LexRegPulse Daily

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jul 9, 2026

5 min · Gisteren
aflevering Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jul 9, 2026 artwork

Beschrijving

Morgan here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Thursday, July 9, 2026. The CFPB opened a deregulatory front on mortgage lending today — and that is the story shaping the week. The Bureau issued a request for information on unwinding the rules that govern how homes are financed. It is the first concrete action under Executive Order 14393, signed March 13, directing the Bureau to cut origination costs and restore community-bank participation. For institutions that have spent a decade building compliance around TILA-RESPA disclosure timing and Qualified Mortgage tests, the questions now on the table run to the foundations of the post-2010 mortgage rulebook. What the Bureau is actually weighing: a materiality-based standard for TRID disclosure timing, an exemption for rate-and-term refinancings from rescission rights, simplified reverse-mortgage disclosures, and tailored Ability-to-Repay and Qualified Mortgage treatment for smaller banks. The RFI's framing explicitly concedes that current rules may raise borrower costs and restrict credit access. The comment deadline is August 10 — 32 days from publication. That is a compressed window for data-driven submissions. Mortgage originators should begin quantifying current compliance costs now. Silence will read as acceptance of whatever the Bureau proposes next. The broader signal: Acting Director Russell Vought's CFPB is reopening inherited rulemakings rather than defending them. The Biden-era credit card late-fee rule, which the Bureau stopped defending in court, is also back on the OIRA agenda for reconsideration. Both moves point the same direction — lighter-touch consumer conduct supervision. On market structure, the direction runs the opposite way — more prescriptive, not less. The SEC published FICC's proposed rule requiring all Netting Members to submit 100 percent of eligible secondary-market Treasury transactions — repos and cash trades — for central clearing. This implements the December 2023 Treasury Clearing Rules and moves the framework from voluntary to universal. Non-compliance triggers fines under the Government Securities Division schedule, waived on timely self-report. Approval is expected within three to six months, followed by a comparable implementation window. Capital-markets and repo desks should scope the integration work now, before the rule is final. The Federal Reserve published its own conforming amendments to the Bank Secrecy Act framework, aligning Board-supervised institutions with the five-agency risk-based proposal issued days earlier. Programs must be reasonably designed to identify, assess, and mitigate illicit-finance risk and generate actionable intelligence. Comments run to September 8. OFAC amended a Russia-related general license and issued accompanying guidance, adjusting which transactions remain authorized and the wind-down timelines attached to them. Correspondent-banking, trade-finance, and payments desks should reconcile the revised authorization windows against open exposures — and do so alongside the separately tightening Iran perimeter, where an oil-export license was recently revoked. Treasury and the IRS issued final rules — Treasury Decision 10052, effective July 9 — tightening Internal Revenue Code Section 6050Y reporting for reportable life-insurance policy sales and Section 1035 exchanges. Wealth, private-banking, and trust units administering life-insurance contracts face new tracking and disclosure duties. A companion rule designated certain charitable remainder annuity trust structures as listed transactions, carrying advisor penalties up to $200,000 per transaction. Two items on the calendar demand immediate attention. First: Treasury Large Position Reports are due by noon Eastern on Monday, July 13. Entities holding $8.4 billion or more of the Treasury Floating Rate Note due January 2026 — CUSIP 91282CJU6 — as of January 23 or 30 must file via TreasuryDirect. Hard deadline. No extensions. Verify holdings today. Second: Fed Chair Kevin Warsh and Governor Christopher Waller testify on Capitol Hill July 15 — the first extended questioning of the reshaped committee since June's divided meeting. June FOMC minutes released today showed officials deeply split over the inflation path, with a minority favoring a hike and AI-driven demand identified as one of the committee's top inflation risks. Asset-liability and stress-testing teams should extend tariff pass-through assumptions well into late 2026. 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.

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aflevering Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jul 10, 2026 artwork

