LexRegPulse Daily

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 30, 2026

5 min · 30. juni 2026
episode Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 30, 2026 cover

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Morgan here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Tuesday, June 30, 2026. The Supreme Court handed down two companion rulings Monday that split the banking regulatory world in a precise and consequential way. The Federal Reserve's independence held. The broader doctrine protecting agency heads did not. That combination defines the regulatory landscape for the rest of this administration and beyond. In Trump v. Cook, a five-four majority blocked the President from removing Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook, grounding her protection in the Fed's unique historical standing — not a general principle. The Court declined to define the "for cause" removal standard and sent the case back for further litigation. President Trump immediately signaled he will press the removal effort again. The Fed's independence is intact for now, but not settled. In the companion case, Trump v. Slaughter, the Court overruled Humphrey's Executor — the 1935 precedent that protected multimember commission heads from at-will dismissal for nine decades. That decision extends presidential removal authority over the FTC and comparable bodies. The read-through to the CFPB, FDIC, OCC, and SEC is direct. Leadership at the agencies that supervise and examine banks now sits closer to executive discretion. For institutions running multi-year compliance roadmaps, policy continuity at those agencies should be treated as less certain than before. Watch examination posture and rulemaking tempo for early signals. The FDIC's late-June deregulatory package formally opened for public comment today with three proposals published in the Federal Register. The most significant raises the threshold separating small and large institutions for deposit insurance assessment purposes — from ten billion dollars in assets to thirty billion. Alongside that, base assessment rates would fall two basis points for small banks and one for large institutions, with a new resolution-readiness adjustment worth up to one basis point. Hundreds of mid-sized banks would be reclassified under the new threshold. A parallel proposal raises the resolution-plan trigger and eliminates credibility assessments and capabilities-testing for institutions above fifty billion in assets. A third proposal liberalizes how banks share confidential supervisory information with affiliates and service providers without prior FDIC approval. All three carry an August 31 comment deadline. Finance and treasury teams at banks near the ten-to-thirty-billion-dollar range should model assessment costs under both regimes before that window closes. On the charter front, the OCC granted conditional approval for a Morgan Stanley national trust charter focused on digital assets. The trust must hold at least fifty million dollars in tier one capital and obtain the OCC's non-objection before changing its business or directors. The approval continues a pattern of large institutions securing federal trust charters to anchor crypto custody and settlement under direct OCC supervision rather than state licensing regimes. Bank of New York Mellon added Circle's USDC stablecoin to its institutional digital-asset custody platform, including minting and redemption services. JPMorgan separately added five Asia-Pacific currencies to its Kinexys blockchain deposit platform, extending 24/7 cross-currency settlement across eight currencies — while also publicly warning that stablecoin yield and reward features could recreate shadow-banking risks. Several rules take effect today and tomorrow with no transition period. The OCC's interim order preempting Illinois' Interchange Fee Prohibition Act, OCC and NCUA rules on non-interest charges, and the interagency Community Bank Leverage Ratio framework on July 1. Capital and operations teams at qualifying community banks should confirm readiness before quarter-end. Two near-term deadlines deserve attention. The CFTC and SEC joint request for comment on harmonizing portfolio and cross-margining across securities and derivatives publishes today, with comments due August 25 — trading desks running matched books should engage. And Treasury's CDFI Bond Guarantee Program carries compressed deadlines: CDFI certification by July 2, qualified-issuer applications by July 7, and guarantee applications by July 8. 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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54 episodes

