Prohibitions On Market Manipulation and False Information in Subtitle B of the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007, 25614-25624 [E8-10102]
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 89 / Wednesday, May 7, 2008 / Proposed Rules
Subject
The unsafe condition is that failure of the
ADG could lead to loss of several functions
essential for safe flight.
(d) Air Transport Association (ATA) of
America Code 24: Electrical Power.
Actions and Compliance
Reason
(e) The mandatory continuing
airworthiness information (MCAI) states:
Following in-flight test deployments,
several Air-Driven generators (ADGs) failed
to come on-line. Investigation revealed that,
as a result of a wiring anomaly that had not
been detected during ADG manufacture, a
short circuit was possible between certain
internal wires and their metallic over-braided
shields, which could result in the ADG not
providing power when deployed. This
directive mandates checking of the ADG and
modification of the ADG internal wiring, if
required. It also prohibits future installation
of unmodified ADGs.
(f) Unless already done, do the following
actions.
(1) For airplanes having serial number (SN)
7305 through 7990 and 8000 through 8083:
Within 12 months after the effective date of
this AD, inspect the SN of the installed ADG.
A review of airplane maintenance records is
acceptable in lieu of this inspection if the
serial number of the ADG can be
conclusively determined from that review.
(i) If the serial number is not listed in
paragraph 1.A of Bombardier Service Bulletin
601R–24–113, Revision A, dated August 11,
2005, no further action is required by this
AD.
(ii) If the serial number is listed in
paragraph 1.A of Bombardier Service Bulletin
601R–24–113, Revision A, dated August 11,
2005, before further flight, inspect the ADG
identification plate and, as applicable, do the
actions of paragraph (f)(1)(ii)(A) or (f)(1)(ii)(B)
of this AD.
(A) If the identification plate is marked
with the symbol ‘‘24–2’’, no further action is
required by this AD.
(B) If the identification plate is not marked
with the symbol ‘‘24–2’’, modify the ADG
wiring in accordance with the
Accomplishment Instructions of the service
bulletin.
(2) For airplanes having SN 7305 through
7990 and 8000 and subsequent: As of the
effective date of this AD, no ADG as
described in Table 1 of this AD may be
installed on any airplane, unless the
identification plate of the ADG is identified
with the symbol ‘‘24–2’’ (refer to Hamilton
Sundstrand Service Bulletin ERPS10AG–24–
2 for further information).
TABLE 1.—ADG IDENTIFICATION
ADG part No.—
Having ADG serial No.—
604–90800–1
(761339C),
604–90800–17
(761339D), or 604–90800–19 (761339E).
0101 through 0132, 0134 through 0167, 0169 through 0358, 0360 through 0438, 0440 through
0456, 0458 through 0467, 0469, 0471 through 0590, 0592 through 0597, 0599 through
0745, 0747 through 1005, or 1400 through 1439.
(3) Actions done before the effective date
of this AD according to Bombardier Service
Bulletin 601R–24–113, dated April 22, 2004,
are considered acceptable for compliance
with the corresponding actions specified in
this AD, provided the ADG has not been
replaced since those actions were done.
(3) Reporting Requirements: For any
reporting requirement in this AD, under the
provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act,
the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
has approved the information collection
requirements and has assigned OMB Control
Number 2120–0056.
FAA AD Differences
Related Information
(h) Refer to MCAI Canadian Airworthiness
Directive CF–2008–09, dated February 5,
2008, and Bombardier Service Bulletin 601R–
24–113, Revision A, dated August 11, 2005,
for related information.
Note 1: This AD differs from the MCAI
and/or service information as follows: No
differences.
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Other FAA AD Provisions
(g) The following provisions also apply to
this AD:
(1) Alternative Methods of Compliance
(AMOCs): The Manager, New York Aircraft
Certification Office, FAA, has the authority to
approve AMOCs for this AD, if requested
using the procedures found in 14 CFR 39.19.
Send information to ATTN: Fabio Buttitta,
Aerospace Engineer, Systems and Flight Test
Branch, ANE–172, FAA, New York Aircraft
Certification Office, 1600 Stewart Avenue,
Suite 410, Westbury, New York 11590;
telephone (516) 228–7303; fax (516) 794–
5531. Before using any approved AMOC on
any airplane to which the AMOC applies,
notify your appropriate principal inspector
(PI) in the FAA Flight Standards District
Office (FSDO), or lacking a PI, your local
FSDO.
(2) Airworthy Product: For any requirement
in this AD to obtain corrective actions from
a manufacturer or other source, use these
actions if they are FAA-approved. Corrective
actions are considered FAA-approved if they
are approved by the State of Design Authority
(or their delegated agent). You are required
to assure the product is airworthy before it
is returned to service.
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Issued in Renton, Washington, on April 25,
2008.
Ali Bahrami,
Manager, Transport Airplane Directorate,
Aircraft Certification Service.
[FR Doc. E8–10097 Filed 5–6–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
16 CFR Part 317
[Project No. P082900]
RIN 3084-AB12
Prohibitions On Market Manipulation
and False Information in Subtitle B of
the Energy Independence and Security
Act of 2007
Federal Trade Commission.
ACTION: Advance notice of proposed
rulemaking; request for public
comment.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Federal Trade
Commission (FTC or Commission) is
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requesting comment on the manner in
which it should carry out its rulemaking
responsibilities under Section 811 of
Subtitle B of Title VIII of The Energy
Independence and Security Act of 2007
(EISA).
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before June 6, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties are
invited to submit written comments
electronically or in paper form.
Comments should refer to ‘‘Market
Manipulation Rulemaking, P082900’’ to
facilitate the organization of comments.
Comments containing material for
which confidential treatment is
requested must be filed in paper form,
must be clearly labeled ‘‘Confidential,’’
and must comply with Commission
Rule 4.9(c).1
Because paper mail in the
Washington-area, and specifically to the
FTC, is subject to delay due to
heightened security screening, please
consider submitting your comments in
electronic form. Comments filed in
electronic form should be submitted by
using the following weblink: https://
secure.commentworks.com/ftcmarketmanipulationANPR/ (and
1 The comment must be accompanied by an
explicit request for confidential treatment,
including the factual and legal basis for the request,
and must identify the specific portions of the
comment to be withheld from the public record.
The request will be granted or denied by the
Commission’s General Counsel, consistent with
applicable law and the public interest. See
Commission Rule 4.9(c), 16 CFR 4.9(c) (2008).
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following the instructions on the webbased form). To ensure that the
Commission considers an electronic
comment, you must file it on the webbased form at the weblink (https://
secure.commentworks.com/ftcmarketmanipulationANPR/). If this
notice appears at https://
www.regulations.gov, you may also file
an electronic comment through that
Web site. The Commission will consider
all comments that regulations.gov
forwards to it. You may also visit the
FTC website at (https://www.ftc.gov/opa/
index.shtml) to read the Advance Notice
of Proposed Rulemaking and the news
release describing it.
A comment filed in paper form
should include the ‘‘Market
Manipulation Rulemaking, P082900’’
reference both in the text and on the
envelope, and should be mailed to the
following address: Federal Trade
Commission, Market Manipulation
Rulemaking, P.O. Box 2846, Fairfax, VA
22031-0846. This address does not
accept courier or overnight deliveries.
Courier or overnight deliveries should
be delivered to: Federal Trade
Commission/Office of the Secretary,
Room H-135 (Annex G), 600
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington,
DC 20580.
The FTC Act and other laws the
Commission administers permit the
collection of public comments to
consider and use in this proceeding as
appropriate. The Commission will
consider all timely and responsive
public comments that it receives,
whether filed in paper or electronic
form. Comments received will be
available to the public on the FTC
website, to the extent practicable, at
https://www.ftc.gov. As a matter of
discretion, the FTC makes every effort to
remove home contact information for
individuals from the public comments it
receives before placing those comments
on the FTC website. More information,
including routine uses permitted by the
Privacy Act, may be found in the FTC’s
privacy policy, at (https://www.ftc.gov/
ftc/privacy.htm).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: John
H. Seesel, Associate General Counsel for
Energy, Federal Trade Commission,
Market Manipulation Rulemaking, P.O.
Box 2846, Fairfax, VA 22031-0846, (202)
326-3772.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Statutory Framework
Subtitle B of EISA, which became
effective on December 19, 2007,2
2 Pub. L. 110-140, 121 Stat. 1723 (December 19,
2007), Title VIII, Subtitle B, to be codified at 42
U.S.C. 17301-17305.
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includes two substantive sections
respectively entitled ‘‘Prohibition On
Market Manipulation’’ (Section 811) and
‘‘Prohibition On False Information’’
(Section 812). Section 811 prohibits
‘‘any person’’ from directly or indirectly
(1) using or employing ‘‘any
manipulative or deceptive device or
contrivance,’’ (2) ‘‘in connection with
the purchase or sale of crude oil
gasoline or petroleum distillates at
wholesale,’’ (3) that violates a rule or
regulation that the Federal Trade
Commission ‘‘may prescribe as
necessary or appropriate in the public
interest or for the protection of United
States citizens.’’ Section 812 prohibits
‘‘any person’’ from reporting
information that is ‘‘required by law to
be reported’’ — and that is ‘‘related to
the wholesale price of crude oil gasoline
or petroleum distillates’’ — to a Federal
department or agency if the person (1)
‘‘knew, or reasonably should have
known, [that] the information [was]
false or misleading;’’ and (2) intended
such false or misleading information ‘‘to
affect data compiled by the department
or agency for statistical or analytical
purposes with respect to the market for
crude oil, gasoline, or petroleum
distillates.’’
Section 813 provides that Subtitle B
‘‘shall be enforced by the Federal Trade
Commission in the same manner, by the
same means, and with the same
jurisdiction’’ as though ‘‘all applicable
terms’’ of the Federal Trade Commission
Act (FTC Act) were incorporated into
and made a part of Subtitle B.
Consequently, any entity subject to
Commission jurisdiction under the FTC
Act is subject to the Commission’s
enforcement of Subtitle B, and must
comply with Section 812 and any rule
promulgated under Section 811 of
Subtitle B.3 Section 813 further provides
that the violation of any provision of
Subtitle B ‘‘shall be treated as an unfair
or deceptive act or practice proscribed
under a rule issued under section
18(a)(1)(B) of the Federal Trade
Commission Act (15 U.S.C.
3 Section 811 and Section 812 of Subtitle B
expressly cover ‘‘any person.’’ The Administrative
Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. 551(2), defines ‘‘person’’ as
including ‘‘an individual, partnership, corporation,
association, or public or private organization other
than an agency.’’ Similarly, the FTC’s jurisdiction
under the FTC Act covers ‘‘persons, partnerships,
or corporations.’’ 15 U.S.C. 45(a)(2). While the FTC
Act applies broadly, certain entities are wholly or
partly exempt from Commission authority under
that Act. These include banks, savings and loan
institutions, federal credit unions, transportation
and communications common carriers, air carriers,
and livestock firms. 15 U.S.C. 45(a)(2). In addition,
the term ‘‘corporation,’’ as defined in Section 4 of
the FTC Act, does not extend to entities not
organized to carry on business for their own profit
or that of their members. 15 U.S.C. 44.
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25615
57a(a)(1)(B)),’’ even though rules and
regulations that the Commission may
prescribe are to be issued under Subtitle
B.4
The Commission could seek a number
of different types of relief against a
person who violated Subtitle B. In
particular, Section 13(b) of the FTC Act
permits the Commission to file a federal
court civil action seeking a temporary
restraining order or a preliminary
injunction to prevent any ‘‘person,
partnership, or corporation’’ from
violating a rule promulgated under EISA
Section 811 or from violating EISA
Section 812, and to secure a permanent
injunction ‘‘in proper cases.’’ In such a
proceeding, the Commission would also
be able to secure corollary equitable
relief, such as an asset freeze,
disgorgement, and/or the appointment
of a receiver. 15 U.S.C. 53(b). Moreover,
Section 19 of the FTC Act permits the
Commission to file a federal court civil
action in its own name against any
person, partnership, or corporation that
‘‘violates any rule . . . respecting unfair
or deceptive acts or practices . . . ,’’5
and permits the court to grant relief
needed:
to redress injury to consumers or
other persons, partnerships, and
corporations resulting from the rule
violation . . . [including but not
limited to] rescission or reformation
of contracts, the refund of money or
return of property, the payment of
damages, and public notification
respecting the rule violation. . . .6
Furthermore, Section 5(m)(1)(A) of the
FTC Act permits the Commission, by
referral to the Department of Justice, to
file a federal court civil action to recover
civil penalties of up to $11,0007 per
violation from:
any person, partnership, or
corporation which violates any rule
under [the FTC Act] respecting unfair
or deceptive acts or practices . . .
4 See EISA Section 811 (defining acts or practices
that shall be unlawful under ‘‘rules and regulations
as the Federal Trade Commission may prescribe as
necessary or appropriate in the public interest or for
the protection of United States citizens’’). Because
the rulemaking procedures for the issuance of trade
regulation rules are limited to rules promulgated
‘‘under’’ Section 18(a)(1)(B) of the FTC Act (see 15
U.S.C. 57a(a)(1)(B)), the issuance of rules and
regulations under EISA Section 811 is instead
governed by the notice-and-comment requirements
of the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. 553,
and Part 1, Subpart C, of the Commission Rules of
Practice for the adoption of non-Section 18 rules.
See 16 CFR 1.21-1.26.
5 15 U.S.C. 57b(a)(1).
6 15 U.S.C. 57b(b).
7 This amount has been adjusted upward from the
original statutory amount of $10,000 pursuant to the
Federal Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act of
1990, as amended by the Debt Collection
Improvement Act of 1996. 28 U.S.C. 2461.
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 89 / Wednesday, May 7, 2008 / Proposed Rules
with actual knowledge or knowledge
fairly implied on the basis of objective
circumstances that such act is unfair
or deceptive and is prohibited by such
rule.8
Because Section 813 of the EISA
provides that a violation of Subtitle B
shall be treated as a violation of such a
rule, any person that violates Subtitle B
is subject to these civil penalties.
Section 814(a) of Subtitle B further
provides that — ‘‘[i]n addition to any
penalty applicable’’ under the FTC Act
— ‘‘any supplier that violates section
811 or 812 shall be punishable by a civil
penalty of not more than $1,000,000.’’9
Both Section 5(m)(1)(C) of the FTC Act,
15 U.S.C. 45(m)(1)(C), and Section
814(c)(1) of the EISA provide that each
day of a continuing violation shall be
considered a separate violation.
Section 815(a) provides that nothing
in Subtitle B ‘‘limits or affects’’
Commission authority ‘‘to bring an
enforcement action or take any other
measure’’ under the FTC Act or ‘‘any
other provision of law.’’ Section 815(b)
provides that ‘‘[n]othing in [Subtitle B]
shall be construed to modify, impair, or
supersede the operation’’ (1) of any of
the antitrust laws (as defined in Section
1(a) of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 12(a))
or (2) of Section 5 of the FTC Act ‘‘to
the extent that . . . [S]ection 5 applies
to unfair methods of competition.’’
Section 815(c) provides that nothing in
Subtitle B ‘‘preempts any State law.’’
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II. Overview of the Advance Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking
Section 811 applies to violations of
‘‘such rules and regulations as the
Federal Trade Commission may
prescribe as necessary or appropriate in
the public interest or for the protection
of United States citizens.’’ This Advance
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking seeks
public comment from interested parties,
including other federal agencies and the
States, on whether, and if so in what
manner, the Commission should
promulgate a rule pursuant to Section
811 in order to ensure that the rule, on
balance, carries out the objectives of the
8 15 U.S.C. 45(m)(1)(A). Section 16(a)(1) of the
FTC Act requires the Commission to refer such
actions to the United States Attorney General in the
first instance, and permits the Commission to file
such actions in its own name if ‘‘the Attorney
General fails within 45 days after receipt of such
notification to commence . . . such action.’’ 15
U.S.C. 56(a)(1).
