LexRegPulse Daily

Weekly Digest - Jun 29, 2026

15 min · 29. kesä 2026
jakson Weekly Digest - Jun 29, 2026 kansikuva

Kuvaus

ALEX: You're listening to the Lex Reg Pulse Weekly for the week of June 22nd through June 29th, 2026. I'm Alex. MORGAN: And I'm Morgan. Here's what mattered this week. ALEX: The Fed's 2026 supervisory stress test cleared all 32 large bank holding companies — and within hours, the capital-return announcements started landing. JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, State Street — dividends up, buybacks expanded. State Street alone announced a planned 10% dividend increase. MORGAN: The numbers behind the pass are worth holding. These firms absorbed a projected $708 billion in losses under a severe scenario — 39% commercial real estate declines, 30% home-price drops, 10% unemployment — and surrendered only 1.6 percentage points of capital. Buffers stayed comfortably above minimums, so capital requirements hold unchanged through 2026. ALEX: But the test that produced this clean pass is itself changing — and that's where capital-planning teams need to focus. MORGAN: Right, and the concern isn't hypothetical. The Fed will deploy revised loss-estimating methodology in the 2027 cycle, which could produce harsher projections. Better Markets called this year's exercise "a hollow exercise awaiting its final blow." So treat 2026 as the clean execution window it is — but begin scenario work against the new models now and engage during the Fed's feedback period rather than inherit the output. ALEX: That framing — a clean window with a harder cycle coming — runs through a lot of what happened this week. The FDIC moved in the same directional week. At an open board session, the agency approved three proposed rules simultaneously — one narrowing resolution-plan submission requirements, one cutting deposit-insurance assessment rates with a downward adjustment for resolution-ready banks, and one on confidential supervisory information disclosure. MORGAN: For large banks that have built significant internal teams around resolution submissions, the cost reduction is real. And OCC Comptroller Jonathan Gould voted for all three but signaled he wants the final rules to go further — particularly on supervisory information disclosure and on whether collecting digital-asset data in resolution planning is even warranted. So the drafts may not be the ceiling; that's the specific provision to track in comment letters. ALEX: The 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act cleared the House 358 to 32 and is now at the President's desk. Section 903 raises the 18-month exam-cycle asset threshold from $3 billion to $6 billion, qualifying an estimated 300 to 400 additional community banks for the lighter cadence. Sections 901 and 902 exclude custodial deposits from brokered-deposit classification and raise the reciprocal-deposit cap — directly lowering funding costs for eligible institutions. MORGAN: Two provisions reach well beyond community banks, though. Title 11 bars a Federal Reserve retail central bank digital currency through 2030 — a firm planning horizon confirming US digital-dollar activity runs through supervised private stablecoins. Title 10 restricts large investors holding 350 or more single-family rental homes from acquiring new ones, which reshapes RMBS collateral and warehouse-lending exposure once FHFA issues build-to-rent guidance. ALEX: So institutions between $3 billion and $6 billion confirm exam-cycle eligibility on signature, but the CBDC and RMBS provisions are the ones to model across the full balance sheet. MORGAN: That's the right read. And separately, the stablecoin compliance perimeter continued filling in. The OCC, coordinating with FinCEN and OFAC, proposed extending Bank Secrecy Act, anti-money-laundering, and sanctions obligations to permitted payment stablecoin issuers — treating them as full BSA financial institutions across both federally and state-qualified issuers. Comments close July 24. ALEX: The scoping line matters there. The framework reaches firms directly interacting with