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05/14/2024

Webinar on FDIC official signs and advertising, etc.

The FDIC has sent email notices announcing that it will host four seminars in 2024 (the first on May 30, from 2:00 to 3:30 pm ET) on the final rule governing use of Official Signs and Advertising Statement, Misrepresentations of Insured Status, and Misuse of FDIC’s Name or Logo for bank staff, bank officers, and other stakeholders. The first seminar will be held via Microsoft (MS) Teams on May 30, 2024. The dates for the remaining three seminars will be announced at a later date.

The sessions will offer a broad overview of the final rule that amended Part 328 of the FDIC’s regulations. The FDIC amended its regulations governing use of the official FDIC sign and advertisement statements to reflect how depositors do business with banks today, including through digital and mobile channels. The rule also clarified the FDIC’s regulations on misrepresentations of deposit insurance coverage. The final rule is intended to help consumers understand when they are interacting with an FDIC-insured bank and when their funds are protected by the FDIC’s deposit insurance coverage.

The rule became effective on April 1, 2024, and has a compliance date of January 1, 2025. The sessions are ideal for bank employees and other Part 328 stakeholders looking for further information and guidance on the new final rule.

During the presentation on the final rule, FDIC staff will cover:

  • Requirements for all FDIC-insured institutions’ use of FDIC official signs. This includes a new FDIC official digital sign for bank websites, apps, and ATMs, as well as updates to the advertising statement.
  • Clarifications on the prohibitions against misrepresentations of deposit insurance coverage and misuse of the FDIC’s name and logo, which apply to any person, including banks and non-bank entities.

During the seminar, FDIC staff will also discuss some of the questions that have been raised by bankers, trade associations, technology companies, vendors, and others.

05/09/2024

OFAC amends Reporting, Procedures and Penalties regulations

OFAC has released and will publish on May 10 an interim final rule to amend the Reporting, Procedures and Penalties Regulations (the “Regulations”), to require electronic filing of certain submissions to OFAC and to describe and modify certain reporting requirements related to blocked property and rejected transactions. In particular, the rule would require use of the electronic OFAC Reporting System for submission of reports related to blocked property and rejected transactions, remove the mail option for certain other types of OFAC submissions, describe reports OFAC may require from financial institutions for transactions that meet specified criteria, and add a reporting requirement for any blocked property that is unblocked or transferred.

Additionally, OFAC is clarifying the scope of the reporting requirement for rejected transactions, in part to respond to comments received on the interim final rule OFAC published on June 21, 2019 to amend the Regulations. The interim final rule also modifies the procedures for requests relating to property that is blocked in error and updating the Regulations with respect to the availability of information under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) for certain categories of records.

The rule also clarifies that persons may submit a petition for administrative reconsideration to seek removal of a person or property from the List of Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons or any other list of sanctioned persons maintained by OFAC. OFAC is also adding a description of reports OFAC may require financial institutions to provide about transactions that meet specified criteria to aid in the identification of blocked property. Finally, OFAC is making several technical and
conforming edits.

The rule will become effective 90 days after publication (August 8, 2024). Comments on the interim final rule will be accepted for 31 days after publication (through June 10, 2024).

05/07/2024

Fed survey: Businesses and consumers adopting faster payment services

Federal Reserve Financial Services yesterday released the results of studies indicating that U.S. businesses and consumers are rapidly adopting digital, faster and instant payment services, according to studies released today by Federal Reserve Financial Services. Digital wallet use saw especially strong growth in 2023 — efficiency-focused businesses increased their use by 31% over the prior year, and convenience-minded consumers experienced a 32% increase.

These changes, particularly consumers’ use of digital wallets and online banking, are leading to increases in instant and faster payment use cases such as bill payment, mobile wallet funding and defunding, account-to-account transfers, and immediate payroll for employees.

Overall, 86% of businesses and 74% of consumers said they used faster or instant payments in 2023, and most (74% of businesses and 79% of consumers) reported looking to their financial institution to provide these services. Other key findings:

  • Younger consumers are leading the move to digital, faster and instant payments. More than half of Generation Z (ages 18-25) and millennials (26-41) now use digital wallets, and 80% of these younger consumers say it is important to be able to make payments by mobile device.
  • One in four (25%) consumers are challenged by the slow speed of payments and prefer to have better options for instant money movement to help manage personal finances.
  • Businesses are using faster/instant payments because it helps them reduce cost (48%) and provides flexibility to pay and be paid as customers prefer (39%). Additionally, 35% appreciate the 24/7 nature of instant payment services.
  • Businesses say key use cases that benefit from instant payments include business-to-business (92%), business-to-person (71%) and account-to-account (40%). Many businesses also believe instant payments will be useful for digital wallet funding/defunding (50%) and earned wage access (25%).

