LexRegPulse Daily
Alex here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Monday, July 6, 2026. The federal architecture for stablecoins is starting to look like bank supervision — and that is the story shaping the week. The OCC has proposed Bank Secrecy Act and sanctions-compliance standards for permitted payment stablecoin issuers under the GENIUS Act framework. Stablecoin settlement volume hit a record in June. Congress advanced its first federal framework for earned wage access. The perimeter around consumer payments and digital dollars is being drawn faster than the products can scale. The OCC's proposal is the lead. The agency would require permitted payment stablecoin issuers to build full Bank Secrecy Act and Office of Foreign Assets Control compliance programs — customer due diligence, transaction monitoring, and sanctions screening — comparable to what the OCC expects of national banks. Issuers that assumed a lighter regime under the GENIUS Act's money-transmission framing should recalibrate. The OCC is treating them as financial institutions with full program obligations. For banks and payment firms evaluating a role in ventures like Open USD, the proposal provides a clearer sense of what regulated participation costs. Program build-out, not marketing reach, will separate durable issuers from announcements. The comment window opens on publication. Sponsor banks, reserve custodians, and issuers should scope the operational lift now rather than waiting for a final rule. The demand backdrop makes the timing clear. Stablecoin transaction volume reached $1.79 trillion in June, up 63% month-over-month, led by USDC on Solana and Base. Settlement rails are scaling faster than the supervisory framework governing them. Separately, the aggregate stablecoin market cap slipped roughly $1.9 billion — a reminder that balances behave as a risk-sensitive liquidity pool even as transaction throughput climbs. On the institutional side, Sony Financial Group signaled plans to establish a US national trust bank for stablecoin business, extending the pattern of large regulated institutions seeking federally supervised structures to anchor token issuance and reserves. On the legislative side, H.R. 9330 — the Earned Wage Access Consumer Protection Act — cleared the House Financial Services Committee July 5 on a 29-to-22 vote. The bill would establish the first federal framework for products that let workers draw earned pay before payday. It mandates no-cost access options, fee and tip disclosures, and dispute resolution. It explicitly preempts the twelve-plus state regimes now in force and exempts earned wage access from Truth in Lending Act and Equal Credit Opportunity Act coverage. The preemption is the prize for national providers. The no-cost and disclosure mandates are the cost. A predecessor bill cleared committee in 2024 and died on the floor, so passage is not assured. Banks partnering with earned wage access fintechs or offering payroll-advance products should begin gap analysis against the bill's requirements while the framework is still forming. Two operational deadlines deserve attention before the week closes. The National Securities Clearing Corporation filed a proposed rule to standardize its Supplemental Liquidity Deposit methodology — replacing estimated netting percentages with position-based calculations during options-expiration periods and eliminating the two-billion-dollar pro rata allocation threshold. The change means higher and more variable funding demands for members driving the NSCC's liquidity needs. Comment closes roughly 21 days from the July 6 publication date. Separately, a final FCC prohibition on importing or marketing communications equipment from foreign-adversary-controlled entities — including equipment with integrated Kaspersky Lab software — takes effect July 16. Banks run this infrastructure across networks and surveillance systems. Institutions should inventory affected equipment ahead of that date, since continued use invites enforcement exposure. On the enforcement and sanctions side: Maryland-based EagleBank reached a $9.7 million settlement resolving allegations it knowingly facilitated a check-fraud scheme, reinforcing that anti-money-laundering program adequacy remains a live examination priority for community and mid-size institutions. Banks with Mexico-facing correspondent, trade-finance, or money-services-business relationships should also run a dedicated screening review against OFAC's June 30 action targeting a Cartel de Jalisco Nueva Generación money-laundering network — two individuals and four entities, including a Mexican exchange house and a UK-registered logistics shell — as a separate workstream, not a routine list refresh. 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.
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