LexRegPulse Daily

Weekly Digest - Jul 6, 2026

15 min · 6. juli 2026
episode Weekly Digest - Jul 6, 2026 cover

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ALEX: You're listening to the Lex Reg Pulse Weekly for the week of June 29 through July 6, 2026. I'm Alex. MORGAN: And I'm Morgan. Here's what mattered this week. ALEX: The Supreme Court handed the Federal Reserve a win this week — but it was a 5-4 win that came with a warning label attached, and the doctrine it dismantled in the process may matter more than the outcome it reached. MORGAN: In Trump v. Cook, Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Kavanaugh joined the three liberal justices to block the President from removing Fed Governor Lisa Cook. But the majority grounded her protection in the Fed's historical tradition of independence — not a general principle — and declined to define what "for cause" actually means. The case was remanded. President Trump immediately signaled he'll press the effort again. ALEX: So the win is real, but narrow and contested. And the companion case, Trump v. Slaughter, is where the structural shift actually lives. MORGAN: The Court overruled Humphrey's Executor — the 1935 precedent that shielded independent-agency heads from at-will dismissal for nine decades. The Fed survived because of its unique historical standing. The doctrine protecting everyone else did not. ALEX: Which means the CFPB, FDIC, OCC, and SEC all sit closer to executive discretion now. For institutions with multi-year compliance builds, leadership continuity at those agencies just became a live planning variable, not a background assumption. MORGAN: And the Cook case itself isn't closed — the remand means Fed governance stability remains contested even after the nominal win. Warsh addressed this at Sintra, saying flatly that no changes to the Fed's structure are coming. But the legal question is still open. ALEX: The other major structural story: two years after the most significant CRA rewrite in three decades, the agencies that wrote it are walking away from it. MORGAN: The OCC and FDIC dropped their appeal in the industry's Fifth Circuit challenge to the 2023 interagency rule. The Fed is moving toward outright repeal. When you get multi-agency convergence on abandonment rather than defense, it rarely reverses. Banks should treat the 2023 rule as effectively dead — the operative framework for the next exam cycle is the 1995-era standard. ALEX: And for compliance teams that spent two years rebuilding data infrastructure around the modernized standard, the practical question flips overnight. Document what was implemented before pausing further spend — examiners will assess performance under the rules that governed the last decade. MORGAN: Exactly. Confirm assessment-area and lending-performance reporting aligns with the prevailing standard, not the one you were preparing for. ALEX: We covered the FDIC's June 25 board vote last week. This week those proposals formally hit the Federal Register and the comment clock started. MORGAN: Three proposals, all open through August 31. The most concrete number: the FDIC is proposing to lift the small-bank assessment threshold from ten billion dollars to thirty billion in assets, with base rate cuts of two basis points for small banks and one for large, plus a resolution-readiness adjustment worth up to a basis point. Finance teams near that line should model costs under both regimes now. ALEX: The resolution-plan proposals are the other piece — those eliminate credibility assessments and capabilities-testing for institutions above fifty billion in assets, shifting from preventive stress-testing toward targeted operational readiness. Plus a third proposal loosening confidential supervisory information sharing with affiliates and service providers. MORGAN: Same August 31 deadline across all three. Mid-sized banks that would be reclassified by the threshold move are the ones with the most at stake in the comment process. ALEX: The GENIUS Act debate shifted this week — away from issuers and asset managers and toward a constituency that hadn't been heard from yet. Roughly four thousand community lenders organized to press Congress to narrow the stablecoin framework. MORGAN: The argument they're making is structurally