Orders Finding that the (1) Phys,1, 23729-23745 [2010-10314]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Notices
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING
COMMISSION
Orders Finding that the (1) Phys,1 BS,2
LD1 3 (US/MM), AB–NIT;4 (2) Phys, BS,
LD1 (US/MM), Union-Dawn; 5 (3) Phys,
FP,6 (CA/GJ),7 AB–NIT; (4) Phys, FP,
(US/MM), Union-Dawn; and (5) Phys,
ID,8 7a 9 (CA/GJ), AB–NIT Contracts,
Offered for Trading on the Natural Gas
Exchange, Inc., Do Not Perform a
Significant Price Discovery Function
AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading
Commission.
ACTION: Final orders.
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY: On October 20, 2009, the
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission (‘‘CFTC’’ or ‘‘Commission’’)
published for comment in the Federal
Register 10 a notice of its intent to
undertake a determination whether the
(1) Phys, BS, LD1 (US/MM), AB–NIT
(‘‘Alberta Basis’’); (2) Phys, BS, LD1 (US/
MM), Union-Dawn (‘‘Union-Dawn
Basis’’); (3) Phys, FP, (CA/GJ), AB–NIT
(‘‘Alberta Fixed-Price’’); (4) Phys, FP,
(US/MM), Union-Dawn (‘‘Union-Dawn
Fixed-Price’’); and (5) Phys, ID, 7a (CA/
GJ), AB–NIT (‘‘7a Index’’) contracts,
which are listed for trading on the
Natural Gas Exchange, Inc. (‘‘NGX’’), an
exempt commercial market (‘‘ECM’’)
under sections 2(h)(3)–(5) of the
Commodity Exchange Act (‘‘CEA’’ or the
‘‘Act’’), perform a significant price
discovery function pursuant to section
2(h)(7) of the CEA. The Commission
undertook this review based upon an
initial evaluation of information and
data provided by NGX as well as other
1 The acronym ‘‘Phys’’ indicates physical delivery
of natural gas.
2 The acronym ‘‘BS’’ indicates that the contract is
a cash-settled basis swap.
3 The acronym ‘‘LD1’’ indicates the final
settlement price of the New York Mercantile
Exchange’s (‘‘NYMEX’s’’) physically-delivered
Henry Hub Natural Gas futures contract for the
corresponding contract month, which is expressed
in U.S. dollars and cents per million British thermal
units (mmBtu).
4 The acronym ‘‘AB–NIT’’ refers to the Alberta,
Canada, market center and Nova Inventory Transfer
hub.
5 ‘‘Union-Dawn’’ refers to the Union Gas, Ltd.’s,
Dawn hub, which is located in Canada across the
U.S. border from Detroit, Michigan.
6 The acronym ‘‘FP’’ refers to a fixed-price
contract.
7 The abbreviation CA/GJ refers the Canadian
dollars per gigajoule, which is a unit of measure for
energy. One GJ is equal to 0.9478 mmBtu.
8 The acronym ‘‘ID’’ refers to an index contract.
9 The term ‘‘7a’’ refers to a price index that is
computed as a volume-weighted average of
transactions that occur on the Natural Gas
Exchange’s trading platform during a particular
calendar month. Such transactions specify the
physical delivery of natural gas at the AB–NIT hub
in the following calendar month.
10 74 FR 53724 (October 20, 2009).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:58 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
available information. The Commission
has reviewed the entire record in this
matter, including all comments
received, and has determined to issue
orders finding that the Alberta Basis,
Union-Dawn Basis, Alberta Fixed-Price,
Union-Dawn Fixed-Price and 7a Index
contracts do not perform a significant
price discovery function. Authority for
this action is found in section 2(h)(7) of
the CEA and Commission rule 36.3(c)
promulgated thereunder.
DATES: Effective Date: April 28, 2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Gregory K. Price, Industry Economist,
Division of Market Oversight,
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission, Three Lafayette Centre,
1155 21st Street, NW., Washington, DC
20581. Telephone: (202) 418–5515. Email: gprice@cftc.gov; or Susan Nathan,
Senior Special Counsel, Division of
Market Oversight, same address.
Telephone: (202) 418–5133. E-mail:
snathan@cftc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Introduction
The CFTC Reauthorization Act of
2008 (‘‘Reauthorization Act’’) 11
significantly broadened the CFTC’s
regulatory authority with respect to
ECMs by creating, in section 2(h)(7) of
the CEA, a new regulatory category—
ECMs on which significant price
discovery contracts (‘‘SPDCs’’) are
traded—and treating ECMs in that
category as registered entities under the
CEA.12 The legislation authorizes the
CFTC to designate an agreement,
contract or transaction as a SPDC if the
Commission determines, under criteria
established in section 2(h)(7), that it
performs a significant price discovery
function. When the Commission makes
such a determination, the ECM on
which the SPDC is traded must assume,
with respect to that contract, all the
responsibilities and obligations of a
registered entity under the Act and
Commission regulations, and must
comply with nine core principles
established by new section 2(h)(7)(C).
On March 16, 2009, the CFTC
promulgated final rules implementing
the provisions of the Reauthorization
Act.13 As relevant here, rule 36.3
imposes increased information reporting
requirements on ECMs to assist the
Commission in making prompt
assessments whether particular ECM
contracts may be SPDCs. In addition to
11 Incorporated as Title XIII of the Food,
Conservation and Energy Act of 2008, Public Law
110–246, 122 Stat. 1624 (June 18, 2008).
12 7 U.S.C. 1a(29).
13 74 FR 12178 (Mar. 23, 2009); these rules
became effective on April 22, 2009.
PO 00000
Frm 00066
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
23729
filing quarterly reports of its contracts,
an ECM must notify the Commission
promptly concerning any contract
traded in reliance on the exemption in
section 2(h)(3) of the CEA that averaged
five trades per day or more over the
most recent calendar quarter, and for
which the exchange sells its price
information regarding the contract to
market participants or industry
publications, or whose daily closing or
settlement prices on 95 percent or more
of the days in the most recent quarter
were within 2.5 percent of the
contemporaneously determined closing,
settlement or other daily price of
another contract.
Commission rule 36.3(c)(3)
established the procedures by which the
Commission makes and announces its
determination whether a particular ECM
contract serves a significant price
discovery function. Under those
procedures, the Commission will
publish notice in the Federal Register
that it intends to undertake an
evaluation whether the specified
agreement, contract or transaction
performs a significant price discovery
function and to receive written views,
data and arguments relevant to its
determination from the ECM and other
interested persons. Upon the close of
the comment period, the Commission
will consider, among other things, all
relevant information regarding the
subject contract and issue an order
announcing and explaining its
determination whether or not the
contract is a SPDC. The issuance of an
affirmative order signals the
effectiveness of the Commission’s
regulatory authorities over an ECM with
respect to a SPDC; at that time such an
ECM becomes subject to all provisions
of the CEA applicable to registered
entities.14 The issuance of such an order
also triggers the obligations,
requirements and timetables prescribed
in Commission rule 36.3(c)(4).15
II. Notice of Intent To Undertake SPDC
Determination
On October 20, 2009, the Commission
published in the Federal Register notice
of its intent to undertake a
determination whether the Alberta
Basis, Union-Dawn Basis, Alberta Fixed14 Public Law 110–246 at 13203; Joint
Explanatory Statement of the Committee of
Conference, H.R. Rep. No. 110–627, 110 Cong., 2d
Sess. 978, 986 (Conference Committee Report). See
also 73 FR 75888, 75894 (Dec. 12, 2008).
