LexRegPulse Daily

Weekly Digest - Jun 1, 2026

15 min · 1 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Weekly Digest - Jun 1, 2026

Descripción

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

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de LexRegPulse Daily!

Empezar

2 meses por 1 €

Después 4,99 € / mes · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts exclusivos
  • 20 horas de audiolibros / mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

56 episodios

Portada del episodio Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 15, 2026

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 15, 2026

Alex here. This is Lex Regg Pulse Daily for Monday, June 15, 2026. The week's sharpest banking story isn't the Iran accord — it's the compliance posture the accord does not change. The genuine lead for bank executives today is a convergence of three active pressure points: firm market-structure deadlines, a coordinated debanking investigation, and a rate decision Wednesday that carries more weight in its language than its outcome. Here's what demands attention. Start with market structure. The SEC's June 11 exemptive order confirms November 1 as the compliance date for half-penny tick sizes on stocks priced at or above one dollar, alongside access-fee caps cut to one-tenth of a cent per share. MEMX's request for further relief was declined. The companion FINRA TRACE proposal — extending principal-transaction reporting for member affiliates — now carries an August 4 SEC decision date. Broker-dealer affiliates should keep order-management and fee-calculation remediation on a single track. The engineering lift is the live task; the deadline is not moving. On debanking, the picture is now clearer when read as a coordinated program. The Justice Department's demand for account-closure records from JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, and other large banks sits alongside three executive orders: one stripping reputation risk from supervisory guidance within six months, one discouraging services to undocumented individuals, and one promoting digital-asset integration. The mechanisms pull in different directions. The practical answer is the same. Every account termination in crypto, firearms, or adult-services lines needs a documented Bank Secrecy Act or anti-money-laundering or fraud basis — and that documentation should reach back several years. Reputation risk is no longer available as a supervisory justification under the executive order framework, so the compliance rationale carries the full weight of any DOJ inquiry. The Iran accord deserves precise framing. President Trump declared the framework complete and authorized reopening the Strait of Hormuz, with a formal signing set for June 19 in Switzerland. Markets repriced: WTI crude fell roughly five percent below 81 dollars a barrel, S&P 500 futures rose about 0.8 percent, and gold gained near two percent. For sanctions desks, the operative point is narrow. A signed accord does not lift existing designations. The June 10 Economic Fury action against China- and Hong Kong-based procurement intermediaries and the June 12 SDN listing remain in force. IRGC-linked names are the least likely early candidates for relief. Blocking and screening obligations are unchanged. Trade-finance and energy-lending desks with Gulf exposure should read the signed text for any oil-trade or correspondent-banking authorizations — not pre-position on the headline. The FOMC decision Wednesday is Kevin Warsh's first as Fed Chair. Markets price a near-certain hold with inflation at 4.2 percent. The forward-guidance language carries more weight than the decision itself. Watch whether the statement retains the phrase "additional adjustments" — that phrasing signals the Committee's tolerance for a subsequent move. Asset-liability teams should finalize both hold and hike scenarios for deposit-beta and securities marks before the release. The energy easing from the Iran deal removes one upside inflation pressure, but AI-linked price gains remain in the data. A single-scenario hold assumption is undersized for this meeting. Two industry signals round out the week. On stablecoins: crypto firms are still paying yield on stablecoin balances even as the CLARITY Act's unresolved yield clause moves toward a federal ban. Roughly 20 billion dollars in potential bank-deposit migration sits in the balance. Banks modeling a token program should run both the no-yield and yield-permitted outcomes before committing. On credit: investors now demand 6.4 percentage points of extra yield to hold CCC-rated bonds over BB-rated paper — the widest premium in 14 months. Only nine percent of small-business owners plan to hire over the next three months, the weakest reading outside the pandemic in a decade. Banks with leveraged-lending exposure should fold the spread widening into mark and reserve reviews. For the full analysis, check your Lex Regg Pulse daily briefing in your inbox, or catch Lex Regg Pulse Weekly every Sunday. I'm Alex. This has been Lex Regg Pulse Daily. --- Your daily 5-minute briefing on banking regulations, compliance updates, and enforcement actions. Stay compliant, stay informed with LexRegPulse Daily.

