LexRegPulse Daily
Alex here. This is the LexRegulatory Intelligence Brief for Saturday, May 23, 2026. Kevin Warsh was sworn in as the 17th Federal Reserve Chair Friday, and the compliance calendar he inherits is immediately consequential. Three developments define the Q3 build agenda: the ROAD Act moving toward near-certain enactment, the FDIC's new stablecoin anti-money laundering framework, and a GSIB resolution planning reform agenda that will set the examination standard for the next cycle. Start with Warsh. The FOMC unanimously elected him chairman. He takes the chair with a committee whose documented majority already favors rate hikes given persistent inflation. Governor Waller, speaking at the ECB Friday, removed the easing bias from policy communications, stated inflation is not headed in the right direction, and explicitly declined to rule out future increases if inflation expectations become unanchored. Consumer sentiment hit its lowest recorded level since 1952, with households projecting 4.8% inflation over the next twelve months — precisely the unanchored expectations condition Waller cited as the hike trigger. Then add the weekend reports of US military strike preparations against Iran, which directly threaten Friday's oil price relief. The rate scenario distribution has widened. ALM frameworks stress-tested only against hold-or-cut scenarios carry live exposure. On the ROAD Act: the House passed it 396 to 13. Senate Banking leadership on both sides has committed to expeditious action. Sixty to ninety days to enactment is the planning horizon, not a tail scenario. The provisions that matter most for community and regional banks: custodial deposits held by institutions under ten billion in assets are excluded from brokered deposit classification up to twenty percent of total liabilities — a material funding expansion. The examination cycle threshold for eighteen-month exams rises from three billion to six billion in assets. And a CBDC prohibition runs through December 31, 2030, creating a statutory bar on Federal Reserve digital currency issuance. CFOs and treasury teams managing to existing brokered deposit constraints should begin modeling the funding capacity expansion now. The FDIC's proposed stablecoin rule is the second major compliance build item. The FDIC Board approved proposed Bank Secrecy Act and OFAC sanctions compliance standards for permitted payment stablecoin issuers — subsidiaries of insured state nonmember banks authorized under the GENIUS Act. The rule requires full FinCEN anti-money laundering and OFAC screening programs at the same standard as traditional banking operations. Comment deadline is July 21. The compliance message is unambiguous: stablecoin issuance is being regulated as banking. Institutions evaluating stablecoin subsidiary structures as a light-lift product extension should revise that assumption before the comment period closes. The intermediary layer — where payment service providers sit between issuers and end users — remains the unsettled compliance perimeter. The July 21 deadline is the window to shape it. On GSIB resolution planning: the FDIC and Federal Reserve completed their review of 2025 submissions from eight US GSIBs and 56 foreign-based firms. No shortcomings or deficiencies were identified. Derivatives-related weaknesses previously flagged at Bank of America, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, and Citigroup from 2023 plans were confirmed resolved. FDIC Chairman Hill simultaneously announced proposed amendments to the IDI Rule for large institutions coming within weeks, with Q4 2026 finalization a credible planning horizon. His explicit reference to lessons from recent large bank failures signals that resolution execution capability — not documentation quality — will be the examination standard going forward. The clean 2025 feedback establishes the baseline from which the new standard will be measured. One item on the forward calendar: a May 19 Executive Order directed FinCEN, the OCC, FDIC, Federal Reserve, and CFPB to strengthen Customer Identification Program and Customer Due Diligence rules. Proposed rules are expected within 90 to 180 days. Banks with higher-risk onboarding segments or technology-light CIP and CDD programs have a window for gap analysis before the notice of proposed rulemaking arrives. 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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