customers, leaving secondary-market participants outside the direct obligation — so the first question for any bank with stablecoin counterparty exposure is where each relationship sits relative to that line. MORGAN: And the OCC separately granted Morgan Stanley initial approval to launch a Digital Trust — a national-bank pathway for digital-asset custody at a major incumbent. The agency is consistently pulling crypto-adjacent activity inside the charter rather than pushing it to the perimeter. That's a competitive marker for every institution still weighing a digital-asset trust strategy. ALEX: The OCC also replaced its 1998 loan-portfolio-management booklet with a consolidated lending handbook, now the primary examination reference for asset-quality reviews at national banks and federal savings associations. Given the OCC's recent emphasis on credit quality, reconcile current lending policies against the new handbook before examiners do. MORGAN: Nine agencies — OCC, Fed, FDIC, NCUA, CFPB, FHFA, CFTC, SEC, and Treasury — also published a joint final rule implementing the Financial Data Transparency Act, establishing common identifiers and machine-readable reporting schemas. The effective date is this fall, but it changes no specific reporting requirement on day one — agencies will fold the standards into separate rulemakings over the following years. The infrastructure mandate is real even where the immediate deadline is not; begin the data-governance gap analysis now rather than absorb it piecemeal. ALEX: On the macro side, May core PCE came in at 4.1% — the highest reading since April 2023. And Friday brought a sharp cross-asset dislocation: roughly $1 trillion erased from the S&P 500 in about 27 minutes before recovering, oil breaking below $70, South Korea's market halted limit down, Bitcoin testing $59,000. MORGAN: For asset-liability desks, the PCE print keeps both a hold and a hike as live cases under the Warsh Fed. The dot-plot removal we covered last week has now graduated into a broader framework review — investors warn the missing rate path adds term premium to the long end, where banks mark securities and price term liabilities. That's a structural funding-cost input, not a one-meeting communications choice. ALEX: OFAC moved three times this week on distinct fronts — ISIS facilitators under Executive Order 13224, a Sudan war-financing network, and a Rwandan gold-laundering network tied to DRC conflict minerals. The Rwandan action specifically targeted Gasabo Gold Refinery and related entities — banks with trade-finance or correspondent exposure to Rwandan gold refining face an immediate blocking-and-reporting obligation. MORGAN: Each of the three carries its own blocking obligation and its own lookback. Screening teams should run them as separate workstreams, not a single batch update. ALEX: What to watch going forward — the OCC stablecoin BSA proposal closes July 24, which is the engagement point for issuers and their bank partners to map current AML infrastructure against the bank-grade standard. MORGAN: The joint SEC-CFTC derivatives harmonization comment windows close August 24th and 25th — treat both requests as one workstream given the cross-product collateral implications. And the FDIC's three proposed rules carry roughly 60-day comment windows from Federal Register publication — that's where the final rules on assessment methodology and resolution scope get shaped. ALEX: The House Financial Services Committee marks up 11 measures June 30th and July 1st — bills covering Fair Credit Reporting Act damages caps, utility and rent payment reporting to credit bureaus, and earned-wage access frameworks. Amendments had to be pre-filed by June 29th, so coordinate positions through trade associations now. MORGAN: And the longest-dated but highest-stakes item remains the Fed's 2027 stress-test model revision. The feedback period is the engagement point — teams that begin scenario work against the new methodology now will be better positioned than those who wait for the output. 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

