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11/22/2024

BNY selected to manage Treasury Direct Express Program

The U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Bureau of the Fiscal Service has announced the selection of The Bank of New York Mellon Corporation (“BNY”), a global financial services company, as the financial agent for the Fiscal Service's Direct Express program.

In its press release, Fiscal Service said it selected BNY as the new financial agent for the program after conducting a competitive selection process and evaluating proposals from multiple financial institutions. Based on this review, Fiscal Service determined that BNY’s suite of features and customer service options will enable an evolution in the Direct Express program by providing enhanced efficiency and services tailored to the program’s customer base. With the new financial agent, customers will enjoy rent and other bill payment solutions, virtual cards, cardless ATM access, chat and text customer service, online dispute filing, in-person identity authentication options, and more.

11/22/2024

U.S. acts to curtail Russia's use of international financial system

The Treasury Department yesterday reported that OFAC has taken another major step in implementing commitments made by G7 leaders to curtail Russia’s use of the international financial system to further its war against Ukraine. OFAC’s action includes the designation of Gazprombank, more than 50 internationally connected Russian banks, more than 40 Russian securities registrars, and 15 Russian finance officials. OFAC is also issuing an alert describing sanctions risks related to Russia’s System for Transfer of Financial Messages (SPFS), which the Kremlin created and uses to evade sanctions.

For the names and identification information of all the designated parties, links to new and revised Russia-related General Licenses, FAQs and the Alert, see yesterday's BankersOnline OFAC Update.

11/22/2024

OCC issues November report of enforcement actions

The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency has released enforcement actions recently taken against financial institutions it supervises and individuals now or formerly associated with such financial institutions.

  • A Cease and Desist Order against Clear Fork Bank, N.A., Albany, Texas, for violations of law and unsafe or unsound practices related to the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA)/anti-money laundering. The bank had failed to correct previously reported BSA problems.
  • A Formal Agreement with Hiawatha National Bank, Hager City, Wisconsin, for unsafe or unsound practices, including those relating to liquidity oversight, annual credit review processes, loan risk ratings, independent loan review, and allowance for credit losses.
  • Cease and Desist Orders against The First National Bank of Shiner, Shiner, Texas; Bank of Brenham, N.A., Brenham, Texas; and The First National Bank of Bellville, Bellville, Texas, three subsidiary banks of Industry Bancshares, Inc., Industry, Texas, resolving the Notices of Charges filed on January 2, 2024, in which the OCC alleged, among other things, that each bank engaged in unsafe or unsound practices relating to an investment strategy concentrated in long-term securities that exposed each bank to excessive interest rate risk. The orders also address unsafe or unsound practices relating to corporate governance and, for Bank of Brenham, N.A., and The First National Bank of Bellville, credit administration practices. [Editor's Note: See also the Federal Reserve Board's Cease and Desist Order against Industry Bancshares, Inc. in "Federal Reserve enforcement actions against bank and holding company," in yesterday's Top Stories.]
  • A Formal Agreement with The National Bank of Coxsackie, Coxsackie, New York, for unsafe or unsound practices, including those related to corporate and risk governance, strategic and capital planning, liquidity risk management, interest rate risk management, the audit function, and internal controls, and for violations, including those relating to loans to insiders.
  • A Personal Cease and Desist Order against Dean A. Lafrentz, former senior vice president at Midstates Bank, N.A., Council Bluffs, Iowa, for falsifying collateral information in a borrower’s loan file, leading the bank to believe it had a surplus, rather than a deficit, of eligible collateral when considering the borrower's loan extension request.
  • An Order of Prohibition against Clarice Saw, former financial advisor at a New York, New York, branch of Citibank N.A., Sioux Falls, South Dakota, for obtaining a power of attorney over an elderly bank customer under false pretenses, using the power of attorney to open new accounts, and misappropriating the customer’s funds.

11/22/2024

Fed enforcement action with bank's former CEO

The Federal Reserve Board has reported it has issued an Order of Prohibition barring Shan Hanes, former chief executive officer of Heartland Tri-State Bank, Elkhart, Kansas, for using his position to embezzle $47.1 million of bank funds in a cryptocurrency scheme that led to the bank becoming insolvent and failing in 2023.

11/21/2024

Federal Reserve enforcement actions against bank and holding company

The Federal Reserve Board has announced it has issued cease and desist orders against:

  • Small Business Bank, Lenexa, Kansas, for deficiencies in various areas, including the bank's operations and risk management practices, and compliance with the Bank Secrecy Act and related rules and regulations
  • Industry Bancshares, Inc., Industry, Texas (jointly issued with the Texas Department of Banking), which owns and controls Bank of Brenham, National Association, Brenham, Texas; The First National Bank of Shiner, Shiner, Texas; The First National Bank of Bellville, Bellville, Texas; Industry State Bank, Industry, Texas; Fayetteville Bank, Fayetteville, Texas; and Citizens State Bank, Buffalo, Texas, for deficiencies with respect to the operations of Bancshares, including with respect to its ability to serve as a source of strength to those banks

11/21/2024

CFPB finalizes rule on Oversight of Digital Payment Apps

The CFPB this morning announced it is has finalized a rule to supervise the largest nonbank companies offering digital funds transfer and payment wallet apps. The rule will help the CFPB to ensure that these companies – specifically those handling more than 50 million transactions per year – follow federal law just like large banks, credit unions, and other financial institutions already supervised by the CFPB. The CFPB estimates that the most widely used apps covered by the rule collectively process over 13 billion consumer payment transactions annually.

