballah-aligned Hamieh finance network — spanning Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, and Oman — stands in full. Blocking and reporting obligations on those names are unchanged. Trade-finance and energy-lending teams that eased Gulf-exposure assumptions on Thursday's now-defunct accord should treat that easing as premature and re-mark counterparty and cargo risk accordingly. On the credit cycle, two signals are pulling in opposite directions. Leveraged-loan funds have drawn roughly three-and-a-half billion dollars since early May — ten consecutive weeks of inflows — while withdrawal requests from large private-credit funds surged roughly fifty-six percent quarter-over-quarter to about twelve billion dollars in the second quarter, with the Cliffwater Corporate Lending Fund seeing the largest redemption jump. Capital is rotating toward the more liquid, tradable corner of leveraged finance. Banks with fund-finance lines or private-credit warehouse exposure should monitor redemption pace as a liquidity-transmission signal. US margin debt jumped roughly one-hundred-twelve billion dollars in May to a record one-point-four-two trillion dollars. That build in leverage alongside record retail options activity is the kind of late-cycle signal that bears on securities-lending and prime-brokerage exposure if positioning reverses quickly. On rates, markets had fully priced a twenty-five-basis-point September hike as of Friday's close, following Warsh's hawkish framing and the removal of forward guidance. A Hormuz tolling regime threatening to reverse the crude decline reinforces that hawkish case. Asset-liability management teams should keep both hold-and-hike scenarios live for deposit-beta and securities-mark planning. Looking ahead: the five-agency stablecoin customer identification proposal publishes Monday, June 22, starting the August 17 comment clock. The OCC minority depository institution policy and the FDIC's monthly enforcement summary are also expected Monday. Senate Banking holds a confirmation hearing Wednesday, June 25, at two in the afternoon, examining John Crews for the NCUA board — his testimony on credit-union capital adequacy and technology-enabled lending is the read for competitive positioning in auto, mortgage, and small-business markets. 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.

20. juni 20265 min
episode Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 19, 2026 artwork

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 19, 2026

Alex here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Friday, June 19, 2026. Five federal regulators moved together Thursday to bring stablecoin issuers inside the Bank Secrecy Act. That joint action is the story of the week — and it carries direct implications for every bank exploring digital-asset partnerships. Alongside it: a Hizballah sanctions expansion with a 10-business-day clock, a polarized capital-rules record now closed to comment, and a Fed leadership signal worth watching carefully. The Federal Reserve, FDIC, OCC, NCUA, and FinCEN jointly proposed requiring permitted payment stablecoin issuers to run customer identification programs — the same know-your-customer infrastructure banks already maintain. The 117-page notice of proposed rulemaking classifies stablecoin issuers as financial institutions under the Bank Secrecy Act, pulling them into the formal anti-money-laundering and counter-terrorism-financing regime. Comments close August 17, with a final rule likely carrying a 12-to-24-month implementation runway. The five-agency posture signals a coordinated priority, not a single-regulator experiment. For banks, the operational weight falls on counterparty diligence: institutions with existing or planned stablecoin custody, issuance, or payment relationships will face examiner scrutiny over whether those issuer partners maintain compliant customer identification programs. Map those relationships against the proposed standard now, ahead of the August deadline. Inside the Fed's vote, former Chair Jerome Powell backed the proposal. New Chair Kevin Warsh abstained. That quiet divergence is worth tracking as Warsh defines how far his deregulatory instincts extend into digital-asset supervision. The abstention leaves room for the final rule to soften. On the sanctions front, Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control designated 11 individuals and entities on June 18 under Executive Order 13224, targeting Hizballah-aligned Lebanese officials and a business network spanning Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, and Oman — a structure that generated roughly $10 million through contracts with the former al-Assad regime. Blocked-property reports are due within 10 business days. Institutions with Middle East correspondent exposure should prioritize screening review against the June 18 names now. The capital-rules comment window closed June 18 — the most consequential capital rewrite since Basel III. The filed record reflects a sharp split. Large banks and industry groups including the Bank Policy Institute pressed for deeper cuts and full recalibration of the GSIB surcharge — that stands for Global Systemically Important Bank surcharge, the additional capital buffer applied to the largest firms. On the other side, advocacy group Better Markets warned the package would invite bank failures and taxpayer bailouts. The agencies now own a polarized record as they move toward a final rule. With advocacy closed, large banks should shift to scenario planning on both the GSIB surcharge and standardized-approach outcomes. The Federal Reserve barred Thomas Engelbrecht, former chief executive of Bank of Eufaula and S N B Bancshares, from the banking industry and imposed a $125,000 penalty. The action cited steering imprudent credit to a relative's company and fabricating board minutes. The Fed separately issued a consent prohibition order against former M&T Bank employee Matthew Cheong for embezzlement. Both are individual actions, not institutional findings — but the Engelbrecht case underscores that related-party lending controls and authentic governance records remain active examination priorities. Two market developments round out the week. The Iran memorandum of understanding is now in effect, the Strait of Hormuz naval blockade has been lifted, and WTI crude fell below $74 a barrel for the first time since early March. Sanctions desks should note that the diplomatic framework does not rescind existing OFAC designations — Thursday's Hizballah action included — so screening obligations are unchanged. For asset-liability teams, the crude drop trims one energy-driven inflation input the Fed cited just a day earlier. Markets steadied Friday after Thursday's selloff following Chair Warsh's hawkish debut. The two-year Treasury yield continued climbing and the dollar held near a year-to-date high. Banks should keep both hold-and-hike scenarios live for deposit-beta and securities-mark planning. Looking ahead to Monday, June 22: the joint stablecoin customer-identification proposal publishes in the Federal Register, formally starting the comment clock. The OCC is also set to publish a policy statement on minority depository institutions, and the FDIC releases its monthly enforcement-actions summary. 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.