distinct. They're not debating issuer economics — they're saying the retail deposit base that funds small-business and agricultural credit is at risk from deposit substitution. That reframes the stablecoin perimeter as a credit-access question, and that framing is likely to land differently on Capitol Hill. ALEX: Two enforcement actions this week, very different in scale but pointing the same direction. EagleBank agreed to pay 9.7 million dollars to resolve Bank Secrecy Act violations. MORGAN: The signal isn't the penalty — it's the admission. EagleBank admitted it knowingly allowed customers to run a check-fraud scheme and maintained lax controls for more than a decade. Examiners will read that as a template for accountability where monitoring gaps persist over years. ALEX: Then the Alibaba and AUS Merchant Services settlement — 600 million dollars to resolve DOJ allegations that inadequate controls allowed illegal sales across their platforms. The FDIC Inspector General's decision to publicize that action is the tell. MORGAN: Sponsor banks are increasingly on the hook for the AML controls of the payment processors and marketplace partners they enable, not just their own programs. Vendor due-diligence files and transaction-monitoring rules for high-risk merchant categories deserve a refresh now. ALEX: OFAC ran several distinct actions this week — cartel fuel smuggling, a Brazilian criminal network, Sudan, Congo, and two delistings. Each one is a separate workstream, not a single batch review. MORGAN: The CJNG fuel-theft designations came with a FinCEN alert on huachicol typologies — over 160 SARs covering seven billion dollars in suspicious activity, concentrated in Texas and Florida. The Brazilian PCC network laundered over thirty million through crypto. And the two delistings — the tanker ASTRA and Munoz Pedroza — mean previously blocked transactions can now be processed. Sudan and DRC each carry separate blocking obligations by executive order. ALEX: The CFPB also moved — pulling its 2020 advisory opinion on Special Purpose Credit Programs. Lenders that built programs using race, color, national origin, or sex as eligibility criteria have lost that interpretive cover and need a fresh legal basis documented before the next exam cycle. MORGAN: That's an immediate action item. The opinion is gone; the exam risk isn't. ALEX: The June jobs report landed Thursday — 57,000 against expectations near 114,000. A hold is now the base case for July rather than a placeholder. MORGAN: Warsh's Sintra remarks gave the market a four-week decision window, and he was explicit that any balance-sheet shift won't be a surprise — a deliberate signal to funding desks that the opacity around the dot-plot's removal doesn't extend to the balance sheet. NIM projections built on a July move need to be reweighted. ALEX: Looking ahead — the FSB's virtual session on responsible AI adoption is July 7. That consultation is expected to seed OCC, Fed, and FDIC examination expectations on model governance. MORGAN: Federal AI model standards are also expected as soon as this coming week. Banks deploying generative or agentic tools should inventory those systems now — a federal baseline gives examiners a reference point whether institutions are ready or not. ALEX: July 21 brings FinCEN oversight and a Federal Home Loan Bank System hearing on the same day. FinCEN testimony typically previews examination priorities six to twelve months out. MORGAN: Treasury teams reliant on FHLB advances should watch the companion hearing for signals on membership standards and collateral. And comment deadlines stack toward late August — GENIUS Act CIP closes August 21, the FDIC's assessment and resolution proposals close August 31. Assign ownership before the window compresses. ALEX: For daily updates and the full briefings behind everything we covered, head to lex reg pulse dot com. MORGAN: And if you want to go deeper — research documents, track regulatory changes, build your own analysis — check out The Regulator at lex reg pulse dot com. ALEX: Thanks for listening. Have a great week. --- Your weekly regulatory roundup from LexRegPulse. The most important developments, charter news, enforcement actions, and what to watch next week. Stay compliant, stay informed at lexregpulse.com

