LexRegPulse Daily
Morgan here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Thursday, June 11, 2026. The development with the longest tail for bank balance sheets today is a structural question about capital. The Bank for International Settlements proposed reworking Additional Tier 1 instruments, the hybrid securities sitting between equity and senior debt in the capital stack. And the inflation data landing this week means the rate environment those instruments price into just shifted materially. Start with capital. The BIS paper, published June 11 and reflecting Basel Committee consensus, proposes replacing discretionary writedowns on Additional Tier 1 securities — AT1s — with mandatory, formula-driven conversion into equity. Conversion triggers would move well above today's five-point-one-two-five percent Common Equity Tier 1 floor, potentially toward seven to eight percent. The intent is to make these instruments absorb losses while a bank is still a going concern, not after the fact. Nothing in the paper is binding today. But Basel Committee consensus papers tend to become guidance within 12 to 24 months. Capital and treasury teams should model the repricing impact on existing AT1 holdings now, and fold the higher trigger scenario into refinancing planning. That modeling work just got more complicated. May CPI came in at four-point-two percent — the highest reading since April 2023 — with core inflation at two-point-nine. Bond markets responded by pricing in a Federal Reserve rate increase this year, not a cut. That lands days before the June 17-18 FOMC meeting — Kevin Warsh's inaugural meeting. The decision itself may hold steady. The forward-guidance language will carry more weight. Asset-liability teams running a no-cut base case should add a hike scenario before the June 18 statement — particularly for deposit-beta assumptions and securities-portfolio marks. The CFTC also moved on June 10, publishing a notice of proposed rulemaking that amends Regulation 40.11 and adds Appendix F. The proposal establishes public-interest standards for event contracts — the category covering prediction markets — and signals the commission will allow sports-outcome bets to continue on regulated platforms. The comment window runs roughly 60 days, closing in early August. Banks with derivatives market-making or structured-product lines tied to event contracts should scope the framework now. On the sanctions front, OFAC designated nine individuals and entities June 10 under its Economic Fury campaign — China- and Hong Kong-based trading intermediaries alleged to have funneled weapons components to Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. The screening update is automatic. The sharper obligation is for institutions with correspondent-banking exposure to China-trade flows or refinery-adjacent networks. Treasury explicitly warned it may sanction foreign financial institutions facilitating these networks, including those tied to Chinese teapot refineries. Blocking reports for any identified assets are due within 10 business days. The Wells Fargo records subpoena is the week's most-watched enforcement signal. The Department of Justice and OCC have subpoenaed Wells Fargo for account records. This is an investigative demand, not an enforcement action against the institution — but a coordinated DOJ-OCC request is a supervisory data point institutions with similar account-documentation practices should note. Two structural developments round out the week. Eight federal regulators jointly finalized data standards under the Financial Data Transparency Act, adding 12 C.F.R. Part 304, Subpart D. No immediate reporting deadline attaches. These standards are the architecture on which future machine-readable reporting mandates will be built. The gap assessment against current data infrastructure is the work to begin now. And the Tennessee international-payments tax litigation is worth tracking beyond state lines. The Financial Technology Association filed suit June 10 challenging a Tennessee law that imposes a ten-dollar flat fee on international transfers, plus two percent on amounts above five hundred dollars, effective January 2027. The constitutional arguments — dormant Commerce Clause, Import-Export Clause — are the kind that, if they fail, hand other states a working model. Banks and money transmitters with origination-state exposure should scope the patchwork risk. One competitive signal: Figure agreed to acquire real estate lending platform Kiavi for seven hundred seventeen million dollars. The deal extends a pattern of tokenization-native firms acquiring conventional origination capacity rather than building it. Banks weighing onchain lending economics should treat it as a competitive data point. 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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