15 For an initial SPDC, ECMs have a grace period
of 90 calendar days from the issuance of a SPDC
determination order to submit a written
demonstration of compliance with the applicable
core principles. For subsequent SPDCs, ECMs have
a grace period of 30 calendar days to demonstrate
core principle compliance.
E:\FR\FM\04MYN1.SGM
04MYN1
23730
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Notices
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
Price, Union-Dawn Fixed Price and 7a
Index contracts perform a significant
price discovery function and requested
comment from interested parties.16
Comments were received from the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
(‘‘FERC’’), NGX and Working Group of
Commercial Energy Firms (‘‘WGCEF’’).17
The comment letter from FERC 18 did
not directly address the issue of whether
or not the subject contracts are SPDCs.
NGX stated that the subject contracts
lack sufficient liquidity to perform a
significant price discovery function.
WGCEF argued that the Alberta Basis
and Union-Dawn Basis contracts fail to
meet the material price reference, price
linkage and material liquidity criteria
for SPDC determination. Similarly, the
7a Index contracts lack sufficient
liquidity to perform a significant price
discovery function.19 NGX’s and the
Working Group’s comments are more
16 The Commission’s Part 36 rules establish,
among other things, procedures by which the
Commission makes and announces its
determination whether a specific ECM contract
serves a significant price discovery function. Under
those procedures, the Commission publishes a
notice in the Federal Register that it intends to
undertake a determination whether a specified
agreement, contract or transaction performs a
significant price discovery function and to receive
written data, views and arguments relevant to its
determination from the ECM and other interested
persons.
17 FERC is an independent Federal regulatory
agency that, among other things, regulates the
interstate transmission of natural gas, oil and
electricity. NGX is Canada’s leading energy
exchange and North America’s largest physical
clearing and settlement facility; NGX is wholly
owned by the TMX Group, Inc. WGCEF describes
itself as ‘‘a diverse group of commercial firms in the
domestic energy industry whose primary business
activity is the physical delivery of one or more
energy commodities to customers, including
industrial, commercial and residential consumers’’
and whose membership consists of ‘‘energy
producers, marketers and utilities.’’ FIEG describes
itself as an association of investment and
commercial banks who are active participants in
various sectors of the natural gas markets,
‘‘including acting as marketers, lenders,
underwriters of debt and equity securities, and
proprietary investors.’’ The comment letters are
available on the Commission’s website: comment
letters are available on the Commission’s Web site:
https://www.cftc.gov/lawandregulation/
federalregister/federalregistercomments/2009/
09-029.html.
18 FERC stated that the subject contracts call for
physical delivery of natural gas in Canada, and thus
do not appear to be interstate commerce under the
Natural Gas Act (‘‘NGA’’). Accordingly, FERC
expressed the opinion that a determination by the
Commission that any of the contracts performs a
significant price discovery function ‘‘would not
appear to conflict with FERC’s exclusive
jurisdiction under NGA over certain sales of natural
gas in interstate commerce for resale or with its
other regulatory responsibilities under the NGA’’
and further that ‘‘FERC staff will continue to
monitor for any such conflict * * * [and] advise
the CFTC’’ should any such potential conflict arise.
CL01.
19 WGCEF did not address whether the Alberta
Fixed Price or Union-Dawn Fixed Price contracts
are SPDCs.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:58 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
extensively discussed below, as
applicable.
III. Section 2(h)(7) of the CEA
The Commission is directed by
section 2(h)(7) of the CEA to consider
the following criteria in determining a
contract’s significant price discovery
function:
• Price Linkage—the extent to which
the agreement, contract or transaction
uses or otherwise relies on a daily or
final settlement price, or other major
price parameter, of a contract or
contracts listed for trading on or subject
to the rules of a designated contract
market (‘‘DCM’’) or derivatives
transaction execution facility (‘‘DTEF’’),
or a SPDC traded on an electronic
trading facility, to value a position,
transfer or convert a position, cash or
financially settle a position, or close out
a position.
• Arbitrage—the extent to which the
price for the agreement, contract or
transaction is sufficiently related to the
price of a contract or contracts listed for
trading on or subject to the rules of a
DCM or DTEF, or a SPDC traded on or
subject to the rules of an electronic
trading facility, so as to permit market
participants to effectively arbitrage
between the markets by simultaneously
maintaining positions or executing
trades in the contracts on a frequent and
recurring basis.
• Material price reference—the extent
to which, on a frequent and recurring
basis, bids, offers or transactions in a
commodity are directly based on, or are
determined by referencing or
consulting, the prices generated by
agreements, contracts or transactions
being traded or executed on the
electronic trading facility.
• Material liquidity—the extent to
which the volume of agreements,
contracts or transactions in a
commodity being traded on the
electronic trading facility is sufficient to
have a material effect on other
agreements, contracts or transactions
listed for trading on or subject to the
rules of a DCM, DTEF or electronic
trading facility operating in reliance on
the exemption in section 2(h)(3).
Not all criteria must be present to
support a determination that a
particular contract performs a
significant price discovery function, and
one or more criteria may be inapplicable
to a particular contract.20 Moreover, the
20 In its October 20, 2009, Federal Register
release, the Commission identified material price
reference, price linkage and material liquidity as the
possible criteria for SPDC determination of the
Alberta Basis and Union-Dawn Basis contracts
(arbitrage was not identified as a possible criterion).
With respect to the Alberta Fixed-Price, Union-
PO 00000
Frm 00067
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
statutory language neither prioritizes the
criteria nor specifies the degree to
which a SPDC must conform to the
various criteria. In Guidance issued in
connection with the Part 36 rules
governing ECMs with SPDCs, the
Commission observed that these criteria
do not lend themselves to a mechanical
checklist or formulaic analysis.
Accordingly, the Commission has
indicated that in making its
determinations it will consider the
circumstances under which the
presence of a particular criterion, or
combination of criteria, would be
sufficient to support a SPDC
determination.21 For example, for
contracts that are linked to other
contracts or that may be arbitraged with
other contracts, the Commission will
consider whether the price of the
potential SPDC moves in such harmony
with the other contract that the two
markets essentially become
interchangeable. This co-movement of
prices would be an indication that
activity in the contract had reached a
level sufficient for the contract to
perform a significant price discovery
function. In evaluating a contract’s price
discovery role as a price reference, the
Commission the extent to which, on a
frequent and recurring basis, bids, offers
or transactions are directly based on, or
are determined by referencing, the
prices established for the contract.
IV. Findings and Conclusions
The Commission’s findings and
conclusions with respect to the Alberta
Basis, Union-Dawn Basis, Alberta FixedPrice, Union-Dawn Fixed-Price and 7a
Index contracts are discussed separately
below.
a. The Phys, BS, LD1 (US/MM), AB–NIT
(Alberta Basis Contract) and the SPDC
Indicia
The Alberta Basis contract calls for
the physical delivery of natural gas
based on the final settlement price for
New York Mercantile Exchange’s
(‘‘NYMEX’s’’) Henry Hub physicallydelivered Natural Gas (‘‘NG’’) futures
contract for the specified calendar
month, plus or minus the price
differential (basis) between the Alberta
delivery point and the Henry Hub.