Full reports:

05/07/2024

OFAC launches new Sanctions List Service application

OFAC has announced the formal launch of its new OFAC Sanctions List Service (SLS) application. SLS is now the primary application OFAC will use to deliver sanctions list files and data to the public.

SLS includes support for all OFAC legacy and modern sanctions list data files. While certain sanctions list data are now hosted within the SLS cloud, existing links to OFAC list files remain functional through URL redirects.

The Sanctions List Service application incorporates the traditional OFAC Sanctions List Search tool which will continue to be available at https://sanctionssearch.ofac.treas.gov/.

05/06/2024

Agencies issue 3rd-party risk management guide for community banks

The FDIC, OCC and Federal Reserve Board have jointly announced their issuance of a guide to support community banks in managing risks presented by third-party relationships.

Third-party relationships present varied risks that community banks are expected to appropriately identify, assess, monitor, and control to ensure that their activities are performed in a safe and sound manner and in compliance with applicable laws and regulations. These laws and regulations include, but are not limited to, those designed to protect consumers and those addressing financial crimes.

The guide offers potential considerations, resources, and examples through each stage of the third-party relationship and may be a helpful resource for community banks. While the guide illustrates the principles discussed in the third-party risk management guidance issued by the agencies in June 2023, it is not a substitute for that guidance.

05/01/2024

FBI reports elder fraud on the rise

The Federal Bureau of Investigation yesterday reported the elder fraud complaints to the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) increased by 14 percent in 2023, and associated losses increased by about 11 percent, according the IC3’s 2023 Elder Fraud Report, released yesterday. Five takeaways from the report:

  • Elder fraud is an expensive crime. Scams targeting individuals aged 60 and older caused over $3.4 billion in losses in 2023—an increase of approximately 11% from the year prior. The average victim of elder fraud lost $33,915 due to these crimes in 2023.
  • Older Americans seem to be disproportionately impacted by scams and fraud. Over 101,000 victims aged 60 and over reported this kind of crime to IC3 in 2023. On the flip side, victims under the age of 20 years old seemed to be the least-impacted demographic, with about 18,000 victims in this demographic reporting suspected scams or frauds to IC3 last year.
  • Tech support scams were the most widely reported kind of elder fraud in 2023. Nearly 18,000 victims aged 60 and over reported such scams to IC3. Personal data breaches, confidence and romance scams, non-payment or non-delivery scams, and investment scams rounded out the top five most common types of elder fraud reported to IC3 last year.
  • Investment scams were the costliest kind of elder fraud in 2023. These schemes cost victims more than $1.2 billion in losses last year. And tech support scams, business email compromise scams, confidence and romance scams, government impersonation scams, and personal data breaches all respectively cost victims hundreds of millions of dollars in 2023.
  • Scammers are coming for people’s cryptocurrency. More than 12,000 victims aged 60 and over indicated that cryptocurrency was “a medium or tool used to facilitate” the scam or fraud that targeted them when reporting it to IC3.

04/22/2024

MLA system release scheduled

The Department of Defense's Military Lending Act website includes a notice that the MLA’s next system release (version 5.19) is scheduled for Thursday, April 25, 2024. MLA v 5.19 will include updates to the password requirements check list and error messages to increase clarity and create a better user experience. It will also include additional security and accessibility enhancements. The MLA website will not be available from 6:00 P.M. until 9:00 P.M. PDT [9:00 P.M. until midnight EDT] while the updates are performed.

04/19/2024

FinCEN financial trend analysis on elder financial exploitation

FinCEN has announced it has issued a Financial Trend Analysis focusing on patterns and trends identified in Bank Secrecy Act data linked to Elder Financial Exploitation (EFE), or the illegal or improper use of an older adult’s funds, property, or assets. FinCEN examined BSA reports filed between June 15, 2022 and June 15, 2023 that either used the key term referenced in FinCEN’s June 2022 EFE Advisory or checked “Elder Financial Exploitation” as a suspicious activity type. This amounted to 155,415 filings over this period indicating roughly $27 billion in EFE-related suspicious activity.

