Tag Archives: Margaret E. Tahyar

Amid Storm of Controversy, SEC Adopts Final Climate Disclosure Rules

by Stephen A. Byeff, Ning Chiu, Joseph A. Hall, Margaret E. Tahyar, Ida Araya-Brumskine, Loyti Cheng, Michael Comstock, and David A. Zilberberg

photos of authors

Top from left to right: Stephen A. Byeff, Ning Chiu, Joseph A. Hall, Margaret E. Tahyar.
Bottom left to right: Ida Araya-Brumskine, Loyti Cheng, Michael Comstock, and David A. Zilberberg. (Photos courtesy of Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP).

Changes from the proposal include elimination of Scope 3 disclosures, scaled back attestation requirements, additional materiality qualifiers and narrower financial statement triggers. Given the lack of explicit congressional authorization for this new sweeping disclosure regime, its political sensitivity, complexity, cost and the substantial challenges already underway in federal courts, we anticipate rapid developments and possibly confusing stops and starts to unfold over the coming weeks.

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Key Takeaways from Interagency Guidance on Banks’ Risk-Management of Fintech Relationships

by Margaret E. Tahyar and Ledina Gocaj

Photos of the authors

Left to right: Margaret E. Tahyar and Ledina Gocaj (Photos courtesy of Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP)

On June 6, 2023, the Federal Reserve, FDIC and OCC (the Agencies) released final interagency guidance on banking organizations’ management of risks associated with third-party relationships.  Davis Polk’s memo on the guidance is linked here.  Our key takeaways:

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NY Attorney General Seeks Broad Authority Over Digital Assets

by Luigi L. De Ghenghi, Boaz B. Goldwater, Randall D. Guynn, Joseph A. Hall, Justin Levine, Daniel E. NewmanDavid L. Portilla, Gabriel D. Rosenberg, Margaret E. Tahyar, and Zachary J. Zweihorn

Photos of the authors

From top left to right: Luigi L. De Ghenghi, Boaz B. Goldwater, Randall D. Guynn, Joseph A. Hall, and Justin Levine.
From bottom left to right: Daniel E. Newman, David L. Portilla, Gabriel D. Rosenberg, Margaret E. Tahyar, and Zachary J. Zweihorn. (photos courtesy of Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP)

The NY Attorney General is seeking legislation that would significantly expand the state’s reach over digital assets and require wholesale changes to the operation of digital asset businesses that choose to remain in New York.

Letitia James, the Attorney General of the State of New York (NYAG), released a proposed bill that—if taken up by the state legislature and enacted—would create the most comprehensive and restrictive digital asset regulatory regime in the United States.

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Federal Reserve and FDIC Reports—Next Steps

Editor’s Note: The NYU School of Law Program on Corporate Compliance and Enforcement (PCCE) is watching the recent banking crisis and failures of Silicon Valley Bank, Signature Bank, and, most recently, First Republic Bank.  PCCE is looking to publish additional posts in this area and those interested should contact joseph.facciponti@nyu.edu.

by Dana Seesel Bayersdorfer, Jung Eun Choi, Luigi L. De Ghenghi, Ledina Gocaj, Randall D. Guynn, Eric McLaughlin, Daniel E. Newman, David L. Portilla, Gabriel D. Rosenberg, and Margaret E. Tahyar

Photos of the authors

From top left to right: Dana Seesel Bayersdorfer, Jung Eun Choi, Luigi L. De Ghenghi, Ledina Gocaj, and Randall D. Guynn.
From bottom left to right: Eric McLaughlin, Daniel E. Newman, David L. Portilla, Gabriel D. Rosenberg, and Margaret E. Tahyar. (photos courtesy of Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP)

The Federal Reserve and the FDIC reports on their supervision of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank provide insight into potential upcoming shifts in regulatory and supervisory focus.

The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Federal Reserve or Board) released the results of its review of the supervision and regulation of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB), which was led by Vice Chair for Supervision Michael S. Barr (the Board Report),[1] and the FDIC released the results of its review of the supervision of Signature Bank,[2] which was led by FDIC Chief Risk Officer E. Marshall Gentry (the FDIC Report).[3]

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NY DFS’ Virtual Currency Guidance for Banking Organizations

by Luigi L. De Ghenghi, Boaz B. Goldwater, Randall D. Guynn, Joseph A. Hall, Justin Levine, Eric McLaughlin, Daniel E. Newman, Gabriel D. Rosenberg, Margaret E. Tahyar, and Zachary J. Zweihorn

The New York Department of Financial Services (DFS) has released guidance that expands the scope of virtual currency activity for which New York banking organizations need prior approval.