There is no standard size for the Alberta
Basis contract, although a minimum
Dawn Fixed-Price and 7a Index contracts, the
Federal Register release identified material price
reference and material liquidity as the possible
criteria for SPDC determination (price linkage and
arbitrage were not identified as possible criteria).
The criteria not indentified in the initial release
will not be discussed further in this document or
the associated Orders.
21 17 CFR part 36, Appendix A.
E:\FR\FM\04MYN1.SGM
04MYN1
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Notices
volume of 100 million British thermal
units (‘‘mmBtu’’) is required in
increments of 100 units per day. The
Alberta Basis contract is listed for 60
consecutive calendar months.
The Henry Hub,22 which is located in
Erath, Louisiana, is the primary cash
market trading and distribution center
for natural gas in the United States. It
also is the delivery point and pricing
basis for the NYMEX’s actively traded,
physically-delivered natural gas futures
contract, which is the most important
pricing reference for natural gas in the
United States. The Henry Hub, which is
operated by Sabine Pipe Line, LLC,
serves as a juncture for 13 different
pipelines. These pipelines bring in
natural gas from fields in the Gulf Coast
region and ship it to major consumption
centers along the East Coast and
Midwest. The throughput shipping
capacity of the Henry Hub is 1.8 trillion
mmBtu per day.
In addition to the Henry Hub, there
are a number of other locations where
natural gas is traded. In 2008, there were
33 natural gas market centers in North
America.23 Some of the major trading
centers include Alberta, Northwest
Rockies, Southern California border and
the Houston Ship Channel. For
locations that are directly connected to
the Henry Hub by one or more pipelines
and where there typically is adequate
shipping capacity, the price at the other
locations usually directly tracks the
price at the Henry Hub, adjusted for
transportation costs. However, at other
locations that are not directly connected
to the Henry Hub or where shipping
capacity is limited, the prices at those
locations often diverge from the Henry
Hub price. Furthermore, one local price
may be significantly different than the
price at another location even though
the two markets’ respective distances
from the Henry Hub are the same. The
reason for such pricing disparities is
that a given location may experience
supply and demand factors that are
specific to that region, such as
differences in pipeline shipping
capacity, unusually high or low demand
for heating or cooling or supply
disruptions caused by severe weather.
As a consequence, local natural gas
prices can differ from the Henry Hub
price by more than the cost of shipping
and such price differences can vary in
an unpredictable manner.
22 The term ‘‘hub’’ refers to a juncture where two
or more natural gas pipelines are connected. Hubs
also serve as pricing points for natural gas at the
particular locations.
23 See https://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/oil_gas/
natural_gas/feature_articles/2009/ngmarketcenter/
ngmarketcenter.pdf.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:58 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
The Alberta hub is far removed from
the Henry Hub and is not directly
connected to the Henry Hub by an
existing pipeline. Located in the
Canadian province of Alberta, the
Alberta natural gas market is a major
connection point for long-distance
transmission systems that ship natural
gas to points throughout Canada and the
United States. The Alberta province is
Canada’s dominant natural gas
producing region; six of the nine
Canadian market centers are located in
the Alberta province. The throughput
capacity at the AECO–C hub is ten
billion cubic feet per day. Moreover, the
number of pipeline interconnections at
that hub was four in 2008. Lastly, the
AECO–C hub’s capacity is 20.4 billion
cubic feet per day.24
The local price at the Alberta hub
typically differs from the price at the
Henry Hub. Thus, the price of the Henry
Hub physically-delivered futures
contract is an imperfect proxy for the
Alberta price. Moreover, exogenous
factors, such as adverse weather, can
cause the Alberta gas price to differ from
the Henry Hub price by an amount that
is more or less than the cost of shipping,
making the NYMEX Henry Hub futures
contract even less precise as a hedging
tool than desired by market participants.
Basis contracts 25 allow traders to more
accurately discover prices at alternative
locations and hedge price risk that is
associated with natural gas at such
locations. In this regard, a position at a
local price for an alternative location
can be established by adding the
appropriate basis swap position to a
position taken in the NYMEX
physically-delivered Henry Hub
contract (or in the NYMEX or ICE Henry
Hub look-alike contract, which cash
settle based on the NYMEX physicallydelivered NG contract’s final settlement
price).
In its October 20, 2009, Federal
Register notice, the Commission
identified material price reference, price
linkage and material liquidity as the
potential SPDC criteria applicable to the
Alberta Basis contract.26 Each of these
criteria is discussed below.
24 See https://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/oil_gas/
natural_gas/feature_articles/2009/ngmarketcenter/
ngmarketcenter.pdf
25 Basis contracts denote the difference in the
price of natural gas at a specified location minus the
price of natural gas at the Henry Hub. The
differential can be either a positive or negative
value.
26 As noted above, the Commission did not find
an indication of arbitrage in connection with this
contract; accordingly, that criterion is not discussed
in reference to the Alberta Basis contract.
PO 00000
Frm 00068
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
23731
1. Material Price Reference Criterion
The Commission’s October 20, 2009,
Federal Register notice identified
material price reference as a potential
basis for a SPDC determination with
respect to the Alberta Basis contract.
The Commission noted that NGX forged
an alliance with the
IntercontinentalExchange, Inc., (‘‘ICE’’)
to use the ICE’s matching engine to
complete transactions in physical
natural gas contracts traded on NGX. In
return, NGX agreed to provide clearing
services for such transactions. As part of
the agreement, NGX provides ICE with
transaction data, which are then made
available to market participants on a
paid basis. ICE offers NGX’s price data
in several packages, which vary in terms
of the amount of available historical
data. For example, the ICE offers the
‘‘OTC Gas End of Day’’ data package
with access to all price data, or just
current prices plus a selected number of
months (i.e., 12, 24, 36, or 48 months)
of historical data.
The Commission will rely on one of
two sources of evidence—direct or
indirect—to determine that the price of
a contract was being used as a material
price reference and therefore, serving a
significant price discovery function.27
With respect to direct evidence, the
Commission will consider the extent to
which, on a frequent and recurring
basis, cash market bids, offers or
transactions are directly based on or
quoted at a differential to, the prices
generated on the ECM in question.
Direct evidence may be established
when cash market participants are
quoting bid or offer prices or entering
into transactions at prices that are set
either explicitly or implicitly at a
differential to prices established for the
contract in question. Cash market prices
are set explicitly at a differential to the
section 2(h)(3) contract when, for
instance, they are quoted in dollars and
cents above or below the reference
contract’s price. Cash market prices are
set implicitly at a differential to a
section 2(h)(3) contract when, for
instance, they are arrived at after adding
to, or subtracting from the section
2(h)(3) contract, but then quoted or
reported at a flat price. With respect to
indirect evidence, the Commission will
consider the extent to which the price
of the contract in question is being
routinely disseminated in widely
distributed industry publications—or
offered by the ECM itself for some form
of remuneration—and consulted on a
frequent and recurring basis by industry
27 17
E:\FR\FM\04MYN1.SGM
CFR part 36, Appendix A.
