LexRegPulse Daily

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 10, 2026

5 min · 10. kesä 2026
jakson Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 10, 2026 kansikuva

Kuvaus

Alex here. This is the LexRegulatory Intelligence Brief for Wednesday, June 10, 2026. The Financial Stability Board published a consultation on twelve sound practices for responsible AI adoption across financial institutions. Comments are due July 22. That is the week's clearest forward signal for bank technology and risk leaders. Alongside it, the deregulation debate inside US agencies hardened into open disagreement, and trading desks absorbed another session of headline-driven market swings. Start with the FSB framework. The twelve practices span three domains: enterprise AI governance, development and deployment risk management, and AI-specific cyber and third-party controls. The document gives explicit attention to generative and agentic models — the higher-risk end of what banks are actually deploying. The FSB is coordinating with the Basel Committee and IOSCO. Its own timeline points to a final report in October, with US guidance from the Federal Reserve, OCC, and FDIC likely following by early 2027. The framework is non-binding today. But FSB standards have a documented history of migrating into national supervisory expectations — Basel III followed that path. Banks running AI in credit decisioning, fraud detection, or operations without documented model risk management, explainability, and bias testing are the ones examiners will eventually flag. The gap analysis to map current use cases against the twelve practices takes months. Starting that work before the July 22 comment window closes is the practical move. On deposit insurance, FDIC Chairman Travis Hill has proposed a significant rework of the assessment framework that would cut Deposit Insurance Fund fees for large banks, paired with an eased resolution-planning regime. For large banks, the assessment relief is a direct funding-cost input to model against current accruals. The resolution-planning changes are a longer process redesign. The variable to watch: Federal Reserve Governor Michael Barr publicly broke with the deregulatory direction in a June 6 speech, warning that easing during an economic expansion invites the next crisis. Hill publicly rejected that framing. That open disagreement between senior regulators signals the relief may not be as settled as the current posture implies. The Federal Reserve confirmed it will publish 2026 stress test results for 32 large banks at 4 p.m. Eastern on June 24. The scenario models a severe global recession concentrated in commercial real estate, residential real estate, and corporate debt. Capital buffers are frozen through 2027 under the Board's February decision, so capital planning can proceed this cycle without waiting on the print. The work to watch is the 2027 loss-model overhaul — that is where the next requirement shift originates. On markets, equities staged one of the year's sharpest intraday reversals on June 10. The S&P 500 traded up nearly one-and-a-half percent mid-morning, then erased roughly 1.3 trillion dollars in two hours after President Trump stated that Iran shot down a US Apache helicopter near the Strait of Hormuz. The Nasdaq 100 fell close to four percent before the Dow recovered to green on the day. Oil whipsawed below ninety dollars a barrel on competing signals that a US-Iran deal remains close. The operative risk-management point: mark-to-market exposure is now cycling on presidential statements rather than scheduled catalysts, compressing the window between event and required portfolio response for energy-finance and trading books. Two near-term calendar items. May CPI lands Thursday, June 11, ahead of next week's FOMC. Any upside surprise hardens the no-cut consensus and carries direct asset-liability implications. May PPI follows Friday, June 12, relevant for margin and pass-through assumptions in commercial credit books. One OFAC item for compliance teams. Treasury published Venezuela General License 48A, which carries a recurring 90-day reporting obligation for institutions facilitating authorized Venezuela energy-sector transactions, along with a strict third-country exclusion. Confirm reporting procedures are operational — not just that screening recognizes the carve-out. For the full analysis, check your LexRegPulse daily briefing in your inbox, or catch the weekly digest every Sunday. I'm Alex. This has been the LexRegulatory Intelligence Brief. --- Your daily 5-minute briefing on banking regulations, compliance updates, and enforcement actions. Stay compliant, stay informed with LexRegPulse Daily.