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episode Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jul 6, 2026 artwork

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jul 6, 2026

Alex here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Monday, July 6, 2026. The federal architecture for stablecoins is starting to look like bank supervision — and that is the story shaping the week. The OCC has proposed Bank Secrecy Act and sanctions-compliance standards for permitted payment stablecoin issuers under the GENIUS Act framework. Stablecoin settlement volume hit a record in June. Congress advanced its first federal framework for earned wage access. The perimeter around consumer payments and digital dollars is being drawn faster than the products can scale. The OCC's proposal is the lead. The agency would require permitted payment stablecoin issuers to build full Bank Secrecy Act and Office of Foreign Assets Control compliance programs — customer due diligence, transaction monitoring, and sanctions screening — comparable to what the OCC expects of national banks. Issuers that assumed a lighter regime under the GENIUS Act's money-transmission framing should recalibrate. The OCC is treating them as financial institutions with full program obligations. For banks and payment firms evaluating a role in ventures like Open USD, the proposal provides a clearer sense of what regulated participation costs. Program build-out, not marketing reach, will separate durable issuers from announcements. The comment window opens on publication. Sponsor banks, reserve custodians, and issuers should scope the operational lift now rather than waiting for a final rule. The demand backdrop makes the timing clear. Stablecoin transaction volume reached $1.79 trillion in June, up 63% month-over-month, led by USDC on Solana and Base. Settlement rails are scaling faster than the supervisory framework governing them. Separately, the aggregate stablecoin market cap slipped roughly $1.9 billion — a reminder that balances behave as a risk-sensitive liquidity pool even as transaction throughput climbs. On the institutional side, Sony Financial Group signaled plans to establish a US national trust bank for stablecoin business, extending the pattern of large regulated institutions seeking federally supervised structures to anchor token issuance and reserves. On the legislative side, H.R. 9330 — the Earned Wage Access Consumer Protection Act — cleared the House Financial Services Committee July 5 on a 29-to-22 vote. The bill would establish the first federal framework for products that let workers draw earned pay before payday. It mandates no-cost access options, fee and tip disclosures, and dispute resolution. It explicitly preempts the twelve-plus state regimes now in force and exempts earned wage access from Truth in Lending Act and Equal Credit Opportunity Act coverage. The preemption is the prize for national providers. The no-cost and disclosure mandates are the cost. A predecessor bill cleared committee in 2024 and died on the floor, so passage is not assured. Banks partnering with earned wage access fintechs or offering payroll-advance products should begin gap analysis against the bill's requirements while the framework is still forming. Two operational deadlines deserve attention before the week closes. The National Securities Clearing Corporation filed a proposed rule to standardize its Supplemental Liquidity Deposit methodology — replacing estimated netting percentages with position-based calculations during options-expiration periods and eliminating the two-billion-dollar pro rata allocation threshold. The change means higher and more variable funding demands for members driving the NSCC's liquidity needs. Comment closes roughly 21 days from the July 6 publication date. Separately, a final FCC prohibition on importing or marketing communications equipment from foreign-adversary-controlled entities — including equipment with integrated Kaspersky Lab software — takes effect July 16. Banks run this infrastructure across networks and surveillance systems. Institutions should inventory affected equipment ahead of that date, since continued use invites enforcement exposure. On the enforcement and sanctions side: Maryland-based EagleBank reached a $9.7 million settlement resolving allegations it knowingly facilitated a check-fraud scheme, reinforcing that anti-money-laundering program adequacy remains a live examination priority for community and mid-size institutions. Banks with Mexico-facing correspondent, trade-finance, or money-services-business relationships should also run a dedicated screening review against OFAC's June 30 action targeting a Cartel de Jalisco Nueva Generación money-laundering network — two individuals and four entities, including a Mexican exchange house and a UK-registered logistics shell — as a separate workstream, not a routine list refresh. 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.