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jakson Weekly Digest - Jun 29, 2026 kansikuva

Weekly Digest - Jun 29, 2026

ALEX: You're listening to the Lex Reg Pulse Weekly for the week of June 22nd through June 29th, 2026. I'm Alex. MORGAN: And I'm Morgan. Here's what mattered this week. ALEX: The Fed's 2026 supervisory stress test cleared all 32 large bank holding companies — and within hours, the capital-return announcements started landing. JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, State Street — dividends up, buybacks expanded. State Street alone announced a planned 10% dividend increase. MORGAN: The numbers behind the pass are worth holding. These firms absorbed a projected $708 billion in losses under a severe scenario — 39% commercial real estate declines, 30% home-price drops, 10% unemployment — and surrendered only 1.6 percentage points of capital. Buffers stayed comfortably above minimums, so capital requirements hold unchanged through 2026. ALEX: But the test that produced this clean pass is itself changing — and that's where capital-planning teams need to focus. MORGAN: Right, and the concern isn't hypothetical. The Fed will deploy revised loss-estimating methodology in the 2027 cycle, which could produce harsher projections. Better Markets called this year's exercise "a hollow exercise awaiting its final blow." So treat 2026 as the clean execution window it is — but begin scenario work against the new models now and engage during the Fed's feedback period rather than inherit the output. ALEX: That framing — a clean window with a harder cycle coming — runs through a lot of what happened this week. The FDIC moved in the same directional week. At an open board session, the agency approved three proposed rules simultaneously — one narrowing resolution-plan submission requirements, one cutting deposit-insurance assessment rates with a downward adjustment for resolution-ready banks, and one on confidential supervisory information disclosure. MORGAN: For large banks that have built significant internal teams around resolution submissions, the cost reduction is real. And OCC Comptroller Jonathan Gould voted for all three but signaled he wants the final rules to go further — particularly on supervisory information disclosure and on whether collecting digital-asset data in resolution planning is even warranted. So the drafts may not be the ceiling; that's the specific provision to track in comment letters. ALEX: The 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act cleared the House 358 to 32 and is now at the President's desk. Section 903 raises the 18-month exam-cycle asset threshold from $3 billion to $6 billion, qualifying an estimated 300 to 400 additional community banks for the lighter cadence. Sections 901 and 902 exclude custodial deposits from brokered-deposit classification and raise the reciprocal-deposit cap — directly lowering funding costs for eligible institutions. MORGAN: Two provisions reach well beyond community banks, though. Title 11 bars a Federal Reserve retail central bank digital currency through 2030 — a firm planning horizon confirming US digital-dollar activity runs through supervised private stablecoins. Title 10 restricts large investors holding 350 or more single-family rental homes from acquiring new ones, which reshapes RMBS collateral and warehouse-lending exposure once FHFA issues build-to-rent guidance. ALEX: So institutions between $3 billion and $6 billion confirm exam-cycle eligibility on signature, but the CBDC and RMBS provisions are the ones to model across the full balance sheet. MORGAN: That's the right read. And separately, the stablecoin compliance perimeter continued filling in. The OCC, coordinating with FinCEN and OFAC, proposed extending Bank Secrecy Act, anti-money-laundering, and sanctions obligations to permitted payment stablecoin issuers — treating them as full BSA financial institutions across both federally and state-qualified issuers. Comments close July 24. ALEX: The scoping line matters there. The framework reaches firms directly interacting with customers, leaving secondary-market participants outside the direct obligation — so the first question for any bank with stablecoin counterparty exposure is where each relationship sits relative to that line. MORGAN: And the OCC separately granted Morgan Stanley initial approval to launch a Digital Trust — a national-bank pathway for digital-asset custody at a major incumbent. The agency is consistently pulling crypto-adjacent activity inside the charter rather than pushing it to the perimeter. That's a competitive marker for every institution still weighing a digital-asset trust strategy. ALEX: The OCC also replaced its 1998 loan-portfolio-management booklet with a consolidated lending handbook, now the primary examination reference for asset-quality reviews at national banks and federal savings associations. Given the OCC's recent emphasis on credit quality, reconcile current lending policies against the new handbook before examiners do. MORGAN: Nine agencies — OCC, Fed, FDIC, NCUA, CFPB, FHFA, CFTC, SEC, and Treasury — also published a joint final rule implementing the Financial Data Transparency Act, establishing common identifiers and machine-readable reporting schemas. The effective date is this fall, but it changes no specific reporting requirement on day one — agencies will fold the standards into separate rulemakings over the following years. The infrastructure mandate is real even where the immediate deadline is not; begin the data-governance gap analysis now rather than absorb it piecemeal. ALEX: On the macro side, May core PCE came in at 4.1% — the highest reading since April 2023. And Friday brought a sharp cross-asset dislocation: roughly $1 trillion erased from the S&P 500 in about 27 minutes before recovering, oil breaking below $70, South Korea's market halted limit down, Bitcoin testing $59,000. MORGAN: For asset-liability desks, the PCE print keeps both a hold and a hike as live cases under the Warsh Fed. The dot-plot removal we covered last week has now graduated into a broader framework review — investors warn the missing rate path adds term premium to the long end, where banks mark securities and price term liabilities. That's a structural funding-cost input, not a one-meeting communications choice. ALEX: OFAC moved three times this week on distinct fronts — ISIS facilitators under Executive Order 13224, a Sudan war-financing network, and a Rwandan gold-laundering network tied to DRC conflict minerals. The Rwandan action specifically targeted Gasabo Gold Refinery and related entities — banks with trade-finance or correspondent exposure to Rwandan gold refining face an immediate blocking-and-reporting obligation. MORGAN: Each of the three carries its own blocking obligation and its own lookback. Screening teams should run them as separate workstreams, not a single batch update. ALEX: What to watch going forward — the OCC stablecoin BSA proposal closes July 24, which is the engagement point for issuers and their bank partners to map current AML infrastructure against the bank-grade standard. MORGAN: The joint SEC-CFTC derivatives harmonization comment windows close August 24th and 25th — treat both requests as one workstream given the cross-product collateral implications. And the FDIC's three proposed rules carry roughly 60-day comment windows from Federal Register publication — that's where the final rules on assessment methodology and resolution scope get shaped. ALEX: The House Financial Services Committee marks up 11 measures June 30th and July 1st — bills covering Fair Credit Reporting Act damages caps, utility and rent payment reporting to credit bureaus, and earned-wage access frameworks. Amendments had to be pre-filed by June 29th, so coordinate positions through trade associations now. MORGAN: And the longest-dated but highest-stakes item remains the Fed's 2027 stress-test model revision. The feedback period is the engagement point — teams that begin scenario work against the new methodology now will be better positioned than those who wait for the output. 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