19. juni 20265 min
episode Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 18, 2026 artwork

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 18, 2026

Morgan here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Thursday, June 18, 2026. Kevin Warsh's first Federal Open Market Committee meeting as Federal Reserve Chair delivered the regime change he promised — and the market reaction tells you everything about what changed. The Committee held the federal funds rate at 3.5 to 3.75 percent, a unanimous 12-0 vote, the fourth straight hold. The rate decision was not the story. The framing was. Warsh stripped forward guidance from the statement entirely, telling reporters the Fed should "give you the facts" rather than telegraph intentions. The dot plot turned sharply hawkish — nine of eighteen officials now project at least one rate hike this year, and the easing bias is gone. The Committee also cut its 2026 GDP growth forecast to 2.2 percent from 2.4 percent, and raised its inflation outlook, citing energy costs and Middle East supply pressures. Markets repriced fast: roughly 1.2 trillion dollars in S&P 500 market capitalization erased within two hours, the Dow off about 800 points, Treasury yields up, gold down. Odds of a 2026 hike moved to roughly 49 percent after the release. For asset-liability management teams, the practical shift is this: the Fed's reaction function is now less telegraphed. Citigroup pushed back its rate-cut timeline. Analysts flagged a possible September hike. Banks should keep both hold-and-hike scenarios live for deposit-beta and securities-mark planning, and build that uncertainty into stress scenarios through year-end. Warsh also launched internal task forces to review Fed operations across five areas — an organizational overhaul alongside the communications change. On enforcement: the Texas SB 13 situation moved from litigation background to active compliance exposure. The Fifth Circuit on May 29 stayed the preliminary injunction that had blocked the 2021 law barring contracts with financial institutions deemed to boycott energy companies. The Texas Attorney General confirmed enforcement resumed June 3. A federal district court found the statute unconstitutional in February — but that finding does not protect banks while the Fifth Circuit stay holds. Institutions with Texas public-sector business — pension mandates, municipal underwriting, government deposits — face exclusion risk now. The compliance task is to audit investment policies and ESG criteria against the law's standard before enforcement lands on a specific contract. Prediction markets crossed from theoretical exposure to audit-committee territory. A Michigan federal judge ruled June 17 that prediction-market sports contracts offered by platforms including Polymarket and Robinhood are functionally equivalent to sports betting. Kentucky's attorney general filed three lawsuits against platforms for unlicensed wagering. Banks with payment-processing, deposit, or partnership ties to these platforms should map those relationships now, before state enforcement actions multiply. The OCC tightened its charter-application gate, warning it will reject incomplete filings without review and publish denial decisions. The agency separately cleared Santander's 12.2 billion dollar acquisition of Webster Bank, confirming the large-bank merger-and-acquisition queue is moving. On stablecoins: Fidelity launched a GENIUS Act-aligned money market fund to hold stablecoin reserves, following a similar move by State Street — State Street shares rose roughly 5.7 percent on its announcement. Reserve custody is consolidating among institutions with existing charters and infrastructure. Banks weighing a reserve-custody or token program should benchmark against these entrants and account for the anti-money-laundering monitoring load. Illinois enacted a 0.2 percent digital-asset transaction tax, the first state-level levy of its kind. Banks and fintechs with crypto-trading or custody operations touching Illinois customers should assess collection and reporting obligations. Other states may follow. Watch June 24: the House Financial Services Committee holds its "Future of Payments" hearing, gathering testimony on payment-rail access, fintech competition, and consumer safeguards — an early read on Congressional priorities likely to shape open-banking rules. Also watch for the CFTC's fintech request for information in the Federal Register today, opening a comment window closing around July 7 for banks to flag friction points in partnering with regulated institutions. 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.