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jul 10, 2026

Alex here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Friday, July 10, 2026. The week's defining move came from the OCC. Circle Internet received final approval to establish First National Digital Currency Bank, N.A. — a federally chartered national trust bank, and the first major dollar stablecoin issuer to complete the OCC's full chartering process. That's the lead. Everything else this week orbits it. Circle's USDC handles the bulk of stablecoin transaction volume. The charter converts that fintech balance sheet into a supervised one. Circle can now custody its own USDC reserves and offer digital-asset custody under direct OCC oversight — replacing a patchwork of state money-transmitter licenses with a single federal framework. Institutional clients that require a chartered counterparty now have a supervised structure to work with. Sony Bank holds a conditional OCC stablecoin trust approval for its Connectia entity. Standard Chartered and BNY have wired stablecoin mint-and-redeem directly into their platforms. The contest is now about who offers a federally regulated issuer and custodian under one roof. Circle reached final approval ahead of that field. Banks weighing reserve, custody, or distribution roles should assess whether a chartered counterparty changes the risk and pricing of those partnerships. One caveat: the statute still trails. FinCEN and the banking agencies have a joint customer-identification rule for payment stablecoin issuers open for comment through August 21. The broader crypto market-structure bill remains stalled in Congress. Circle is operating inside a framework that is only half-written. On that front, negotiators aim to release crypto market-structure legislative text around July 14. The stablecoin-yield provisions are the clause deposit and treasury strategists should read first. The Fed carried two distinct messages this week. First, on enforcement: effective July 6, the Federal Reserve entered a formal Written Agreement with TS Banking Group and TS Contrarian Bancshares in Treynor, Iowa, citing inadequate capital. The agreement requires board-level remediation and restricts the firms' ability to expand, acquire, or pay dividends pending compliance. A Brookings Institution finding published this week showed federal banking-agency enforcement has declined over the past decade — with the Fed standing out as comparatively active. The TS Banking action confirms that capital adequacy remains a live escalation trigger. Community and regional bank boards should confirm their capital-planning documentation would withstand the same scrutiny. Second message from the Fed: the agency is opening its analytical framework to outside voices. Chair Kevin Warsh named leadership for five external task forces on July 9, covering communications, balance-sheet policy, data quality, productivity and artificial intelligence, and inflation frameworks. The roster includes former Bank of England Governor Mervyn King, former Reserve Bank of India Governor Raghuram Rajan, and economists Greg Mankiw and Thomas Sargent, alongside technology figures. Findings will feed the Federal Open Market Committee and shape guidance on balance-sheet normalization and supervisory expectations around emerging technology. Three agencies aligned this week on voluntary fraud-information sharing. The Federal Reserve, OCC, and FDIC each distributed FinCEN's updated Section 314(b) Fact Sheet on July 9. The coordinated guidance widens what banks may exchange — cyber indicators, IP addresses, surveillance footage, anomalous-login and new-payee patterns — and removes the prior requirement that a bank first know the information relates to a specific customer. Examiners will assess participation during Bank Secrecy Act and anti-money-laundering reviews. Compliance teams should review current information-sharing policies against the updated fact sheet. Two near-term deadlines deserve attention. The 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act — carrying a custodial-deposit carve-out for banks under ten billion dollars, modified reciprocal-deposit treatment, and a six-billion-dollar extended exam-cycle threshold — has passed both chambers and sits in the presidential signing window. Absent a veto it becomes law without signature. Stage the deposit-policy updates now; activate them on confirmed enactment. Separately, FFIEC Uniform Bank Performance Report updates take effect on or shortly after August 10. Finance and reporting teams should complete data remapping and testing before that date. One industry signal worth flagging: Swift's blockchain-based shared ledger is now operating with 17 major banks — including Citi, HSBC, UBS, BNP Paribas, BNY, Standard Chartered, and Lloyds — enabling around-the-clock movement between participating banks' tokenized deposit systems. The competitive edge in tokenized payments is shifting toward whoever controls the client relationship and service layer. 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.

10 jul 20265 min
aflevering Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jul 9, 2026 artwork

