All in Regulatory Update

On August 7, 2025, the FTC published its latest Consumer Protection Data Spotlight, which shows a more than four-fold increase since 2020 in reports from older adults who say they lost $10,000 or more to scammers who impersonate trusted government agencies or businesses. These scams generally involve someone contacting consumers to alert them to a fake and urgent problem and then proceeding to try to persuade them to transfer their money to “keep it safe” or for some other false reason. 

On August 6, 2025, FinCEN published a Readout regarding its latest FinCEN Exchange held on July 15 where it convened Treasury components, law enforcement agencies, financial institutions, regulatory technology companies, and trade groups to share insights on driving innovation in the digital assets ecosystem while protecting consumers from emerging fraud and scam threats. The FinCEN Exchange event, titled “Advancing Digital Assets Innovation While Safeguarding Consumers Against Fraud and Scam Risks,” focused on industry trends, fraud prevention, law enforcement's role in combating financial crimes related to digital assets, and compliance best practices.

On July 31, 2025, the Federal Reserve Board joined other federal financial institution regulatory agencies, as well as FinCEN, in providing banks the flexibility to use an alternative method for collecting certain customer identification information. Specifically, the agencies now permit banks and credit unions to obtain a tax identification number from a third party, rather than directly from the customer.

On July 29, 2025, the PYMNTS reported that the CFPB asked a judge to stay a lawsuit challenging the open banking rule implemented last year by the Bureau’s previous leadership under the Biden administration. On October 22, 2024, the CFPB  issued the Personal Financial Data Rights Final Rule that will give consumers greater rights, privacy, and security over their personal financial data.