6. juli 20265 min
episode Weekly Digest - Jul 6, 2026 artwork

Weekly Digest - Jul 6, 2026

ALEX: You're listening to the Lex Reg Pulse Weekly for the week of June 29 through July 6, 2026. I'm Alex. MORGAN: And I'm Morgan. Here's what mattered this week. ALEX: The Supreme Court handed the Federal Reserve a win this week — but it was a 5-4 win that came with a warning label attached, and the doctrine it dismantled in the process may matter more than the outcome it reached. MORGAN: In Trump v. Cook, Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Kavanaugh joined the three liberal justices to block the President from removing Fed Governor Lisa Cook. But the majority grounded her protection in the Fed's historical tradition of independence — not a general principle — and declined to define what "for cause" actually means. The case was remanded. President Trump immediately signaled he'll press the effort again. ALEX: So the win is real, but narrow and contested. And the companion case, Trump v. Slaughter, is where the structural shift actually lives. MORGAN: The Court overruled Humphrey's Executor — the 1935 precedent that shielded independent-agency heads from at-will dismissal for nine decades. The Fed survived because of its unique historical standing. The doctrine protecting everyone else did not. ALEX: Which means the CFPB, FDIC, OCC, and SEC all sit closer to executive discretion now. For institutions with multi-year compliance builds, leadership continuity at those agencies just became a live planning variable, not a background assumption. MORGAN: And the Cook case itself isn't closed — the remand means Fed governance stability remains contested even after the nominal win. Warsh addressed this at Sintra, saying flatly that no changes to the Fed's structure are coming. But the legal question is still open. ALEX: The other major structural story: two years after the most significant CRA rewrite in three decades, the agencies that wrote it are walking away from it. MORGAN: The OCC and FDIC dropped their appeal in the industry's Fifth Circuit challenge to the 2023 interagency rule. The Fed is moving toward outright repeal. When you get multi-agency convergence on abandonment rather than defense, it rarely reverses. Banks should treat the 2023 rule as effectively dead — the operative framework for the next exam cycle is the 1995-era standard. ALEX: And for compliance teams that spent two years rebuilding data infrastructure around the modernized standard, the practical question flips overnight. Document what was implemented before pausing further spend — examiners will assess performance under the rules that governed the last decade. MORGAN: Exactly. Confirm assessment-area and lending-performance reporting aligns with the prevailing standard, not the one you were preparing for. ALEX: We covered the FDIC's June 25 board vote last week. This week those proposals formally hit the Federal Register and the comment clock started. MORGAN: Three proposals, all open through August 31. The most concrete number: the FDIC is proposing to lift the small-bank assessment threshold from ten billion dollars to thirty billion in assets, with base rate cuts of two basis points for small banks and one for large, plus a resolution-readiness adjustment worth up to a basis point. Finance teams near that line should model costs under both regimes now. ALEX: The resolution-plan proposals are the other piece — those eliminate credibility assessments and capabilities-testing for institutions above fifty billion in assets, shifting from preventive stress-testing toward targeted operational readiness. Plus a third proposal loosening confidential supervisory information sharing with affiliates and service providers. MORGAN: Same August 31 deadline across all three. Mid-sized banks that would be reclassified by the threshold move are the ones with the most at stake in the comment process. ALEX: The GENIUS Act debate shifted this week — away from issuers and asset managers and toward a constituency that hadn't been heard from yet. Roughly four thousand community lenders organized to press Congress to narrow the stablecoin framework. MORGAN: The argument they're making is structurally distinct. They're not debating issuer economics — they're saying the retail deposit base that funds small-business and agricultural credit is at risk from deposit substitution. That reframes the stablecoin perimeter as a credit-access question, and that framing is likely to land differently on Capitol Hill. ALEX: Two enforcement actions this week, very different in scale but pointing the same direction. EagleBank agreed to pay 9.7 million dollars to resolve Bank Secrecy Act violations. MORGAN: The signal isn't the penalty — it's the admission. EagleBank admitted it knowingly allowed customers to run a check-fraud scheme and maintained lax controls for more than a decade. Examiners will read that as a template for accountability where monitoring gaps persist over years. ALEX: Then the Alibaba and AUS Merchant Services settlement — 600 million dollars to resolve DOJ allegations that inadequate controls allowed illegal sales across their platforms. The FDIC Inspector General's decision to publicize that action is the tell. MORGAN: Sponsor banks are increasingly on the hook for the AML controls of the payment processors and marketplace partners they enable, not just their own programs. Vendor due-diligence files and transaction-monitoring rules for high-risk merchant categories deserve a refresh now. ALEX: OFAC ran several distinct actions this week — cartel fuel smuggling, a Brazilian criminal network, Sudan, Congo, and two delistings. Each one is a separate workstream, not a single batch review. MORGAN: The CJNG fuel-theft designations came with a FinCEN alert on huachicol typologies — over 160 SARs covering seven billion dollars in suspicious activity, concentrated in Texas and Florida. The Brazilian PCC network laundered over thirty million through crypto. And the two delistings — the tanker ASTRA and Munoz Pedroza — mean previously blocked transactions can now be processed. Sudan and DRC each carry separate blocking obligations by executive order. ALEX: The CFPB also moved — pulling its 2020 advisory opinion on Special Purpose Credit Programs. Lenders that built programs using race, color, national origin, or sex as eligibility criteria have lost that interpretive cover and need a fresh legal basis documented before the next exam cycle. MORGAN: That's an immediate action item. The opinion is gone; the exam risk isn't. ALEX: The June jobs report landed Thursday — 57,000 against expectations near 114,000. A hold is now the base case for July rather than a placeholder. MORGAN: Warsh's Sintra remarks gave the market a four-week decision window, and he was explicit that any balance-sheet shift won't be a surprise — a deliberate signal to funding desks that the opacity around the dot-plot's removal doesn't extend to the balance sheet. NIM projections built on a July move need to be reweighted. ALEX: Looking ahead — the FSB's virtual session on responsible AI adoption is July 7. That consultation is expected to seed OCC, Fed, and FDIC examination expectations on model governance. MORGAN: Federal AI model standards are also expected as soon as this coming week. Banks deploying generative or agentic tools should inventory those systems now — a federal baseline gives examiners a reference point whether institutions are ready or not. ALEX: July 21 brings FinCEN oversight and a Federal Home Loan Bank System hearing on the same day. FinCEN testimony typically previews examination priorities six to twelve months out. MORGAN: Treasury teams reliant on FHLB advances should watch the companion hearing for signals on membership standards and collateral. And comment deadlines stack toward late August — GENIUS Act CIP closes August 21, the FDIC's assessment and resolution proposals close August 31. Assign ownership before the window compresses. ALEX: For daily updates and the full briefings behind everything we covered, head to lex reg pulse dot com. MORGAN: And if you want to go deeper — research documents, track regulatory changes, build your own analysis — check out The Regulator at lex reg pulse dot com. ALEX: Thanks for listening. Have a great week. --- Your weekly regulatory roundup from LexRegPulse. The most important developments, charter news, enforcement actions, and what to watch next week. Stay compliant, stay informed at lexregpulse.com