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jul 9, 2026

Morgan here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Thursday, July 9, 2026. The CFPB opened a deregulatory front on mortgage lending today — and that is the story shaping the week. The Bureau issued a request for information on unwinding the rules that govern how homes are financed. It is the first concrete action under Executive Order 14393, signed March 13, directing the Bureau to cut origination costs and restore community-bank participation. For institutions that have spent a decade building compliance around TILA-RESPA disclosure timing and Qualified Mortgage tests, the questions now on the table run to the foundations of the post-2010 mortgage rulebook. What the Bureau is actually weighing: a materiality-based standard for TRID disclosure timing, an exemption for rate-and-term refinancings from rescission rights, simplified reverse-mortgage disclosures, and tailored Ability-to-Repay and Qualified Mortgage treatment for smaller banks. The RFI's framing explicitly concedes that current rules may raise borrower costs and restrict credit access. The comment deadline is August 10 — 32 days from publication. That is a compressed window for data-driven submissions. Mortgage originators should begin quantifying current compliance costs now. Silence will read as acceptance of whatever the Bureau proposes next. The broader signal: Acting Director Russell Vought's CFPB is reopening inherited rulemakings rather than defending them. The Biden-era credit card late-fee rule, which the Bureau stopped defending in court, is also back on the OIRA agenda for reconsideration. Both moves point the same direction — lighter-touch consumer conduct supervision. On market structure, the direction runs the opposite way — more prescriptive, not less. The SEC published FICC's proposed rule requiring all Netting Members to submit 100 percent of eligible secondary-market Treasury transactions — repos and cash trades — for central clearing. This implements the December 2023 Treasury Clearing Rules and moves the framework from voluntary to universal. Non-compliance triggers fines under the Government Securities Division schedule, waived on timely self-report. Approval is expected within three to six months, followed by a comparable implementation window. Capital-markets and repo desks should scope the integration work now, before the rule is final. The Federal Reserve published its own conforming amendments to the Bank Secrecy Act framework, aligning Board-supervised institutions with the five-agency risk-based proposal issued days earlier. Programs must be reasonably designed to identify, assess, and mitigate illicit-finance risk and generate actionable intelligence. Comments run to September 8. OFAC amended a Russia-related general license and issued accompanying guidance, adjusting which transactions remain authorized and the wind-down timelines attached to them. Correspondent-banking, trade-finance, and payments desks should reconcile the revised authorization windows against open exposures — and do so alongside the separately tightening Iran perimeter, where an oil-export license was recently revoked. Treasury and the IRS issued final rules — Treasury Decision 10052, effective July 9 — tightening Internal Revenue Code Section 6050Y reporting for reportable life-insurance policy sales and Section 1035 exchanges. Wealth, private-banking, and trust units administering life-insurance contracts face new tracking and disclosure duties. A companion rule designated certain charitable remainder annuity trust structures as listed transactions, carrying advisor penalties up to $200,000 per transaction. Two items on the calendar demand immediate attention. First: Treasury Large Position Reports are due by noon Eastern on Monday, July 13. Entities holding $8.4 billion or more of the Treasury Floating Rate Note due January 2026 — CUSIP 91282CJU6 — as of January 23 or 30 must file via TreasuryDirect. Hard deadline. No extensions. Verify holdings today. Second: Fed Chair Kevin Warsh and Governor Christopher Waller testify on Capitol Hill July 15 — the first extended questioning of the reshaped committee since June's divided meeting. June FOMC minutes released today showed officials deeply split over the inflation path, with a minority favoring a hike and AI-driven demand identified as one of the committee's top inflation risks. Asset-liability and stress-testing teams should extend tariff pass-through assumptions well into late 2026. 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.

Gisteren5 min
aflevering Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jul 8, 2026 artwork

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jul 8, 2026

Alex here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Wednesday, July 8, 2026. Five federal agencies moved together on anti-money-laundering rules yesterday — the Federal Reserve, OCC, FDIC, CFPB, and FinCEN — and the proposal they released reframes what examiners will actually look for. That is the story of the day. The interagency proposal would reorient Bank Secrecy Act program requirements away from documentation and toward demonstrated effectiveness. Banks would be required to show that risk assessments genuinely drive staffing, technology, and monitoring decisions — and to fold FinCEN's published national AML and counter-terrorism financing priorities directly into those assessments. The examination question shifts: not whether a program exists, but whether significant failures exist within it. Institutions that over-invest in low-risk lines while under-investing in high-risk ones become the new finding. The comment window runs 60 days, closing around September 6. The Bank Policy Institute has already engaged, signaling trade groups view this as a substantive rewrite of examination expectations. Compliance teams should map current resource allocation against their own risk assessments before that deadline — misalignment is what examiners will probe. That proposal lands alongside a broader supervisory pattern. Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman endorsed the Financial Stability Board's consultation report on responsible artificial intelligence adoption on July 7. The framework is built on proportionality — lighter requirements for lower-risk uses, robust controls for material applications in credit, fraud detection, and sanctions screening. The report will become a US G-20 deliverable later this year and is expected to shape 2027 and 2028 examination cycles. It builds on SR 26-2, issued in April, which updated fifteen-year-old model-risk guidance and explicitly brought machine-learning models producing quantitative estimates under validation and monitoring expectations. Institutions with material AI in credit or fraud decisions should inventory those applications now. On resolution, the Financial Stability Board's 2026 ReSolve event this week pressed a shift toward what the Standing Committee chair called joint readiness — asking whether a bank failure could push an insurance counterparty into insolvency, or whether central counterparty distress could cascade into banking stress. The chair invoked AIG as the cautionary case. For CROs at globally active banks, the signal is that resolvability assessments will increasingly require mapped exposures to insurers and central counterparties, collateral-call cascade testing, and cross-border coordination evidence. Two enforcement actions to note — both against individuals, not institutions. The DOJ secured a 78-month federal sentence for a California man who defrauded seven banks of roughly 39 million dollars over nearly a decade. The CFTC filed a civil fraud complaint against a North Carolina commodity pool operator and his firm, Argent Capital Management. Both will surface in examiner discussions of fraud detection and third-party due diligence. On the industry side, JPMorgan and Bank of America have held talks with Fiserv over a possible acquisition of its debit payments network, according to the Wall Street Journal. A deal would allow large banks to route transactions around debit interchange caps — a meaningful competitive development for payments strategy. Sony Bank won OCC approval for a US trust unit, extending the pattern of large regulated institutions seeking federally supervised structures. And Revolut's national bank application, filed in March with the OCC and FDIC, continues to draw attention as the London-based fintech pursues a path that has challenged prior European entrants. One near-term deadline: the Capital Requirements Directive Six — CRD VI — reaches a key milestone effective July 11, three days out. Non-EU banks serving European customers face a new framework for core banking services, implemented unevenly across member states. Institutions with EU-facing business lines should confirm their licensing structures before that date. 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.

