The Securities and Exchange Commission’s exam unit is tabbed for a slight funding decrease in the overall federal 2018 budget request released by President Donald Trump Tuesday.

The White House is asking for $341 million for the SEC’s Office of Compliance Inspections and Examinations for Fiscal 2018 which begins October 1 compared to $346 million for the current federal budget year.

Overall, SEC operating spending would remain nearly the same at $1.603 billion.

However, there is $245 million in the budget request for headquarter relocation costs for the agency.

The SEC is expected to sign a lease on a new headquarters in 2018, according to the budget document.

Former Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Mary Jo White first publicly revealed the SEC was seeking a new headquarters and money for the facility in testimony before the House Financial Services Committee in November.

As a sidelight, the favorite SEC unit among Congressional Republicans, the Division of Economic and Risk Analysis, is slated for a small decrease after years of pointed increases, to $69 million from $71 million.

The Department of Labor’s Employee Benefits Security Administration, which oversees the fiduciary rule and other ERISA regulations, would see its budget increased to $188 million from $168 million if the Trump Administration gets its way.

The budget proposal lauded EBSA for continuing efforts to enhance the quality and impact of its investigations and has placed special emphasis on the timely conduct and referral of cases.

There is nothing in the budget’s section on DOL about the fiduciary rule.

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission is seeking $281.5 million for the new year, up $31.5 million from the current one.

Much of the new money is slated for the agency’s fintech initiative designed to determine and implement how the CFTC should leverage fintech innovation to make it a more effective regulator; how fintech can help the CFTC identify rules and regulations that need to be updated for relevance in digital markets, and the role of the Commission in supporting fintech innovation in the markets it regulates, according to a statement from the regulator.