9 It is not clear whether the use of the term
‘‘supplier’’ in Section 814 is intended to limit use
of the remedy available under that section to
violations committed by suppliers through sales of
crude oil, gasoline, or petroleum distillates, or was
intended to extend to violations committed by
suppliers through purchases of such products as
well. Commenters are encouraged to discuss this
point.
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statute by prohibiting practices that
constitute manipulative or deceptive
devices or contrivances to the benefit of
the public interest.10
The Commission has devoted
substantial resources to enforcing the
antitrust laws in various parts of the
petroleum industry, including in the
refining and distribution of crude oil,
gasoline, and petroleum distillates. The
Commission has also expended
significant research efforts in this same
space. As a consequence, the
Commission and its staff have
experience with many parts of the
petroleum industry. The Commission
will draw upon this foundation in
conducting this Rulemaking proceeding.
The Commission’s consumer
protection efforts provide a second
important foundation for conducting
this Rulemaking proceeding, and in
particular for determining the extent to
which the law of unfairness and
deception can inform the Commission’s
interpretation of a ‘‘manipulative or
deceptive device or contrivance.’’11 In
interpreting Section 5 of the FTC Act,
the Commission has determined that a
representation, omission, or practice is
deceptive if (1) it is likely to mislead
consumers acting reasonably under the
circumstances; and (2) it is material,
that is, likely to affect consumers’
conduct or decisions with respect to the
product at issue.12 Section 5 also
provides that an act or practice is unfair
if the injury to consumers it causes or
is likely to cause (1) is substantial; (2)
is not outweighed by countervailing
benefits to consumers or to competition;
and (3) is not reasonably avoidable by
consumers themselves.13
10 The prohibitions embodied in Section 812 of
EISA became effective with enactment of EISA on
December 19, 2007. These prohibitions therefore
already apply to any person subject to the
jurisdiction granted to the Commission by the FTC
Act, and the Commission may seek legal and
equitable relief to remedy violations of Section 812
in the manner described above, through civil
actions in federal court.
11 The term ‘‘manipulative or deceptive’’ arguably
can be read as a single adjective. That is the
approach the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission followed in promulgating the Final
Rule discussed infra, in reliance on the fact that,
with respect to Securities Rule 10b-5 cases, the
Supreme Court had ‘‘concluded that both
[manipulative and deceptive] require
‘misrepresentation.’’’ Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, 18 CFR Part 1c: Prohibition of Energy
Market Manipulation: Final Rule, 71 FR 4244, 4253
n. 107 (January 26, 2006). By contrast, however, the
FTC has for many years vigorously enforced the
separate prohibition of ‘‘deceptive acts or practices’’
embodied in Section 5 of the FTC Act, 15 U.S.C.
45.
12 See generally Federal Trade Commission
Policy Statement on Deception, appended to
Cliffdale Assocs., 103 F.T.C. 110, 174-83 (1984).
13 15 U.S.C. 45(n); see generally Federal Trade
Commission Policy Statement on Unfairness,
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As a consequence of the foregoing law
enforcement, research, and related
efforts — through both its competition
mission and its consumer protection
mission — the Commission and its staff
have gained an understanding of the
domestic petroleum industry; of how
participants in the industry compete; of
how prices of gasoline and other refined
petroleum products are determined; and
of how particular practices may, in
specific circumstances, constitute either
unfair methods of competition or unfair
or deceptive acts or practices, in
violation of Section 5 of the FTC Act.
The Commission expects to use this
experience and understanding to
effectuate the objectives of Subtitle B.
Through this Advance Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking, the Commission
expects to secure new and valuable
information concerning how best to
achieve those objectives. Commenters
are encouraged to review this document
in its entirety and offer comments
concerning any of the points or
questions raised, as well as any other
relevant issue.
III. The Antecedents of Section 811 and
Relevant Legal Precedent
The manner in which the courts and
regulatory agencies have interpreted
provisions similar to those comprising
Section 811 is relevant both to
formulating a rule under Section 811
and to determining how the resultant
formulation will fare in the courts.
Public comment will provide critical
information in that regard. While there
are substantial similarities among prior
interpretations and their contexts, there
are substantial differences as well. In
order to provide a framework within
which commenters can develop and
provide their own assessments for
purposes of considering a rule under
Section 811, we offer a brief discussion
of the statutory and regulatory
antecedents of Section 811, and court
interpretations of similar statutes and
regulations. The Commission
encourages comment on these or any
other aspects of precedent that may help
to guide the Commission’s approach in
this Rulemaking.
Establishing a violation of Section 811
first requires a showing that a person14
directly or indirectly used or employed
a ‘‘manipulative or deceptive device or
contrivance.’’ In determining the
contours of this requirement —
appended to International Harvester, Co., 104
F.T.C. 949, 1070-76 (1984). Neither deception nor
unfairness requires a showing of scienter.
14 For the reasons discussed supra, the term
‘‘person’’ is used in this document to refer to
‘‘person, partnership, or corporation,’’ consistent
with the jurisdictional reach of the FTC Act.
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 89 / Wednesday, May 7, 2008 / Proposed Rules
including determining the state of mind
that is required — commenters are
encouraged to address the extent to
which the Commission can or should
rely on four separate sets of existing
statutory and regulatory constructs,
discussed below.
or contrivance’’ in contravention of
[Securities and Exchange] Commission
rules. The words ‘‘manipulative or
deceptive’’ used in conjunction with
‘‘device or contrivance’’ strongly suggest
that [Section] 10(b) was intended to
proscribe knowing or intentional
misconduct.18
A. The Securities Laws
The phrase ‘‘manipulative or
deceptive device or contrivance’’
derives from the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 (Exchange Act). Section
10(b) of that statute prohibits the use or
employment of:
any manipulative or deceptive device
or contrivance in contravention of
such rules as the [Securities and
Exchange] Commission may prescribe
as necessary or appropriate in the
public interest or for the protection of
investors.15
The Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) relied on Section
10(b) of the Exchange Act to promulgate
Rule 10b-5, which makes it unlawful for
any person:
Moreover, the Court found that use of
the terms ‘‘[t]o use or employ’’
supported ‘‘the view that Congress did
not intend [Section] 10(b) to embrace
negligent conduct.’’19 The Court
concluded that ‘‘the language of
[Section] 10(b) . . . clearly connotes
intentional misconduct. . . .’’20 Soon
thereafter, the Court determined that the
SEC, as well as private plaintiffs, must:
(a) To employ any device, scheme, or
artifice to defraud;
(b) To make any untrue statement of a
material fact or to omit to state a material
fact necessary in order to make the
statements made, in the light of the
circumstances under which they were
made, not misleading . . .; or
(c) To engage in any act, practice, or
course of business which operates or
would operate as a fraud or deceit upon
any person. . . .
in connection with the purchase or
sale of any security.16
In 1976, the Supreme Court
determined that a private cause of
action for damages would not lie under
Section 10(b) or Rule 10b-5 without
proof that the defendant possessed
scienter; that is, the ‘‘intent to deceive,
manipulate, or defraud.’’17 In particular,
the Court noted:
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Section 10(b) makes unlawful the use or
employment of ‘‘any manipulative device
15 15 U.S.C. 78j(b) (emphasis added). Section 9
of the Exchange Act more specifically addresses
‘‘Manipulation of security prices,’’ and prohibits or
limits the use of certain practices with respect to
‘‘[t]ransactions relating to purchase or sale of
security;’’ ‘‘[t]ransactions relating to puts, calls,
straddles, or options;’’ ‘‘[e]ndorsement or guarantee
of puts, calls, straddles, or options;’’ and ‘‘practices
that affect market volatility.’’ 15 U.S.C.
78i(a),(b),(c),(h).
16 17 CFR 240.10b-5(a)-(c) (2008). In addition, the
SEC’s rules under Section 10(b) prohibit a number
of specific practices in specific circumstances. See
17 CFR 240.10b-1 through 240.10b-18.
17 Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder, 425 U.S. 185, 193
(1976); accord, e.g., Tellabs, Inc. v. Makor Issues &
Rights, Ltd., 551 U.S. ___ (June 21, 2007), slip op.
at 1-2, 7; In re Worlds of Wonder Securities
Litigation, 35 F.3d 1407, 1424 (9th Cir. 1994), cert.
denied, 116 S. Ct. 185 (1995); Loveridge v.
Dreagoux, 678 F.2d 870, 875 (10th Cir. 1982).
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establish scienter as an element of a civil
enforcement action to enjoin violations of
. . . [Section] 10(b) of the [Securities
Exchange Act of 1934], and Rule 10b-5
promulgated under that section of the 1934
Act.21
While the Supreme Court has reserved
the question
whether reckless behavior is sufficient for
civil liability under Section 10(b) and Rule
10b-5, . . . [e]very Court of Appeals that
has considered the issue has held that a
plaintiff may meet the scienter requirement
by showing that the defendant acted
intentionally or recklessly, though the
Circuits differ on the degree of recklessness
required.22
More generally, the Court of Appeals for
the Second Circuit has elaborated that,
in order to establish a Rule 10b-5
violation, the SEC must establish that
the defendant:
(1) [m]ade a material misrepresentation or
a material omission as to which he had a
duty to speak, or used a fraudulent device;
18 Ernst & Ernst, 425 U.S. at 197. The Court
concluded that the terms ‘‘manipulative,’’ ‘‘device,’’
and ‘‘contrivance’’ . . . make unmistakable a
congressional intent to proscribe a type of conduct
quite different from negligence. Use of the word
‘‘manipulative’’ is especially significant. It is and
was virtually a term of art when used in connection
with securities markets. It connotes intentional or
willful conduct designed to deceive or defraud
investors by controlling or artificially affecting the
price of securities.
Id. at 199 (internal citations omitted). See also
Schreiber v. Burlington Northern, Inc., 472 U.S. 1,
6-7 (1985); Santa Fe Industries, Inc. v. Green, 430
U.S. 462, 476 (1977) (the term ‘‘manipulation’’
‘‘refers generally to practices, such as wash sales,
matched orders, or rigged prices, that are intended
to mislead investors by artificially affecting market
activity.’’).
19 Id. at 199 n. 20.
20 Id. at 201, citing United States v. Oregon, 366
U.S. 643, 648 (1961); Packard Motor Car Co. v.
NLRB, 330 U.S. 485, 492 (1947); accord, e.g., Aaron
v. Securities and Exchange Commission, 446 U.S.
680, 690 (1980).
21 Aaron v. SEC, 446 U.S. at 701-702.
22 Tellabs, Inc. v. Makor Issues & Rights, Ltd., 551
U.S. ___ (June 21, 2007), slip op. at 7 n. 3, citing
Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder, 425 U.S. at 194 n. 12;
Ottman v. Hanger Orthopedic Group, Inc., 353 F.3d
338, 343 (collecting Court of Appeals cases).
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(2) with scienter; and (3) in connection
with the purchase or sale of securities.23
B. The Natural Gas Act and the Federal
Power Act
The Energy Policy Act of 2005
amended the Natural Gas Act and the
Federal Power Act, respectively, to
prohibit the same type of conduct that
Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act
targets — that is, the use or employment
of ‘‘any manipulative or deceptive
device or contrivance (as those terms are
used in [Section 10(b) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934] . . . ).’’24 In
2006, the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission (FERC) relied on those
prohibitions to promulgate two rules —
respectively prohibiting natural gas
market manipulation and electric energy
market manipulation (collectively
referred to as the Final Rule). The FERC
Final Rule is identical in many respects
to SEC Rule 10b-5.25 FERC also
determined to interpret the Final Rule
in a manner ‘‘consistent with analogous
SEC precedent that is appropriate under
the circumstances.’’26 In particular,
FERC included a scienter requirement,
noting that ‘‘[t]he final rule is not
intended to regulate negligent practices
or corporate mismanagement, but rather
to deter or punish fraud in wholesale
energy markets,’’27 and that ‘‘there can
be no violation of the final rule, or any
of its sections, absent a showing of the
requisite scienter.’’28 FERC determined
that a showing of recklessness would be
sufficient to satisfy the scienter
requirement under the FERC Final
Rule.29 FERC expressly declined to
incorporate ‘‘a specific intent standard’’
into the Final Rule.30
FERC relied on the foregoing analysis
to determine that it will take action
pursuant to the Final Rule in cases
where an entity:
(1) [u]ses a fraudulent device, scheme or
artifice, or makes a material
misrepresentation or a material omission as
to which there is a duty to speak under a
Commission-filed tariff, Commission order,
23 SEC v. Monarch Funding Corp., 192 F.3d 295,
308 (2d Cir. 1999).
24 Compare Section 4A of the Natural Gas Act,
15 U.S.C. 717c-1, with Section 222 of the Federal
Power Act, 16 U.S.C. 824v.
25 18 CFR 1c.1, 1c.2 (2008).
26 Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 18
CFR Part 1c: Prohibition of Energy Market
Manipulation: Final Rule, 71 FR 4244, 4246
(January 26, 2006).
27 Id. at 4246.
28 Id. at 4252; accord, id. at 4253, citing Ernst &
Ernst v. Hochfelder, 425 U.S. at 197; Aaron v. SEC,
446 U.S. at 690.
29 Id. at 4253-54 and n. 109 (‘‘Courts of appeal
are in general agreement that recklessness in some
form satisfies the scienter requirement of SEC Rule
10b-5.’’) (citations omitted).
30 Id. at 4253.
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rule or regulation, or engages in any act,
practice, or course of business that operates
or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon
any entity; (2) with the requisite scienter;
(3) in connection with the purchase or sale
of natural gas or electric energy or
transportation of natural gas or
transmission of electric energy subject to
the jurisdiction of the Commission.31
FERC defined fraud ‘‘generally . . . to
include any action, transaction, or
conspiracy for the purpose of impairing,
obstructing, or defeating a wellfunctioning market.’’32 FERC also
provided examples of practices that
would violate the Final Rule because
the practices constituted ‘‘manipulative
or deceptive devices or contrivances.’’
FERC’s cited practices were already
prohibited by its Market Behavior Rule
2 (since-repealed), but included in
particular:
wash trades, transactions predicated on
submitting false information, transactions
creating and relieving artificial congestion,
and collusion for the purpose of market
manipulation.33
FERC also determined to incorporate the
‘‘safe harbor presumptions of
compliance and affirmative defenses’’
available under its Market Behavior
Rules into its enforcement of the Final
Rule.34 FERC rejected the argument
registered by some commenters that its
rule was ‘‘vague and overly broad,’’
noting that it was modeled after SEC
Rule 10b-5, and that the courts have
determined that the latter rule is neither
vague nor overly broad.35
FERC’s statute specifically limited its
application to actions ‘‘in connection
with a jurisdictional transaction.’’
Relying on cases addressing Section
10(b) of the SEC, in its Final Rule, FERC
defined ‘‘in connection with’’ to mean
that ‘‘in committing fraud, the entity
must have intended to affect, or have
acted recklessly to affect, a
jurisdictional transaction.’’36
FERC’s first litigated case under the
Final Rule provides a helpful
illustration of how it intends to enforce
the Final Rule in practice. In that case,
Id. at 4253.
Id., citing Dennis v. United States, 384 U.S.
855, 861 (1966).
33 Id. at 4254.
34 Id. at 4255. Thus, for example, FERC will
presume that a market participant that ‘‘undertakes
an action or transaction that is explicitly
contemplated in Commission-approved rules and
regulations’’ does not violate the Final Rule.
Moreover, if a market participant takes an action or
engages in a transaction — at the direction of an
Independent System Operator or a Regional
Transmission Organization, but not approved by
FERC — it can assert that as a defense for the action
taken.