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jakson Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 10, 2026 kansikuva

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 10, 2026

Alex here. This is the LexRegulatory Intelligence Brief for Wednesday, June 10, 2026. The Financial Stability Board published a consultation on twelve sound practices for responsible AI adoption across financial institutions. Comments are due July 22. That is the week's clearest forward signal for bank technology and risk leaders. Alongside it, the deregulation debate inside US agencies hardened into open disagreement, and trading desks absorbed another session of headline-driven market swings. Start with the FSB framework. The twelve practices span three domains: enterprise AI governance, development and deployment risk management, and AI-specific cyber and third-party controls. The document gives explicit attention to generative and agentic models — the higher-risk end of what banks are actually deploying. The FSB is coordinating with the Basel Committee and IOSCO. Its own timeline points to a final report in October, with US guidance from the Federal Reserve, OCC, and FDIC likely following by early 2027. The framework is non-binding today. But FSB standards have a documented history of migrating into national supervisory expectations — Basel III followed that path. Banks running AI in credit decisioning, fraud detection, or operations without documented model risk management, explainability, and bias testing are the ones examiners will eventually flag. The gap analysis to map current use cases against the twelve practices takes months. Starting that work before the July 22 comment window closes is the practical move. On deposit insurance, FDIC Chairman Travis Hill has proposed a significant rework of the assessment framework that would cut Deposit Insurance Fund fees for large banks, paired with an eased resolution-planning regime. For large banks, the assessment relief is a direct funding-cost input to model against current accruals. The resolution-planning changes are a longer process redesign. The variable to watch: Federal Reserve Governor Michael Barr publicly broke with the deregulatory direction in a June 6 speech, warning that easing during an economic expansion invites the next crisis. Hill publicly rejected that framing. That open disagreement between senior regulators signals the relief may not be as settled as the current posture implies. The Federal Reserve confirmed it will publish 2026 stress test results for 32 large banks at 4 p.m. Eastern on June 24. The scenario models a severe global recession concentrated in commercial real estate, residential real estate, and corporate debt. Capital buffers are frozen through 2027 under the Board's February decision, so capital planning can proceed this cycle without waiting on the print. The work to watch is the 2027 loss-model overhaul — that is where the next requirement shift originates. On markets, equities staged one of the year's sharpest intraday reversals on June 10. The S&P 500 traded up nearly one-and-a-half percent mid-morning, then erased roughly 1.3 trillion dollars in two hours after President Trump stated that Iran shot down a US Apache helicopter near the Strait of Hormuz. The Nasdaq 100 fell close to four percent before the Dow recovered to green on the day. Oil whipsawed below ninety dollars a barrel on competing signals that a US-Iran deal remains close. The operative risk-management point: mark-to-market exposure is now cycling on presidential statements rather than scheduled catalysts, compressing the window between event and required portfolio response for energy-finance and trading books. Two near-term calendar items. May CPI lands Thursday, June 11, ahead of next week's FOMC. Any upside surprise hardens the no-cut consensus and carries direct asset-liability implications. May PPI follows Friday, June 12, relevant for margin and pass-through assumptions in commercial credit books. One OFAC item for compliance teams. Treasury published Venezuela General License 48A, which carries a recurring 90-day reporting obligation for institutions facilitating authorized Venezuela energy-sector transactions, along with a strict third-country exclusion. Confirm reporting procedures are operational — not just that screening recognizes the carve-out. For the full analysis, check your LexRegPulse daily briefing in your inbox, or catch the weekly digest every Sunday. I'm Alex. This has been the LexRegulatory Intelligence Brief. --- Your daily 5-minute briefing on banking regulations, compliance updates, and enforcement actions. Stay compliant, stay informed with LexRegPulse Daily.

10. kesä 20265 min
jakson Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 9, 2026 kansikuva

