LexRegPulse Daily
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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