episode Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jul 3, 2026 artwork

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jul 3, 2026

Alex here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Friday, July 3, 2026. The lead story this week is the effective death of the 2023 Community Reinvestment Act overhaul. The OCC and FDIC have withdrawn from the Fifth Circuit appeal defending the Biden-era interagency rule. The Federal Reserve is moving toward outright repeal. For compliance and community-development teams that spent two years rebuilding data systems around the modernized framework, the operative question is immediate: which rulebook governs the next exam cycle. The answer, for now, is the 1995-era rules. Document what was built under the 2023 standard before pausing further spend. The agencies are converging on abandonment, and multi-agency alignment of this kind rarely reverses. On enforcement, the Federal Reserve's docket told two stories this week. The Board issued a Prompt Corrective Action directive against Small Business Bank of Lenexa, Kansas, signaling capital or operational deficiencies at that institution. Separately, the Fed terminated its cease-and-desist order against BNP Paribas entities — first imposed in July 2017 — after nearly nine years of remediation, along with a separate order against Community Bankshares. The BNP closure is a reminder that sustained remediation does resolve even large enforcement cases. The timeline is measured in years, not quarters. Third-party payments risk sharpened this week. Alibaba Group and AUS Merchant Services agreed to pay 600 million dollars to resolve Justice Department allegations that inadequate controls allowed illegal pharmaceutical and contraband sales across their platforms. The tell here is the FDIC Inspector General's decision to publicize the DOJ action. Examiners are increasingly holding banks accountable for the anti-money-laundering controls of the payment processors and marketplace partners they sponsor. Institutions with high-risk merchant categories in their portfolios should refresh vendor due-diligence files and transaction-monitoring rules. On rates, June nonfarm payrolls came in at 57,000 — roughly half of the 114,000 consensus estimate. May was revised down 43,000. Unemployment edged to 4.2 percent. Markets read the softness as removing a July rate hike from the table. The Dow closed nearly 600 points higher. Fed Chair Kevin Warsh had framed the path at Sintra as a four-week decision window. A hold is now the base case. Rate-sensitive balance sheets should reweight net interest margin projections accordingly. Standard Chartered became the first systemically important institution to give clients direct USDC minting and redemption, through a partnership with Circle. That positions the bank as a Circle correspondent and extends a pattern: large regulated banks anchoring stablecoin reserve and settlement infrastructure rather than leaving it to fintechs. California Governor Newsom also signed state stablecoin legislation, widening the compliance map for issuers weighing a national footprint ahead of full federal GENIUS Act implementation. Two calendar items before the weekend. Call Reports for the quarter ended June 30 are due under the FDIC's Financial Institution Letter — data feeding CAMELS ratings and capital calculations. July 6 brings a Federal Reserve Change in Bank Control filing opening a comment window, an FDIC information-collection notice, and expected rule filings from the National Securities Clearing Corporation and Miami International Securities Exchange. Clearing and settlement teams should watch for scope on those filings. 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.

Yesterday5 min
episode Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jul 2, 2026 artwork

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jul 2, 2026

Morgan here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Thursday, July 2, 2026. The day's most actionable story for banking professionals is a cluster: a Fed Chair narrowing the rate-decision window to four weeks, a CFPB rescission that removes interpretive cover from active fair-lending programs, and a payments study that reshapes where fraud and resilience investment should concentrate. Here is what each means for your institution. Kevin Warsh spoke at the European Central Bank's Forum on Central Banking in Sintra — his first international appearance as Fed Chair. He told the forum the Fed will reach a rate decision within roughly four weeks, called inflation still too high but less threatening than it looked recently, and was unambiguous that he will not tolerate price growth above the 2% target. On Federal Reserve independence — the live question since a recent Supreme Court ruling left the Fed as the lone agency shielded from at-will presidential removal — Warsh was direct: no changes. The practical implication for rate-sensitive balance sheets is that late July is a live inflection point. Model both a hold and a hike into July net-interest-margin projections rather than assuming continuity. Warsh also flagged that any balance-sheet policy change will be telegraphed, not sprung — a deliberate signal to funding desks. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rescinded its December 2020 advisory opinion on Special Purpose Credit Programs. That opinion had addressed for-profit programs using race, color, national origin, or sex as eligibility criteria. Lenders that built Special Purpose Credit Program offerings on that interpretive foundation no longer have it. Fair-lending and program teams should document a fresh legal rationale for any active or planned programs before the next examination cycle. The Federal Reserve's initial findings from its 2025 triennial payments study show noncash payments reached 236.6 billion transactions in 2024 — more than triple the 2000 level. Cards still lead by count, but ACH now moves almost 75% of noncash value. Credit-card volume grew faster than debit for the first time in nearly a decade. Payments and product teams should reweight fraud-detection and resilience investment toward the ACH channel, where the value concentration is now greatest. On the enforcement side, EagleBank — a 1.3 billion dollar lender based in Bethesda, Maryland — agreed to pay 9.7 million dollars to resolve Bank Secrecy Act violations. The institution admitted it knowingly allowed customers to run a check-fraud scheme and maintained lax anti-money-laundering controls for more than a decade. The admission of wrongdoing, not just the penalty amount, is the signal for mid-size compliance programs. OFAC on July 1 designated six parties tied to Brazil's Primeiro Comando da Capital network, which laundered more than 30 million dollars in drug proceeds through cryptocurrency and trade-based schemes. Separately, two additional OFAC actions cover individuals and entities tied to Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo. These are distinct programs with distinct screening obligations — trade-finance and commodity desks with Brazilian, Rwandan mining, or gold-refining exposure carry the sharpest risk. OFAC also removed two parties from the Specially Designated Nationals list — Venezuelan national Reinaldo Munoz Pedroza and the tanker ASTRA — and correspondent and trade-finance teams should confirm they can now process previously blocked transactions involving those parties. Two forward-looking items to track: The House Financial Services Committee held a bipartisan markup of earned-wage-access legislation. A federal framework would supersede the current state-by-state patchwork and clarify whether earned-wage-access advances are treated as credit — a classification question with direct implications for payroll-linked lenders and their bank partners. And the White House is preparing federal artificial-intelligence model standards, with guidance expected as soon as next week. For banks deploying generative or agentic tools, a federal model-standards baseline will likely become a reference point in future examinations. Inventory those systems now and map them to existing model risk management frameworks. 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.