6. juli 202615 min
episode Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jul 4, 2026 artwork

Daily Regulatory Briefing - Jul 4, 2026

Alex here. This is Lex Reg Pulse Daily for Saturday, July 4, 2026. The headline this holiday weekend is a credibility problem, not a regulatory action. Open Standard's Open USD stablecoin consortium — pitched as a 140-plus member coalition of banks, payment firms, and asset managers — is facing public disavowals from named founding members before it has cleared its first week. That is the banking story. Everything else follows from it. Samsung, Dunamu — the parent of Korean exchange Upbit — and Shinhan have each told reporters they were listed as founding consortium members without consultation. That matters because the entire premise of Open USD rested on breadth. The 140-plus figure was the argument that stablecoin infrastructure was consolidating around a shared, bank-friendly standard rather than a proprietary product. With marquee names publicly backing away, that argument is now contested. For any institution evaluating a distribution, reserve, or naming role in this or any similar consortium, the action item is straightforward: secure written confirmation of terms and membership status before any public association. Consortium announcements in the stablecoin space are running ahead of binding commitments. Circle, whose USDC economics depend on retaining reserve yield that Open USD promises to redistribute, has minimized the competitive threat. The membership confusion makes that posture easier to sustain. The reserve-economics challenge the consortium concept poses is real. Whether this vehicle is the one that delivers it is now an open question. On the regulatory front, the FDIC published its list of state nonmember banks examined for Community Reinvestment Act compliance and moved on Call Report revisions. State nonmember institutions should confirm whether they appear on the examination list and review any findings. Reporting teams should scope the Call Report changes for system and timeline impact — those data feeds flow directly into supervisory ratings and capital calculations. The SEC opened a comment window on novel exchange-traded fund structures, with responses due August 31. Capital-markets and product teams weighing tokenized or non-traditional fund wrappers should assign ownership now. The request signals where the Commission is drawing the product-approval line for novel structures. On the competitive landscape, X Money — Elon Musk's financial services platform — launched consumer offerings advertising a 6% yield and up to ten million dollars in FDIC coverage routed through partner banks. The FDIC coverage claim rests on sweep arrangements with chartered partners. Banks in the sponsor-bank business should expect examiner attention to how those pass-through insurance representations are structured and disclosed. Agentic commerce — transactions delegated to autonomous AI agents — moved from concept to infrastructure. Cross River expanded its Stripe partnership to support card issuing for agent-initiated payments. The Monetary Authority of Singapore, alongside major banks, published a white paper on AI-agent safeguards in finance. For US institutions, change management, transaction authorization, and model governance for agent-initiated payments are becoming examinable questions well ahead of formal OCC, Fed, or CFPB guidance. Two political currents are worth carrying into the week. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand called for a ban on digital-asset issuance by the President and members of Congress — a move that lands as disclosures put President Trump's digital-asset earnings at roughly 1.4 billion dollars. Any legislative effort along those lines would reshape the political backdrop for the GENIUS Act framework and the reputational calculus for banks partnering on politically affiliated tokens. On rates, the weak June payrolls print — 57,000 jobs against expectations near 114,000, with 14 of the last 17 months revised down by a cumulative 710,000 — keeps a July hold as the central scenario for Chair Kevin Warsh. Carry that into near-term net interest margin and balance-sheet projections. Three things to carry into the week: verify your institution's status in any stablecoin consortium before lending your name or balance sheet. Check the FDIC's published CRA examination list if you are a state nonmember bank. And hold remains the base-case rate path — plan accordingly. 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.

4. juli 20265 min
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.

3. juli 20265 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