35 Id. at 4250, citing United States v. Persky, 520
F.2d 283 (2d Cir. 1975); Todd & Co. v. SEC, 557
F.2d 1008, 1013 (3d Cir. 1977).
36 Id. at 4249.
31
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FERC issued an Order to Show Cause
and Notice of Proposed Penalties against
hedge fund Amaranth LLC, and two
traders, alleging that they had illegally
manipulated the price of transactions
subject to FERC jurisdiction by trading
in the New York Mercantile Exchange
(NYMEX) Natural Gas Futures Contracts
for February, March, and April of 2006.
In particular, the Order alleged that the
respondents intentionally manipulated
the final, or ‘‘settlement,’’ price of the
NYMEX Natural Gas Futures Contract —
on three occasions in 2006 — by selling
an extraordinary quantity of these
contracts during the last 30 minutes of
trading before they expired, with the
purpose and effect of driving down the
settlement price. The settlement price is
explicitly used to determine the price
for a substantial volume of physical
natural gas transactions subject to FERC
jurisdiction, and Amaranth had
previously taken positions in various
financial derivatives that were several
times larger — and whose values
increased — as a direct result of the fall
in the settlement price of each natural
gas futures contract. As a consequence,
for every dollar Amaranth lost on its
sales of the futures contracts, Amaranth
gained several dollars on its derivative
financial positions.37 The Order gave
Amaranth 30-days to show cause why it
should not be assessed $200 million in
civil penalties and be required to
disgorge profits totaling $59 million,
plus interest. The case remains in
litigation.38
C. The Commodity Exchange Act
Interpretation of the first component
of Section 811 can also be informed by
the manner in which the concept of
‘‘manipulation’’ has been defined in
cases arising under the Commodity
37 Commission Takes Preliminary Action in Two
Major Market Manipulation Cases, Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission News (July 26, 2007),
available at https://www.ferc.gov/news/newsreleases/2007/2007-3/07-26-07.pdf.
38 On July 25, 2007, the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission (CFTC) filed a civil
enforcement action in federal district court against
Amaranth challenging many of the same actions at
issue in the FERC proceeding described above. The
CFTC is seeking permanent injunctive relief, an
award of civil penalties, and other remedial and
ancillary relief. The CFTC and FERC both noted
that they had coordinated their respective
investigations, pursuant to the agencies’
Memorandum of Understanding. The ultimate
resolution of the CFTC and FERC cases will provide
important guidance concerning the interaction
between their respective statutes and rules with
respect to manipulation. See U.S. Commodity
Futures Trading Commission Charges Hedge Fund
Amaranth and its Former Head Energy Trader,
Brian Hunter, with Attempted Manipulation of the
Price of Natural Gas Futures, Commodity Futures
Trading Commission News (July 25, 2007),
available at (https://www.cftc.gov/newsroom/
enforcementpressreleases/2007/pr5359-07.html.)
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Exchange Act (CEA).39 That statute
empowers the CFTC, inter alia, to bring
an administrative enforcement action, or
a civil injunctive action in federal
district court against:
any person (other than a registered entity)
[who] is manipulating or attempting to
manipulate or has manipulated or
attempted to manipulate the market price
of any commodity, in interstate commerce,
or for future delivery on or subject to the
rules of any registered entity. . . .40
In addition, Section 9(a)(2) of the CEA
makes it a felony for:
[a]ny person to manipulate or attempt to
manipulate the price of any commodity in
interstate commerce, or for future delivery
on or subject to the rules of any registered
entity, or to corner or attempt to corner any
such commodity . . . .41
The CEA also requires any board of
trade (defined as any organized
exchange or other trading facility42 )
that wishes to be designated as a
contract market, inter alia, to comply
with a variety of statutory ‘‘Core
Principles.’’43
The Supreme Court decision in
Merrill Lynch v. Curran provides an
extensive discussion of the origins of
futures trading and the CEA, and of how
the foregoing statutory proscriptions of
manipulation should be interpreted.44
In particular, the Court held that the
primary purpose of the 1974
amendments to the CEA was to protect
‘‘against manipulation of markets and to
protect any individual who desires to
participate in futures market trading.’’45
D. The Sherman Act, the Clayton Act,
and the Federal Trade Commission Act
The enactment of Subtitle B raises the
important question of the extent to
which the Commission should rely
39 The CEA provides that the CFTC possesses,
inter alia, ‘‘exclusive jurisdiction’’ for ‘‘transactions
involving contracts of sale of a commodity for
future delivery, traded or executed on a contract
market . . . or derivatives transaction execution
facility . . . or any other board of trade, exchange,
or market. . . .’’ 7 U.S.C. 2(a)(1)(A). It further
provides for non-exclusive CFTC anti-manipulation
authority over cash and physical transactions, as
well as certain derivatives transactions relating to
securities. 7 U.S.C. 2(a)(1)(A), (C), (D).
40 7 U.S.C. 9, 13b; see 7 U.S.C. 15. The statute
defines a ‘‘registered entity’’ as including certain
boards of trade designated as contract markets;
derivatives transaction execution facilities; and
‘‘derivatives clearing organizations.’’ 7 U.S.C.
1a(29).
41 7 U.S.C. 13(a)(2).
42 7 U.S.C. 1a(2).
43 7 U.S.C. 7(d).
44 Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner, & Smith, Inc. v.
Curran, 456 U.S. 353 (1982).
45 Id. at 372, n. 50. Subsequently, the Commodity
Futures Modernization Act of 2000 identified the
purposes of the CEA as including, inter alia, ‘‘to
deter and prevent price manipulation or any other
disruptions to market integrity. . .’’ 7 U.S.C. 5(b).
See also Frey v. Commodity Futures Trading
Commission, 931 F.2d 1171, 1175 (7th Cir. 1991).
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upon antitrust and consumer protection
precedent as a frame of reference for this
Rulemaking proceeding. The legislation
gave the Commission new law
enforcement tools to prevent both
market manipulation and the reporting
of false information. However, the
extent to which law enforcement
agencies have been able to prevent
manipulation or deception in the past
may provide useful lessons as
commenters offer their input as to how
best to effectuate EISA Section 811 and
the statutory objectives it represents.
In the context of antitrust law, the
term ‘‘manipulative or deceptive device
or contrivance’’ is not a term of art. But,
practices that potentially fall within the
definition of those terms have been
analyzed in the past through the prism
of the Sherman Act Section 1
prohibition against certain unreasonable
contracts, combinations and
conspiracies in restraint of trade;
through the Sherman Act Section 2
prohibition against monopolization,
attempts to monopolize, and
conspiracies to monopolize; and
through the FTC Act prohibition against
unfair methods of competition.
For example, 60 years ago, the
Supreme Court addressed the concept of
manipulation in the petroleum industry
in United States v. Socony-Vacuum Oil
Co. In that case, 12 oil companies and
five individuals violated Section 1 of
the Sherman Act by operating the ‘‘MidContinent Buying Program’’ and the
‘‘East Texas Buying Program.’’46 The
defendant participants in these two
programs agreed that they would
purchase tank cars of ‘‘distress gasoline’’
from independent oil refiners.47
Thereafter, the participants in the MidContinent Buying Program held
monthly meetings at which each
participant would advise the others of
‘‘how much his company would buy
and from whom.’’48
The Supreme Court determined that
the:
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whole scheme was carefully planned and
executed to the end that distress gasoline
would not overhang the markets and
depress them at any time. And as a result
46 United States v. Socony-Vacuum Oil Co., Inc.,
et al., 310 U.S. 150, 181-90 (1940).
47 For example, in the Mid-Continent oil field, 17
independent refiners did not have regular outlets
for their gasoline, and because they had to keep
their refineries running, they had to sell
approximately 600 to 700 tank cars of gasoline each
month at ‘‘distress’’ prices. Id. at 178-79. For similar
reasons, a number of independent refiners in the
East Texas oil field had to sell a substantial number
of tank cars of gasoline at ‘‘distress’’ prices. See id.
at 185-90.
48 Id. at 182. The East Texas Buying Program
followed a similar approach with respect to
independent refiners in the East Texas oil field. Id.
at 185-90.
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of the payment of fair going market prices
a floor was placed and kept under the spot
markets. Prices rose and jobbers and
consumers in the Mid-Western area paid
more for their gasoline than they would
have paid but for the conspiracy.
Competition was not eliminated from the
markets; but it was clearly curtailed, since
restriction of the supply of gasoline, the
timing and placement of the purchases
under the buying programs and the placing
of a floor under the spot markets obviously
reduced the play of the forces of supply
and demand.49
25619
experience with unfair or deceptive acts
or practices should or could provide in
implementing its new authority.55
The Socony-Vacuum decision is
among many in antitrust and consumer
protection law that may provide useful
guidance to the Commission in
determining the metes and bounds of
manipulative conduct under Subtitle
B.53 To the extent commenters believe
the Commission should be aware of
particular antitrust or consumer
protection law decisions, commenters
are encouraged to discuss the cases and
provide an explanation of the lessons to
be incorporated from those opinions.
In addition, unlike the SEC, CFTC,
and FERC, the Commission has long had
authority to prevent ‘‘unfair or
deceptive acts or practices.’’54 That
prohibition is not limited to ‘‘devices or
contrivances,’’ and violations do not
require proof of actual fraud or intent to
deceive. The Commission seeks
comments on any guidance its
E. Reflecting on the Legal Framework —
Questions for Commenters
The conduct component of Section
811 derives from a similar prohibition
in Section 10(b) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 — as
implemented by the SEC through its
promulgation and enforcement of Rule
10b-5 — and from the 2005 amendments
to the Natural Gas Act and the Federal
Power Act, as implemented through
regulations promulgated and enforced
by FERC. The Commodity Exchange
Act, as enforced by the CFTC, and the
antitrust laws provide additional
guidance as to the manner in which the
Supreme Court and lower courts have
interpreted the manipulation concept.
Commenters are encouraged to assess
whether, and if so to what extent, a
Section 811 rule should incorporate or
otherwise reflect any other aspects of
these statutory and federal court
precedents. Commenters are encouraged
to assess whether these statutory and
federal court precedents indicate that a
Section 811 rule should prohibit a
person from using or employing ‘‘any
manipulative or deceptive device or
contrivance’’ only if that person
possesses the scienter — to execute the
allegedly manipulative strategy at issue
— that is analogous to the general intent
to injure competition component of the
monopolization offense under Section 2
of the Sherman Act and Section 5 of the
Federal Trade Commission Act. In
addition, commenters are encouraged to
assess whether, and if so to what extent,
a Section 811 rule should incorporate or
otherwise reflect the FTC Act
prohibition of unfair or deceptive acts or
practices.56
In addition, in the Commission’s 2006
Investigation of Gasoline Price
Manipulation and Post-Katrina Gasoline
Price Increases Report to Congress,57 the
Commission described and looked for a
Id. at 220.
Id. at 223.
51 Id. at 251. The Court rejected as irrelevant the
defendants’ arguments that the prices at issue were
reasonable, and that their activities ‘‘merely
removed from the market the depressive effect of
distress gasoline. . . .’’ Id. at 229.
52 Id. at 223.
53 Other cases that may be of interest include
Verizon Communications Inc. v. Law Offices of
Curtis v. Trinko, LLP, 540 U.S. 398 (2004); Eastman
Kodak v. Image Technical Services, 504 U.S. 451,
455-56 (1992); Aspen Skiing Co. v. Aspen Highlands
Skiing Corp., 472 U.S. 585, 601 (1985); and Virtual
Maintenance Inc. v. Prime Computer Inc., 11 F.3d
660, 662 (6th Cir. 1993). This list is not intended
to be exhaustive, but merely illustrative.
54 See supra for the criteria the Commission uses
under the FTC Act.
55 Please note that nothing in connection with
this Section 811 Rulemaking, any subsequently
enacted rules, or related efforts should be construed
to alter the standards associated with establishing
a deceptive practice or an unfair practice in a case
brought by the Commission.
56 The Commission notes that neither knowledge
nor intent need be shown to prove a deceptive
practice or an unfair practice under Section 5 of the
FTC Act. See, e.g., FTC v. Bay Area Business
Council, Inc., 423 F.3d 627, 635 (7th Cir. 2005); FTC
v. Freecom Communications, Inc., 401 F.3d 1192,
1202 (10th Cir. 2005); FTC v. Amy Travel Serv., Inc.,
875 F.2d 564, 573-74 (7th Cir. 1989).
57 Federal Trade Commission Report to Congress,
Investigation of Gasoline Price Manipulation and
Post-Katrina Gasoline Price Increases (Spring 2006).
Commenters may consider this report a useful
primer on the industry.
The Court determined that the
purchases ‘‘at or under the market are
one species of price-fixing,’’50 and that
‘‘there was substantial competent
evidence that the buying programs
resulted in an increase of spot market
prices, of prices to jobbers and of retail
prices in the Mid-Western area.’’51 The
Court concluded that the buying
programs, by stabilizing market prices,
constituted ‘‘one form of manipulation,’’
and defined ‘‘market manipulation in its
various manifestations’’ as:
an artificial stimulus applied to (or at times
a brake on) market prices, a force which
distorts those prices, a factor which
prevents the determination of those prices
by free competition alone.52
49
50
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 89 / Wednesday, May 7, 2008 / Proposed Rules
number of types of practices and
circumstances in various components of
the petroleum refining and distribution
system that might be viewed as
manipulative.58 Commenters are
encouraged to discuss whether a Section
811 rule should limit or prohibit any of
these types of practices and, if so, in
what circumstances, including
discussing the direct and indirect
benefits and costs of doing so.
Commenters are also encouraged to
discuss conduct in connection with the
purchase and sale of crude oil, which,
though outside the scope of the 2006
report, is within the reach of Section
811.
IV. Particular Questions For
Commenters
Below is a general framework within
which commenters are encouraged to
discuss what they believe the contours
of a Section 811 rule should be. The
Commission encourages commenters to
answer specific questions, and to focus
in particular on defining manipulative
or deceptive behavior, in order to help
the Commission formulate a workable
rule that on balance benefits consumers.
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A. Defining Market Manipulation
The Commission is considering
various possible definitions of market
manipulation for the purpose of this
Rulemaking under Section 811. One
possible definition is the following:
Market manipulation shall mean
knowingly using or employing,
directly or indirectly, a manipulative
or deceptive device or contrivance —
in connection with the purchase or
sale of crude oil, gasoline, or
petroleum distillates at wholesale —
for the purpose or with the effect of
increasing the market price thereof
relative to costs.
The Commission seeks comment on
whether this proposed definition of
market manipulation is one under
which a rule may be adopted that is
‘‘necessary and appropriate in the
public interest or for the protection of
United States citizens,’’ as required by
Section 811. The Commission also seeks
comment on whether an effect on prices
should be a necessary element of proof
under either a charge of market
58 The Commission examined: ‘‘(1) all
transactions and practices that are prohibited by the
antitrust laws, including the Federal Trade
Commission Act, and (2) all other transactions and
practices, irrespective of their legality under the
antitrust laws, that tend to increase prices relative
to costs and to reduce output.’’ Id. at ii (emphasis
added). The Commission made clear, however, that
this definition for purpose of the report represented
neither existing legal prohibitions nor, in its view,
an identification of practices that should be
prohibited.
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manipulation or a charge of attempted
market manipulation. In addition, the
Commission encourages commenters to
suggest any other definitions that, in
their view, may better address the
public policy concern enunciated
through the Commission’s new
rulemaking authority.
addition, the Commission encourages
commenters to address whether an antimanipulation rule promulgated under
Section 811 could be a mechanism for
abuse by customers, competitors, or
others.
