LexRegPulse Daily

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 24, 2026

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episode Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 24, 2026 cover

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Alex here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Wednesday, June 24, 2026. The most consequential community-banking legislation in nearly a decade has cleared Congress. The 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act passed the House and now goes to President Trump for signature. What compliance and treasury teams have been tracking as a bill becomes imminent statute — and the changes are substantial. Section 903 raises the asset threshold for the 18-month examination cycle from three billion to six billion dollars. Between 300 and 400 additional community banks now qualify for that lighter cadence. Sections 901 and 902 exclude custodial deposits from brokered-deposit classification and raise the reciprocal-deposit cap — a direct reduction in funding costs for community lenders. Institutions between three and six billion in assets should confirm eligibility and reassess funding-cost assumptions before the President signs. The bill also carries two provisions with broader reach. Title 11 prohibits the Federal Reserve from issuing a retail central bank digital currency — a retail CBDC — through 2030. Deposit-franchise planning now has a clear horizon on that front. Title 10 restricts large institutional investors holding 350 or more single-family rental homes from purchasing additional single-family houses. Residential mortgage-backed securities desks and warehouse lenders should watch for Federal Housing Finance Agency guidance on the build-to-rent exemption — that guidance determines how collateral composition shifts. On digital assets, two comment windows opened. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, coordinating with the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network and the Office of Foreign Assets Control, proposed rules implementing the GENIUS Act — the stablecoin framework legislation. The proposal extends Bank Secrecy Act, anti-money-laundering, counter-terrorism-financing, and sanctions requirements to permitted payment stablecoin issuers, treating them as financial institutions under the BSA. That triggers customer due diligence, suspicious-activity reporting, and sanctions screening. Comments are due July 24. The Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission jointly reopened comment on the statutory definitions of "swap" and "security-based swap." They are also seeking input on redesigning swap data-reporting frameworks, drawing on 15 years of experience under Dodd-Frank Title VII. For banks with significant derivatives books, the outcome touches product classification, capital treatment, margin, and reporting workflows. Both requests carry an August 24 deadline. OFAC designated additional parties to the Specially Designated Nationals list under Executive Order 13224, effective June 18, targeting ISIS facilitators. Formal notice published June 24. This is a separate screening obligation from the Southeast Asian scam-network campaign. Institutions with terrorism-financing exposure should ensure SDN screening reflects the updated list. On the charter side, the FDIC granted conditional approval to United Development Bank — a fresh entry in the de novo pipeline the ROAD Act now aims to widen. Green Dot and CommerceOne shareholders approved their bank-and-fintech combination. Utah-based Capital Community Bank relaunches as Quill Bank on June 30, repositioning to serve fintech partners. Together, these moves reflect continued consolidation and repositioning at the bank-fintech boundary. One macro signal worth flagging for asset-liability teams: markets now price roughly a 25% probability of a rate increase at the July 29 Federal Open Market Committee meeting. The Federal Reserve has moved away from forward guidance and is reducing Treasury-bill purchases to 25 billion dollars per month. Both a hold and a hike remain live scenarios. Asset-liability committees should stress-test against each. The week ahead: the OCC stablecoin rule is expected in the Federal Register today, opening its formal comment clock. Routine Federal Reserve change-in-bank-control notices and FDIC information-collection proposals are also expected in the Federal Register on June 24. 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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episode Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 24, 2026 artwork