8 jul 20265 min
aflevering Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jul 7, 2026 artwork

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jul 7, 2026

Morgan here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Tuesday, July 7, 2026. The week's defining story is a redrawing of the regulated financial perimeter — from the outside in and the top down simultaneously. Klarna is filing for a bank charter. The Supreme Court has loosened White House control over the agencies that grant those charters. And the Senate has two weeks to decide whether stablecoin yields can compete directly with bank deposits. Each development stands alone. Together, they signal a compressed period of structural change for the industry. Klarna filed July 6 to charter Klarna Bank USA — submitting applications to the Utah Department of Financial Institutions and the FDIC for an industrial loan company charter, or ILC. The ILC structure pairs a Utah state license with federal deposit insurance, and it allows a commercial parent to own a bank without falling under Federal Reserve supervision as a bank holding company. Approval would give Klarna a deposit-funded balance sheet and direct access to US consumer lending at scale. The FDIC and Utah will set capital, governance, and parent-company conditions; those conditions will function as the template for the next wave of fintech applicants. ILC applications of this profile typically run six to twelve months. Klarna is not alone in the queue — CBW Bank has applied to the OCC for a charter conversion, and a Utah de novo cleared on its second attempt. Community and mid-size lenders should begin modeling deposit and consumer-credit pricing pressure from entrants who arrive with existing customer scale, not startup numbers. The supervisory architecture around those applicants shifted the same week. The Supreme Court's July 6 decision in Trump v. Slaughter overturned the precedent protecting federal banking regulators from direct White House removal — extending at-will dismissal to leadership at the OCC, FDIC, CFPB, and NCUA, while preserving a carve-out for the Federal Reserve. Banking-law scholars have described the ruling as a structural inflection point, with examination priorities and enforcement posture now more exposed to electoral cycles. Fired NCUA board members Todd Harper and Tanya Otsuka have asked an appeals court for quick reinstatement, arguing the credit-union agency deserves Fed-like protection — a test of exactly where the new line falls. For compliance teams, the practical response is documentation: record current supervisory interpretations now, and build programs that can absorb faster reversals as leadership transitions occur. The FDIC also proposed a comprehensive overhaul of its confidential supervisory information rules — expanding when FDIC-supervised banks may share examination findings and supervisory assessments with auditors, consultants, and service providers without prior agency approval. The change aligns FDIC practice with existing Federal Reserve and OCC frameworks. It reduces friction in vendor and audit relationships, though it will introduce new recipient categories and documentation standards. Banks should map those against current policy once the comment period opens. On monetary policy, Fed Governor Christopher Waller endorsed Chair Kevin Warsh's push to lean less on forward guidance in a July 6 speech, arguing that initial economic conditions — not historical averages — drive how policy transmits. Market-implied odds of a 2026 rate cut have fallen to roughly 21 percent. Rate-risk modeling teams should factor in a central bank signaling more real-time flexibility and fewer pre-commitments on the path ahead. The legislative deadline that matters most this week is the CLARITY Act's stablecoin-yield provision. Jamie Dimon said JPMorgan will fight language that could allow crypto platforms to pay rewards on stablecoin balances. The Senate window runs July 13 through the August recess. For banks reliant on retail deposit funding, the outcome of that two-week window is worth close attention. Two items to close. Standard Chartered launched a capability allowing institutional clients to mint and redeem Circle's USDC directly — a global systemically important bank building a native on-ramp to a dollar stablecoin, against a backdrop of record stablecoin settlement volume of $1.79 trillion in June. And private credit redemption requests reached $15.6 billion in the second quarter of 2026, the third consecutive quarterly increase. Banks with warehouse lines or fund-finance exposure to private credit vehicles should review gating and liquidity terms as that pressure compounds. 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.

7 jul 20265 min
aflevering Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jul 6, 2026 artwork

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jul 6, 2026

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.

6 jul 20265 min