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05/08/2024

First Citizens Bank of Butte in formal agreement

The Federal Reserve Board has reported that First Citizens Bank of Butte, Butte, Montana, has entered into a formal agreement with the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis and the Montana Division of Banking and Financial Institutions, to address deficiencies identified in the most recent examination of the bank conducted by the Division and the Reserve Bank relating to the bank's risk management and compliance with applicable federal laws, rules, and regulations relating to BSA/AML compliance.

05/08/2024

U.S. sanctions senior leader of LockBit Ransomware Group

On Tuesday, the United States designated Dmitry Yuryevich Khoroshev, a Russian national and a leader of the Russia-based LockBit group, for his role in developing and distributing LockBit ransomware. This designation is the result of a collaborative effort with the U.S. Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of Investigation, the United Kingdom’s National Crime Agency, the Australian Federal Police, and other international partners.

Concurrently, the Department of Justice is unsealing an indictment and the Department of State is announcing a reward offer for information leading to the arrest and/or conviction of Khoroshev. The United Kingdom and Australia are also announcing the designation of Khoroshev.

For identification information on Khoroshev, see BankersOnline’s May 7, 2024, OFAC Update.

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/.

05/07/2024

FDIC Consumer News focuses on small business accounts

The May 3, 2024, issue of FDIC Consumer News has been posted, with an article on "Your Business, Your Deposits." The article includes sections on:

  • Things to know about small business accounts
  • Payments from customers
  • Deciding on whether the separate consumer and business deposit accounts
  • Varying protections for consumer versus commercial accounts
  • Watching out for scams targeting businesses

05/07/2024

Agencies propose Incentive-Based Compensation Arrangements rule

The FDIC, Federal Housing Finance Agency, NCUA, and OCC have issued a Joint Press Release announcing that the FDIC, the OCC, and the FHFA have adopted a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPR) to address incentive-based compensation arrangements, as required under section 956 of the Dodd-Frank Act (section 956). The NCUA is expected to take action on the NPR in the near future. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has included a rulemaking to implement section 956 on its rulemaking agenda. This NPR is intended to advance stakeholder engagement needed to develop a final incentive-based compensation rule.

The NPR re-proposes the regulatory text previously proposed in June 2016, and seeks public comment in the preamble on certain alternatives and questions.

Section 956 requires the appropriate Federal regulators—the FDIC, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (FRB), the OCC, the NCUA, the FHFA, and the SEC—to jointly prescribe regulations or guidelines with respect to incentive-based compensation practices at certain financial institutions that have $1 billion or more in assets. Once the NPR is adopted by all six agencies, it will be published in the Federal Register with a comment period of 60 days following publication. Until then, each agency acting on the NPR will make it available on their respective website, and will accept comments. If any of the six regulators specified by section 956 fails to join in the rulemaking, the rulemaking will not go forward.

The proposed rule includes prohibitions intended to make incentive-based compensation arrangements more sensitive to risk. These include a prohibition on incentive-based compensation arrangements that do not include risk adjustment of awards, deferral of payments, and forfeiture and clawback provisions. The prohibitions also emphasize the important role of sound governance and risk management control mechanisms. These prohibitions would help safeguard covered institutions from the types and features of incentive-based compensation arrangements that encourage inappropriate risks. The recordkeeping and disclosure requirements in the proposed regulatory text would assist the appropriate Federal regulator in monitoring and identifying areas of potential concern at covered institutions.

Comments received on this NPR and those previously submitted on the 2016 NPR will further inform efforts to address incentive-based compensation arrangements, as required under section 956.

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.

05/06/2024

Fed proposes expanding operating days of large-value payments services

The Federal Reserve Board has requested comment on a proposal to expand the operating days of the Federal Reserve Banks' two large-value payments services to include weekends and holidays, so that they would operate every day of the year.

Currently, both the Fedwire Funds Service and the National Settlement Service, or NSS, operate Monday through Friday, excluding holidays. Under the proposal, both services would operate every day of the year. The operating hours each day would remain the same, with the Fedwire Funds Service open 22 hours per day, and NSS open 21.5 hours per day. Use of the expanded operating days by service participants, such as banks and credit unions, would be voluntary.

The Fedwire Funds Service is a wholesale payment service that allows service participants to send and receive individual electronic funds transfers up to $10 billion. The NSS is a settlement service for participants in private-sector clearing arrangements, such as check clearinghouses, a private-sector automated clearinghouse network, and securities settlement systems. The proposal does not include changes to the Fedwire Securities Service or the Federal Reserve's new retail service for instant payments, the FedNow Service.

Comments on the proposal will be accepted up to 60 days after publication in the Federal Register.

  • Fed staff memo to Board of Governors
  • UPDATE: Scheduled for publication on 5/9/2024, with a comment period ending 7/8/2024
  • FURTHER UPDATE: The Fed Board has announced it is extending the comment period, which will now end on 9/6/2024.

05/03/2024

Sanctions evaders targeted

Yesterday, the Department of the Treasury reported that OFAC has designated five individuals for helping U.S.-designated Hizballah money exchanger Hassan Moukalled (Moukalled) and his company, CTEX Exchange, evade sanctions and facilitate illicit activities in support of Hizballah. These individuals, including two co-founders of CTEX Exchange and two of Moukalled’s sons, operate two companies in Lebanon and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) that were concurrently designated. Individuals and entities targeted yesterday were designated pursuant to Executive Order (E.O.) 13224, as amended, which targets terrorist groups, their supporters, and those who aid acts of terrorism.

For the names and identification information of the designated parties, see the May 2, 2024, BankersOnline OFAC Update.

05/02/2024

CFPB report on costs of Health Savings Accounts

The CFPB yesterday released an issue spotlight report, Health Savings Accounts, detailing the complex costs and fees that many consumers with health savings accounts are forced to pay. The report indicates there were approximately 36 million health savings accounts in 2023 – holding more than $116 billion. These accounts provide tax benefits to help offset the costs of high deductible health plans. However, these benefits are being offset by charges like monthly maintenance fees, paper statement fees, outbound transfer fees, and account closure fees.

According to the CFPB, consumers have reported a range of concerns with health savings accounts. For some consumers, these accounts come with high costs. Employers often decide on the financial service provider that will manage employees’ health savings accounts. The factors that motivate employers can differ from those of employees. Providers design health savings accounts to compete for employers. The result is that health savings accounts can often present challenges and costs for consumers, such as surprise fees, lack of fund portability, and low-yield interest rates.

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