2. juli 20265 min
episode Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jul 1, 2026 artwork

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jul 1, 2026

Alex here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Wednesday, July 1, 2026. The stablecoin market shifted structurally yesterday. More than 140 firms — Visa, Mastercard, American Express, BNY, BlackRock, Google, Stripe, Coinbase, and Ripple among them — backed a new dollar stablecoin called Open USD, run by an independent company called Open Standard. The design breaks from incumbents: user-governed, zero-fee, and revenue-sharing, meaning reserve earnings flow back to institutions using the network rather than staying with the issuer. That model attacks the foundation of Circle's USDC business directly. Circle shares declined roughly fifteen percent on the news. For banks and payment firms, the competitive terms for stablecoin infrastructure are being set now — months ahead of full GENIUS Act implementation. The economics matter. Circle's value rests on retaining reserve yield. Open USD promises to return that yield to distributors and enterprise users, reframing stablecoins as shared utility rails rather than a proprietary product. Analysts trimmed price targets on Circle, and industry observers noted that Coinbase faces a strategic tension: it benefits from its existing Circle arrangement but now has stronger incentive to build its own payments stack as a hedge. MetaMask's parallel launch of a stablecoin money account paying up to four percent yield with card spending sharpens the deposit-substitution picture. Checking-style balances and lending-based savings are converging in a single app. Banks modeling stablecoin exposure should factor in both the issuer-economics pressure and the yield-bundling dynamic that product illustrates. On the regulatory side, five agencies — FinCEN, the Federal Reserve, the OCC, the FDIC, and the NCUA — jointly proposed Customer Identification Program requirements for permitted payment stablecoin issuers on June 18. The rules require risk-based written CIP programs, identity verification, recordkeeping, and terrorist-list screening. They cover primary-market relationships but exclude secondary-market transactions. Federal Reserve Governor Barr flagged illicit-finance risk in that gap, and regulators are soliciting comment on expanding scope. Comments close August 21. Any institution weighing stablecoin issuance should run a gap analysis now and consider whether to weigh in on the secondary-market question. Treasury's enforcement arm was active June 30. OFAC sanctioned two Mexican nationals and nine entities tied to the Cartel de Jalisco Nueva Generación's cross-border fuel theft, customs fraud, and tax-evasion schemes. FinCEN issued a supplemental alert detailing what it calls fiscal fuel theft — known as huachicol — with specific red flags. A prior FinCEN alert from May 2025 generated more than 160 suspicious activity reports covering seven billion dollars in flagged activity within a year, concentrated in Texas and Florida. Banks serving oil, gas, fuel-distribution, and transportation customers near the southern border should update transaction-monitoring rules, screen customer bases against the new designations, and consider a lookback on recent activity. Two items round out the week's regulatory picture. The OCC, FDIC, and Federal Reserve released the 2026 list of distressed or underserved nonmetropolitan middle-income geographies qualifying for Community Reinvestment Act credit through June 30, 2027. Banks with rural footprints should map service areas against the new designations. Separately, the FDIC proposed an overhaul of its resolution planning rule for insured depository institutions, shifting from comprehensive documentation toward the information the agency considers most critical to execution — liquidity analysis, critical operations, and counterparty dependencies. Comments close August 31. One item for risk and operations teams: EY terminated two employees on assignment at Commonwealth Bank of Australia after they allegedly accessed the Australian Prime Minister's personal account without authorization, with one facing criminal charges. The episode is a direct signal for any US bank granting consulting firms privileged access to core systems. Examiners scrutinize third-party access controls under the GLBA Safeguards Rule. An access audit is a proportionate response. Fed Chair Kevin Warsh speaks today — his clearest near-term signal on the rate path as he advances a reform agenda with prices at a three-year high. 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.

