LexRegPulse Daily
Morgan here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Tuesday, June 23, 2026. The federal stablecoin framework took its most concrete supervisory shape yet Monday. The OCC issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking — a formal draft rule — requiring permitted payment stablecoin issuers under its supervision to run full bank-grade anti-money-laundering programs, sanctions screening, and regulatory reporting. Comment period closes around July 22. That is the banking story of the day, and the gap analysis clock is running. Here is what matters most. The OCC's draft goes well beyond the five-agency customer-identification proposal already in its comment window. That earlier rule asked issuers to verify customer identities. This one requires a complete Bank Secrecy Act compliance program — the same machinery chartered banks operate. Critically, the rule asserts OCC authority over both federally and state-qualified stablecoin issuers for anti-money-laundering and sanctions purposes. Banks with current or planned token partnerships should map each partner's program against the proposed standard now. The comment window closes in roughly 30 days. The proposal also establishes formal consultation and information-sharing procedures between the OCC and the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network — FinCEN — for significant compliance actions, an interagency coordination model likely to shape stablecoin oversight as the broader framework fills in. The Senate reinforced the policy direction from the legislative side. A bipartisan housing package — the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act — cleared the Senate carrying a four-year prohibition on Federal Reserve issuance of a central bank digital currency. That ban, combined with the OCC's rulemaking activity, confirms the US digital-dollar path runs through supervised private stablecoins, not a public instrument. The housing bill also carries community-bank regulatory relief provisions advocated by the Independent Community Bankers of America, with support from the American Bankers Association. Smaller institutions weighing mortgage and small-business capacity should review those provisions. On market structure, a Federal Reserve staff note published June 22 documented hedge fund gross Treasury exposures reaching four trillion dollars as of September 2025 — double their 2023 level. The cash-futures basis trade alone stood at 830 billion dollars. The 50 largest funds hold 90 percent of that total, financed through roughly three trillion dollars in repurchase agreements — repo. Banks are the primary repo counterparties to these positions. The April 2025 swap-spread unwind is the live stress precedent on record. Examination focus on hedge fund counterparty concentration and repo haircut practices should be expected. OFAC designated three individuals and six entities June 22 under Executive Order 13224 — the counterterrorism sanctions authority — targeting operators of money-services businesses and a crypto exchange used to move funds for ISIS and its West Africa branch. The designations span France, Syria, Turkey, Nigeria, and West Africa. Banks with correspondent or remittance exposure in those regions should treat money-services-business and informal value-transfer relationships as the screening priority and file any blocked-asset reports within the standard window. Two items for the calendar. The House Financial Services Committee holds a payments innovation hearing June 24 — testimony will signal emerging policy direction on stablecoins across multiple business lines. The Form PF deadline — the CFTC and SEC joint rule modifying private-fund disclosure obligations — falls today, June 23, for affected managers. Visa's stablecoin settlement pilot reached a roughly seven-billion-dollar annualized run rate in its fiscal second quarter, alongside eleven-point-two billion dollars in revenue and a twenty-billion-dollar buyback announcement. The Bank of England finalized a lighter sterling stablecoin regime, dropping holder limits in favor of a forty-billion-pound per-issuer cap — a brief international reference point as the US framework takes shape. 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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