29. kesä 202615 min
jakson Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 27, 2026 kansikuva

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 27, 2026

Alex here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Saturday, June 27, 2026. The lead today is a joint SEC and CFTC action with direct implications for how banks fund their derivatives books. The two agencies issued a request for public comment on June 26, asking how to harmonize portfolio margining across securities, security-based swaps, futures, and related positions. Comments are due August 25. For institutions running large matched trading books, the practical question is straightforward: how much collateral is currently locked in separate regulatory silos that cross-product offsets could release? That number belongs in your comment letter. This is the second joint action from the SEC and CFTC in quick succession. Earlier this month, the two agencies moved together to clarify the statutory definitions of swap and security-based swap. Trading desks now face two overlapping comment windows that will reshape product classification, capital treatment, and reporting. Engaging both as a single workstream is more efficient than responding to each in isolation. On the sanctions front, OFAC issued two distinct actions on June 26 — and the distinction matters for compliance teams. The first designated eight individuals and entities under Executive Order 14098 for financing Sudan's civil war. The designees include Sudan-based defense-procurement firms sourcing weapons from Iran, India, Turkey, and the UAE for the Sudanese Armed Forces, and a Colombian-Panamanian network recruiting former Colombian soldiers for the RSF paramilitary. The blocking obligation extends to any entity 50% or more owned by a designee. Banks with Sudan, Middle East trade-finance, or Colombian military-sector exposure carry an immediate screening obligation and a 12-month lookback. The second action — OFAC Notice 2026-12916, effective June 23 — adds and updates names on the Specially Designated Nationals list under a separate program. These are two distinct screening triggers with separate blocking obligations. Running them as one review risks missing the scope of each. The FDIC's May 2026 enforcement bulletin, published June 26, documents 15 administrative actions, most of them directed at individuals rather than institutions. Restitution orders reached a former Truist banker and a former Independence Bank officer. A civil money penalty fell on Alliance Community Bank in Petersburg, Illinois. Connect Community Bank in Raymond, Washington received a new consent order. The concentration of personal prohibition orders continues the agency's emphasis on individual accountability for control failures. On digital assets, FinCEN and the federal banking agencies proposed rules implementing the GENIUS Act's anti-money-laundering and sanctions obligations for permitted payment stablecoin issuers. The framework covers Customer Identification Program requirements and Bank Secrecy Act standards. Critically, it applies to firms directly interacting with customers — secondary-market participants sit outside the direct obligation. That scoping line is the first thing payments and exchange operators should model against their own business structure. Friday's market session warrants attention from asset-liability, trading, and liquidity teams heading into next week. Equities shed roughly one trillion dollars intraday before recovering to close positive. Oil fell below 70 dollars a barrel following new US strikes near the Strait of Hormuz. Several large-cap technology names remain deep in bear-market territory. Bitcoin tested 59,000 dollars, and total stablecoin supply held near 315 billion dollars. The breadth of the move — equities, oil, and digital assets moving together — makes it relevant beyond any single desk. Intraday liquidity and collateral assumptions are worth a fresh look before Monday's open. Two items to carry into next week: BancFirst Corporation filed to acquire Spirit Bankcorp and its SpiritBank unit in Tulsa, with a Federal Reserve comment period running through July 27. And the OCC is expected to publish a final rule on real estate lending escrow accounts on June 29. 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.