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 9, 2026

Morgan here. This is the LexRegulatory Intelligence Brief for Tuesday, June 9, 2026. The week's defining structural move landed today — not as a rulemaking, but as a deletion. The Federal Reserve, FDIC, and OCC jointly removed all references to reputational risk from interagency supervisory documents, effective this date. For institutions that pulled back on product lines or partnership strategies under prior examination pressure, the supervisory basis for those decisions no longer exists. Compliance teams should document that change now and treat it as a material input to the next examination preparation cycle. This isn't a policy footnote — it's a clean break. That action sits inside a broader supervisory redesign. Fed Vice Chair Michelle Bowman testified to Congress on June 4 confirming the most sweeping examination methodology overhaul since 1979. The FFIEC's proposed CAMELS revision replaces subjective management assessments with objective, measurable metrics. March 2026 capital framework proposals explicitly reduce mortgage risk weights to address 25 years of community bank market share erosion. And matters requiring attention — MRAs — are already down roughly 50 percent from 2024 to 2025. Capital planning and examination teams that haven't modeled the CAMELS changes and the capital proposals together should do so before the next exam cycle. Institutions with outstanding MRAs should also review them now — some may be reconsidered under the new materiality-focused standard, but don't assume the framework shift resolves findings that require remediation. Nine federal agencies moved in lockstep on a separate front. The CFTC finalized joint data standards June 8 under the Financial Data Transparency Act of 2022, with the Federal Reserve, SEC, CFPB, Treasury, FDIC, FHFA, NCUA, and OCC adopting identical parallel standards. The practical consequence: data reporting deficiencies will now be simultaneously visible to every primary regulator at once. Cross-functional IT and compliance task forces should begin gap assessments now. The investment required is multi-year, and early starters will have a cleaner 2027 budget process than those waiting for agency-specific implementation rules to force the work. The SEC granted Paxos Securities Settlement Company a temporary clearing agency registration permitting blockchain-based settlement for DTC-eligible securities on a permissioned distributed ledger. That is the first regulatory blueprint for alternative distributed ledger settlement in the US. Capital markets and operations teams should obtain the full exemptive order and assess participation implications within 60 days. Competitor applications are now more likely. One hard deadline this week: OFAC blocked asset reports are due Thursday, June 12, for any institution that identified exposure to the four designated Iranian crypto platforms — NOBITEX, WALLEX, BITPIN, and RAMZINEX — following the June 2 effective date. The Iran-Israel ceasefire does not affect these designations. Confirm filing is complete, not queued, before close of business Wednesday. Looking ahead: May CPI prints Wednesday, eight days before Kevin Warsh's inaugural FOMC meeting. Goldman projects no cut in 2026, and Cleveland Fed President Hammack has flagged the possibility of rate increases. ALM scenario updates should be finalized before the June 17 meeting. For the full analysis, check your LexRegPulse daily briefing in your inbox, or catch the weekly digest every Sunday. I'm Morgan. This has been the LexRegulatory Intelligence Brief. --- Your daily 5-minute briefing on banking regulations, compliance updates, and enforcement actions. Stay compliant, stay informed with LexRegPulse Daily.

Eilen5 min
jakson Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 8, 2026 kansikuva

