LexRegPulse Daily
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.
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