WASHINGTON — On August 7, President Donald J. Trump signed an Executive Order intended to prevent financial institutions from refusing or closing accounts for lawful businesses or individuals based on “reputational risk,” political or religious beliefs, or other non-illegal activity. The order directs federal banking regulators to remove “reputational risk” from examination materials, review past account closures for bias, and require remediation where appropriate. It also instructs the Small Business Administration to work with lenders on reinstating customers who were wrongly removed and asks the Treasury Department to propose a coordinated approach to address politicized or unlawful debanking.
Relevance to adult creators and studios
Adult performers and studios have reported account closures by banks and payment processors despite operating legally. Industry groups, including the Free Speech Coalition (FSC), have advocated for clearer access-to-banking rules.
Near-term effects
- Agencies must revise guidance; until new guidance is issued, current bank policies remain in effect.
- Institutions are expected to reassess prior closures. Affected customers should keep records of past correspondence.
- Agencies may take action against discriminatory practices, subject to how the order is implemented.