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 24, 2026

Alex here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Wednesday, June 24, 2026. The most consequential community-banking legislation in nearly a decade has cleared Congress. The 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act passed the House and now goes to President Trump for signature. What compliance and treasury teams have been tracking as a bill becomes imminent statute — and the changes are substantial. Section 903 raises the asset threshold for the 18-month examination cycle from three billion to six billion dollars. Between 300 and 400 additional community banks now qualify for that lighter cadence. Sections 901 and 902 exclude custodial deposits from brokered-deposit classification and raise the reciprocal-deposit cap — a direct reduction in funding costs for community lenders. Institutions between three and six billion in assets should confirm eligibility and reassess funding-cost assumptions before the President signs. The bill also carries two provisions with broader reach. Title 11 prohibits the Federal Reserve from issuing a retail central bank digital currency — a retail CBDC — through 2030. Deposit-franchise planning now has a clear horizon on that front. Title 10 restricts large institutional investors holding 350 or more single-family rental homes from purchasing additional single-family houses. Residential mortgage-backed securities desks and warehouse lenders should watch for Federal Housing Finance Agency guidance on the build-to-rent exemption — that guidance determines how collateral composition shifts. On digital assets, two comment windows opened. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, coordinating with the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network and the Office of Foreign Assets Control, proposed rules implementing the GENIUS Act — the stablecoin framework legislation. The proposal extends Bank Secrecy Act, anti-money-laundering, counter-terrorism-financing, and sanctions requirements to permitted payment stablecoin issuers, treating them as financial institutions under the BSA. That triggers customer due diligence, suspicious-activity reporting, and sanctions screening. Comments are due July 24. The Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission jointly reopened comment on the statutory definitions of "swap" and "security-based swap." They are also seeking input on redesigning swap data-reporting frameworks, drawing on 15 years of experience under Dodd-Frank Title VII. For banks with significant derivatives books, the outcome touches product classification, capital treatment, margin, and reporting workflows. Both requests carry an August 24 deadline. OFAC designated additional parties to the Specially Designated Nationals list under Executive Order 13224, effective June 18, targeting ISIS facilitators. Formal notice published June 24. This is a separate screening obligation from the Southeast Asian scam-network campaign. Institutions with terrorism-financing exposure should ensure SDN screening reflects the updated list. On the charter side, the FDIC granted conditional approval to United Development Bank — a fresh entry in the de novo pipeline the ROAD Act now aims to widen. Green Dot and CommerceOne shareholders approved their bank-and-fintech combination. Utah-based Capital Community Bank relaunches as Quill Bank on June 30, repositioning to serve fintech partners. Together, these moves reflect continued consolidation and repositioning at the bank-fintech boundary. One macro signal worth flagging for asset-liability teams: markets now price roughly a 25% probability of a rate increase at the July 29 Federal Open Market Committee meeting. The Federal Reserve has moved away from forward guidance and is reducing Treasury-bill purchases to 25 billion dollars per month. Both a hold and a hike remain live scenarios. Asset-liability committees should stress-test against each. The week ahead: the OCC stablecoin rule is expected in the Federal Register today, opening its formal comment clock. Routine Federal Reserve change-in-bank-control notices and FDIC information-collection proposals are also expected in the Federal Register on June 24. 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.

Yesterday5 min
episode Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 23, 2026 artwork

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 23, 2026

Morgan here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Tuesday, June 23, 2026. The federal stablecoin framework took its most concrete supervisory shape yet Monday. The OCC issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking — a formal draft rule — requiring permitted payment stablecoin issuers under its supervision to run full bank-grade anti-money-laundering programs, sanctions screening, and regulatory reporting. Comment period closes around July 22. That is the banking story of the day, and the gap analysis clock is running. Here is what matters most. The OCC's draft goes well beyond the five-agency customer-identification proposal already in its comment window. That earlier rule asked issuers to verify customer identities. This one requires a complete Bank Secrecy Act compliance program — the same machinery chartered banks operate. Critically, the rule asserts OCC authority over both federally and state-qualified stablecoin issuers for anti-money-laundering and sanctions purposes. Banks with current or planned token partnerships should map each partner's program against the proposed standard now. The comment window closes in roughly 30 days. The proposal also establishes formal consultation and information-sharing procedures between the OCC and the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network — FinCEN — for significant compliance actions, an interagency coordination model likely to shape stablecoin oversight as the broader framework fills in. The Senate reinforced the policy direction from the legislative side. A bipartisan housing package — the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act — cleared the Senate carrying a four-year prohibition on Federal Reserve issuance of a central bank digital currency. That ban, combined with the OCC's rulemaking activity, confirms the US digital-dollar path runs through supervised private stablecoins, not a public instrument. The housing bill also carries community-bank regulatory relief provisions advocated by the Independent Community Bankers of America, with support from the American Bankers Association. Smaller institutions weighing mortgage and small-business capacity should review those provisions. On market structure, a Federal Reserve staff note published June 22 documented hedge fund gross Treasury exposures reaching four trillion dollars as of September 2025 — double their 2023 level. The cash-futures basis trade alone stood at 830 billion dollars. The 50 largest funds hold 90 percent of that total, financed through roughly three trillion dollars in repurchase agreements — repo. Banks are the primary repo counterparties to these positions. The April 2025 swap-spread unwind is the live stress precedent on record. Examination focus on hedge fund counterparty concentration and repo haircut practices should be expected. OFAC designated three individuals and six entities June 22 under Executive Order 13224 — the counterterrorism sanctions authority — targeting operators of money-services businesses and a crypto exchange used to move funds for ISIS and its West Africa branch. The designations span France, Syria, Turkey, Nigeria, and West Africa. Banks with correspondent or remittance exposure in those regions should treat money-services-business and informal value-transfer relationships as the screening priority and file any blocked-asset reports within the standard window. Two items for the calendar. The House Financial Services Committee holds a payments innovation hearing June 24 — testimony will signal emerging policy direction on stablecoins across multiple business lines. The Form PF deadline — the CFTC and SEC joint rule modifying private-fund disclosure obligations — falls today, June 23, for affected managers. Visa's stablecoin settlement pilot reached a roughly seven-billion-dollar annualized run rate in its fiscal second quarter, alongside eleven-point-two billion dollars in revenue and a twenty-billion-dollar buyback announcement. The Bank of England finalized a lighter sterling stablecoin regime, dropping holder limits in favor of a forty-billion-pound per-issuer cap — a brief international reference point as the US framework takes shape. 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.

