LexRegPulse Daily
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 The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rescinded its December 2020 advisory opinion on Special Purpose Credit Programs.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.
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