B. Manipulative or Deceptive Device or
Contrivance
As discussed above, Section 811 is
modeled on authority previously
granted to the SEC, FERC, and the
CFTC. The Commission encourages
commenters to address how Section
811’s rulemaking authority should be
exercised in light of the similar
authority granted to the SEC and to
FERC. In particular, the Commission
seeks comments on how legal precedent
established for violations of rules
addressing manipulation or deceit in
regulated behavior (such as securities
trading or the execution of transactions
carried out by regulated entities) should
apply to unregulated behavior, such as
the purchase and sale at wholesale of
crude oil, gasoline, or petroleum
distillates. To what extent (or in what
particulars) should the jurisprudence
under the other laws addressing
manipulation apply under the
Commission’s new authority? What
should not apply? The Commission
encourages commenters to identify both
general criteria and specific applications
of the other laws, and to explain why
each should or should not apply under
a Section 811 rule, with a specific
discussion of the costs and benefits of
application
The Commission also seeks comment
on the potential costs or benefits of an
FTC rule that simply mirrors the
language of SEC Rule 10b-5 or the
language of the FERC Final Rule. In
particular, could a Section 811 rule, that
is similar to the rules adopted by the
SEC and FERC for their specific
purposes, provide sufficient clarity as to
prohibited practices in the different
context of crude oil, gasoline, and
petroleum distillates transactions? In
addition, commenters are asked to
consider whether a rule that provides
more specificity would be adequately
broad and flexible to allow the
Commission to address new and varied
types of manipulation and deception. If
the Commission develops a rule with
more specific guidance and standards,
what should those standards be?
In the larger context discussed above,
the Commission also seeks comment on
the regulatory authority granted to the
other federal agencies, and the potential
or actual impact on consumer prices
from the exercise of this authority. In
As indicated in a number of the cases
discussed above, as well as the FERC
rulemaking, the primary focus of the
prohibition on manipulation appears to
be on practices that are not a reaction
to market forces. Instead, the focus is on
practices that intentionally, willfully, or
recklessly cause distortions in the
market, such as artificially raising or
depressing prices. Commenters are
encouraged to consider whether this
should be a focus of a potential Section
811 rule.
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C. Effect on the Market
D. Scienter/State of Mind
In determining whether particular
conduct violates any of the statutory
and regulatory proscriptions, the federal
courts have required a showing that the
defendants or respondents were not
simply negligent, but rather possessed at
least the requisite scienter to execute the
manipulative practice in question.
For example, the courts have
interpreted Section 10(b) of the SEA to
require a showing of scienter — that is,
of intentional, willful, or reckless
conduct designed to deceive or defraud
by controlling or artificially affecting
market prices or market activity. FERC
relied on that precedent to incorporate
a scienter requirement into its Final
Rule. By contrast, the courts and the
CFTC have interpreted the CEA and its
implementing regulations as requiring a
showing of a specific intent to injure a
futures market through the execution of
an intentionally manipulative strategy.
The Commission seeks comment on the
appropriate nature and level of scienter
for a violation, and on whether that
determination should depend on the
nature of the practice at issue (and, if so,
in what way). An additional question
for consideration includes whether the
Commission should incorporate either
of the above scienter standards into a
Section 811 rule. Commenters are
encouraged to provide a specific
discussion of the costs and benefits of
the standard they recommend.
E. In Connection With
Establishing a violation of Section 811
also requires establishing that the
conduct at issue was used or employed
‘‘in connection with the purchase or
sale of crude oil[,] gasoline[,] or
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petroleum distillates at wholesale.’’59 As
a consequence, Section 811 does not
extend to retail sales of gasoline.
Instead, it arguably covers sales and
purchases starting at the point at which
crude oil, gasoline, or a petroleum
distillate is sold by the producer or
importer, and ending at the point at
which it is purchased by a retailer.
Commenters are encouraged to discuss
how the phrase ‘‘in connection with the
sale or purchase of crude oil, gasoline,
or petroleum distillates at wholesale’’
should be interpreted. In relying on
cases addressing Section 10(b) of the
SEA to promulgate its Final Rule, FERC
defined ‘‘in connection with’’ to mean
that ‘‘in committing fraud, the entity
must have intended to affect, or have
acted recklessly to affect, a
jurisdictional transaction.’’60 The
Commission specifically seeks guidance
as to whether the FERC model is
appropriate for adoption by the
Commission.
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F. In the Public Interest or For the
Protection of United States Citizens
Establishing a violation of Section 811
also requires a showing that the
practices ‘‘used or employed’’ violate a
rule that the Commission has prescribed
‘‘as necessary or appropriate in the
public interest or for the protection of
United States citizens.’’ Commenters are
encouraged to address how the
Commission may best ensure that a
Section 811 rule satisfies this standard.
Commenters are also encouraged to
discuss whether antitrust or consumer
protection principles should or should
not be incorporated at all into a Section
811 rule. For example, the Commission
seeks comment on whether a Section
811 rule should conform to traditional
antitrust analysis by requiring (1) the
use or employment of ‘‘any
manipulative or deceptive device or
contrivance’’ to satisfy the
anticompetitive conduct component of
the offenses of monopolization and
attempted monopolization prohibited by
Section 2 of the Sherman Act and (2) the
intent and market power components of
those offenses to be satisfied under the
59 The phrase ‘‘crude oil gasoline or petroleum
distillates,’’ without commas, is used in Section 811
(as well as in the first clause of Section 812), while
the phrase ‘‘crude oil, gasoline, or petroleum
distillates’’ (with commas) is used in Section
812(3). This is presumably a non-substantive
typographical error; therefore, all parts of both
Sections should be read to cover all three types of
products (that is, crude oil, gasoline, and petroleum
distillates).
60 71 FR 4249, quoting SEC v. Zandford, 535 U.S.
813, 825 (2002) (the Supreme Court has construed
the ‘‘in connection with’’ requirement broadly, ‘‘to
encompass many circumstances where securities
transactions ‘coincide’ with the overall scheme to
defraud’’).
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standards explained throughout
antitrust case law.61 Commentors are
asked to explain whether such a
construction is necessary or appropriate
in the context of this Rulemaking.
G. Penalties
Section 814 provides civil penalty
authority of up to $1,000,000, which can
be assessed against ‘‘suppliers’’ for each
violation for each day, taking into
consideration the seriousness of the
violation and any attempts by the
violator to mitigate the harm. The
Commission seeks comment on whether
any potential chilling effect of these
penalties on legitimate business
behavior should affect the interpretation
of, or required state of mind for, a
‘‘manipulative deceptive device or
contrivance.’’ The Commission also
seeks comment on whether the Section
814 civil penalty authority extends only
to violations committed by suppliers
through sales of crude oil, gasoline, or
petroleum distillates, or is intended to
extend to violations committed by
suppliers through purchases of such
products as well.
H. Overlapping Jurisdiction
As noted above, Congress has
provided anti-manipulation authority to
FERC and the CFTC to reach behavior
previously not regulated by those
agencies. In some cases, this authority
may lead to a shared jurisdiction over
the same behavior. The manipulation
authority provided by Section 811 may
subject market participants to similar
overlapping agency oversight, and
create the potential for market
participants to be subject to differing
standards of conduct and multiple
61 The Supreme Court has defined market power
as the power ‘‘‘to force a purchaser to do something
that he would not do in a competitive market,’’’ and
as ‘‘‘the ability of a single seller to raise price and
restrict output.’’’ Eastman Kodak Co. v. Image
Technical Services, 504 U.S. 451, 464 (1992), citing
Jefferson Parish Hospital Dist. No. 2 v. Hyde, 466
U.S. 2, 14 (1984); accord, e.g., United States v.
Dentsply Int’l, Inc., 399 F.3d 181, 187 (3d Cir. 2005);
United States v. Microsoft Corp., 253 F.3d 34, 51
(D.C. Cir.), cert. denied, 534 U.S. 952 (2001).
Consistent with that determination, the Horizontal
Merger Guidelines define market power as to a
seller as ‘‘the ability profitably to maintain prices
above competitive levels for a significant period of
time.’’ U.S. Dep’t of Justice & Federal Trade
Comm’n, Horizontal Merger Guidelines (1992),
Section 0.1, at 4; accord, Tops Markets, Inc. v.
Quality Markets, Inc., 142 F.3d 90, 99 (2d Cir.
1998); United States v. Syufy Enters., 903 F.2d 659,
665-66 (9th Cir. 1990). As the Commission has
noted, although the terms ‘‘market power’’ and
‘‘monopoly power’’ are often treated as synonymous
from an economic perspective, market power can be
thought of as a continuum along which the power
to control prices varies, beginning with the
complete absence of market power at one end and
ending with monopoly power at the other.
International Telephone & Telegraph Co., 104
F.T.C. 280, 411 n. 60 (1984).
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levels of liability. The Commission
seeks comment on the possible effects of
this type of overlapping jurisdiction.
The Commission also seeks comment on
the usefulness of inter-agency
information sharing on market
manipulation regulation law
enforcement; on reducing costs; on
speeding enforcement actions; on other
potential benefits or costs for consumers
and businesses; and, on how it can best
harmonize its enforcement efforts with
those of FERC and the CFTC.
I. Potential Practices
The Commission requests comment
on the following topic list, but
encourages commenters to present any
other proposals for formal rule
provisions that they may wish to
suggest. This list is not to be perceived
as a formal proposal to address any of
the practices described pursuant to
Section 811; rather, it is intended to be
illustrative, and to encourage further
thinking.
• Certain refiners have made public
announcements of planned reductions
in the overall utilization of their refinery
plant(s). The Commission seeks
comment on: (1) whether such practices
should be viewed as manipulative; (2)
the perceived harm from such actions,
if any; (3) whether such practices
should or would manifest the intent
necessary to violate Section 811; and (4)
whether any business justifications
balance the perceived harm.
• Refiners engage in periodic
scheduled maintenance and refinery
downtime in order to prevent
breakdowns or to change equipment. On
the one hand, such maintenance and
scheduled downtime are necessary for
the safe and efficient operation of
petroleum refineries; on the other hand,
public announcements of downtime
may enable competitors to collude
inappropriately. The Commission
therefore seeks comment on both the
costs and the benefits of a rule
restricting public pre-announcements of
such downtime.
• Wholesale petroleum market
participants frequently rely on
independent published data for market
prices in effecting purchase and sale
contracts and other supply
arrangements. In the past, Commission
staff have received allegations of false or
misleading physical sales reports
furnished to private reporting entities by
market participants in thinly traded
petroleum commodity markets. The
Commission seeks comment on
experiences with this practice, the
likelihood the practice could drive false
or misleading market prices, the ability
of a market manipulation rule
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effectively to police such activities, and
the potential benefits or harm to public
data sources or private data compilation
services.
• The Commission seeks comment on
the circumstances, if any, under which
a firm’s decision regarding supplying a
market (including whether to reduce,
increase, or maintain unchanged the
amount it supplies) should be
considered manipulative or deceptive.
Commenters are encouraged to address
both the immediate and the long-term
costs and benefits to consumers of
permitting, prohibiting, or restricting
such actions, as well as the effects such
decisions would have during a time of
national emergency or natural disaster.
• Some have argued that market
participants with terminal or other
storage inventory should be under an
affirmative obligation to release
inventory during price spikes when the
participant knows, or should know, that
the release of the product will be
profitable. The Commission seeks
comment on when such an obligation
should be imposed; what possible intent
standard should be used as a test for
liability; how one should measure
profitability in such a circumstance;
and, the costs and benefits to consumers
of placing such an obligation on
potential market suppliers.
• FERC and state regulations govern
open access to common carrier
pipelines. In some circumstances,
prospective shippers on a given
common carrier pipeline may lack the
ability to access that pipeline due to an
inability to place product in a terminal
from which to enter the pipeline system,
or because those shippers lack a
terminal from which to exit the pipeline
system. The Commission seeks
comment on whether a denial of access
to a non-regulated terminal may be an
act of market manipulation subject to
Section 811, and on whether applying
the rule to this behavior is likely to
result in benefits that outweigh the
costs.
• Regulated petroleum pipelines may
not allow new shippers a share of a
pipeline’s capacity when historical
shippers seek to transport more
petroleum products than the pipeline is
capable of transporting. The
Commission seeks comment on whether
pre-announcements that pipelines are
approaching capacity constraints may
be a conduit for market manipulation or
deceit under Section 811, and on
whether applying the rule to this
behavior is likely to result in benefits
that outweigh the costs.
• Accurate cost and volume data for
wholesale transactions at all levels of
trade, refinery or pipeline outage data,
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and import and inventory volumes are
frequently difficult to construct or are
unavailable. The Commission seeks
comment on whether it possesses the
authority to promulgate a rule under
Section 811 requiring a covered person
to maintain and submit such
information to the Commission or any
other government entity, and, if so,
whether it should do so, and what
particular data it should require.
• The Commission seeks comment on
how to determine an artificial price. For
example, if an entity with market power
that was not obtained by improper
means, sets its prices above what would
have been a competitive level, and as a
result, prices in the market are higher
than competitive prices, is this an
artificial price? Commenters are
encouraged to explain how the
competitive price should be determined,
including during a period in which
capacity has declined unexpectedly
because of a disaster. Commenters are
encouraged to assess, in particular,
whether setting the prices above a
competitive level should be considered
a manipulative device or contrivance;
whether that answer would depend on
other factors or circumstances, and, if
so, on which ones; and what the direct
and indirect, short- and long-term
effects of treating this as a manipulative
device or contrivance would be.
• The Commission seeks comment as
to what extent or in what circumstances
should the distinction between
forbidden and permitted business
behavior be primarily a function of the
intent, purpose, or knowledge of the
actor? For example, if a firm holds back
inventory during a supply shortage with
the intent to raise or expectation of
raising immediate prices, but the effect
is that the inventory is sold later, when
the shortage is more severe, and thus
mitigates the more severe shortage,
should that be a violation? If a firm
decreases the amount of product sold in
a tight market in order to grow its
business elsewhere, regardless of
whether prices in the tight market will
rise, should that be a violation?
• The Commission encourages
commenters, in addressing any of the
foregoing practices, to discuss whether,
and if so how, a Section 811 rule should
account for the fact that the practice is
used prior to, during, or in the aftermath
of a natural disaster, such as an
earthquake or a hurricane.
V. Questions Arising From Two Case
Studies
This part of the Advance Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking focuses on two
separate series of events that are
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frequently cited as examples of possible
manipulation in energy markets.
A. BP Amoco/Atlantic Richfield, FTC
Docket No. C-3938
In BP Amoco/Atlantic Richfield, the
Commission issued a consent order that
remedied the anticompetitive effects of
the proposed $27 billion merger
between BP Amoco p.l.c. (BP) and
Atlantic Richfield Company (ARCO).62
Under the terms of the settlement, BP
was required to divest, among other
things, all of ARCO’s assets relating to
oil production on Alaska’s North Slope
(ANS) to Phillips Petroleum Company
(Phillips). The divestitures required by
the consent order fully resolved the
competitive concerns that initially led
the Commission to seek a preliminary
injunction to block the transaction. By
requiring the divestiture of all of
ARCO’s operations in Alaska, the
Commission ensured that BP’s market
share in the exploration, production and
transportation of ANS crude oil would
remain unchanged, and that the number
of players would remain the same.
The divestiture itself is not
remarkable for purposes of this
Rulemaking. However, the Commission
had reason to believe that BP
occasionally had exported ANS crude
oil to the Far East in order to increase
spot prices for ANS crude oil on the
West Coast, and that BP benefitted from
those higher spot prices because of its
status as a merchant marketer.