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 8, 2026

Alex here. This is the LexRegulatory Intelligence Brief for Monday, June 8, 2026. The CFPB reversed course today on immigration status in credit decisions — and institutions that moved quickly on the agency's June 5 position now have a policy cleanup problem. The Bilt fintech transition failure is drawing simultaneous CFPB direction and a Senator Warren letter, setting a new benchmark for third-party accountability. And geopolitical escalation between Israel and Iran is producing direct banking exposure across energy trading books, commodity finance, and Asia-Pacific trade lines. Start with the CFPB reversal. The agency's June 8 statement says creditors may — and in some circumstances must — consider immigration status in ability-to-repay analysis under TILA and Regulation Z. The reasoning: removal could disrupt income streams, making immigration status relevant to income reliability. That directly contradicts the June 5 statement, which treated immigration status as generally impermissible in credit decisions. These are not complementary documents. Institutions that updated lending policies to reflect the June 5 position need to revisit those updates now. The complication: FinCEN's June 5 advisory on enhanced ITIN monitoring is still in effect and unchanged. Consumer lending, fair lending, and BSA and AML teams at the same institution are now operating under guidance pointing in different directions. The distinction that needs to be documented — clearly and separately — is between immigration status as an income-reliability factor, which is now permissible, and immigration status as a disqualifier, which is still not. On Bilt: the CFPB has publicly directed the platform to provide full consumer remediation for harm caused by its February through March banking partner transition — covering overdraft, late, and NSF fees for more than 500 customers. Senator Warren separately demanded detailed data on payment failures and CARD Act compliance. Wells Fargo, Column, and Cardless are all named in the accountability gap. The regulatory signal here is specific: CFPB will pierce multi-vendor structures and hold the named platform responsible without waiting for a formal consent order. Any institution managing a material fintech partnership transition should treat Bilt as the current examiner benchmark. OFAC designated four Iranian cryptocurrency platforms effective June 2 — NOBITEX, WALLEX, BITPIN, and RAMZINEX. Monday's Federal Register publication formalizes the blocking obligations. NOBITEX carries an Executive Order 13224 designation for material support to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. All four carry E.O. 13902 Iran financial sector designations. The deadline is hard: institutions that identified any blocked assets or transaction relationships in initial screening must file a Blocked Assets Report with OFAC by June 12. That is ten days from the June 2 effective date. Institutions with fintech-sector, cryptocurrency platform, or Iran-adjacent correspondent relationships should confirm screening is complete and reporting is in process before Thursday. The geopolitical backdrop is directly relevant to bank balance sheets. Israeli strikes on Beirut over the weekend triggered Iranian ballistic missile retaliation — three waves, per reports. WTI crude surged above 94 dollars per barrel. S&P 500 futures initially fell before recovering on President Trump's public statements signaling restraint and progress toward an Iran deal. Container shipping rates from Asia to the US West Coast have risen roughly 20 percent over the last week, reaching approximately 3,933 dollars per 40-foot container. Banks with energy commodities trading books, commodity finance exposures, or trade finance lines to Asian counterparties should pull current position reports. The intraweek mark-to-market and credit exposure changes may not be visible in standard weekly reporting cycles. Two items to track ahead. The House Ways and Means Committee holds a hearing on digital asset tax bills Tuesday, June 9 — seven circulated bills covering crypto tax treatment. Institutions with digital asset custody, trading, or lending operations should monitor for legislative text emerging from the hearing. And Goldman Sachs has pushed its Federal Reserve rate-cut forecast to 2027, following Friday's jobs data. ALM teams that have not revised 2026 rate scenarios to a sustained hold should do so before the June 17 through 18 FOMC — Kevin Warsh's inaugural meeting as Fed Chair. For the full analysis, check your LexRegPulse daily briefing in your inbox, or catch the weekly digest every Sunday. I'm Alex. This has been the LexRegulatory Intelligence Brief. --- Your daily 5-minute briefing on banking regulations, compliance updates, and enforcement actions. Stay compliant, stay informed with LexRegPulse Daily.