Ayer5 min
Portada del episodio Weekly Digest - Jun 15, 2026

Weekly Digest - Jun 15, 2026

ALEX: You're listening to the Lex Regg Pulse Weekly for the week of June eighth through June thirteenth, 2026. I'm Alex. MORGAN: And I'm Morgan. Here's what mattered this week. ALEX: The GENIUS Act passed months ago, and we've been tracking the jurisdictional fight ever since — state regulators challenging Treasury's adequacy framework, the FDIC opening its comment clock on BSA and sanctions rules for stablecoin issuers. This week, the OCC put actual forms on the table. MORGAN: Two forms: PS-01, a weekly confidential report on stablecoin activity and reserve composition, and PS-02, a quarterly condition-and-income report. Comments run to August eleventh, with a second thirty-day window to follow. ALEX: The weekly cadence is the part that changes the business case. Near-real-time visibility into reserves, redemptions, and transaction volume — that's an infrastructure investment, not a compliance checkbox. Any institution weighing an issuance program needs to price that reporting stack before the economics pencil out. MORGAN: And I'd push back slightly on treating this as purely a burden story. The forms also define what banks serving as reserve custodians will eventually be asked to verify on behalf of their issuer clients. So even institutions that aren't planning to issue directly have a reason to read PS-01 carefully. ALEX: Fair point. Though the jurisdictional picture still isn't clean — these forms are the federal-track template. State-chartered issuers don't yet know which adequacy standard applies to them. That dispute from last week is unresolved. MORGAN: And the FDIC divergence compounds it. The two regimes differ on reporting cadence and on whether issuers may pay yield to holders. An institution choosing a charter path right now is making that decision before knowing which framework will govern them. Convergence isn't guaranteed — and the comment deadline is August eleventh, which is the moment to push back if the weekly cadence is operationally unworkable. ALEX: Two active frameworks, one product decision. That's the compliance risk in one sentence. MORGAN: Exactly. ALEX: Treasury Secretary Bessent was in Houston on Friday — two separate audiences, two separate speeches. Bankers in the morning, the Petroleum Club in the afternoon. MORGAN: The banker remarks are the more operationally significant. Bessent framed anti-money-laundering detection as a national-security imperative and cited two-point-five billion dollars in payroll-tax-fraud suspicious activity reports filed in 2025 as evidence of scale. That reads as an enforcement-posture signal: expect examiners to scrutinize SAR quality on payroll schemes, labor trafficking, and identity theft this cycle. ALEX: The petroleum remarks leaned into energy-sector support. The question for banks is whether Treasury is signaling deregulatory comfort on energy credit simultaneously, because institutions at the intersection of energy finance and banking are pricing fossil-fuel exposures against a volatile oil backdrop. The two speeches together are the clearest statement of Treasury's current priorities, but they don't resolve the capital-treatment question on energy lending. MORGAN: FinCEN reinforced the AML message the same day with Section 314(b) guidance. The clarification is concrete: institutions may share video surveillance footage, IP addresses, login patterns, and specific fraud indicators — newly added payees followed by large transfers, geographically anomalous logins — under that authority. ALEX: This isn't a new authority. FinCEN is telling banks they're not using it enough. The guidance doesn't create new liability, but it establishes a documented expectation — which means BSA officers who've treated 314(b) as a rarely-invoked option now have an examiner reference point sitting on the record. MORGAN: The CFTC moved on whistleblower awards this week — proposed amendments to how awards are calculated and determined. Two weeks ago we covered the agency's immediate rescission of its no-deny settlement policy. These two moves need to be read together. ALEX: No-deny settlements are gone, and if the award amendments make payouts more accessible or larger, internal concerns are more likely to surface externally before compliance channels can manage them. Institutions with live or potential CFTC exposure should reassess their settlement calculus against both moves simultaneously. MORGAN: The SEC published proposed rule changes for two new exchanges — the Texas Stock Exchange and the Green Impact Exchange. One explicitly positioning against ESG disclosure requirements, one built around them. Both in the same week's Federal Register. ALEX: For banks serving as underwriters, market-makers, or clearing members, new venue approvals mean new rulebook obligations before the volume arrives to justify them. The TXSE filing also included a proxy proposal requiring brokers to vote uninstructed shares by proportional allocation tied to actual beneficial-owner instructions — broker-dealer affiliates holding TXSE-listed securities need to scope the systems work there. MORGAN: Whether either venue attracts enough listing or trading volume to require dedicated compliance infrastructure is genuinely a watch-and-see. But the rulebook obligations don't wait for the volume. ALEX: The macro picture shifted materially this week. May CPI came in at four-point-two percent — the highest since April 2023. PPI followed at six-point-five, above consensus. Goldman had already moved its first Fed cut to 2027 before those prints landed. MORGAN: The inflation data hardened that call. ALM teams running a no-cut base case should now have a rate-increase scenario beside it — particularly for deposit-beta and securities-portfolio marks — before the June seventeenth and eighteenth FOMC. That's Kevin Warsh's inaugural meeting. The forward guidance language will carry more interpretive weight than the rate decision itself. ALEX: Oil was the other variable. WTI surged above ninety-four dollars on the Israel-Iran exchange that opened the week. By Friday, crude had pulled back below eighty-seven after the president signaled an Iran deal was imminent. For trading and energy-finance desks, the week illustrated how quickly mark-to-market exposure can cycle on presidential statements rather than scheduled catalysts. MORGAN: The ECB raised rates twenty-five basis points during the week — the first hike from a major central bank since 2023 — citing renewed inflation tied to the conflict. That reinforces the hawkish backdrop heading into the FOMC. ALEX: Looking ahead — the June seventeenth and eighteenth FOMC is the immediate date. Warsh's first meeting, against a four-point-two CPI print. Finalize scenario updates before the statement, not after. MORGAN: The OCC stablecoin reporting forms comment window runs to August eleventh. If the weekly PS-01 cadence is operationally unworkable for your issuance program, that's the deadline to say so on the record. ALEX: And stress test results land June twenty-fourth. The Fed releases 2026 results for thirty-two large banks at four p.m. Eastern. With capital buffers frozen through 2027, capital planning can proceed without waiting on the print — but the 2027 loss-model overhaul is where the next requirement shift originates, and that's the work to begin now. MORGAN: The paperwork for the GENIUS Act landed this week. The jurisdictional questions are still open. Both of those things are true simultaneously — and that's the position institutions are navigating into the summer comment season. 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