Commenters are encouraged to discuss
this scenario, whether this type of
conduct is likely to recur, whether this
type of conduct still occurs (and if so,
how frequently), and whether this type
of practice can be characterized as a
manipulative or deceptive device or
contrivance — in connection with the
purchase or sale of crude oil, gasoline,
or petroleum distillates at wholesale —
that should be prohibited by a Section
811 rule. Commenters are also
encouraged to address scenarios such
as, for example, when a person or entity
determines to hold a supply of crude oil
or petroleum product off the coast of the
United States for five days — waiting for
the price to go up, and thereby shorting
the U.S. supply of crude oil or
petroleum product — and then sells the
crude oil or petroleum product after the
price has risen, thereby securing greater
revenues than it would have secured if
it had simply sold the supply on the
first day rather than the fifth.
62 In the Matter of BP Amoco p.l.c. and Atlantic
Richfield Company, FTC File No. 9910192, Docket
No. C-3938 (August 25, 2000) (hereinafter BP
Amoco/ARCO).
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B. Enron
The substantial disruptions in
Western electricity and natural gas
markets in 2000 and 2001 are often cited
as the product of market manipulation
by Enron Corp. and other energy traders,
and the Commission is interested in
securing comments on the extent to
which those disruptions may provide
guidance as to what may constitute the
use of a manipulative or deceptive
device or contrivance, in connection
with the purchase or sale of crude oil,
gasoline, or petroleum distillates at
wholesale. In May 2001, FERC initiated
a staff investigation to determine
whether Enron or any other sellers
manipulated electricity and natural gas
markets in California and other Western
states in 2000 and 2001. In a Final Staff
Report issued in March 2003, the FERC
staff found ‘‘significant market
manipulation,’’ but also determined that
natural gas prices and trade volumes to
industry publications, including in
particular Gas Daily and Inside FERC,
which the staff characterized as ‘‘the
most influential and relied-upon
compilers of natural gas price
indices.’’66 The staff found that ‘‘the
false reporting included fabricating
trades, inflating the volume of trades,
omitting trades, and adjusting the price
of trades.’’67 The staff further found that:
significant supply shortfalls and a fatally
flawed market design were the root causes
of the California market meltdown. The
underlying supply-demand imbalance and
flawed market design greatly facilitated the
ability of certain market participants to
engage in manipulation.63
Second, the staff found that Enron
used its subsidiary, EnronOnline (EOL),
to carry out several different types of
manipulation. The staff found that
certain characteristics — including in
particular the fact that Enron served as
the counterparty to every trade on EOL
— made the system ripe for abuse, and
permitted Enron to use EOL to effect a
number of different types of
manipulation. In particular, the staff
found that wash trades — in which two
parties would prearrange a pair of sales
of the same product with no net change
in ownership — were common on EOL.
The parties effected such ‘‘trades’’ in
order artificially to influence the closing
price on EOL, and/or to increase the
apparent volume of trading in order
deceptively to make the market for that
product appear to be more liquid than
was actually the case. The staff further
found that EOL itself ‘‘often posted its
willingness to buy and sell at the same
price;’’ that Enron also manipulated
prices on EOL ‘‘by having affiliates on
both sides of certain wash-like trades;’’
and that these practices both created a
false sense of liquidity and raised or
otherwise distorted prices.69 The staff
also found that EOL gave Enron a huge
information advantage — derived from
its central position in the physical
markets — which enabled it to earn
more than $500 million in 2000 and
2001 from its financial products, while
sustaining trading losses at a much
lower level in the ‘‘thinner physical
markets.’’70
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The staff found in particular that
markets for natural gas and electricity in
California were inextricably linked; that
dysfunctions in each market fed off the
other during the crisis; that spot gas
prices rose to extraordinary levels,
facilitating the unprecedented price
increase in the electricity market; and
that the dysfunctions in the natural gas
market appeared to stem, at least in part,
from efforts to manipulate price indices
compiled by trade publications.64 The
FERC Staff Report concluded, inter alia,
that Enron manipulated natural gas
markets to the detriment of California
electricity consumers.65
The FERC Staff Report provides an
extensive discussion of a number of
manipulative trading strategies that
energy traders used, including two of
particular relevance to this Rulemaking
proceeding. First, a number of market
participants provided false reports of
63 Final Report On Price Manipulation In Western
Markets: Fact-Finding Investigation of Potential
Manipulation of Electric and Natural Gas Prices,
Docket No. PA02-2-000, Prepared by the Staff of the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (March
2003), at ES-1 (hereinafter FERC Staff Report),
available at (https://www.ferc.gov/industries/electric/
indus-act/wec/enron/info-release.asp)
64 FERC Staff Report at ES-1.
65 Thereafter, in June 2007, an Administrative
Law Judge issued a decision revoking Enron’s
market-based rate authorization as of January 1997
and ordering it to disgorge $1.6 billion of unjust
profits. See the initial decision in the Gaming and
Partnership Proceedings 119 FERC ¶ 63013 (2007),
Docket No. EL03-180-000, available at (https://
www.ferc.gov/industries/electric/indus-act/wec/
enron/info-release.asp) (hereafter Initial Decision).
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[t]he predominant motives for reporting
false information were to influence
reported gas prices, to enhance the value
of financial positions or purchase
obligations, and to increase reported
volumes to attract participants by creating
the impression of more liquid markets.
Market participants that sold power in
California, or that were affiliated with such
sellers, also had incentives to manipulate
reported prices because the clearing price
set for power was based, in part, on natural
gas spot prices.68
Id. at ES-6.
Id.
68 Id.
69 Id. at ES-11-12.
70 Id. at ES-12.
66
67
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Four important characteristics of the
markets for the physical products —
that is, for electricity and natural gas —
facilitated execution of the foregoing
strategies. First, electricity cannot
economically be stored more than a few
seconds. As a result, electricity
generation and transmission are
necessarily ‘‘just-in-time’’ activities.
Because storing electricity is
prohibitively expensive, electricity
suppliers must essentially anticipate
demand on a minute-by-minute basis,
and errant forecasts can cause the
system to become unstable and lead to
blackouts. Moreover, the absence of
storage capability may make physical
withholding more attractive to a
supplier — because closing a plant or
generation unit will then result in the
immediate withdrawal of output from
the market — and unless such a
reduction is offset by a competing
supplier, this output reduction might be
sufficient to produce an increase in
price levels.
Second, electricity suppliers may be
able to increase profits by withholding
capacity during peak demand periods
because other rival facilities are already
committed to production and cannot
respond. Third, the regulation of
wholesale electricity markets generates
an enormous amount of publicly
available information. In particular, the
cost structure of electricity generators is
publicly available, and this information
may potentially support the exercise of
market power. And fourth, electric
utilities — including in particular those
in the California market — have relied
upon purchasing electricity on spot
markets, rather than through the
negotiation of long-term contracts, and
that type of reliance may facilitate the
exercise of market power by placing
electricity suppliers in a repetitive
situation that supports signaling.
The Commission encourages
commenters to consider the foregoing
discussion, and to address in particular
whether any of the types of
manipulative strategies used in the
electricity and natural gas markets
might be used in the markets for crude
oil, gasoline, and petroleum distillates.
C. Questions For Commenters Relating
to Case Studies
• Prior to 1995, Congress had
imposed a ban on exports of Alaska
North Slope crude oil. In 1995, Congress
repealed that ban, but also granted the
President the power to reimpose the
export ban in certain circumstances.
The Commission seeks comment on the
effects of the export ban and of its
repeal; on the residual authority of the
President to reimpose the ban; and on
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any implications these circumstances
may have for a Section 811 rule.
• Consider the following scenario: a
supplier provides a particular type or
formulation of product that cannot be
obtained from other suppliers (not due
to monopolization by the supplier). This
particular product is needed in certain
areas, and is not easily substituted for
by other suppliers’ products. The
Commission seeks comment on whether
the following practice would constitute
a manipulative device or contrivance: if
the supplier sold some of its product to
certain areas but not to other areas, at
a loss or for a profit that is not as great
as it would likely have made in the area
where it did not sell. In answering this
question, commenters are encouraged to
address whether their answers depend
on the supplier’s knowledge or
motivation(s), such as that the supplier
(1) might have had contractual
arrangements elsewhere; (2) might have
anticipated developing more business
elsewhere; (3) might have anticipated
that prices in the particular areas might
go up, making the rest of its supply sold
in those areas more profitable; or (4)
might have taken the foregoing steps for
the express purpose of causing the
prices in those areas to go up.
Commenters are also encouraged to
address whether their answers depend
on how difficult it is to substitute for or
do without the product, and, if so, what
constitutes an unreasonable degree of
difficulty.
• As noted above, market
manipulation by certain firms (Enron
and others) is often cited as a significant
cause of the substantial disruptions in
Western electricity and natural gas
markets in 2000 and 2001. The
Commission seeks comment on the
extent to which such activities,
including but not limited to the
activities described above, may provide
guidance as to what may constitute the
use of a manipulative or deceptive
device or contrivance, in connection
with the purchase or sale of crude oil,
gasoline, or petroleum distillates at
wholesale.
• In light of the electricity market
characteristics identified by the FERC
Staff Report, and the physical
peculiarities of electricity storage and
distribution, the Commission seeks
comment on how relevant this
experience may be to wholesale
petroleum markets, and on whether
(and if so to what extent) this
experience can inform the
Commission’s approach to
distinguishing manipulative or
deceptive devices or contrivances from
legitimate business practices.
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VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act
• Does Subtitle B of the EISA impose
any disparate impact on small
businesses? If so, how may this
disparate impact be minimized?
• Describe and, where feasible,
estimate the number of small entities to
which Subtitle B applies.
VII. Conclusion
The Commission will proceed from
this ANPR to a Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking. The evaluation of
comments submitted in response to this
ANPR will comprise part of the
Commission’s rulemaking process.
By direction of the Commission.
Donald S. Clark,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E8–10102 Filed 5–6–08: 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6750–01–S
COAST GUARD
33 CFR Part 165
[Docket No. USCG–2008–0314]
RIN 1625–AA00
Safety Zone; Red Bull Air Race, Detroit
River, Detroit, MI
Coast Guard, DHS.
Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The Coast Guard proposes
establishing a temporary safety zone on
the Detroit River, Detroit, Michigan.
This Zone is intended to restrict vessels
from portions of the Detroit River during
the Red Bull Air Race. This temporary
safety zone is necessary to protect
spectators and vessels from the hazards
associated with air races.
DATES: Comments and related material
must reach the Coast Guard on or before
May 22, 2008.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
identified by Coast Guard docket
number USCG–2008–0314 to the Docket
Management Facility at the U.S.
Department of Transportation. To avoid
duplication, please use only one of the
following methods:
(1) Online: https://www.regulation.gov.
(2) Mail: Docket Management Facility
(M–30), U.S. Department of
Transportation, West Building Ground
Floor, Room W12–140, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue, SE., Washington, DC 20590–
0001.
(3) Hand delivery: Room W12–140 on
the Ground Floor of the West Building,
1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE.,
Washington, DC 20590, between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays. The telephone
number is 202–366–9329.
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(4) Fax: 202–493–2251.
LT
Jeff Ahlgren, Waterways Management,
U.S. Coast Guard Sector Detroit, 110
Mount Elliot Ave., Detroit, MI 48207,
(313) 568–9580.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
I. Public Participation and Request for
Comments
We encourage you to participate in
this rulemaking by submitting
comments and related materials. All
comments received will be posted,
without change, to https://
www.regulations.gov and will include
any personal information you have
provided. We have an agreement with
the Department of Transportation (DOT)
to use the Docket Management Facility.
Please see DOT’s ‘‘Privacy Act’’
paragraph below.
A. Submitting Comments
If you submit a comment, please
include the docket number for this
rulemaking (USCG–2008–0314),
indicate the specific section of this
document to which each comment
applies, and give the reason for each
comment. We recommend that you
include your name, mailing address,
and an e-mail address or other contact
information in the body of your
document to ensure that you can be
identified as the submitter. This also
allows us to contact you in the event
further information is needed or if there
are questions. For example, if we cannot
read your submission due to technical
difficulties and you cannot be
contacted; your submission may not be
considered. You may submit your
comments and material by electronic
means, mail, fax, or delivery to the
Docket Management Facility at the
address under ADDRESSES; but please
submit your comments and material by
only one means. If you submit them by
mail or delivery, submit them in an
unbound format, no larger than 81⁄2 by
11 inches, suitable for copying and
electronic filing. If you submit them by
mail and would like to know that they
reached the Facility, please enclose a
stamped, self-addressed postcard or
envelope. We will consider all
comments and material received during
the comment period. We may change
this proposed rule in view of them.
B. Viewing Comments and Documents
To view comments, as well as
documents mentioned in this preamble
as being available in the docket, go to
https://www.regulations.gov at any time,
click on ‘‘Search for Dockets,’’ and enter
the docket number for this rulemaking
(USCG–2008–0218) in the Docket ID
E:\FR\FM\07MYP1.SGM
07MYP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 89 (Wednesday, May 7, 2008)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 25614-25624]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-10102]
=======================================================================
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FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
16 CFR Part 317
[Project No. P082900]
RIN 3084-AB12
Prohibitions On Market Manipulation and False Information in
Subtitle B of the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007
AGENCY: Federal Trade Commission.
ACTION: Advance notice of proposed rulemaking; request for public
comment.
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SUMMARY: The Federal Trade Commission (FTC or Commission) is requesting
comment on the manner in which it should carry out its rulemaking
responsibilities under Section 811 of Subtitle B of Title VIII of The
Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 (EISA).
DATES: Comments must be received on or before June 6, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties are invited to submit written comments
electronically or in paper form. Comments should refer to ``Market
Manipulation Rulemaking, P082900'' to facilitate the organization of
comments. Comments containing material for which confidential treatment
is requested must be filed in paper form, must be clearly labeled
``Confidential,'' and must comply with Commission Rule 4.9(c).\1\
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\1\ The comment must be accompanied by an explicit request for
confidential treatment, including the factual and legal basis for
the request, and must identify the specific portions of the comment
to be withheld from the public record. The request will be granted
or denied by the Commission's General Counsel, consistent with
applicable law and the public interest. See Commission Rule 4.9(c),
16 CFR 4.9(c) (2008).
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Because paper mail in the Washington-area, and specifically to the
FTC, is subject to delay due to heightened security screening, please
consider submitting your comments in electronic form. Comments filed in
electronic form should be submitted by using the following weblink:
https://secure.commentworks.com/ftc-marketmanipulationANPR/ (and
[[Page 25615]]
following the instructions on the web-based form). To ensure that the
Commission considers an electronic comment, you must file it on the
web-based form at the weblink (https://secure.commentworks.com/ftc-
marketmanipulationANPR/). If this notice appears at https://
www.regulations.gov, you may also file an electronic comment through
that Web site. The Commission will consider all comments that
regulations.gov forwards to it. You may also visit the FTC website at
(https://www.ftc.gov/opa/index.shtml) to read the Advance Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking and the news release describing it.
A comment filed in paper form should include the ``Market
Manipulation Rulemaking, P082900'' reference both in the text and on
the envelope, and should be mailed to the following address: Federal
Trade Commission, Market Manipulation Rulemaking, P.O. Box 2846,
Fairfax, VA 22031-0846. This address does not accept courier or
overnight deliveries. Courier or overnight deliveries should be
delivered to: Federal Trade Commission/Office of the Secretary, Room H-
135 (Annex G), 600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20580.