18. juni 20265 min
episode Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 17, 2026 artwork

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 17, 2026

Alex here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Wednesday, June 17, 2026. The fair-lending rulebook tightened today. The CFPB's rescission of its 2020 special purpose credit program guidance is effective this morning, and any bank running a targeted-lending program built around race, national origin, or sex as eligibility criteria is out of compliance as of now. That is the story banks need to act on first. Here is what changed. The Bureau's December 2020 advisory opinion had given lenders a safe harbor to use protected characteristics — race, color, national origin, sex — as common eligibility factors under Regulation B's Equal Credit Opportunity framework. That safe harbor is gone. The operative standard is now the Bureau's April final rule, published at 91 FR 21620. For-profit lenders may use protected characteristics as eligibility factors only where necessary to overcome a demonstrated, specific inability to access credit on those same grounds. That is a narrow exception, and it carries a high evidentiary burden. The CFPB found no evidence that protected-class-based programs remained necessary, and it cited constitutional concerns in the process. The practical consequence is immediate. Programs keyed to protected-class membership — including many built for Community Reinvestment Act outreach goals — need to be audited against the necessity exception now. Institutions need to review eligibility design, marketing materials, and underwriting documentation, then decide whether to restructure or wind down before the next examination cycle. The OCC approved a merger application involving Webster Bank and Santander Bank on June 12, per Webster Financial's SEC disclosure. The clearance moves a large-bank combination through the structural-approval stage and signals that the agency's merger queue is processing again after a slower stretch. On the fintech front, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission issued a Request for Information on June 16 asking which of its rules, orders, and no-action letters unduly impede fintech firms from partnering with federally regulated institutions. The inquiry is framed around Executive Order 14405 and signals a lighter-touch posture toward derivatives-adjacent fintech. Banks with such partnerships have a formal venue to flag specific friction points. Oregon's Division of Financial Regulation proposed requiring all nonbank Buy Now, Pay Later lenders and service providers to obtain payday or consumer-finance licenses through the Nationwide Multistate Licensing System before operating in the state. The trigger is the borrower's repayment timeline alone — not whether the product carries fees, interest, or recourse. Banks partnering with Buy Now, Pay Later providers face indirect compliance risk if those partners lack licensure. Comments close July 17, and Oregon's broad reading could serve as a template for other states. The Federal Reserve concludes Kevin Warsh's first meeting as Chair today, with markets pricing a near-certain hold and inflation running at 4.2 percent. The rate decision matters less than the communication posture. Warsh is expected to withhold the rate-path dot plot and adopt a quieter, less-telegraphed style. Analysts at Deutsche Bank read a hawkish tilt into his opening; UBS sees no easing this year; and some market participants now flag rising odds of a September rate increase. Asset-liability management teams running a single hold scenario should keep a hike case open until the new communication regime clarifies the Fed's reaction function. One item to watch on the political side: reporting indicates that the Trump-family-linked World Liberty Financial is close to OCC approval for a federal trust bank charter. An approval would hand a politically connected crypto venture a national supervisory footprint and would test whether the agency's digital-asset charter pipeline can withstand the appearance questions that come with it. Three dates to hold. The Fed's bank holding company notice is expected today, formalizing pending control filings for public comment. The CFPB's Regulation B rescission formal publication lands in the Federal Register this week, locking in the effective date. And Warsh's debut press conference is the week's clearest read on the new communication posture — watch whether forward guidance language is stripped back as expected. 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.

17. juni 20265 min