Ayer15 min
Portada del episodio Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 13, 2026

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 13, 2026

Alex here. This is Lex Regg Pulse Daily for Saturday, June 13, 2026. The week's defining story is a hardening of the Bank Secrecy Act into a front-line examination priority. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, speaking to Texas bankers in Houston on June 12, framed anti-money-laundering detection as a national-security imperative — and arrived with agency machinery to match. That framing now shapes how examiners will judge your program. Here is what matters most. Bessent's Houston speech was an enforcement-posture statement. He credited community banks as the first to see suspicious activity in real time and pointed to two-point-five billion dollars in payroll-tax-fraud suspicious activity reports filed in 2025 as evidence of the scale at issue. The practical read: expect examiners to scrutinize suspicious activity report quality on payroll schemes, labor trafficking, shell companies, and identity theft. SAR quality in these categories is a likely examination focus this cycle. The same day, FinCEN issued guidance expanding what banks may share under Section 314(b) of the USA PATRIOT Act — the voluntary information-sharing program between financial institutions. The updated guidance clarifies that institutions may share video surveillance footage, IP addresses, login patterns, and specific fraud indicators such as newly added payees followed by large transfers or geographically anomalous logins. The Bank Policy Institute welcomed the move. The examination implication runs the other direction: banks that are not registered for 314(b) participation now risk findings. A week earlier, on June 5, FinCEN joined the FDIC, OCC, and NCUA on a joint advisory — FIN-2026-A002 — mandated by Executive Order 14406. It lays out 18 red flags for identity theft and payroll fraud involving non-work-authorized populations. Institutions with meaningful Individual Tax Identification Number account books, or customers in payroll-processing and labor-broker industries, should fold those indicators into transaction monitoring now. Beyond the anti-money-laundering package, the Securities and Exchange Commission proposed eliminating Rules 611 and 610(e) of Regulation NMS — the 2005 trade-through regime that made the national best bid and offer the binding reference for order routing and best execution. The comment window runs roughly 60 days, closing around August 10. Broker-dealer affiliates should scope the systems impact and prepare a comment response. Analysts also noted a secondary consequence: the rule has functioned as a barrier to domestic tokenized-equity trading, and its removal opens a path for onchain stock trading in the United States. On cybersecurity, a community bank disclosed a material incident caused not by an outside attacker but by an employee who fed customer data into an unauthorized AI tool. With regulators moving toward outcomes-based examination rather than checklist review, that case signals examiners will expand cyber scope to cover employee AI-tool usage and data governance. Inventorying unsanctioned AI adoption before the next exam cycle is now a practical priority. Two forward dates to hold. On June 15, the Federal Reserve is expected to publish its routine bank holding company formation, acquisition, and merger notices — the standard pipeline for tracking regional consolidation. On June 24, the Fed releases 2026 stress test results for its large-bank cohort at 4 p.m. Eastern. With capital buffers frozen through 2027, capital planning can proceed this cycle without waiting on that print. For the full analysis, check your Lex Regg Pulse daily briefing in your inbox, or catch Lex Regg Pulse Weekly every Sunday. I'm Alex. This has been Lex Regg Pulse Daily. --- Your daily 5-minute briefing on banking regulations, compliance updates, and enforcement actions. Stay compliant, stay informed with LexRegPulse Daily.