The FTC Act and other laws the Commission administers permit the
collection of public comments to consider and use in this proceeding as
appropriate. The Commission will consider all timely and responsive
public comments that it receives, whether filed in paper or electronic
form. Comments received will be available to the public on the FTC
website, to the extent practicable, at https://www.ftc.gov. As a matter
of discretion, the FTC makes every effort to remove home contact
information for individuals from the public comments it receives before
placing those comments on the FTC website. More information, including
routine uses permitted by the Privacy Act, may be found in the FTC's
privacy policy, at (https://www.ftc.gov/ftc/privacy.htm).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: John H. Seesel, Associate General
Counsel for Energy, Federal Trade Commission, Market Manipulation
Rulemaking, P.O. Box 2846, Fairfax, VA 22031-0846, (202) 326-3772.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Statutory Framework
Subtitle B of EISA, which became effective on December 19, 2007,\2\
includes two substantive sections respectively entitled ``Prohibition
On Market Manipulation'' (Section 811) and ``Prohibition On False
Information'' (Section 812). Section 811 prohibits ``any person'' from
directly or indirectly (1) using or employing ``any manipulative or
deceptive device or contrivance,'' (2) ``in connection with the
purchase or sale of crude oil gasoline or petroleum distillates at
wholesale,'' (3) that violates a rule or regulation that the Federal
Trade Commission ``may prescribe as necessary or appropriate in the
public interest or for the protection of United States citizens.''
Section 812 prohibits ``any person'' from reporting information that is
``required by law to be reported'' -- and that is ``related to the
wholesale price of crude oil gasoline or petroleum distillates'' -- to
a Federal department or agency if the person (1) ``knew, or reasonably
should have known, [that] the information [was] false or misleading;''
and (2) intended such false or misleading information ``to affect data
compiled by the department or agency for statistical or analytical
purposes with respect to the market for crude oil, gasoline, or
petroleum distillates.''
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\2\ Pub. L. 110-140, 121 Stat. 1723 (December 19, 2007), Title
VIII, Subtitle B, to be codified at 42 U.S.C. 17301-17305.
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Section 813 provides that Subtitle B ``shall be enforced by the
Federal Trade Commission in the same manner, by the same means, and
with the same jurisdiction'' as though ``all applicable terms'' of the
Federal Trade Commission Act (FTC Act) were incorporated into and made
a part of Subtitle B. Consequently, any entity subject to Commission
jurisdiction under the FTC Act is subject to the Commission's
enforcement of Subtitle B, and must comply with Section 812 and any
rule promulgated under Section 811 of Subtitle B.\3\ Section 813
further provides that the violation of any provision of Subtitle B
``shall be treated as an unfair or deceptive act or practice proscribed
under a rule issued under section 18(a)(1)(B) of the Federal Trade
Commission Act (15 U.S.C. 57a(a)(1)(B)),'' even though rules and
regulations that the Commission may prescribe are to be issued under
Subtitle B.\4\
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\3\ Section 811 and Section 812 of Subtitle B expressly cover
``any person.'' The Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. 551(2),
defines ``person'' as including ``an individual, partnership,
corporation, association, or public or private organization other
than an agency.'' Similarly, the FTC's jurisdiction under the FTC
Act covers ``persons, partnerships, or corporations.'' 15 U.S.C.
45(a)(2). While the FTC Act applies broadly, certain entities are
wholly or partly exempt from Commission authority under that Act.
These include banks, savings and loan institutions, federal credit
unions, transportation and communications common carriers, air
carriers, and livestock firms. 15 U.S.C. 45(a)(2). In addition, the
term ``corporation,'' as defined in Section 4 of the FTC Act, does
not extend to entities not organized to carry on business for their
own profit or that of their members. 15 U.S.C. 44.
\4\ See EISA Section 811 (defining acts or practices that shall
be unlawful under ``rules and regulations as the Federal Trade
Commission may prescribe as necessary or appropriate in the public
interest or for the protection of United States citizens''). Because
the rulemaking procedures for the issuance of trade regulation rules
are limited to rules promulgated ``under'' Section 18(a)(1)(B) of
the FTC Act (see 15 U.S.C. 57a(a)(1)(B)), the issuance of rules and
regulations under EISA Section 811 is instead governed by the
notice-and-comment requirements of the Administrative Procedure Act,
5 U.S.C. 553, and Part 1, Subpart C, of the Commission Rules of
Practice for the adoption of non-Section 18 rules. See 16 CFR 1.21-
1.26.
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The Commission could seek a number of different types of relief
against a person who violated Subtitle B. In particular, Section 13(b)
of the FTC Act permits the Commission to file a federal court civil
action seeking a temporary restraining order or a preliminary
injunction to prevent any ``person, partnership, or corporation'' from
violating a rule promulgated under EISA Section 811 or from violating
EISA Section 812, and to secure a permanent injunction ``in proper
cases.'' In such a proceeding, the Commission would also be able to
secure corollary equitable relief, such as an asset freeze,
disgorgement, and/or the appointment of a receiver. 15 U.S.C. 53(b).
Moreover, Section 19 of the FTC Act permits the Commission to file a
federal court civil action in its own name against any person,
partnership, or corporation that ``violates any rule . . . respecting
unfair or deceptive acts or practices . . . ,''\5\ and permits the
court to grant relief needed:
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\5\ 15 U.S.C. 57b(a)(1).
to redress injury to consumers or other persons, partnerships, and
corporations resulting from the rule violation . . . [including but not
limited to] rescission or reformation of contracts, the refund of money
or return of property, the payment of damages, and public notification
respecting the rule violation. . . .\6\
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\6\ 15 U.S.C. 57b(b).
Furthermore, Section 5(m)(1)(A) of the FTC Act permits the Commission,
by referral to the Department of Justice, to file a federal court civil
action to recover civil penalties of up to $11,000\7\ per violation
from:
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\7\ This amount has been adjusted upward from the original
statutory amount of $10,000 pursuant to the Federal Civil Penalties
Inflation Adjustment Act of 1990, as amended by the Debt Collection
Improvement Act of 1996. 28 U.S.C. 2461.
any person, partnership, or corporation which violates any rule under
[the FTC Act] respecting unfair or deceptive acts or practices . . .
[[Page 25616]]
with actual knowledge or knowledge fairly implied on the basis of
objective circumstances that such act is unfair or deceptive and is
prohibited by such rule.\8\
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\8\ 15 U.S.C. 45(m)(1)(A). Section 16(a)(1) of the FTC Act
requires the Commission to refer such actions to the United States
Attorney General in the first instance, and permits the Commission
to file such actions in its own name if ``the Attorney General fails
within 45 days after receipt of such notification to commence . . .
such action.'' 15 U.S.C. 56(a)(1).
Because Section 813 of the EISA provides that a violation of Subtitle B
shall be treated as a violation of such a rule, any person that
violates Subtitle B is subject to these civil penalties.
Section 814(a) of Subtitle B further provides that -- ``[i]n
addition to any penalty applicable'' under the FTC Act -- ``any
supplier that violates section 811 or 812 shall be punishable by a
civil penalty of not more than $1,000,000.''\9\ Both Section 5(m)(1)(C)
of the FTC Act, 15 U.S.C. 45(m)(1)(C), and Section 814(c)(1) of the
EISA provide that each day of a continuing violation shall be
considered a separate violation.
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\9\ It is not clear whether the use of the term ``supplier'' in
Section 814 is intended to limit use of the remedy available under
that section to violations committed by suppliers through sales of
crude oil, gasoline, or petroleum distillates, or was intended to
extend to violations committed by suppliers through purchases of
such products as well. Commenters are encouraged to discuss this
point.
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Section 815(a) provides that nothing in Subtitle B ``limits or
affects'' Commission authority ``to bring an enforcement action or take
any other measure'' under the FTC Act or ``any other provision of
law.'' Section 815(b) provides that ``[n]othing in [Subtitle B] shall
be construed to modify, impair, or supersede the operation'' (1) of any
of the antitrust laws (as defined in Section 1(a) of the Clayton Act,
15 U.S.C. 12(a)) or (2) of Section 5 of the FTC Act ``to the extent
that . . . [S]ection 5 applies to unfair methods of competition.''
Section 815(c) provides that nothing in Subtitle B ``preempts any State
law.''
II. Overview of the Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
Section 811 applies to violations of ``such rules and regulations
as the Federal Trade Commission may prescribe as necessary or
appropriate in the public interest or for the protection of United
States citizens.'' This Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking seeks
public comment from interested parties, including other federal
agencies and the States, on whether, and if so in what manner, the
Commission should promulgate a rule pursuant to Section 811 in order to
ensure that the rule, on balance, carries out the objectives of the
statute by prohibiting practices that constitute manipulative or
deceptive devices or contrivances to the benefit of the public
interest.\10\
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\10\ The prohibitions embodied in Section 812 of EISA became
effective with enactment of EISA on December 19, 2007. These
prohibitions therefore already apply to any person subject to the
jurisdiction granted to the Commission by the FTC Act, and the
Commission may seek legal and equitable relief to remedy violations
of Section 812 in the manner described above, through civil actions
in federal court.
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The Commission has devoted substantial resources to enforcing the
antitrust laws in various parts of the petroleum industry, including in
the refining and distribution of crude oil, gasoline, and petroleum
distillates. The Commission has also expended significant research
efforts in this same space. As a consequence, the Commission and its
staff have experience with many parts of the petroleum industry. The
Commission will draw upon this foundation in conducting this Rulemaking
proceeding.
The Commission's consumer protection efforts provide a second
important foundation for conducting this Rulemaking proceeding, and in
particular for determining the extent to which the law of unfairness
and deception can inform the Commission's interpretation of a
``manipulative or deceptive device or contrivance.''\11\ In
interpreting Section 5 of the FTC Act, the Commission has determined
that a representation, omission, or practice is deceptive if (1) it is
likely to mislead consumers acting reasonably under the circumstances;
and (2) it is material, that is, likely to affect consumers' conduct or
decisions with respect to the product at issue.\12\ Section 5 also
provides that an act or practice is unfair if the injury to consumers
it causes or is likely to cause (1) is substantial; (2) is not
outweighed by countervailing benefits to consumers or to competition;
and (3) is not reasonably avoidable by consumers themselves.\13\
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\11\ The term ``manipulative or deceptive'' arguably can be read
as a single adjective. That is the approach the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission followed in promulgating the Final Rule
discussed infra, in reliance on the fact that, with respect to
Securities Rule 10b-5 cases, the Supreme Court had ``concluded that
both [manipulative and deceptive] require `misrepresentation.'''
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 18 CFR Part 1c: Prohibition of
Energy Market Manipulation: Final Rule, 71 FR 4244, 4253 n. 107
(January 26, 2006). By contrast, however, the FTC has for many years
vigorously enforced the separate prohibition of ``deceptive acts or
practices'' embodied in Section 5 of the FTC Act, 15 U.S.C. 45.
\12\ See generally Federal Trade Commission Policy Statement on
Deception, appended to Cliffdale Assocs., 103 F.T.C. 110, 174-83
(1984).
\13\ 15 U.S.C. 45(n); see generally Federal Trade Commission
Policy Statement on Unfairness, appended to International Harvester,
Co., 104 F.T.C. 949, 1070-76 (1984). Neither deception nor
unfairness requires a showing of scienter.
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As a consequence of the foregoing law enforcement, research, and
related efforts -- through both its competition mission and its
consumer protection mission -- the Commission and its staff have gained
an understanding of the domestic petroleum industry; of how
participants in the industry compete; of how prices of gasoline and
other refined petroleum products are determined; and of how particular
practices may, in specific circumstances, constitute either unfair
methods of competition or unfair or deceptive acts or practices, in
violation of Section 5 of the FTC Act. The Commission expects to use
this experience and understanding to effectuate the objectives of
Subtitle B. Through this Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, the
Commission expects to secure new and valuable information concerning
how best to achieve those objectives. Commenters are encouraged to
review this document in its entirety and offer comments concerning any
of the points or questions raised, as well as any other relevant issue.
III. The Antecedents of Section 811 and Relevant Legal Precedent
The manner in which the courts and regulatory agencies have
interpreted provisions similar to those comprising Section 811 is
relevant both to formulating a rule under Section 811 and to
determining how the resultant formulation will fare in the courts.
Public comment will provide critical information in that regard. While
there are substantial similarities among prior interpretations and
their contexts, there are substantial differences as well. In order to
provide a framework within which commenters can develop and provide
their own assessments for purposes of considering a rule under Section
811, we offer a brief discussion of the statutory and regulatory
antecedents of Section 811, and court interpretations of similar
statutes and regulations. The Commission encourages comment on these or
any other aspects of precedent that may help to guide the Commission's
approach in this Rulemaking.
Establishing a violation of Section 811 first requires a showing
that a person\14\ directly or indirectly used or employed a
``manipulative or deceptive device or contrivance.'' In determining the
contours of this requirement --
[[Page 25617]]
including determining the state of mind that is required -- commenters
are encouraged to address the extent to which the Commission can or
should rely on four separate sets of existing statutory and regulatory
constructs, discussed below.
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\14\ For the reasons discussed supra, the term ``person'' is
used in this document to refer to ``person, partnership, or
corporation,'' consistent with the jurisdictional reach of the FTC
Act.
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A. The Securities Laws
The phrase ``manipulative or deceptive device or contrivance''
derives from the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Exchange Act).
Section 10(b) of that statute prohibits the use or employment of:
any manipulative or deceptive device or contrivance in contravention
of such rules as the [Securities and Exchange] Commission may prescribe
as necessary or appropriate in the public interest or for the
protection of investors.\15\
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\15\ 15 U.S.C. 78j(b) (emphasis added). Section 9 of the
Exchange Act more specifically addresses ``Manipulation of security
prices,'' and prohibits or limits the use of certain practices with
respect to ``[t]ransactions relating to purchase or sale of
security;'' ``[t]ransactions relating to puts, calls, straddles, or
options;'' ``[e]ndorsement or guarantee of puts, calls, straddles,
or options;'' and ``practices that affect market volatility.'' 15
U.S.C. 78i(a),(b),(c),(h).
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) relied on Section 10(b) of
the Exchange Act to promulgate Rule 10b-5, which makes it unlawful for
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any person:
(a) To employ any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud;
(b) To make any untrue statement of a material fact or to omit to
state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements
made, in the light of the circumstances under which they were made,
not misleading . . .; or
(c) To engage in any act, practice, or course of business which
operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon any person. . .
.
in connection with the purchase or sale of any security.\16\
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\16\ 17 CFR 240.10b-5(a)-(c) (2008). In addition, the SEC's
rules under Section 10(b) prohibit a number of specific practices in
specific circumstances. See 17 CFR 240.10b-1 through 240.10b-18.
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In 1976, the Supreme Court determined that a private cause of
action for damages would not lie under Section 10(b) or Rule 10b-5
without proof that the defendant possessed scienter; that is, the
``intent to deceive, manipulate, or defraud.''\17\ In particular, the
Court noted:
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\17\ Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder, 425 U.S. 185, 193 (1976);
accord, e.g., Tellabs, Inc. v. Makor Issues & Rights, Ltd., 551 U.S.
------ (June 21, 2007), slip op. at 1-2, 7; In re Worlds of Wonder
Securities Litigation, 35 F.3d 1407, 1424 (9th Cir. 1994), cert.
denied, 116 S. Ct. 185 (1995); Loveridge v. Dreagoux, 678 F.2d 870,
875 (10th Cir. 1982).
Section 10(b) makes unlawful the use or employment of ``any
manipulative device or contrivance'' in contravention of [Securities
and Exchange] Commission rules. The words ``manipulative or
deceptive'' used in conjunction with ``device or contrivance''
strongly suggest that [Section] 10(b) was intended to proscribe
knowing or intentional misconduct.\18\
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\18\ Ernst & Ernst, 425 U.S. at 197. The Court concluded that
the terms ``manipulative,'' ``device,'' and ``contrivance'' . . .
make unmistakable a congressional intent to proscribe a type of
conduct quite different from negligence. Use of the word
``manipulative'' is especially significant. It is and was virtually
a term of art when used in connection with securities markets. It
connotes intentional or willful conduct designed to deceive or
defraud investors by controlling or artificially affecting the price
of securities.
Id. at 199 (internal citations omitted). See also Schreiber v.