04MYN1
23732
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Notices
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
participants in pricing cash market
transactions.
The Alberta hub is a major trading
center for natural gas in North America.
Traders, including producers, keep
abreast of the prices of the Alberta
market center when conducting cash
deals. However, ICE’s cash-settled
AECO Financial Basis contract is used
more widely as a price reference than
the NGX Alberta Basis contract. Traders
look to ICE contract’s competitively
determined price as an indication of
expected values of natural gas at the
Alberta hub when entering into cash
market transactions for natural gas,
especially those trades providing for
physical delivery in the future.
Moreover, traders use ICE’s AECO
Financial Basis contract, as well as other
basis contracts, to hedge cash market
positions and transactions. The
substantial volume of trading and open
interest in the ICE contract attests to its
use for this purpose.28 In contrast,
trading volume in the NGX Alberta
Basis contract is much smaller than in
ICE’s cash-settled version of the
contract. In this regard, total trading
volume in the NGX Alberta Basis
contract in the third quarter of 2009 was
equivalent to 52,158 NYMEX
physically-delivered natural gas
contracts, which has a size of 10,000
mmBtu.
Accordingly, although the Alberta
Hub is a major trading center for natural
gas and, as noted, NGX provides price
information for the Alberta Basis
contract to ICE which sells it, the
Commission has found upon further
evaluation that the Alberta Basis
contract is not routinely consulted by
industry participants in pricing cash
market transactions and thus does not
meet the Commission’s Guidance for the
material price reference criterion. In this
regard, the ICE AECO natural gas futures
contract is routinely consulted by
industry participants in pricing cash
market transactions at this location.
Because both the NGX and the ICE
contracts basically price the same
commodity at the same location and
time and the ICE contract has
significantly higher trading volume and
open interest, it is not necessary for
market participants to independently
refer to the NGX Alberta Basis contract
for pricing natural gas at this location.
28 In the third quarter of 2009, 6,320 separate
trades occurred on ICE’s electronic platform in its
AECO Financial Basis contract, resulting in a daily
average of 95.8 trades. During the same period, the
ICE contract had a total trading volume on its
electronic platform of 736,412 contracts (which was
an average of 11,158 contracts per day). As of
September 30, 2009, open interest in the ICE AECO
Financial Basis contract was 483,561 contracts.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:58 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
Thus, the Alberta Basis contract does
not satisfy the direct price reference test
for existence of material price reference.
Furthermore, the Commission notes that
publication of the Alberta Basis
contract’s prices is not indirect evidence
of material price reference. The Alberta
Basis contract’s prices are published
with those of numerous other contracts,
including ICE’s AECO Financial Basis
contract, which are of more interest to
market participants. Thus, the
Commission has concluded that traders
likely do not specifically purchase ICE
data packages for the NGX Alberta Basis
contract’s prices and do not consult
such prices on a frequent and recurring
basis in pricing cash market
transactions.
i. Federal Register Comments
NGX states its opinion that the
Alberta Basis contract does not satisfy
the material price reference criteria
because the contract lacks sufficient
liquidity, and ‘‘the consideration of
liquidity is implicitly understood to be
a relevant, if not fundamental factor,
where material price reference is being
considered.’’ 29 Furthermore, NGX
opined that the Commission purported
‘‘to adopt a threshold as low as 5, 10 or
20 trades per day as sufficiently material
to attract a SPDC designation.’’ 30 In this
regard, the Commission adopted a five
trades-per-day threshold as a reporting
requirement to enable it to
‘‘independently be aware of ECM
contracts that may develop into
SPDCs’’ 31 rather than solely relying
upon an ECM on its own to identify any
such potential SPDCs to the
Commission. Thus, any contract that
meets this threshold may be subject to
scrutiny as a potential SPDC. However,
this does not mean that the contract will
be found to be a SPDC merely because
it met the reporting threshold. WGCEF
states that there is no direct evidence
that any contracts on any market settle
to or reference the NGX Alberta Basis
price. Moreover, WGCEF ‘‘does not
believe the fact that ICE publishes the
settlement prices of NGX physical
transactions constitutes sufficient
evidence of a Material Price Reference
necessary to satisfy the requirements of
CEA Section 2(h)(7)(B)(iii).’’ It notes that
the publication of NGX price data by
ICE is the result of a unique
arrangement between ICE and NGX,
whereby ICE serves as the exclusive
trading platform for NGX contracts and
NGX does not publish any trade data on
its own website. ‘‘Given this unique
29 CL
02.
arrangement,’’ WGCEF asserts, ‘‘it is only
logical that ICE publishes transaction
data regarding the NGX physical deals
in its ‘‘OTC Gas End of Day’’
publication.’’ As noted above, the
Commission believes that publication of
the Alberta Basis contract’s prices is not
indirect evidence of material price
reference. The Alberta Basis contract’s
prices are published with those of
numerous other contracts, including
ICE’s AECO Financial Basis contract,
which are of more interest to market
participants. As a result, the
Commission has concluded that traders
likely do not specifically purchase ICE
data packages for the NGX Alberta Basis
contract’s prices and do not consult
such prices on a frequent and recurring
basis in pricing cash market
transactions.
ii. Conclusion Regarding Material Price
Reference
Based on the above, the Commission
finds that the NGX Alberta Basis
contract does not meet the material
price reference criterion because cash
market transactions are not priced either
explicitly or implicitly on a frequent
and recurring basis at a differential to
the Alberta Basis contract’s price (direct
evidence). Moreover, while the Alberta
Basis contract’s price data is sold to
market participants, market participants
likely do not specifically purchase the
ICE data packages for the Alberta
contract’s prices and do not consult
such prices on a frequent and recurring
basis in pricing cash market transactions
(indirect evidence).
2. Price Linkage Criterion
In its October 20, 2009, Federal
Register notice, the Commission
identified price linkage as a potential
basis for a SPDC determination with
respect to the Alberta Basis contract. In
this regard, the final settlement of the
Alberta Basis contract is based, in part,
on the final settlement price of
NYMEX’s Henry Hub physically
delivered NG futures contract, where
NYMEX is registered with the
Commission as a DCM.
The Commission’s Guidance on
Significant Price Discovery Contracts
notes that a ‘‘price-linked contract is a
contract that relies on a contract traded
on another trading facility to settle,
value or otherwise offset the pricelinked contract.’’ 32 Furthermore, the
Guidance notes that ‘‘[f]or a linked
contract, the mere fact that a contract is
linked to another contract will not be
sufficient to support a determination
that a contract performs a significant
30 Id.
31 73
PO 00000
FR 75892 (December 12, 2008)
Frm 00069
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
32 Appendix
E:\FR\FM\04MYN1.SGM
A to the Part 36 rules.