27. kesä 20265 min
jakson Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 26, 2026 kansikuva

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 26, 2026

Alex here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Friday, June 26, 2026. The FDIC moved Thursday to reduce the cost and complexity of being a large insured bank — and that package of three proposed rules is the story of the day. Alongside it, a nine-agency data-standards mandate just became final, the OCC rewrote its credit-risk examination handbook, and the Federal Reserve cleared a fintech enforcement overhang. The direction of regulatory travel is toward relief, but the compliance calendar is filling fast. Start with the FDIC. At its June 25 open board session, the agency approved three Notices of Proposed Rulemaking simultaneously. The first narrows resolution-plan obligations — fewer covered firms, less documentation. The second lowers deposit-insurance assessment rates and introduces an optional credit for banks that demonstrate resolution readiness. The third reshapes when confidential supervisory information can be disclosed. OCC Comptroller Jonathan Gould voted yes on all three but said they don't go far enough. He specifically questioned whether collecting digital-asset information in resolution planning is justified — a signal that the final rules may move further than the drafts. Comment periods open roughly 60 days after Federal Register publication. That window is the engagement point for any institution with resolution-plan infrastructure or a material assessment line item. The nine-agency data-standards rule is final. The OCC, Federal Reserve, FDIC, NCUA, CFPB, FHFA, CFTC, SEC, and Treasury jointly finalized the Financial Data Transparency Act framework, establishing common identifiers and machine-readable reporting schemas across federal regulatory reporting. Effective date is October 1, 2026 — but that date changes no existing reporting requirement. Agencies will fold the new standards into separate rulemakings over the following years. The infrastructure commitment is real even where the immediate deadline is not. Data-governance teams should begin the gap analysis now rather than absorb it piecemeal when individual mandates start arriving. The OCC also issued Bulletin 2026-29 on June 25, replacing its 1998 loan-portfolio-management booklet and related materials with a consolidated lending and loan-portfolio risk-management handbook. This is now the primary examination reference for asset-quality reviews at national banks and federal savings associations. Given the OCC's recent focus on credit quality, institutions should reconcile current lending policies against the new procedures before the next exam cycle. Two enforcement items worth noting. The Federal Reserve entered a consent cease-and-desist order against Jason Burns, president and director of Bank of Eufaula in Oklahoma, for unsafe lending practices. This is an action against the individual, not yet the institution — but a cease-and-desist against a sitting bank president typically precedes heightened examination scrutiny of the organization. Separately, OFAC designated Gasabo Gold Refinery and three related Rwandan mining companies, along with two named individuals, for laundering gold from M23-controlled areas of eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. Banks with trade-finance or correspondent exposure to Rwandan gold refining face an immediate blocking-and-reporting obligation. On the fintech side, the Federal Reserve terminated its enforcement action against Jiko Group, removing a supervisory overhang from the bank-fintech hybrid and giving it a clean supervisory standing that several stablecoin-focused competitors still lack. Looking ahead: the House Financial Services Committee marks up eleven measures on June 30 and July 1. Several carry direct compliance consequence — including a bill capping statutory damages in Fair Credit Reporting Act class actions, one expanding utility and rental payment reporting to credit bureaus, and two building frameworks for earned-wage access and payment-fraud prevention. Amendment pre-filing closes June 29. 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.