Burlington Northern, Inc., 472 U.S. 1, 6-7 (1985); Santa Fe
Industries, Inc. v. Green, 430 U.S. 462, 476 (1977) (the term
``manipulation'' ``refers generally to practices, such as wash
sales, matched orders, or rigged prices, that are intended to
mislead investors by artificially affecting market activity.'').
Moreover, the Court found that use of the terms ``[t]o use or employ''
supported ``the view that Congress did not intend [Section] 10(b) to
embrace negligent conduct.''\19\ The Court concluded that ``the
language of [Section] 10(b) . . . clearly connotes intentional
misconduct. . . .''\20\ Soon thereafter, the Court determined that the
SEC, as well as private plaintiffs, must:
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\19\ Id. at 199 n. 20.
\20\ Id. at 201, citing United States v. Oregon, 366 U.S. 643,
648 (1961); Packard Motor Car Co. v. NLRB, 330 U.S. 485, 492 (1947);
accord, e.g., Aaron v. Securities and Exchange Commission, 446 U.S.
680, 690 (1980).
establish scienter as an element of a civil enforcement action to
enjoin violations of . . . [Section] 10(b) of the [Securities
Exchange Act of 1934], and Rule 10b-5 promulgated under that section
of the 1934 Act.\21\
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\21\ Aaron v. SEC, 446 U.S. at 701-702.
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While the Supreme Court has reserved the question
whether reckless behavior is sufficient for civil liability under
Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5, . . . [e]very Court of Appeals that
has considered the issue has held that a plaintiff may meet the
scienter requirement by showing that the defendant acted
intentionally or recklessly, though the Circuits differ on the
degree of recklessness required.\22\
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\22\ Tellabs, Inc. v. Makor Issues & Rights, Ltd., 551 U.S. ----
-- (June 21, 2007), slip op. at 7 n. 3, citing Ernst & Ernst v.
Hochfelder, 425 U.S. at 194 n. 12; Ottman v. Hanger Orthopedic
Group, Inc., 353 F.3d 338, 343 (collecting Court of Appeals cases).
More generally, the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has
elaborated that, in order to establish a Rule 10b-5 violation, the SEC
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must establish that the defendant:
(1) [m]ade a material misrepresentation or a material omission as
to which he had a duty to speak, or used a fraudulent device; (2)
with scienter; and (3) in connection with the purchase or sale of
securities.\23\
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\23\ SEC v. Monarch Funding Corp., 192 F.3d 295, 308 (2d Cir.
1999).
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B. The Natural Gas Act and the Federal Power Act
The Energy Policy Act of 2005 amended the Natural Gas Act and the
Federal Power Act, respectively, to prohibit the same type of conduct
that Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act targets -- that is, the use or
employment of ``any manipulative or deceptive device or contrivance (as
those terms are used in [Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934] . . . ).''\24\ In 2006, the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission (FERC) relied on those prohibitions to promulgate two rules
-- respectively prohibiting natural gas market manipulation and
electric energy market manipulation (collectively referred to as the
Final Rule). The FERC Final Rule is identical in many respects to SEC
Rule 10b-5.\25\ FERC also determined to interpret the Final Rule in a
manner ``consistent with analogous SEC precedent that is appropriate
under the circumstances.''\26\ In particular, FERC included a scienter
requirement, noting that ``[t]he final rule is not intended to regulate
negligent practices or corporate mismanagement, but rather to deter or
punish fraud in wholesale energy markets,''\27\ and that ``there can be
no violation of the final rule, or any of its sections, absent a
showing of the requisite scienter.''\28\ FERC determined that a showing
of recklessness would be sufficient to satisfy the scienter requirement
under the FERC Final Rule.\29\ FERC expressly declined to incorporate
``a specific intent standard'' into the Final Rule.\30\
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\24\ Compare Section 4A of the Natural Gas Act, 15 U.S.C. 717c-
1, with Section 222 of the Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C. 824v.
\25\ 18 CFR 1c.1, 1c.2 (2008).
\26\ Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 18 CFR Part 1c:
Prohibition of Energy Market Manipulation: Final Rule, 71 FR 4244,
4246 (January 26, 2006).
\27\ Id. at 4246.
\28\ Id. at 4252; accord, id. at 4253, citing Ernst & Ernst v.
Hochfelder, 425 U.S. at 197; Aaron v. SEC, 446 U.S. at 690.
\29\ Id. at 4253-54 and n. 109 (``Courts of appeal are in
general agreement that recklessness in some form satisfies the
scienter requirement of SEC Rule 10b-5.'') (citations omitted).
\30\ Id. at 4253.
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FERC relied on the foregoing analysis to determine that it will
take action pursuant to the Final Rule in cases where an entity:
(1) [u]ses a fraudulent device, scheme or artifice, or makes a
material misrepresentation or a material omission as to which there
is a duty to speak under a Commission-filed tariff, Commission
order,
[[Page 25618]]
rule or regulation, or engages in any act, practice, or course of
business that operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon
any entity; (2) with the requisite scienter; (3) in connection with
the purchase or sale of natural gas or electric energy or
transportation of natural gas or transmission of electric energy
subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission.\31\
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\31\ Id. at 4253.
FERC defined fraud ``generally . . . to include any action,
transaction, or conspiracy for the purpose of impairing, obstructing,
or defeating a well-functioning market.''\32\ FERC also provided
examples of practices that would violate the Final Rule because the
practices constituted ``manipulative or deceptive devices or
contrivances.'' FERC's cited practices were already prohibited by its
Market Behavior Rule 2 (since-repealed), but included in particular:
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\32\ Id., citing Dennis v. United States, 384 U.S. 855, 861
(1966).
wash trades, transactions predicated on submitting false
information, transactions creating and relieving artificial
congestion, and collusion for the purpose of market
manipulation.\33\
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\33\ Id. at 4254.
FERC also determined to incorporate the ``safe harbor presumptions of
compliance and affirmative defenses'' available under its Market
Behavior Rules into its enforcement of the Final Rule.\34\ FERC
rejected the argument registered by some commenters that its rule was
``vague and overly broad,'' noting that it was modeled after SEC Rule
10b-5, and that the courts have determined that the latter rule is
neither vague nor overly broad.\35\
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\34\ Id. at 4255. Thus, for example, FERC will presume that a
market participant that ``undertakes an action or transaction that
is explicitly contemplated in Commission-approved rules and
regulations'' does not violate the Final Rule. Moreover, if a market
participant takes an action or engages in a transaction -- at the
direction of an Independent System Operator or a Regional
Transmission Organization, but not approved by FERC -- it can assert
that as a defense for the action taken.
\35\ Id. at 4250, citing United States v. Persky, 520 F.2d 283
(2d Cir. 1975); Todd & Co. v. SEC, 557 F.2d 1008, 1013 (3d Cir.
1977).
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FERC's statute specifically limited its application to actions ``in
connection with a jurisdictional transaction.'' Relying on cases
addressing Section 10(b) of the SEC, in its Final Rule, FERC defined
``in connection with'' to mean that ``in committing fraud, the entity
must have intended to affect, or have acted recklessly to affect, a
jurisdictional transaction.''\36\
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\36\ Id. at 4249.
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FERC's first litigated case under the Final Rule provides a helpful
illustration of how it intends to enforce the Final Rule in practice.
In that case, FERC issued an Order to Show Cause and Notice of Proposed
Penalties against hedge fund Amaranth LLC, and two traders, alleging
that they had illegally manipulated the price of transactions subject
to FERC jurisdiction by trading in the New York Mercantile Exchange
(NYMEX) Natural Gas Futures Contracts for February, March, and April of
2006. In particular, the Order alleged that the respondents
intentionally manipulated the final, or ``settlement,'' price of the
NYMEX Natural Gas Futures Contract -- on three occasions in 2006 -- by
selling an extraordinary quantity of these contracts during the last 30
minutes of trading before they expired, with the purpose and effect of
driving down the settlement price. The settlement price is explicitly
used to determine the price for a substantial volume of physical
natural gas transactions subject to FERC jurisdiction, and Amaranth had
previously taken positions in various financial derivatives that were
several times larger -- and whose values increased -- as a direct
result of the fall in the settlement price of each natural gas futures
contract. As a consequence, for every dollar Amaranth lost on its sales
of the futures contracts, Amaranth gained several dollars on its
derivative financial positions.\37\ The Order gave Amaranth 30-days to
show cause why it should not be assessed $200 million in civil
penalties and be required to disgorge profits totaling $59 million,
plus interest. The case remains in litigation.\38\
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\37\ Commission Takes Preliminary Action in Two Major Market
Manipulation Cases, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission News (July
26, 2007), available at https://www.ferc.gov/news/news-releases/2007/
2007-3/07-26-07.pdf.
\38\ On July 25, 2007, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission
(CFTC) filed a civil enforcement action in federal district court
against Amaranth challenging many of the same actions at issue in
the FERC proceeding described above. The CFTC is seeking permanent
injunctive relief, an award of civil penalties, and other remedial
and ancillary relief. The CFTC and FERC both noted that they had
coordinated their respective investigations, pursuant to the
agencies' Memorandum of Understanding. The ultimate resolution of
the CFTC and FERC cases will provide important guidance concerning
the interaction between their respective statutes and rules with
respect to manipulation. See U.S. Commodity Futures Trading
Commission Charges Hedge Fund Amaranth and its Former Head Energy
Trader, Brian Hunter, with Attempted Manipulation of the Price of
Natural Gas Futures, Commodity Futures Trading Commission News (July
25, 2007), available at (https://www.cftc.gov/newsroom/
enforcementpressreleases/2007/pr5359-07.html.)
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C. The Commodity Exchange Act
Interpretation of the first component of Section 811 can also be
informed by the manner in which the concept of ``manipulation'' has
been defined in cases arising under the Commodity Exchange Act
(CEA).\39\ That statute empowers the CFTC, inter alia, to bring an
administrative enforcement action, or a civil injunctive action in
federal district court against:
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\39\ The CEA provides that the CFTC possesses, inter alia,
``exclusive jurisdiction'' for ``transactions involving contracts of
sale of a commodity for future delivery, traded or executed on a
contract market . . . or derivatives transaction execution facility
. . . or any other board of trade, exchange, or market. . . .'' 7
U.S.C. 2(a)(1)(A). It further provides for non-exclusive CFTC anti-
manipulation authority over cash and physical transactions, as well
as certain derivatives transactions relating to securities. 7 U.S.C.
2(a)(1)(A), (C), (D).
any person (other than a registered entity) [who] is manipulating
or attempting to manipulate or has manipulated or attempted to
manipulate the market price of any commodity, in interstate
commerce, or for future delivery on or subject to the rules of any
registered entity. . . .\40\
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\40\ 7 U.S.C. 9, 13b; see 7 U.S.C. 15. The statute defines a
``registered entity'' as including certain boards of trade
designated as contract markets; derivatives transaction execution
facilities; and ``derivatives clearing organizations.'' 7 U.S.C.
1a(29).
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In addition, Section 9(a)(2) of the CEA makes it a felony for:
[a]ny person to manipulate or attempt to manipulate the price of
any commodity in interstate commerce, or for future delivery on or
subject to the rules of any registered entity, or to corner or
attempt to corner any such commodity . . . .\41\
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\41\ 7 U.S.C. 13(a)(2).
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The CEA also requires any board of trade (defined as any organized
exchange or other trading facility\42\ ) that wishes to be designated
as a contract market, inter alia, to comply with a variety of statutory
``Core Principles.''\43\
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\42\ 7 U.S.C. 1a(2).
\43\ 7 U.S.C. 7(d).
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The Supreme Court decision in Merrill Lynch v. Curran provides an
extensive discussion of the origins of futures trading and the CEA, and
of how the foregoing statutory proscriptions of manipulation should be
interpreted.\44\ In particular, the Court held that the primary purpose
of the 1974 amendments to the CEA was to protect ``against manipulation
of markets and to protect any individual who desires to participate in
futures market trading.''\45\
D. The Sherman Act, the Clayton Act, and the Federal Trade Commission
Act
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\44\ Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner, & Smith, Inc. v. Curran, 456
U.S. 353 (1982).
\45\ Id. at 372, n. 50. Subsequently, the Commodity Futures
Modernization Act of 2000 identified the purposes of the CEA as
including, inter alia, ``to deter and prevent price manipulation or
any other disruptions to market integrity. . .'' 7 U.S.C. 5(b). See
also Frey v. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, 931 F.2d 1171,
1175 (7th Cir. 1991).
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The enactment of Subtitle B raises the important question of the
extent to which the Commission should rely
[[Page 25619]]
upon antitrust and consumer protection precedent as a frame of
reference for this Rulemaking proceeding. The legislation gave the
Commission new law enforcement tools to prevent both market
manipulation and the reporting of false information. However, the
extent to which law enforcement agencies have been able to prevent
manipulation or deception in the past may provide useful lessons as
commenters offer their input as to how best to effectuate EISA Section
811 and the statutory objectives it represents.
In the context of antitrust law, the term ``manipulative or
deceptive device or contrivance'' is not a term of art. But, practices
that potentially fall within the definition of those terms have been
analyzed in the past through the prism of the Sherman Act Section 1
prohibition against certain unreasonable contracts, combinations and
conspiracies in restraint of trade; through the Sherman Act Section 2
prohibition against monopolization, attempts to monopolize, and
conspiracies to monopolize; and through the FTC Act prohibition against
unfair methods of competition.
For example, 60 years ago, the Supreme Court addressed the concept
of manipulation in the petroleum industry in United States v. Socony-
Vacuum Oil Co. In that case, 12 oil companies and five individuals
violated Section 1 of the Sherman Act by operating the ``Mid-Continent
Buying Program'' and the ``East Texas Buying Program.''\46\ The
defendant participants in these two programs agreed that they would
purchase tank cars of ``distress gasoline'' from independent oil
refiners.\47\ Thereafter, the participants in the Mid-Continent Buying
Program held monthly meetings at which each participant would advise
the others of ``how much his company would buy and from whom.''\48\
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\46\ United States v. Socony-Vacuum Oil Co., Inc., et al., 310
U.S. 150, 181-90 (1940).
\47\ For example, in the Mid-Continent oil field, 17 independent
refiners did not have regular outlets for their gasoline, and
because they had to keep their refineries running, they had to sell
approximately 600 to 700 tank cars of gasoline each month at
``distress'' prices. Id. at 178-79. For similar reasons, a number of
independent refiners in the East Texas oil field had to sell a
substantial number of tank cars of gasoline at ``distress'' prices.
See id. at 185-90.
\48\ Id. at 182. The East Texas Buying Program followed a
similar approach with respect to independent refiners in the East
Texas oil field. Id. at 185-90.
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The Supreme Court determined that the:
whole scheme was carefully planned and executed to the end that
distress gasoline would not overhang the markets and depress them at
any time. And as a result of the payment of fair going market prices
a floor was placed and kept under the spot markets. Prices rose and
jobbers and consumers in the Mid-Western area paid more for their
gasoline than they would have paid but for the conspiracy.
Competition was not eliminated from the markets; but it was clearly
curtailed, since restriction of the supply of gasoline, the timing
and placement of the purchases under the buying programs and the
placing of a floor under the spot markets obviously reduced the play
of the forces of supply and demand.\49\
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\49\ Id. at 220.
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The Court determined that the purchases ``at or under the market
are one species of price-fixing,''\50\ and that ``there was substantial
competent evidence that the buying programs resulted in an increase of
spot market prices, of prices to jobbers and of retail prices in the
Mid-Western area.''\51\ The Court concluded that the buying programs,
by stabilizing market prices, constituted ``one form of manipulation,''
and defined ``market manipulation in its various manifestations'' as:
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\50\ Id. at 223.