The final rule will enable to the CFPB to supervise companies in key areas including:

  • Privacy and Surveillance: Large technology companies are collecting vast quantities of data about an individual’s transactions. Federal law allows consumers to opt-out of certain data collection and sharing practices, and also prohibits misrepresentations about data protection practices.
  • Errors and Fraud: Under longstanding federal law, consumers have the right to dispute transactions that are incorrect or fraudulent, and financial institutions must take steps to look into them. The CFPB is particularly concerned about how digital payment apps can be used to defraud older adults and active duty servicemembers. Some popular payment apps appear to design their systems to shift disputes to banks, credit unions, and credit card companies, rather than managing them on their own.
  • Debanking: Given the volume of payments consumers make through many popular payment apps, consumers can face serious harms when they lose access to their app without notice or when their ability to make or receive payments is disrupted. Consumers have reported concerns to the CFPB about disruptions to their lives due to closures or freezes.

While the CFPB has always had enforcement authority over these companies, today's rule gives the CFPB the authority to conduct proactive examinations to ensure companies are complying with the law in these and other areas.

In the final rule, the CFPB made several significant changes from its initial proposal. The transaction threshold determining which companies require supervision is now substantially higher, at 50 million annual transactions. Given the evolving market for digital currencies, the CFPB also limited the rule's scope to count only transactions conducted in U.S. dollars. The rule, which amends 12 C.F.R. part 1090, will be effective 30 days after publication in the Federal Register.

11/21/2024

FDIC updates Risk Manual of Exam Policies

The FDIC has made its November 2024 updates to its Risk Management Manual of Examination Policies (RMS Manual). The Manual provides FDIC examiners information relating to examination activities and supervisory practices. The FDIC conducts examinations at financial institutions to ensure public confidence in the banking system and to protect the Deposit Insurance Fund. The Manual promotes consistency in examination activities, which center on evaluating an institution’s capital, assets, management, earnings, liquidity, sensitivity to market risk, and adherence to laws and regulations.

This month's updates are found in Section 22.1 — Examination Documentation Modules. The FDIC has added 25 Reference ED Modules to this section.

11/20/2024

OFAC imposes $1.1M penalty on individual for Iranian sanctions violations

OFAC has issued a Penalty Notice imposing a $1,104,408 penalty on a natural U.S. person for 75 violations of OFAC sanctions on Iran valued at approximately $561,802.

Between 2019 and 2022, the individual executed a plan to purchase, renovate, and operate a hotel in Iran. In furtherance of this scheme, this individual used foreign money services businesses in Iran and Canada to evade U.S. sanctions, while aware at all times of U.S. sanctions on Iran. The penalty amount reflects OFAC’s determination that the violations were egregious and were not voluntarily self-disclosed.

11/20/2024

OFAC targets opioid traffickers and key Hamas leaders and financiers

Yesterday, the Treasury Department reported that OFAC sanctioned a network of nine Mexican nationals involved in fentanyl, heroin, and other deadly drug trafficking and money laundering. Individuals designated in this network also engage in human smuggling in furtherance of their drug trafficking activities. Additionally, as members of the Cartel Jalisco Nueva Generacion (CJNG), some of the individuals sanctioned today played a prominent role in the early stages of the U.S. opioid crisis, a leading factor driving the United States’ modern fentanyl crisis. CJNG is a violent Mexico-based drug trafficking organization responsible for a significant proportion of fentanyl and other deadly drugs trafficked into the United States.

Treasury also reported that OFAC designated six senior Hamas officials, including the terrorist group’s representatives abroad, a senior member of the Hamas military wing, the Izz Al-Din Al-Qassam Brigades, as well as individuals involved in supporting the terrorist group’s fundraising efforts and weapons smuggling into Gaza.

For the names and identification information of the designated individuals, see yesterday's BankersOnline OFAC Update.

11/20/2024

Fed lowers rates in Regs A and D after FOMC meeting

The Federal Reserve Board has published in the today's Federal Register amendments to Regulations A (Extensions of Credit by Federal Reserve Banks) and D (Reserve Requirements of Depository Institutions) following its votes of last week to reduce interest rates by one-quarter of one percent (25 basis points). Each of these amendments is effective on publication, with applicability as of November 8, 2024.

The Board also published amendments to Regulation D this morning to reflect the annual indexing of the reserve requirement exemption amount and the low reserve tranche for 2025. The annual indexation of these amounts is required notwithstanding the Board’s action in March 2020 of setting all reserve requirement ratios to zero. The Board is amending Regulation D to set the reserve requirement exemption amount at $37.8 million (increased from $36.1 million in 2024) and the amount of the low reserve tranche at $645.8 million (increased from $644.0 million in 2024). These changes become effective on January 1, 2025.

Each of the amendments has been posted to the BankersOnline Regulations pages.

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