26. kesä 20265 min
jakson Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 25, 2026 kansikuva

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 25, 2026

Morgan here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Thursday, June 25, 2026. The Federal Reserve's stress test results cleared the way for the largest wave of capital returns in years. All 32 large bank holding companies passed. JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, and State Street moved within hours to raise dividends and expand buybacks. That's the headline. The subtext matters more for capital planning teams: the Fed is replacing its loss-estimating models for the 2027 cycle, and that shift could produce harsher projections even as this year's results unlock distributions. Here's what that means in practice. The 2026 test absorbed a projected 708 billion dollars in loan losses under a severe-recession scenario — 39 percent commercial real estate declines, 30 percent home-price drops, 10 percent unemployment — while surrendering only 1.6 percentage points of capital. No distribution restrictions were imposed. Treasury and investor-relations teams have a clean runway for the dividend and buyback plans announced this week. Capital-planning teams should begin scenario work against the revised 2027 models now and engage during the Fed's public feedback window rather than inherit the output. Better Markets called this year's exercise a hollow exercise, arguing the test has been softened — that critique shapes how aggressively the 2027 redesign tightens, and it belongs in the planning backdrop. On digital assets, the OCC granted Morgan Stanley initial conditional approval to launch a Digital Trust — a national-bank pathway for digital-asset custody and trust services. The approval signals the agency's continued willingness to bring crypto-adjacent activity inside the national-bank charter. Every institution weighing a digital-asset trust strategy should treat this as a competitive marker. It pairs with the OCC's GENIUS Act proposal extending Bank Secrecy Act, anti-money-laundering, and sanctions obligations to permitted payment stablecoin issuers — open for comment through July 24 — and a parallel FDIC bank-like AML approach for stablecoins under its jurisdiction. The direction is consistent: digital-asset activity is being pulled inside the charter under full BSA obligations. Institutions weighing custody or issuance should map AML infrastructure against both proposals ahead of the comment deadline. The CFPB documented a 3,700 percent surge in credit-reporting complaints — from 150,000 in 2019 to more than 5 million in 2025 — attributing the increase to credit-repair firms, social-media influencers, and AI tools gaming the portal. The bureau says it can no longer treat complaint data as a reliable reflection of actual market conditions. Six corrective measures follow: standardized closure definitions, two-factor authentication, address validation, new abuse-detection categories, and explicit alignment with Fair Credit Reporting Act dispute procedures requiring consumers to exhaust direct disputes with credit bureaus before escalating to the portal. Banks and credit-reporting agencies should audit complaint-handling controls against the new Company Portal Manual ahead of the next exam cycle. The 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act is at the President's desk after clearing the House 358 to 32. The bill moves the 6 billion dollar exam-cycle threshold, brokered-deposit reforms, de novo formation support, and a CBDC bar through 2030 from bill to statute. An embedded custodial-deposit provision is drawing attention for quietly easing fintech and crypto firms deeper into the deposit system. Community banks should obtain the final text on signature and reassess third-party deposit strategy. That provision connects directly to the Synapse collapse post-mortem: industry analysts this week argued the underlying bank-fintech partnership risks are greater now than when Synapse failed. The reconciliation and for-benefit-of account controls that failed depositors in that unwind remain the live exposure for sponsor banks scaling new programs. Two items to keep on the radar. FinCEN's proposed rule defining the Huione Group as a financial institution of primary money-laundering concern is set for Federal Register publication today — banks with Southeast Asian correspondent, crypto, or remittance exposure should screen against the expanded definition. And the FDIC Board meets in open session June 26 at 2 p.m. Eastern — the agenda is posted and worth monitoring for near-term supervisory priorities. 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.

25. kesä 20265 min
jakson Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 24, 2026 kansikuva

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.

24. kesä 20265 min