8. kesä 20265 min
jakson Weekly Digest - Jun 8, 2026 kansikuva

Weekly Digest - Jun 8, 2026

ALEX: You're listening to the Lex Reg Pulse Weekly for the week of June 1 through June 5, 2026. I'm Alex. MORGAN: And I'm Morgan. Here's what mattered this week. ALEX: We've been tracking the CFTC's enforcement posture shift since late May — the Gemini settlement vacatur, the Polymarket insider trading complaint. This week that posture became binding policy. On June 5, the CFTC published a final rule formally rescinding its prior framework on accepting settlements in administrative and civil proceedings. MORGAN: The distinction matters. The Gemini vacatur was a signal. This rule is doctrine. The prior framework set expectations about how the agency would weigh cooperation, remediation, and penalty calibration in settlement negotiations. Firms that modeled their enforcement exposure against that framework need to re-baseline now — it's no longer operative. ALEX: And the rescission is effective immediately. No grandfathering. MORGAN: Right. Any institution with a live CFTC investigation or pending settlement discussion should be back at the table with external counsel before the next negotiation session. The binary that governed for years — admit and settle, or deny and fight — is gone. The agency now has broader discretion on both sides of that equation. ALEX: The Coinbase OCC charter fight escalated sharply this week. The ICBA filed a formal rescission request — not a lobbying letter, a formal request invoking the OCC's own integrity assessment standards. MORGAN: The letter is specific. It cites a 2023 NYDFS BSA/AML consent order, a 2025 Connecticut unlicensed money transmission order, an FCA penalty of three-and-a-half million pounds, a six-and-a-half million dollar CFTC false-reporting order, and a New York AG gambling allegation against a Coinbase subsidiary. The argument is that subsidiary conduct triggers the same character-and-integrity review as direct applicant conduct under the OCC examination manual. ALEX: Senator Warren filed a separate challenge framing the conditional approvals as National Bank Act violations. So the OCC is fielding pressure from the industry and the Hill simultaneously. MORGAN: The precedent question is narrow but consequential. The OCC's response — expected within 60 to 90 days, so late July to late August — will set the standard for every fintech charter application that follows. And Comptroller Gould testified under oath this week that 2025 OCC charter applications matched the prior four years combined, with ten conditionally approved in 2026 alone. Whatever standard the OCC articulates in response to the ICBA letter applies to that entire pipeline. ALEX: Treasury moved on two separate fronts on June 5. New sanctions targeting Iran's LPG smuggling infrastructure and shadow banking networks, and a FinCEN alert directing banks to flag illicit activity tied to illegal immigration. MORGAN: These are operationally distinct. On Iran: the sanctions environment is tightening. The US conducted military strikes on Iranian targets earlier in the week, and any scenario-planning that assumed sanctions relief this year should be set aside. The escalation scenario is the base case now, not a tail. On the FinCEN alert: the practical question for BSA officers is how to operationalize a reporting obligation that intersects immigration status with transaction monitoring. The CFPB published a statement the same day on ability-to-repay and immigration status — compliance teams need to read those two documents together. ALEX: The NSCC's extended-hours clearing window went live Monday. SR-NSCC-2026-006 effective June 1 — the Universal Trade Capture system now supports equity trading from 1:30 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. Eastern. MORGAN: Participation isn't mandated, but the operational excuse is gone. For banks with prime brokerage, clearing, or equity trading operations, the question is whether competitive pressure forces adoption before internal staffing, risk monitoring, and system capacity are actually ready. ALEX: Powell's JFK Library remarks Sunday set the tone for the entire week. He framed the Fed's current moment explicitly as a stress test on institutional independence. MORGAN: He named the mechanism directly — removal over policy disagreement as the path by which Fed credibility unravels. That framing landed on the first trading day of a week carrying ISM Manufacturing, JOLTS, ISM Services, jobless claims, and the May jobs report. For rate path modeling, the institutional context is as relevant as the data: a lame-duck Chair who has publicly staked his legacy on policy independence, an unresolved succession, and April PCE already at 3.8 percent — the highest since May 2023, which we covered last week. Dallas Fed President Logan added Thursday that she can no longer rule out rate hikes. The June 17 FOMC is the first meeting under Chair Warsh, and ALM scenarios should account for the possibility that forward guidance language shifts faster than the market currently expects. ALEX: On the supervisory side, Vice Chair Bowman's HFSC testimony Thursday was the clearest official statement yet of the Fed's examination philosophy. The direction is away from documentation MRAs and toward material financial risk. MORGAN: She acknowledged explicitly that prior exam cycles cited documentation failures rather than safety-and-soundness threats, and that G-SIB best practices were improperly applied to smaller institutions. The CAMELS framework is being revised to replace subjective management assessments with measurable, objective metrics. Comptroller Gould made a parallel statement — the OCC is reviewing open MRAs against a materiality standard, meaning existing findings may be withdrawn. Institutions with active OCC examination items have a concrete basis to ask their examiner whether those items remain operative before the next cycle begins. ALEX: The FDIC's stablecoin AML proposed rule formally published June 5, opening the comment clock. August 4 deadline. MORGAN: This applies to permitted payment stablecoin issuers that are subsidiaries of insured depository institutions — treating them as financial institutions under the Bank Secrecy Act. The novel element is a coordination requirement: the FDIC must give FinCEN's director 30 days' written notice, including draft examination reports, before initiating enforcement against a PPSI. Institutions evaluating stablecoin subsidiary structures should begin gap analysis now, not at finalization. The buildout time for transaction monitoring and FinCEN coordination protocols will exceed the comment window. ALEX: Looking ahead — three items with defined windows. MORGAN: The OCC's 60-to-90-day response clock on the ICBA rescission request starts now. Any institution with a pending OCC charter application should be monitoring for interim integrity-assessment guidance before the formal response lands — that guidance will shape the standard applied to their own application. ALEX: The CLARITY Act yield clause is in its active legislative window. Congress returned Monday, and the question of whether yield-bearing stablecoins are permissible under the federal framework is the operative fault line. Governor Waller participated in a stablecoin panel the day before Congress returned — that timing was deliberate. MORGAN: And on CAMELS — the FFIEC comment deadline is August 17. That sounds distant, but June is the realistic drafting month before summer schedules compress. Institutions that want to shape how objective metrics replace the current management assessment criteria need to be working on that now. 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