Financial institutions began filing BSA reports featuring the advisory’s key term on the same day that FinCEN published its 2022 advisory. FinCEN has continued to receive EFE BSA reports, averaging 15,993 per month between June 15, 2023, and January 15, 2024. Banks have submitted the vast majority of EFE-related BSA filings.

EFE typically consists of two subcategories: elder scams and elder theft. Elder scams, identified in approximately 80% of the EFE BSA reports that FinCEN analyzed, involve the transfer of money to a stranger or imposter for a promised benefit that the older adult does not receive. In elder theft, identified in approximately 20% of the reports, an otherwise trusted person steals an older adult’s assets, funds, or income. Among other conclusions, FinCEN’s analysis revealed that most elder scam-related BSA filings referenced “account takeover” by a perpetrator unknown to the victim; that adult children were the most frequent elder theft-related perpetrators; and that illicit actors mostly relied on unsophisticated means to steal funds that minimize direct contact with financial institution employees.

04/19/2024

OCC releases enforcement actions

The OCC has released a list of recent enforcement actions taken against national banks, federal savings associations, and individuals currently and formerly affiliated with them. Actions taken against national banks and federal savings associations include:

  • A Formal Agreement with First FS & LA of Lorain (Lorain, Ohio) for unsafe or unsound practices, including those related to the failure of the board of directors and bank management to develop and implement an appropriate strategic plan; appropriately manage and control liquidity and interest rate risks; implement effective Bank Secrecy Act (“BSA”) /Anti-Money Laundering internal controls; and appoint a BSA Officer with the requisite skills and expertise to oversee the BSA program, and the bank’s violation of law, rule, or regulation, including a violation relating to conducting ongoing customer due diligence.
  • A Cease and Desist Order against Heritage Bank, N.A. (Spicer, Minnesota), for unsafe or unsound practices, including those related to capital adequacy, capital and strategic planning, credit review, ongoing monitoring of the credit portfolio, liquidity and liquidity management practices, and the allowance methodology.
  • A Formal Agreement with Minnstar Bank, N.A. (Lake Crystal, Minnesota), for unsafe or unsound practices, including those related to concentrations of credit, credit underwriting and administration, appraisals, allowance for credit losses, strategic planning, incentive compensation, capital planning, and liquidity risk management, and violations of law, rule, or regulation, including those relating to loans to executive officers, lending limits, and appraisals.

Actions against institution-affiliated parties included:

  • An Order of Prohibition and for payment of a $40,000 civil money penalty (CMP) against Norman Desembrana, former operations senior manager at the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, lockbox facility of Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., Sioux Falls, South Dakota, for concealing a significant backlog of unprocessed customer checks.
  • An Order of Prohibition and for payment of a $300,000 CMP against Gary Judd, former chairman and CEO, Sterling Bank and Trust, FSB, Southfield, Michigan, for failing to appropriately oversee the bank’s operation of its Advantage Loan Program or supervise bank insiders involved in the implementation of the Advantage Loan Program.
  • An Order of Prohibition and for payment of a $400,000 CMP against Scott Seligman, an institution-affiliated party of Sterling Bank and Trust, FSB, Southfield, Michigan, for participating in the operation of the Advantage Loan Program, contributing to a poor compliance culture at the bank, and pressuring bank employees to quickly underwrite Advantage Loan Program loans.
  • An Order of Prohibition against Jackie M. Snider, former AVP at a Sulphur, Oklahoma, branch of Vision Bank, N.A., Ada, Oklahoma, for misappropriating at least $95,430 via the diversion of funds from customers’ accounts and taking efforts to conceal such misappropriation.
  • An Order of Prohibition against John Edmonds, former VP at JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A., Columbus, Ohio, based on his conviction for commodities fraud and conspiracy to commit wire fraud, commodities fraud, commodities price manipulation, and spoofing.
  • An Order of Prohibition against Christian Trunz, former executive director at JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A., Columbus, Ohio, based on his conviction for spoofing and conspiracy to commit spoofing.

04/17/2024

CFPB publishes two previously posted Circulars

The CFPB has published in today's Federal Register two Consumer Financial Protection Circulars previously posted to its website.

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