04MYN1
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Notices
price discovery function. To assess
whether such a determination is
warranted, the Commission will
examine the relationship between
transaction prices of the linked contract
and the prices of the referenced
contract. The Commission believes that
where material liquidity exists, prices
for the linked contract would be
observed to be substantially the same as,
or move substantially in conjunction
with, the prices of the referenced
contract.’’ The Guidance proposes a
threshold price relationship such that
prices of the ECM linked contract will
fall within a 2.5 percent price range for
95 percent of contemporaneously
determined closing, settlement or other
daily prices over the most recent
quarter. Finally, the Commission also
stated in the Guidance that it would
consider a linked contract that has a
trading volume equivalent to 5 percent
of the volume of trading in the contract
to which it is linked to have sufficient
volume potentially to be deemed SPDC
(‘‘minimum threshold’’).
To assess whether the Alberta Basis
contract meets the price linkage
criterion, Commission staff obtained
price data from NGX and performed the
statistical tests cited above. Staff found
that, while the Alberta Basis contract
price is determined, in part, by the final
settlement price of the NYMEX
physically delivered natural gas futures
contract (a DCM contract), the imputed
Alberta price (derived by adding the
NYMEX Henry Hub Natural Gas price to
the Alberta Basis price) is not within 2.5
percent of the settlement price of the
corresponding NYMEX Henry Hub
natural gas futures contract on 95
percent or more of the days.
Specifically, during the third quarter of
2009, none of the Alberta Basis natural
gas prices derived from the NGX basis
values were within 2.5 percent of the
daily settlement price of the NYMEX
Henry Hub futures contract. In addition,
staff found that the Alberta Basis
contract fails to meet the volume
threshold requirement. In particular, the
total trading volume in the NYMEX NG
contract during the third quarter of 2009
was 14,022,963 contracts, with 5
percent of that number being 701,148
contracts. Trades on the NGX
centralized market in the Alberta Basis
contract during the same period was
52,168 NYMEX-equivalent contracts.
Thus, centralized-market trades in the
Alberta Basis contract amounted to less
than the minimum threshold.
i. Federal Register Comments
NGX states its belief that the Alberta
Basis contract does not meet the price
linkage factor because there is
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:58 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
insufficient trading activity in this
contract.
WGCEF acknowledges that the
Alberta Basis contract is technically
linked to the NYMEX Henry Hub NG
contract. However, WGCEF contends
that a comparison of the Alberta Basis
contract price with NYMEX NG
settlement prices from July 21, 2009
through November 2, 2009 clearly
establishes that prices for these
contracts are not substantially the same
and do not move substantially in
conjunction with one another.
ii. Conclusion Regarding the Price
Linkage Criterion
The Commission finds that the NGX
Alberta Basis contract does not meet the
price linkage criterion because it fails
the price relationship and volume test
provided for in the Commission’s
Guidance.
3. Material Liquidity Criterion
As noted above, in its October 20,
2009, Federal Register notice, the
Commission identified material
liquidity, price linkage and material
price reference as potential criteria for
SPDC determination of the AB contract.
To assess whether a contract meets the
material liquidity criterion, the
Commission first examines trading
activity as a general measurement of the
contract’s size and potential importance.
If the Commission finds that the
contract in question meets a threshold
of trading activity that would render it
of potential importance, the
Commission will then perform a
statistical analysis to measure the effect
that changes to the subject-contract’s
prices potentially may have on prices
for other contracts listed on an ECM or
a DCM.
With respect to the material liquidity
criterion, the Commission noted that the
average number of transactions in the
Alberta Basis nearby month contract
was 23.2 trades per day in the second
quarter of 2009. During the same period,
the Alberta Basis contract had an
average daily trading volume of
5,869,000 mmBtu (or 587 NYMEXequivalent contracts of 10,000 mmBtu
size). Moreover, open interest as of June
30, 2009, was 150,213,600 mmBtu in the
nearby month (15,021 NYMEX
equivalents) and 10,112,200 mmBtu
(1,011 NYMEX equivalents) for delivery
two months out.33
In a subsequent filing, NGX reported
that in the third quarter of 2009 the total
number of transactions was 2,640 trades
33 Second quarter 2009 data was submitted to the
Commission in a different format than in later
filings. In this regard total trading volume and total
number of trades per quarter were not identified.
PO 00000
Frm 00070
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
23733
(an average of 40 trades per day).
Trading volume in the third quarter of
2009 was 521,580,000 mmBtu (52,158
NYMEX-equivalent contracts) or an
average of 7,900,000 mmBtu (790
NYMEX-equivalent contracts) on a daily
basis. As of September 30, 2009, open
interest in the Alberta Basis contract
was 6,440,000 mmBtu (644 NYMEXequivalent contracts).
The number of trades per day
remained relatively low from the second
to third quarters of 2009, and averaged
only slightly more than the reporting
level of five trades per day. Moreover,
trading activity in the Alberta Basis
contract, as characterized by total
quarterly volume, indicates that the
Alberta Basis contract experiences
trading activity that is similar to that of
minor futures markets.34 Thus, the
Alberta Basis contract does not meet a
threshold of trading activity that would
render it of potential importance and no
additional statistical analysis is
warranted.35
i. Federal Register Comments
NGX stated in its comment letter that
the Alberta Basis contract does not meet
the material liquidity criterion for SPDC
determination for a number of reasons.
First, NGX opined that the
Commission ‘‘seems to have applied a
threshold for ‘material liquidity’ that is
extremely low, and in general
insufficient to support a determination
that these contracts are no longer
emerging markets but in fact serve a
significant price discovery function.’’
NGX also noted that the Commission’s
Guidance states that material liquidity
was intended to be a ‘‘broad concept that
captures the ability to transact
immediately with little or no price
concession.’’ The Guidance also states
that where ‘‘material liquidity exists, a
more or less continuous stream of prices
can be observed and the prices should
be similar,’’ such as ‘‘where trades occur
multiple times per minute.’’ NGX then
opined that ‘‘[t]he levels of liquidity
34 Based on the Commission’s experience, a
minor futures contract is, generally, one that has a
quarterly trading volume of 100,000 contracts or
less.
35 In establishing guidance to illustrate how it
will evaluate the various criteria, or combinations
of criteria, when determining whether a contract is
an SPDC, the Commission made clear that ‘‘material
liquidity itself would not be sufficient to make a
determination that a contract is a [SPDC], * * * but
combined with other factors it can serve as a
guidepost indicating which contracts are
functioning as [SPDCs].’’ For the reasons discussed
above, the Commission has found that the UnionDawn Basis contract does not meet either the price
linkage or material price reference criterion. In light
of this finding and the Commission’s Guidance
cited above, there is no need to evaluate further the
material liquidity criteria since it cannot be used
alone as a basis for an SPDC determination.
E:\FR\FM\04MYN1.SGM
04MYN1
23734
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Notices
outlined above for the Proposed
Contracts cannot be what Congress
intended in establishing the dividing
line between contracts ripe for
regulation and those still emerging and
in need of further incubation.’’
