A payment processor issuing a stablecoin backed by reserves held at an OCC-chartered national trust bank asked whether its stablecoin qualifies as a 'payment stablecoin' under the current CFTC digital asset collateral framework — covering both the original December 2025 package and subsequent updates — and whether futures commission merchants can accept it as customer margin collateral.
The model produced a specific reissuance date — "February 6, 2026" — that has no basis in the regulator's record; the date appears to be fabricated from inference rather than retrieved from a primary source. The model also failed to surface OCC Interpretive Letter 1183 as the specific regulatory instrument anchoring national trust bank eligibility — the detail that determines whether a particular issuer actually qualifies — defaulting instead to a structural description of the amendment that omits the operative cross-reference.
The fabricated reissuance date implicates the training corpus's coverage of this instrument's amendment cycle: the model had enough information to describe the amendment's structural effect but not enough to retrieve the actual date, producing a plausible confabulation instead of a retrieval failure. The omission of OCC Interpretive Letter 1183 as the eligibility hook implicates the retrieval stack's handling of cross-document dependencies — the model resolved the 'what changed' question without following the cross-reference to 'why this charter type qualifies,' a gap in how the RAG layer traverses inter-document citations.
A payment processor issues a stablecoin backed by reserves at an OCC-chartered national trust bank. Which CFTC staff letter is operative for FCM margin acceptance of payment stablecoins, what revision to the stablecoin issuer definition did that letter introduce, and what specific regulatory instrument provides the eligibility hook for national trust bank issuers?
The model described the amendment's effect accurately at a structural level but omitted the specific secondary instrument — OCC Interpretive Letter 1183 — that the regulator named as the operative eligibility hook. The response answers the "what changed" question while leaving the "why does this charter type qualify" question unresolved, which is precisely what a practitioner needs to determine whether a particular issuer falls within the definition.
The elision of OCC Interpretive Letter 1183 as the national trust bank eligibility hook points to a gap in how the retrieval layer handles cross-document dependencies for recent regulatory instruments. The model answered the structural question (what changed in the definition) while dropping the operationally critical cross-reference (what anchors the new category's eligibility) — a failure mode where the RAG layer retrieves summary-level content but does not follow the citation chain to the specific secondary instrument.
A lawyer advising a stablecoin issuer on whether its product qualifies as acceptable FCM margin collateral under Staff Letter 26-05 receives an AI memo that correctly identifies the national trust bank amendment but omits OCC Interpretive Letter 1183 — the cross-reference that grounds national trust bank eligibility in federal interpretive authority. The client's eligibility analysis is built on an incomplete legal chain.
If the issuer proceeds to market its stablecoin to FCMs as qualifying collateral without that anchor in the opinion, the lawyer's work product cannot withstand regulatory scrutiny or counterparty due diligence, and the resulting PI exposure attaches at the moment the advice is delivered.
Each finding has a stable Citation ID (RLB-F-… for aggregated case-study findings, RLB-H-… for raw per-model hallucinations) — like a DOI, the ID always resolves to the canonical finding even if URLs change.
RegLeg Specialist Panel, Finding#1 — Payment stablecoin eligibility: missing OCC 1183 cross-reference [RLB-F-US-CFTC-DIGITAL-ASSET-COLLATERAL-TOKENIZED-ASSETS-STAFF-GUIDANCE-2025-Q005], RegLegBrief AI Hallucination Research (June 04, 2026), https://reglegbrief.com/regulators/j3/us/cftc/digital-asset-collateral-tokenized-assets-staff-guidance-2025/practitioners/lawyers/finding/US-CFTC-US-001-DIGITAL-ASSET-COLLATERAL-TOKENIZED-ASSETS-STAFF-GUIDANCE-2025-v1-005/.
RegLeg Specialist Panel (2026). "Finding#1 — Payment stablecoin eligibility: missing OCC 1183 cross-reference — Practitioners — Lawyers." Citation ID: RLB-F-US-CFTC-DIGITAL-ASSET-COLLATERAL-TOKENIZED-ASSETS-STAFF-GUIDANCE-2025-Q005. RegLegBrief AI Hallucination Research, published 2026-06-04. https://reglegbrief.com/regulators/j3/us/cftc/digital-asset-collateral-tokenized-assets-staff-guidance-2025/practitioners/lawyers/finding/US-CFTC-US-001-DIGITAL-ASSET-COLLATERAL-TOKENIZED-ASSETS-STAFF-GUIDANCE-2025-v1-005/
RegLeg Specialist Panel. (2026). Finding#1 — Payment stablecoin eligibility: missing OCC 1183 cross-reference [Hallucination finding RLB-F-US-CFTC-DIGITAL-ASSET-COLLATERAL-TOKENIZED-ASSETS-STAFF-GUIDANCE-2025-Q005]. RegLegBrief AI Hallucination Research. https://reglegbrief.com/regulators/j3/us/cftc/digital-asset-collateral-tokenized-assets-staff-guidance-2025/practitioners/lawyers/finding/US-CFTC-US-001-DIGITAL-ASSET-COLLATERAL-TOKENIZED-ASSETS-STAFF-GUIDANCE-2025-v1-005/
@misc{reglegbrief_RLB_F_US_CFTC_DIGITAL_ASSET_COLLATERAL_TOKENIZED_ASSETS_STAFF_GUIDANCE_2025_Q005,
author = {RegLeg Specialist Panel},
title = {Finding#1 — Payment stablecoin eligibility: missing OCC 1183 cross-reference},
year = {2026},
publisher = {RegLegBrief AI Hallucination Research},
note = {Hallucination finding Citation ID: RLB-F-US-CFTC-DIGITAL-ASSET-COLLATERAL-TOKENIZED-ASSETS-STAFF-GUIDANCE-2025-Q005},
url = {https://reglegbrief.com/regulators/j3/us/cftc/digital-asset-collateral-tokenized-assets-staff-guidance-2025/practitioners/lawyers/finding/US-CFTC-US-001-DIGITAL-ASSET-COLLATERAL-TOKENIZED-ASSETS-STAFF-GUIDANCE-2025-v1-005/}
}