LexRegPulse Daily
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.
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