\51\ Id. at 251. The Court rejected as irrelevant the
defendants' arguments that the prices at issue were reasonable, and
that their activities ``merely removed from the market the
depressive effect of distress gasoline. . . .'' Id. at 229.
an artificial stimulus applied to (or at times a brake on) market
prices, a force which distorts those prices, a factor which prevents
the determination of those prices by free competition alone.\52\
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\52\ Id. at 223.
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The Socony-Vacuum decision is among many in antitrust and consumer
protection law that may provide useful guidance to the Commission in
determining the metes and bounds of manipulative conduct under Subtitle
B.\53\ To the extent commenters believe the Commission should be aware
of particular antitrust or consumer protection law decisions,
commenters are encouraged to discuss the cases and provide an
explanation of the lessons to be incorporated from those opinions.
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\53\ Other cases that may be of interest include Verizon
Communications Inc. v. Law Offices of Curtis v. Trinko, LLP, 540
U.S. 398 (2004); Eastman Kodak v. Image Technical Services, 504 U.S.
451, 455-56 (1992); Aspen Skiing Co. v. Aspen Highlands Skiing
Corp., 472 U.S. 585, 601 (1985); and Virtual Maintenance Inc. v.
Prime Computer Inc., 11 F.3d 660, 662 (6th Cir. 1993). This list is
not intended to be exhaustive, but merely illustrative.
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In addition, unlike the SEC, CFTC, and FERC, the Commission has
long had authority to prevent ``unfair or deceptive acts or
practices.''\54\ That prohibition is not limited to ``devices or
contrivances,'' and violations do not require proof of actual fraud or
intent to deceive. The Commission seeks comments on any guidance its
experience with unfair or deceptive acts or practices should or could
provide in implementing its new authority.\55\
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\54\ See supra for the criteria the Commission uses under the
FTC Act.
\55\ Please note that nothing in connection with this Section
811 Rulemaking, any subsequently enacted rules, or related efforts
should be construed to alter the standards associated with
establishing a deceptive practice or an unfair practice in a case
brought by the Commission.
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E. Reflecting on the Legal Framework -- Questions for Commenters
The conduct component of Section 811 derives from a similar
prohibition in Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 --
as implemented by the SEC through its promulgation and enforcement of
Rule 10b-5 -- and from the 2005 amendments to the Natural Gas Act and
the Federal Power Act, as implemented through regulations promulgated
and enforced by FERC. The Commodity Exchange Act, as enforced by the
CFTC, and the antitrust laws provide additional guidance as to the
manner in which the Supreme Court and lower courts have interpreted the
manipulation concept.
Commenters are encouraged to assess whether, and if so to what
extent, a Section 811 rule should incorporate or otherwise reflect any
other aspects of these statutory and federal court precedents.
Commenters are encouraged to assess whether these statutory and federal
court precedents indicate that a Section 811 rule should prohibit a
person from using or employing ``any manipulative or deceptive device
or contrivance'' only if that person possesses the scienter -- to
execute the allegedly manipulative strategy at issue -- that is
analogous to the general intent to injure competition component of the
monopolization offense under Section 2 of the Sherman Act and Section 5
of the Federal Trade Commission Act. In addition, commenters are
encouraged to assess whether, and if so to what extent, a Section 811
rule should incorporate or otherwise reflect the FTC Act prohibition of
unfair or deceptive acts or practices.\56\
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\56\ The Commission notes that neither knowledge nor intent need
be shown to prove a deceptive practice or an unfair practice under
Section 5 of the FTC Act. See, e.g., FTC v. Bay Area Business
Council, Inc., 423 F.3d 627, 635 (7th Cir. 2005); FTC v. Freecom
Communications, Inc., 401 F.3d 1192, 1202 (10th Cir. 2005); FTC v.
Amy Travel Serv., Inc., 875 F.2d 564, 573-74 (7th Cir. 1989).
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In addition, in the Commission's 2006 Investigation of Gasoline
Price Manipulation and Post-Katrina Gasoline Price Increases Report to
Congress,\57\ the Commission described and looked for a
[[Page 25620]]
number of types of practices and circumstances in various components of
the petroleum refining and distribution system that might be viewed as
manipulative.\58\ Commenters are encouraged to discuss whether a
Section 811 rule should limit or prohibit any of these types of
practices and, if so, in what circumstances, including discussing the
direct and indirect benefits and costs of doing so. Commenters are also
encouraged to discuss conduct in connection with the purchase and sale
of crude oil, which, though outside the scope of the 2006 report, is
within the reach of Section 811.
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\57\ Federal Trade Commission Report to Congress, Investigation
of Gasoline Price Manipulation and Post-Katrina Gasoline Price
Increases (Spring 2006). Commenters may consider this report a
useful primer on the industry.
\58\ The Commission examined: ``(1) all transactions and
practices that are prohibited by the antitrust laws, including the
Federal Trade Commission Act, and (2) all other transactions and
practices, irrespective of their legality under the antitrust laws,
that tend to increase prices relative to costs and to reduce
output.'' Id. at ii (emphasis added). The Commission made clear,
however, that this definition for purpose of the report represented
neither existing legal prohibitions nor, in its view, an
identification of practices that should be prohibited.
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IV. Particular Questions For Commenters
Below is a general framework within which commenters are encouraged
to discuss what they believe the contours of a Section 811 rule should
be. The Commission encourages commenters to answer specific questions,
and to focus in particular on defining manipulative or deceptive
behavior, in order to help the Commission formulate a workable rule
that on balance benefits consumers.
A. Defining Market Manipulation
The Commission is considering various possible definitions of
market manipulation for the purpose of this Rulemaking under Section
811. One possible definition is the following:
Market manipulation shall mean knowingly using or employing, directly
or indirectly, a manipulative or deceptive device or contrivance -- in
connection with the purchase or sale of crude oil, gasoline, or
petroleum distillates at wholesale -- for the purpose or with the
effect of increasing the market price thereof relative to costs.
The Commission seeks comment on whether this proposed definition of
market manipulation is one under which a rule may be adopted that is
``necessary and appropriate in the public interest or for the
protection of United States citizens,'' as required by Section 811. The
Commission also seeks comment on whether an effect on prices should be
a necessary element of proof under either a charge of market
manipulation or a charge of attempted market manipulation. In addition,
the Commission encourages commenters to suggest any other definitions
that, in their view, may better address the public policy concern
enunciated through the Commission's new rulemaking authority.
B. Manipulative or Deceptive Device or Contrivance
As discussed above, Section 811 is modeled on authority previously
granted to the SEC, FERC, and the CFTC. The Commission encourages
commenters to address how Section 811's rulemaking authority should be
exercised in light of the similar authority granted to the SEC and to
FERC. In particular, the Commission seeks comments on how legal
precedent established for violations of rules addressing manipulation
or deceit in regulated behavior (such as securities trading or the
execution of transactions carried out by regulated entities) should
apply to unregulated behavior, such as the purchase and sale at
wholesale of crude oil, gasoline, or petroleum distillates. To what
extent (or in what particulars) should the jurisprudence under the
other laws addressing manipulation apply under the Commission's new
authority? What should not apply? The Commission encourages commenters
to identify both general criteria and specific applications of the
other laws, and to explain why each should or should not apply under a
Section 811 rule, with a specific discussion of the costs and benefits
of application
The Commission also seeks comment on the potential costs or
benefits of an FTC rule that simply mirrors the language of SEC Rule
10b-5 or the language of the FERC Final Rule. In particular, could a
Section 811 rule, that is similar to the rules adopted by the SEC and
FERC for their specific purposes, provide sufficient clarity as to
prohibited practices in the different context of crude oil, gasoline,
and petroleum distillates transactions? In addition, commenters are
asked to consider whether a rule that provides more specificity would
be adequately broad and flexible to allow the Commission to address new
and varied types of manipulation and deception. If the Commission
develops a rule with more specific guidance and standards, what should
those standards be?
In the larger context discussed above, the Commission also seeks
comment on the regulatory authority granted to the other federal
agencies, and the potential or actual impact on consumer prices from
the exercise of this authority. In addition, the Commission encourages
commenters to address whether an anti-manipulation rule promulgated
under Section 811 could be a mechanism for abuse by customers,
competitors, or others.
C. Effect on the Market
As indicated in a number of the cases discussed above, as well as
the FERC rulemaking, the primary focus of the prohibition on
manipulation appears to be on practices that are not a reaction to
market forces. Instead, the focus is on practices that intentionally,
willfully, or recklessly cause distortions in the market, such as
artificially raising or depressing prices. Commenters are encouraged to
consider whether this should be a focus of a potential Section 811
rule.
D. Scienter/State of Mind
In determining whether particular conduct violates any of the
statutory and regulatory proscriptions, the federal courts have
required a showing that the defendants or respondents were not simply
negligent, but rather possessed at least the requisite scienter to
execute the manipulative practice in question.
For example, the courts have interpreted Section 10(b) of the SEA
to require a showing of scienter -- that is, of intentional, willful,
or reckless conduct designed to deceive or defraud by controlling or
artificially affecting market prices or market activity. FERC relied on
that precedent to incorporate a scienter requirement into its Final
Rule. By contrast, the courts and the CFTC have interpreted the CEA and
its implementing regulations as requiring a showing of a specific
intent to injure a futures market through the execution of an
intentionally manipulative strategy. The Commission seeks comment on
the appropriate nature and level of scienter for a violation, and on
whether that determination should depend on the nature of the practice
at issue (and, if so, in what way). An additional question for
consideration includes whether the Commission should incorporate either
of the above scienter standards into a Section 811 rule. Commenters are
encouraged to provide a specific discussion of the costs and benefits
of the standard they recommend.
E. In Connection With
Establishing a violation of Section 811 also requires establishing
that the conduct at issue was used or employed ``in connection with the
purchase or sale of crude oil[,] gasoline[,] or
[[Page 25621]]
petroleum distillates at wholesale.''\59\ As a consequence, Section 811
does not extend to retail sales of gasoline. Instead, it arguably
covers sales and purchases starting at the point at which crude oil,
gasoline, or a petroleum distillate is sold by the producer or
importer, and ending at the point at which it is purchased by a
retailer. Commenters are encouraged to discuss how the phrase ``in
connection with the sale or purchase of crude oil, gasoline, or
petroleum distillates at wholesale'' should be interpreted. In relying
on cases addressing Section 10(b) of the SEA to promulgate its Final
Rule, FERC defined ``in connection with'' to mean that ``in committing
fraud, the entity must have intended to affect, or have acted
recklessly to affect, a jurisdictional transaction.''\60\ The
Commission specifically seeks guidance as to whether the FERC model is
appropriate for adoption by the Commission.
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\59\ The phrase ``crude oil gasoline or petroleum distillates,''
without commas, is used in Section 811 (as well as in the first
clause of Section 812), while the phrase ``crude oil, gasoline, or
petroleum distillates'' (with commas) is used in Section 812(3).
This is presumably a non-substantive typographical error; therefore,
all parts of both Sections should be read to cover all three types
of products (that is, crude oil, gasoline, and petroleum
distillates).
\60\ 71 FR 4249, quoting SEC v. Zandford, 535 U.S. 813, 825
(2002) (the Supreme Court has construed the ``in connection with''
requirement broadly, ``to encompass many circumstances where
securities transactions `coincide' with the overall scheme to
defraud'').
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F. In the Public Interest or For the Protection of United States
Citizens
Establishing a violation of Section 811 also requires a showing
that the practices ``used or employed'' violate a rule that the
Commission has prescribed ``as necessary or appropriate in the public
interest or for the protection of United States citizens.'' Commenters
are encouraged to address how the Commission may best ensure that a
Section 811 rule satisfies this standard. Commenters are also
encouraged to discuss whether antitrust or consumer protection
principles should or should not be incorporated at all into a Section
811 rule. For example, the Commission seeks comment on whether a
Section 811 rule should conform to traditional antitrust analysis by
requiring (1) the use or employment of ``any manipulative or deceptive
device or contrivance'' to satisfy the anticompetitive conduct
component of the offenses of monopolization and attempted
monopolization prohibited by Section 2 of the Sherman Act and (2) the
intent and market power components of those offenses to be satisfied
under the standards explained throughout antitrust case law.\61\
Commentors are asked to explain whether such a construction is
necessary or appropriate in the context of this Rulemaking.
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\61\ The Supreme Court has defined market power as the power
```to force a purchaser to do something that he would not do in a
competitive market,''' and as ```the ability of a single seller to
raise price and restrict output.''' Eastman Kodak Co. v. Image
Technical Services, 504 U.S. 451, 464 (1992), citing Jefferson
Parish Hospital Dist. No. 2 v. Hyde, 466 U.S. 2, 14 (1984); accord,
e.g., United States v. Dentsply Int'l, Inc., 399 F.3d 181, 187 (3d
Cir. 2005); United States v. Microsoft Corp., 253 F.3d 34, 51 (D.C.
Cir.), cert. denied, 534 U.S. 952 (2001). Consistent with that
determination, the Horizontal Merger Guidelines define market power
as to a seller as ``the ability profitably to maintain prices above
competitive levels for a significant period of time.'' U.S. Dep't of
Justice & Federal Trade Comm'n, Horizontal Merger Guidelines (1992),
Section 0.1, at 4; accord, Tops Markets, Inc. v. Quality Markets,
Inc., 142 F.3d 90, 99 (2d Cir. 1998); United States v. Syufy
Enters., 903 F.2d 659, 665-66 (9th Cir. 1990). As the Commission has
noted, although the terms ``market power'' and ``monopoly power''
are often treated as synonymous from an economic perspective, market
power can be thought of as a continuum along which the power to
control prices varies, beginning with the complete absence of market
power at one end and ending with monopoly power at the other.
International Telephone & Telegraph Co., 104 F.T.C. 280, 411 n. 60
(1984).
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G. Penalties
Section 814 provides civil penalty authority of up to $1,000,000,
which can be assessed against ``suppliers'' for each violation for each
day, taking into consideration the seriousness of the violation and any
attempts by the violator to mitigate the harm. The Commission seeks
comment on whether any potential chilling effect of these penalties on
legitimate business behavior should affect the interpretation of, or
required state of mind for, a ``manipulative deceptive device or
contrivance.'' The Commission also seeks comment on whether the Section
814 civil penalty authority extends only to violations committed by
suppliers through sales of crude oil, gasoline, or petroleum
distillates, or is intended to extend to violations committed by
suppliers through purchases of such products as well.
H. Overlapping Jurisdiction
As noted above, Congress has provided anti-manipulation authority
to FERC and the CFTC to reach behavior previously not regulated by
those agencies. In some cases, this authority may lead to a shared
jurisdiction over the same behavior. The manipulation authority
provided by Section 811 may subject market participants to similar
overlapping agency oversight, and create the potential for market
participants to be subject to differing standards of conduct and
multiple levels of liability. The Commission seeks comment on the
possible effects of this type of overlapping jurisdiction. The
Commission also seeks comment on the usefulness of inter-agency
information sharing on market manipulation regulation law enforcement;
on reducing costs; on speeding enforcement actions; on other potential
benefits or costs for consumers and businesses; and, on how it can best
harmonize its enforcement efforts with those of FERC and the CFTC.
I. Potential Practices
The Commission requests comment on the following topic list, but
encourages commenters to present any other proposals for formal rule
provisions that they may wish to suggest. This list is not to be
perceived as a formal proposal to address any of the practices
described pursuant to Section 811; rather, it is intended to be
illustrative, and to encourage further thinking.
Certain refiners have made public announcements of planned
reductions in the overall utilization of their refinery plant(s). The
Commission seeks comment on: (1) whether such practices should be
viewed as manipulative; (2) the perceived harm from such actions, if
any; (3) whether such practices should or would manifest the intent
necessary to violate Section 811; and (4) whether any business
justifications balance the perceived harm.
Refiners engage in periodic scheduled maintenance and
refinery downtime in order to prevent breakdowns or to change
equipment. On the one hand, such maintenance and scheduled