13 de jun de 20265 min
Portada del episodio Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 12, 2026

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 12, 2026

Alex here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Friday, June 12, 2026. Stablecoin supervision crossed a threshold this week. The OCC published Bulletin 2026-24, proposing the first concrete reporting forms under the GENIUS Act — and the weekly cadence of those forms is the number that will determine whether bank issuance programs are financially viable. Here is what matters most heading into the weekend. The OCC's proposed Form PS-01 would require national banks issuing payment stablecoins to file weekly confidential reports on reserve composition, redemptions, and transaction volume. Form PS-02 is a quarterly condition-and-income report. The weekly requirement is the operative burden. Near-real-time reserve reporting materially raises the infrastructure cost of any issuance program. The comment deadline is August 11, with a second 30-day window to follow. If that cadence is operationally unworkable for your program, that is the argument to file. The complication is that the OCC is not the only regulator writing these rules. The FDIC has its own proposed stablecoin framework, and the two diverge — on reporting architecture and on whether issuers may pay yield to holders. Banks evaluating a charter path cannot assume the two regimes will converge before they need to commit. The compliance risk is the divergence itself. Model both frameworks against your product design now. Beneath the stablecoin story, the capital markets are already building what the rules are meant to govern. Digital Asset, developer of the Canton Network, raised 355 million dollars in a round that included Citadel Securities, BNP Paribas, HSBC, Coinbase, and an Abu Dhabi sovereign fund. Citi opened a tokenized-share route into private markets. Zelle confirmed plans to launch its own stablecoin, ZLUSD, with cross-border payments to India targeted by end of 2026. The OCC's proposed forms and this capital flow are describing the same market from opposite ends. On the rate environment: May producer prices rose 6.5 percent, above the 6.4 percent consensus and the highest reading since November 2022. Core producer prices came in at 4.9 percent. That follows the 4.2 percent consumer price reading earlier this week. The European Central Bank raised rates 25 basis points this week, citing inflation tied to the Iran conflict — the first hike from a major central bank since 2023. For asset-liability and trading desks running a hold-or-cut base case ahead of the June 17th and 18th Federal Open Market Committee meeting, the operative message is to finalize a rate-increase scenario now — particularly for deposit-beta assumptions and securities marks. New Fed Chair Kevin Warsh is expected to offer less forward guidance than markets have grown accustomed to. Two compliance items require near-term attention. The Office of Foreign Assets Control published a formal designation in the Federal Register covering Iran-linked procurement networks under the Economic Fury action, triggering immediate blocking duties and 10-day reporting on any identified assets. Separately, OFAC published a definitive list of more than 50 medical devices — diagnostic imaging equipment, PCR machines, and bioreactors among them — excluded from the North Korea humanitarian general license and now requiring specific authorization. Trade-finance and correspondent banking desks should incorporate both into screening within 30 days. On the leadership front, President Trump nominated Brian Johnson for a five-year term as Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Director — his third nominee for the post. A confirmed director would bring durability to the Bureau's current direction, including the document removals that have left compliance teams without authoritative reference points on unfair, deceptive, or abusive acts and practices and fair lending. Treat the confirmation timeline as the variable shaping enforcement posture into 2027. One longer-horizon item before we close. The Financial Data Transparency Act standards are now documented in an OCC bulletin covering the nine-agency final rule governing Call Reports and stress-test submissions. No single compliance deadline is binding yet, but the gap assessment against current reporting architecture is the work to begin. The SEC also published a Texas Stock Exchange rule-change filing that would require brokers to allocate votes on uninstructed shares proportionally to actual beneficial-owner instructions, eliminating discretionary voting on routine matters. Broker-dealer affiliates holding Texas Stock Exchange-listed securities should scope the systems work that recalculation requires. 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.