WGCEF used arguments similar to
those of NGX in opining that the Alberta
Basis contract does not meet the
material liquidity criterion. For
example, WGCEF stated that the Alberta
Basis contract does not have an effect on
other contracts that are listed for
trading, particularly the NYMEX NG
contract. WGCEF pointed out the
Commission’s Guidance which states
that a ‘‘continuous stream of prices’’
should be observed in markets with
material liquidity. In addition, WGCEF
indicated that in liquid markets
observed prices should be similar to
each other and that transactions should
occur multiple times per minute; ‘‘the
trade frequency of the Alberta Basis
Contract in terms of multiple trades per
minute is very low.’’ In this regard, the
Commission notes that it adopted a five
trades-per-day threshold as a reporting
requirement to enable it to
‘‘independently be aware of ECM
contracts that may develop into
SPDCs’’ 36 rather than solely relying
upon an ECM on its own to identify any
such potential SPDCs to the
Commission. Thus, any contract that
meets this threshold may be subject to
scrutiny as a potential SPDC but this
does not mean that the contract will be
found to be a SPDC merely because it
met the reporting threshold.
Furthermore, the Commission observes
that a continuous stream of prices
would indeed be an indication of
liquidity for certain markets but the
Guidance also notes that ‘‘quantifying
the levels of immediacy and price
concession that would define material
liquidity may differ from one market or
commodity to another.’’
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
ii. Conclusion Regarding Material
Liquidity
For the reasons discussed above, the
Commission finds that the Alberta Basis
contract does not meet the material
liquidity criterion.
4. Overall Conclusion Regarding the
Alberta Basis Contract
After considering the entire record in
this matter, including the comments
received, the Commission has
determined that the NGX Alberta Basis
contract does not perform a significant
price discovery function under the
criteria established in section 2(h)(7) of
the CEA. Specifically, the Commission
36 73
FR 75892 (December 12, 2008).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:58 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
has determined that the NGX Alberta
Basis contract does not meet the
material price reference, price linkage,
or material liquidity criteria at this time.
Accordingly, the Commission is issuing
the attached Order declaring that the
Alberta Basis contract is not a SPDC.
Issuance of this Order indicates that
the Commission does not at this time
regard NGX as a registered entity in
connection with its Alberta Basis
contract.37 Accordingly, with respect to
its Alberta Basis contract, NGX is not
required to comply with the obligations,
requirements and timetables prescribed
in Commission rule 36.3(c)(4) for ECMs
with SPDCs. However, NGX must
continue to comply with the applicable
reporting requirements for ECMs.
b. The Phys, BS, LD1 (US/MM), UnionDawn (Union-Dawn Basis) Contract and
the SPDC Indicia
The NGX Union-Dawn Basis contract
is a monthly contract that calls for
physical delivery of natural gas based
on the final settlement price for
NYMEX’s Henry Hub physicallydelivered natural gas futures contract for
the specified calendar month, plus or
minus the price differential (basis)
between the Dawn delivery point and
the Henry Hub. There is no standard
size for the Union-Dawn Basis contract,
although a minimum volume of 100
mmBtu is required in increments of 100
units per day. The Union-Dawn Basis
contract is listed for 60 consecutive
calendar months.
The Henry Hub,38 which is located in
Erath, Louisiana, is the primary cash
market trading and distribution center
for natural gas in the United States. It
also is the delivery point and pricing
basis for the NYMEX’s actively traded,
physically-delivered natural gas futures
contract, which is the most important
pricing reference for natural gas in the
United States. The Henry Hub, which is
operated by Sabine Pipe Line, LLC,
serves as a juncture for 13 different
pipelines. These pipelines bring in
natural gas from fields in the Gulf Coast
region and ship it to major consumption
centers along the East Coast and
Midwest. The throughput shipping
capacity of the Henry Hub is 1.8 trillion
mmBtu per day.
In addition to the Henry Hub, there
are a number of other locations where
natural gas is traded. In 2008, there were
33 natural gas market centers in North
37 See
73 FR 75888, 75893 (Dec. 12, 2008).
38 The term ‘‘hub’’ refers to a juncture where two
or more natural gas pipelines are connected. Hubs
also serve as pricing points for natural gas at the
particular locations.
PO 00000
Frm 00071
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
America.39 Some of the major trading
centers include Alberta, Northwest
Rockies, Southern California border and
the Houston Ship Channel. For
locations that are directly connected to
the Henry Hub by one or more pipelines
and where there typically is adequate
shipping capacity, the price at the other
locations usually directly tracks the
price at the Henry Hub, adjusted for
transportation costs. However, at other
locations that are not directly connected
to the Henry Hub or where shipping
capacity is limited, the prices at those
locations often diverge from the Henry
Hub price. Furthermore, one local price
may be significantly different than the
price at another location even though
the two markets’ respective distances
from the Henry Hub are the same. The
reason for such pricing disparities is
that a given location may experience
supply and demand factors that are
specific to that region, such as
differences in pipeline shipping
capacity, unusually high or low demand
for heating or cooling or supply
disruptions caused by severe weather.
As a consequence, local natural gas
prices can differ from the Henry Hub
price by more than the cost of shipping
and such price differences can vary in
an unpredictable manner.
Union Gas, Ltd., is a major Canadian
natural gas storage, transmission, and
distribution company based in Ontario,
Canada. Union Gas offers premium
storage and transportation services to
customers at the Dawn hub, which is
the largest underground storage facility
in Canada and one of the largest in
North America. The Dawn hub offers
customers an important link for natural
gas moving from Western Canadian and
U.S. supply basins to markets in central
Canada and the northeast United States.
The throughput capacity at the Dawn
hub is 9.3 billion cubic feet per day.
Moreover, the number of pipeline
interconnections at that hub was ten in
2008. Lastly, the Dawn hub’s capacity is
12.8 billion cubic feet per day.40
The local price at the Dawn hub
typically differs from the price at the
Henry Hub. Thus, the price of the Henry
Hub physically-delivered futures
contract is an imperfect proxy for the
Dawn price. Moreover, exogenous
factors, such as adverse weather, can
cause the Dawn gas price to differ from
the Henry Hub price by an amount that
is more or less than the cost of shipping,
making the NYMEX Henry Hub futures
39 See https://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/oil_gas/
natural_gas/feature_articles/2009/ngmarketcenter/
ngmarketcenter.pdf.
40 See https://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/oil_gas/
natural_gas/feature_articles/2009/ngmarketcenter/
ngmarketcenter.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\04MYN1.SGM
04MYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Notices
contract even less precise as a hedging
tool than desired by market participants.
Basis contracts 41 allow traders to more
accurately discover prices at alternative
locations and hedge price risk that is
associated with natural gas at such
locations. In this regard, a position at a
local price for an alternative location
can be established by adding the
appropriate basis swap position to a
position taken in the NYMEX
physically-delivered Henry Hub
contract (or in the NYMEX or ICE Henry
Hub look-alike contract, which cash
settle based on the NYMEX physicallydelivered natural gas contract’s final
settlement price).
In its October 20, 2009, Federal
Register notice, the Commission
identified material price reference, price
linkage and material liquidity as the
potential SPDC criteria applicable to the
Union-Dawn Basis contract. Each of
these criteria is discussed below.42
1. Material Price Reference Criterion
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
The Commission’s October 20, 2009,
Federal Register notice identified
material price reference as a potential
basis for a SPDC determination with
respect to this contract. The
Commission noted that NGX forged an
alliance with ICE to use ICE’s matching
engine to complete transactions in
physical natural gas contracts traded on
NGX. In return, NGX agreed to provide
the clearing services for such
transactions. As part of the agreement,
NGX provides ICE with transaction data,
which are then made available to market
participants on a paid basis. ICE offers
the NGX data in several packages,
which vary in terms of the amount of
available historical data. For example,
the ICE offers the ‘‘OTC Gas End of Day’’
data packages with access to all price
data, or just current prices plus a
selected number of months (i.e., 12, 24,
36, or 48 months) of historical data.