23. juni 20265 min
episode Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 22, 2026 artwork

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 22, 2026

Alex here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Monday, June 22, 2026. The lead story this week is not a single rule — it is a structural shift in how the Federal Reserve communicates policy, and the cost of that shift is landing on bank balance sheets right now. Chair Kevin Warsh has confirmed a broad review of the Fed's framework and communications is underway. The June 17 statement dropped the dot plot — the quarterly rate-path projection — and reporting Monday confirms that was the opening move, not the complete picture. The Financial Times flags that investors see the missing rate path adding term premium and volatility to US borrowing costs, even with the policy rate held at 3.5 to 3.75 percent. For asset-liability managers, the opacity around the future path is itself a funding-cost input. The cost lands on the long end, where banks mark securities and price term liabilities. Futures currently imply roughly a 61.5 percent probability of a July hold, with September hike odds climbing. Keep both scenarios open for deposit-beta and securities-mark work. On the regulatory calendar, a five-agency proposal on stablecoins is drawing a hard deadline. The agencies — FinCEN, the OCC, the Federal Reserve, the FDIC, and the NCUA — have proposed classifying permitted payment stablecoin issuers as Bank Secrecy Act financial institutions, requiring bank-grade customer identification programs. The comment window closes August 21. Institutions with current or planned stablecoin custody, issuance, or payment-integration relationships should map each partner's anti-money-laundering program against the proposed standard during that window. The non-dollar issuance wave adds urgency: Swiss, Swedish, and Japanese institutions are moving to issue franc, krona, and yen tokens, and the Bank of England has finalized a lighter sterling framework with a forty-billion-pound per-issuer cap. Cross-border payment partnerships will increasingly span regimes with divergent reserve and identity standards. The OCC's revised Minority Depository Institution policy took effect June 16. The revision aligns the agency's designation test with the FIRREA statutory threshold — 51 percent qualifying ownership — and removes the discretion that previously allowed the OCC to maintain designations after a bank fell below that level. National banks relying on MDI standing for Community Reinvestment Act and examination benefits should audit ownership structure and board composition against the new test now. The SEC has renewed the information-collection requirements under Rule 2a-5, the fair-value governance rule for registered funds and business development companies. The agency estimates the annual burden at roughly 341,600 hours and 336 million dollars across approximately 10,000 respondents. Banks running fund or BDC subsidiaries should verify their valuation-designee reporting meets the quarterly, annual, and five-business-day material-matter timelines. Comments on the renewal run to August 21. One industry signal worth tracking: Santander has rolled out artificial intelligence access to all 185,000 of its employees, projecting more than 200 million euros in business value this year. The bank also published eleven code repositories under the Apache 2.0 open-source license — an unusual step for an institution of its size, and a reference point for how large banks can govern model deployment in the open. Looking ahead: S&P Global purchasing managers' indices land Tuesday. May new-home sales follow Wednesday. Thursday brings both May PCE inflation and first-quarter GDP. With forward guidance withdrawn, each print carries added weight for July and September rate expectations. Wednesday at 2:00 PM, the Senate Banking Committee examines three nominations, including John Crews for the NCUA board. His testimony on credit-union capital and technology-enabled lending is the competitive read for banks active 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.

22. juni 20265 min
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