1. juli 20265 min
episode Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 30, 2026 artwork

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 30, 2026

Morgan here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Tuesday, June 30, 2026. The Supreme Court handed down two companion rulings Monday that split the banking regulatory world in a precise and consequential way. The Federal Reserve's independence held. The broader doctrine protecting agency heads did not. That combination defines the regulatory landscape for the rest of this administration and beyond. In Trump v. Cook, a five-four majority blocked the President from removing Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook, grounding her protection in the Fed's unique historical standing — not a general principle. The Court declined to define the "for cause" removal standard and sent the case back for further litigation. President Trump immediately signaled he will press the removal effort again. The Fed's independence is intact for now, but not settled. In the companion case, Trump v. Slaughter, the Court overruled Humphrey's Executor — the 1935 precedent that protected multimember commission heads from at-will dismissal for nine decades. That decision extends presidential removal authority over the FTC and comparable bodies. The read-through to the CFPB, FDIC, OCC, and SEC is direct. Leadership at the agencies that supervise and examine banks now sits closer to executive discretion. For institutions running multi-year compliance roadmaps, policy continuity at those agencies should be treated as less certain than before. Watch examination posture and rulemaking tempo for early signals. The FDIC's late-June deregulatory package formally opened for public comment today with three proposals published in the Federal Register. The most significant raises the threshold separating small and large institutions for deposit insurance assessment purposes — from ten billion dollars in assets to thirty billion. Alongside that, base assessment rates would fall two basis points for small banks and one for large institutions, with a new resolution-readiness adjustment worth up to one basis point. Hundreds of mid-sized banks would be reclassified under the new threshold. A parallel proposal raises the resolution-plan trigger and eliminates credibility assessments and capabilities-testing for institutions above fifty billion in assets. A third proposal liberalizes how banks share confidential supervisory information with affiliates and service providers without prior FDIC approval. All three carry an August 31 comment deadline. Finance and treasury teams at banks near the ten-to-thirty-billion-dollar range should model assessment costs under both regimes before that window closes. On the charter front, the OCC granted conditional approval for a Morgan Stanley national trust charter focused on digital assets. The trust must hold at least fifty million dollars in tier one capital and obtain the OCC's non-objection before changing its business or directors. The approval continues a pattern of large institutions securing federal trust charters to anchor crypto custody and settlement under direct OCC supervision rather than state licensing regimes. Bank of New York Mellon added Circle's USDC stablecoin to its institutional digital-asset custody platform, including minting and redemption services. JPMorgan separately added five Asia-Pacific currencies to its Kinexys blockchain deposit platform, extending 24/7 cross-currency settlement across eight currencies — while also publicly warning that stablecoin yield and reward features could recreate shadow-banking risks. Several rules take effect today and tomorrow with no transition period. The OCC's interim order preempting Illinois' Interchange Fee Prohibition Act, OCC and NCUA rules on non-interest charges, and the interagency Community Bank Leverage Ratio framework on July 1. Capital and operations teams at qualifying community banks should confirm readiness before quarter-end. Two near-term deadlines deserve attention. The CFTC and SEC joint request for comment on harmonizing portfolio and cross-margining across securities and derivatives publishes today, with comments due August 25 — trading desks running matched books should engage. And Treasury's CDFI Bond Guarantee Program carries compressed deadlines: CDFI certification by July 2, qualified-issuer applications by July 7, and guarantee applications by July 8. 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.