The DFS has released guidance clarifying both the scope of and application process for virtual currency-related activities by NY banking organizations (the Guidance). The Guidance expresses the DFS’ expectation that all Covered Institutions[1]—New York-chartered banks and trust companies and foreign bank branches and agencies in New York—seek the DFS’ approval before engaging in any new or additional virtual currency-related activity.[2] The BitLicense regulations have always been clear that Covered Institutions that obtain approval from the DFS before engaging in virtual currency business activity[3] do not need to obtain a BitLicense from the DFS.[5] But the Guidance requires a Covered Institution to obtain approval before engaging in virtual currency-related activity, which includes but is not limited to virtual currency business activity. The Guidance, therefore, expands the scope of activities for which Covered Institutions must seek prior approval.

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Bank Relationships with Fintechs

by Jai R. Massari, Eric McLaughlinGabriel D. RosenbergMargaret E. Tahyar, Zachary J. Zweihorn, Adam Greene, and Dana E. Seesel

Federal banking regulators continue to signal their attention to banks’ relationships with third parties, and particularly with fintechs. We think that these developments should be of interest to larger banking organizations as well.

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10 Key Takeaways from the Federal Reserve’s Final Rule on CSI and FOIA

by Luigi L. De Ghenghi, Randall D. GuynnJai R. Massari, Margaret E. Tahyar, Eric McLaughlin, Daniel E. Newman, and Eric B. Lewin 

The Federal Reserve’s recent updates to its regulations on confidential supervisory information (CSI) and availability of information under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)[1] include several meaningful modifications to adapt these rules for the digital age of emails, data rooms and slide decks and the modern organizational structure and operations of banking organizations.  

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SEC Office of Compliance Inspections and Examinations (OCIE) Issues Observations on Cybersecurity and Resiliency Practices

by Greg D. Andres, Robert A. Cohen, Neil H. MacBride, Annette L. Nazareth, Margaret E. Tahyar, Leor Landa, Michael S. Hong, Matthew J. Bacal, Daniel F. Forester, and Matthew A. Kelly

The SEC Office of Compliance Inspections and Examinations (OCIE) recently published observations (PDF: 854 KB) related to cybersecurity and operational resiliency practices observed in its examinations. OCIE reiterated its continued focus on cybersecurity issues, citing eight risk alerts related to cybersecurity it has published over the last few years.[1] OCIE conducts examinations for compliance with Regulation S-P and S-ID, which apply to broker-dealers and investment advisers, and Regulation SCI, which applies to exchanges and other SCI entities. The publication provides important guidance to regulated entities about the likely subjects of SEC exams, the expectations of its examiners, and the subjects of potential enforcement referrals. Continue reading

SCOTUS Expands Scope of FOIA Trade Secrets and Commercial Information Exemption

by Michael S. Flynn, Randall D. Guynn, Michael Kaplan, Neil H. MacBride, Paul J. Nathanson, Annette L. Nazareth, Margaret E. Tahyar, and Eric B. Lewin

The Supreme Court has updated an important Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”) exemption for the digital age.  In Food Marketing Institute v. Argus Leader Media (PDF: 125 KB), the Supreme Court last week significantly expanded the scope of FOIA Exemption 4.  FOIA Exemption 4 is the exemption most commonly claimed by private-sector entities when seeking to protect competitively sensitive information that must be disclosed to a federal agency.  It shields from disclosure “trade secrets and commercial or financial information obtained from a person and privileged or confidential.”[1]  Beginning with a D.C. Circuit decision in 1974, National Parks & Conservation Ass’n v. Morton, 498 F.2d 765 (D.C. Cir. 1974), courts have interpreted FOIA Exemption 4 narrowly.  For commercial or financial information to be “confidential,” a number of federal courts of appeals have required a showing of “substantial competitive harm” from disclosure.  Proving “substantial competitive harm” has proven difficult in practice, and, in this digital age, there is an increasing awareness that information and data are valuable.  The majority opinion in Food Marketing, written by Justice Gorsuch, squarely repudiated the “substantial competitive harm” test in favor of a less difficult standard, thereby broadening Exemption 4.

It is significant that the justices were unanimous in rejecting the “substantial competitive harm” test.  They disagreed about whether harm has any role to play in Exemption 4.  In an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part, Justice Breyer explained that he “would clarify that a private harm need not be ‘substantial’ so long as it is genuine.”[2]  In contrast, the majority wouldn’t apply a harm test at all, arguing that such a test is not supported by the statute.  Instead, the majority explained its test as follows: Continue reading