The Commission will rely on one of
two sources of evidence—direct or
indirect—to determine that the price of
a contract was being used as a material
price reference and therefore, serving a
significant price discovery function.43
With respect to direct evidence, the
Commission will consider the extent to
which, on a frequent and recurring
basis, cash market bids, offers or
41 Basis contracts denote the difference in the
price of natural gas at a specified location minus the
price of natural gas at the Henry Hub. The
differential can be either a positive or negative
value.
42 As noted above, the Commission did not find
an indication of arbitrage in connection with this
contract; accordingly, that criterion is not discussed
in reference to the Union-Dawn Basis contract.
43 17 CFR part 36, Appendix A.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:58 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
transactions are directly based on or
quoted at a differential to, the prices
generated on the ECM in question.
Direct evidence may be established
when cash market participants are
quoting bid or offer prices or entering
into transactions at prices that are set
either explicitly or implicitly at a
differential to prices established for the
contract in question. Cash market prices
are set explicitly at a differential to the
section 2(h)(3) contract when, for
instance, they are quoted in dollars and
cents above or below the reference
contract’s price. Cash market prices are
set implicitly at a differential to a
section 2(h)(3) contract when, for
instance, they are arrived at after adding
to, or subtracting from the section
2(h)(3) contract, but then quoted or
reported at a flat price. With respect to
indirect evidence, the Commission will
consider the extent to which the price
of the contract in question is being
routinely disseminated in widely
distributed industry publications—or
offered by the ECM itself for some form
of remuneration—and consulted on a
frequent and recurring basis by industry
participants in pricing cash market
transactions.
The Union-Dawn hub is a relatively
important trading center for natural gas
in North America. Traders use the NGX
Union-Dawn Basis contract to hedge
cash market positions and transactions.
Nevertheless, the relatively small
volume of trading and open interest 44 in
the Union-Dawn Basis contract does not
support a finding that the contract is
consulted on a frequent and recurring
basis in establishing cash market
transaction prices. Thus, the UnionDawn Basis contract does not satisfy the
direct price reference test for existence
of material price reference. Furthermore,
the Commission notes that publication
of the Union-Dawn Basis contract’s
prices is not indirect evidence of
material price reference. The UnionDawn Basis contract’s prices are
published with those of numerous other
contracts, including ICE’s AECO
Financial Basis contract, which are of
more interest to market participants.
Thus, the Commission has concluded
that traders likely do not specifically
purchase ICE data packages for the NGX
Union-Dawn Basis contract’s prices and
do not consult such prices on a frequent
44 In the third quarter of 2009, the Union-Dawn
Basis contract had a total trading volume that was
equivalent to 28,090 NYMEX physically-delivered
NG futures contracts (the size of one NYMEX NG
contract is 10,000 mmBtu); the Union-Dawn
contract also had an open interest equivalent to
2,948 NYMEX NG futures contracts.
PO 00000
Frm 00072
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
23735
and recurring basis in pricing cash
market transactions.
i. Federal Register Comments
NGX expressed the opinion that the
Union Dawn Basis contract does not
meet the material price reference
criterion because there is insufficient
trading activity in this contract.
WGCEF stated that there is no
evidence that the Union-Dawn Basis
contract does not directly affect the
‘‘settlement of the NYMEX NG Contract
nor does it influence physical pricing at
the Henry Hub.’’ 45 Moreover, there is no
evidence that a contract in any market
is tied directly or indirectly to the
settlement price of the Union-Dawn
Basis contract. With respect to indirect
evidence, WGCEF believes that ICE’s
publication of the NGX contract’s
settlement prices does not ‘‘constitute
sufficient evidence’’ of material price
reference, and is simply an extension of
the ‘‘unique [business] arrangement’’
between ICE and NGX.
ii. Conclusion Regarding Material Price
Reference
Based on the above, the Commission
finds that the NGX Union-Dawn Basis
contract does not meet the material
price reference criterion because cash
market transactions are not priced either
explicitly or implicitly on a frequent
and recurring basis at a differential to
the Union-Dawn Basis contract’s price
(direct evidence). Moreover, while the
Union-Dawn Basis contract’s price data
is sold to market participants,
individuals likely do not specifically
purchase the ICE data packages for the
Union-Dawn Basis contract’s prices and
do not consult such prices on a frequent
and recurring basis in pricing cash
market transactions (indirect evidence).
2. Price Linkage Criterion
In its October 20, 2009, Federal
Register notice, the Commission
identified price linkage as a potential
basis for a SPDC determination with
respect to the Union-Dawn Basis
contract. In this regard, the final
settlement of the Union-Dawn Basis
contract is based, in part, on the final
settlement price of the NYMEX’s Henry
Hub physically-delivered natural gas
futures contract, where the NYMEX is
registered with the Commission as a
DCM.
The Commission’s Guidance on
Significant Price Discovery Contracts
notes that a ‘‘price-linked contract is a
contract that relies on a contract traded
on another trading facility to settle,
value or otherwise offset the price45 CL
E:\FR\FM\04MYN1.SGM
03.
04MYN1
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
23736
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Notices
linked contract.’’ 46 Furthermore, the
Guidance notes that ‘‘[f]or a linked
contract, the mere fact that a contract is
linked to another contract will not be
sufficient to support a determination
that a contract performs a significant
price discovery function. To assess
whether such a determination is
warranted, the Commission will
examine the relationship between
transaction prices of the linked contract
and the prices of the referenced
contract. The Commission believes that
where material liquidity exists, prices
for the linked contract would be
observed to be substantially the same as,
or move substantially in conjunction
with, the prices of the referenced
contract.’’ The Guidance proposes a
threshold price relationship such that
prices of the ECM linked contract will
fall within a 2.5 percent price range for
95 percent of contemporaneously
determined closing, settlement or other
daily prices over the most recent
quarter. Finally, the Commission also
stated in the Guidance that it would
consider a linked contract that has a
trading volume equivalent to 5 percent
of the volume of trading in the contract
to which it is linked to have sufficient
volume potentially to be deemed a
SPDC (‘‘minimum threshold’’).
To assess whether the Union-Dawn
contract meets the price linkage
criterion, Commission staff obtained
price data from NGX and performed the
statistical tests cited above. Staff found
that, while the Union-Dawn Basis
contract price is determined, in part, by
the final settlement price of the NYMEX
physically-delivered natural gas futures
contract (a DCM contract), the imputed
Union-Dawn price (derived by adding
the NYMEX Henry Hub Natural Gas
price to the Union-Dawn Basis price) is
not within 2.5 percent of the settlement
price of the corresponding NYMEX
Henry Hub natural gas futures contract
on 95 percent or more of the days.
Specifically, during the third quarter of
2009, 27.4 percent of the Union-Dawn
Basis natural gas prices derived from the
NGX basis values were within 2.5
percent of the daily settlement price of
the NYMEX Henry Hub futures contract.