30. juni 20265 min
episode Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 29, 2026 artwork

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jun 29, 2026

Alex here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Monday, June 29, 2026. The week's defining banking story is structural, not procedural. Roughly 4,000 community lenders have organized a coordinated lobbying campaign against the GENIUS Act's stablecoin framework — and the argument they're taking to Capitol Hill cuts to the funding model of local banking. If households shift retail deposits into payment stablecoins, community banks lose the stable balances that support small-business and agricultural lending in markets the large banks largely ignore. That deposit-substitution risk is real, and this campaign is the first time the institutions most exposed to it are pressing it with a unified voice. The timing is deliberate. FinCEN and the federal banking agencies are advancing proposed rules right now implementing the GENIUS Act's anti-money-laundering and sanctions obligations for permitted payment stablecoin issuers. The compliance perimeter is being drawn. The community-bank coalition is trying to reshape the competitive terms before those rules harden. Meanwhile, the institutional buildout continues in the other direction — American Express has hired a vice president for stablecoin and blockchain partnerships, and Japan's SBI acquired the exchange Bitbank to build stablecoin payment infrastructure. The split between incumbents leaning into the framework and those pushing back against it is now the central tension in payments strategy. For banks reliant on retail deposits for local lending, the practical step is to model stablecoin and yield-adjacent deposit substitution as a funding-base scenario. Not a distant hypothetical — a planning input, as the GENIUS Act rules move toward finalization. On sanctions, OFAC's notice 2026-13059 formalizes designations from May 19 — eight individuals and at least one entity — under Executive Order 13224, the principal US counterterrorism sanctions authority. The targets are connected to Hamas, its social-media apparatus, the Popular Conference for Palestinians Abroad, and the Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network. All US-jurisdiction property is blocked, with secondary-sanctions exposure under section 1(b). AML and BSA teams should note this is a separate program from the late-June Sudan Executive Order 14098 designations and the separate SDN action. Run the counterterrorism lookback as its own workstream — not folded into prior reviews. A correction notice published June 29 confirms the OCC's final rule on Real Estate Lending Escrow Accounts is in force for national banks and federal savings associations. The correction fixes a heading error only — substance is unchanged. Residential real-estate lending teams should confirm escrow management and disclosure practices align with the codified requirements under 12 CFR Parts 34 and 160. A fintech card program drew scrutiny from industry analysts over the weekend. An a16z-backed card program launched marketing an "up to 100 percent cash back" Visa card — but the issuing bank told analysts the program has not been approved and is not a live card program. Analysts applied FTC and CFPB deceptive-practices standards, noting the headline rate is achievable only under narrow merchant, timing, and transaction conditions the marketing omits. The issuing bank, not the program manager, carries the deceptive-practices exposure regardless of which party drafted the copy. Banks with fintech card partnerships should review reward-marketing substantiation across their sponsored programs. On the macro side, the BIS General Manager used the bank's June 28 annual meeting to restate four headline concerns: inflation resurgence tied to Middle East conflict, an abrupt AI-investment unwind, stretched financial valuations, and the intersection of high public debt with fast-growing non-bank finance. US supervisors typically fold BIS-process themes into stress scenarios over an 18-to-36-month horizon, with non-bank counterparty exposure the fastest to surface in examination focus. The week ahead carries significant rate-path data. Thursday's June jobs report is the clearest near-term signal under Fed Chair Warsh. JOLTS openings and consumer confidence land Tuesday, ISM manufacturing Wednesday. Core PCE ran at 3.4 percent and headline at 4.1 percent in May. Rate-sensitive balance sheets should calendar all four releases. 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.

29. juni 20265 min