12 de jun de 20265 min
Portada del episodio Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 11, 2026

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 11, 2026

Morgan here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Thursday, June 11, 2026. The development with the longest tail for bank balance sheets today is a structural question about capital. The Bank for International Settlements proposed reworking Additional Tier 1 instruments, the hybrid securities sitting between equity and senior debt in the capital stack. And the inflation data landing this week means the rate environment those instruments price into just shifted materially. Start with capital. The BIS paper, published June 11 and reflecting Basel Committee consensus, proposes replacing discretionary writedowns on Additional Tier 1 securities — AT1s — with mandatory, formula-driven conversion into equity. Conversion triggers would move well above today's five-point-one-two-five percent Common Equity Tier 1 floor, potentially toward seven to eight percent. The intent is to make these instruments absorb losses while a bank is still a going concern, not after the fact. Nothing in the paper is binding today. But Basel Committee consensus papers tend to become guidance within 12 to 24 months. Capital and treasury teams should model the repricing impact on existing AT1 holdings now, and fold the higher trigger scenario into refinancing planning. That modeling work just got more complicated. May CPI came in at four-point-two percent — the highest reading since April 2023 — with core inflation at two-point-nine. Bond markets responded by pricing in a Federal Reserve rate increase this year, not a cut. That lands days before the June 17-18 FOMC meeting — Kevin Warsh's inaugural meeting. The decision itself may hold steady. The forward-guidance language will carry more weight. Asset-liability teams running a no-cut base case should add a hike scenario before the June 18 statement — particularly for deposit-beta assumptions and securities-portfolio marks. The CFTC also moved on June 10, publishing a notice of proposed rulemaking that amends Regulation 40.11 and adds Appendix F. The proposal establishes public-interest standards for event contracts — the category covering prediction markets — and signals the commission will allow sports-outcome bets to continue on regulated platforms. The comment window runs roughly 60 days, closing in early August. Banks with derivatives market-making or structured-product lines tied to event contracts should scope the framework now. On the sanctions front, OFAC designated nine individuals and entities June 10 under its Economic Fury campaign — China- and Hong Kong-based trading intermediaries alleged to have funneled weapons components to Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. The screening update is automatic. The sharper obligation is for institutions with correspondent-banking exposure to China-trade flows or refinery-adjacent networks. Treasury explicitly warned it may sanction foreign financial institutions facilitating these networks, including those tied to Chinese teapot refineries. Blocking reports for any identified assets are due within 10 business days. The Wells Fargo records subpoena is the week's most-watched enforcement signal. The Department of Justice and OCC have subpoenaed Wells Fargo for account records. This is an investigative demand, not an enforcement action against the institution — but a coordinated DOJ-OCC request is a supervisory data point institutions with similar account-documentation practices should note. Two structural developments round out the week. Eight federal regulators jointly finalized data standards under the Financial Data Transparency Act, adding 12 C.F.R. Part 304, Subpart D. No immediate reporting deadline attaches. These standards are the architecture on which future machine-readable reporting mandates will be built. The gap assessment against current data infrastructure is the work to begin now. And the Tennessee international-payments tax litigation is worth tracking beyond state lines. The Financial Technology Association filed suit June 10 challenging a Tennessee law that imposes a ten-dollar flat fee on international transfers, plus two percent on amounts above five hundred dollars, effective January 2027. The constitutional arguments — dormant Commerce Clause, Import-Export Clause — are the kind that, if they fail, hand other states a working model. Banks and money transmitters with origination-state exposure should scope the patchwork risk. One competitive signal: Figure agreed to acquire real estate lending platform Kiavi for seven hundred seventeen million dollars. The deal extends a pattern of tokenization-native firms acquiring conventional origination capacity rather than building it. Banks weighing onchain lending economics should treat it as a competitive data point. 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.

11 de jun de 20265 min