8. kesä 202615 min
jakson Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 6, 2026 kansikuva

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 6, 2026

Alex here. This is the LexRegulatory Intelligence Brief for Saturday, June 6, 2026. The week's defining story isn't a single rule or enforcement action — it's a structural collision. On June 5, the federal government advanced immigration enforcement through the financial system on two fronts simultaneously, and the tension between those two moves is the most operationally consequential compliance challenge heading into next week. Here's the core conflict. FinCEN, alongside the OCC, FDIC, and NCUA, issued a joint advisory under Executive Order 14406 directing banks to detect unauthorized employment schemes. It's effective now, carries an 18-indicator red flag list, and requires a specific key term — FINANCIALINTEGRITY-2026-A002 — in SAR Field 2 and the narrative for every relevant filing. That's an examiner-verifiable configuration requirement, not a suggestion. Institutions have a 60-day window to get their SAR systems configured. Treat that window as an examination benchmark. On the same day, the CFPB issued a policy statement confirming that immigration status cannot independently justify a credit denial or adverse terms when an applicant can demonstrate ability to repay. That statement is also in effect as of June 5. The problem for institutions serving ITIN-based customers: both agencies will examine your procedures independently. If your AML monitoring configuration functions in practice as a proxy for immigration-status-based credit denial, you have a problem with the CFPB. If your credit underwriting doesn't account for the FinCEN advisory's enhanced monitoring expectations, you have a problem with FinCEN. Document the operational distinction between these two frameworks before your next exam cycle. That's the week's clearest action item. The FDIC also published a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on June 5 establishing BSA and sanctions compliance standards for permitted payment stablecoin issuers under the GENIUS Act. This is the first federal framework of its kind. The comment deadline is August 4. Institutions with stablecoin programs — or evaluating them — should treat that deadline as a strategic filing opportunity, not a passive calendar entry. On rates: Friday's May jobs report closed the door on near-term rate relief. Payrolls came in at 172,000 — more than double the 85,000 consensus — with April revised up another 64,000. Citi is now the sole major Wall Street firm still projecting a 2026 cut. ISM Services Prices hit 71.3, their highest since August 2022. Kevin Warsh chairs his first FOMC meeting June 17 and 18, and markets are actively debating a hike. ALM scenarios built around a 2026 cut as a primary assumption need review before that meeting. The Friday market close adds further pressure. The Nasdaq 100 posted its largest single-session decline of 2026 — down roughly 4.5%, erasing nearly two trillion dollars in S&P 500 market capitalization. Bitcoin closed below 60,000 dollars, down more than 50% from its October 2025 peak, with 1.5 billion dollars in levered positions liquidated in 24 hours. MicroStrategy's unrealized loss on Bitcoin holdings reached a record 12.7 billion dollars. Institutions with crypto-backed lending books or custody positions established during last fall's peak should be stress-testing collateral management protocols now. One final competitive signal: both Visa and Mastercard are now running live stablecoin settlement infrastructure. Visa confirmed an institutional pilot using a state-backed stablecoin on the Canton Network. Major US banks have announced plans for a shared tokenized deposit network targeting 2027. If your payment operations team hasn't developed a formal stablecoin position, you're reacting to live competitive infrastructure — not anticipating it. For the full analysis, check your LexRegPulse daily briefing in your inbox, or catch the weekly digest every Sunday. I'm Alex. This has been the LexRegulatory Intelligence Brief. --- Your daily 5-minute briefing on banking regulations, compliance updates, and enforcement actions. Stay compliant, stay informed with LexRegPulse Daily.

6. kesä 20265 min