LexRegPulse Daily
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
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