In addition, staff found that the UnionDawn Basis contract fails to meet the
volume threshold requirement. In
particular, the total trading volume in
the NYMEX NG contract during the
third quarter of 2009 was 14,022,963
contracts, with 5 percent of that number
being 701,148 contracts. Trades on the
NGX centralized market in the UnionDawn Basis contract during the same
period was 28,090 NYMEX-equivalent
46 Appendix
VerDate Mar<15>2010
A to the Part 36 rules.
18:58 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
contracts. Thus, centralized-market
trades in the Union-Dawn Basis contract
amounted to less than the minimum
threshold.
i. Federal Register Comments
NGX states its belief that the Union
Dawn Basis contract does not meet the
price linkage factor because there is
insufficient trading activity in this
contract. WGCEF acknowledges that the
Union-Dawn Basis is technically linked
to the NYMEX physically-delivered NG
futures contract. The Working Group
notes that a comparison of the UnionDawn Basis with NYMEX NG settlement
prices from July 21, 2009, through
November 2, 2009, clearly establishes
that these contracts are not substantially
the same and do not move substantially
in conjunction with one another.
ii. Conclusion Regarding the Price
Linkage Criterion
The Commission finds that the UnionDawn Basis contract does not meet the
price linkage criterion because it fails
the price relationship and volume tests
provided for in the Commission’s
Guidance.
3. Material Liquidity Criterion
As noted above, in its October 20,
2009, Federal Register notice, the
Commission identified material
liquidity, price linkage and material
price reference as potential criteria for
SPDC determination of the Union-Dawn
Basis contract. To assess whether a
contract meets the material liquidity
criterion, the Commission first examines
trading activity as a general
measurement of the contract’s size and
potential importance. If the Commission
finds that the contract in question meets
a threshold of trading activity that
would render it of potential importance,
the Commission will then perform a
statistical analysis to measure the effect
that changes to the subject-contract’s
prices potentially may have on prices
for other contracts listed on an ECM or
a DCM.
In its October 20, 2009, Federal
Register release, the Commission noted
that the total number of transactions
executed on NGX’s electronic platform
in the nearby month of the Union-Dawn
Basis contract was 8.3 trades per day in
the second quarter of 2009. During the
same period, the Union-Dawn Basis
contract had an average daily trading
volume of 1,332,400 mmBtu (or 133
NYMEX-equivalent contracts per day).
Moreover, open interest as of June 30,
2009, was 28,203,800 mmBtu (2,820
NYMEX-equivalent contracts) in the
nearby contract month and 12,908,400
mmBtu (1,291 NYMEX-equivalent
PO 00000
Frm 00073
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
contracts) for delivery two months
out.47
In a subsequent filing, NGX reported
that total trading volume in the third
quarter of 2009 was 28,090 contracts (or
425 contracts on a daily basis). In term
of number of transactions, 1,831 trades
occurred in the third quarter of 2009 (28
trades per day). As of September 30,
2009, open interest in the Union-Dawn
Basis contract was 23,289 NYMEXequivalent contracts.
As indicated above, the average
number of trades per day in the second
and third quarters of 2009 was only
slightly above the minimum reporting
level (5 trades per day). Moreover,
trading activity in the Union-Dawn
Basis contract, as characterized by total
quarterly volume, indicates that the
Union-Dawn Basis contract experiences
trading activity similar to that of minor
futures markets.48 Thus, the UnionDawn Basis contract does not meets a
threshold of trading activity that would
render it of potential importance and no
additional statistical analysis is
warranted.49
i. Federal Register Comments
NGX stated in its comment letter that
the Union-Dawn Basis contract does not
meet the material liquidity criterion for
SPDC determination for a number of
reasons.
First, NGX opined that the
Commission ‘‘seems to have applied a
threshold for ‘material liquidity’ that is
extremely low, and in general
insufficient to support a determination
that these contracts are no longer
emerging markets but in fact serve a
significant price discovery function’’.
NGX also noted that the Commission’s
Guidance states that material liquidity
was intended to be a ‘‘broad concept that
captures the ability to transact
immediately with little or no price
47 Second quarter 2009 data was submitted to the
Commission is a different format than in later
filings. In this regard total trading volume and total
number of trades per quarter were not identified.
48 Based on the Commission’s experience, a
minor futures contract is, generally, one that has a
quarterly trading volume of 100,000 contracts or
less.
49 In establishing guidance to illustrate how it
will evaluate the various criteria, or combinations
of criteria, when determining whether a contract is
a SPDC, the Commission made clear that ‘‘material
liquidity itself would not be sufficient to make a
determination that a contract is a [SPDC], * * * but
combined with other factors it can serve as a
guidepost indicating which contracts are
functioning as [SPDCs].’’ For the reasons discussed
above, the Commission has found that the UnionDawn Basis contract does not meet either the price
linkage or material price reference criterion. In light
of this finding and the Commission’s Guidance
cited above, there is no need to evaluate further the
material liquidity criteria since it cannot be used
alone as a basis for a SPDC determination.
E:\FR\FM\04MYN1.SGM
04MYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Notices
concession.’’ The Guidance also states
that where ‘‘material liquidity exists, a
more or less continuous stream of prices
can be observed and the prices should
be similar’’, such as ‘‘where trades occur
multiple times per minute.’’ NGX then
opined that ‘‘[t]he levels of liquidity
outlined above for the Proposed
Contracts cannot be what Congress
intended in establishing the dividing
line between contracts ripe for
regulation and those still emerging and
in need of further incubation.
The WGCEF used arguments similar
to those of NGX in opining that the
Union-Dawn Basis contract does not
meet the material liquidity criterion. In
addition, WGCEF noted that to be
materially liquid, a contract must have
‘‘a material effect of other contracts’’ and
have ‘‘sufficient liquidity to perform a
significant price discovery function.’’
WGCEF stated that the Union-Dawn
Basis contract lacks both of those
features.
In this regard, the Commission notes
that it adopted a five trades-per-day
threshold as a reporting requirement to
enable it to ‘‘independently be aware of
ECM contracts that may develop into
SPDCs’’ 50 rather than solely relying
upon an ECM on its own to identify any
such potential SPDCs to the
Commission. Thus, any contract that
meets this threshold may be subject to
scrutiny as a potential SPDC but this
does not mean that the contract will be
found to be a SPDC merely because it
met the reporting threshold.
Furthermore, the Commission observes
that a continuous stream of prices
would indeed be an indication of
liquidity for certain markets but the
Guidance also notes that ‘‘quantifying
the levels of immediacy and price
concession that would define material
liquidity may differ from one market or
commodity to another.’’
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
ii. Conclusion Regarding Material
Liquidity
For the reasons discussed above, the
Commission finds that the Union-Dawn
Basis contract does not meet the
material liquidity criterion.
4. Overall Conclusion Regarding the
Union-Dawn Basis Contract
After considering the entire record in
this matter, including the comments
received, the Commission has
determined that the Union-Dawn Basis
contract does not perform a significant
price discovery function under the
criteria established in section 2(h)(7) of
the CEA. Specifically, the Commission
has determined that the Union-Dawn
50 73
FR 75892 (December 12, 2008).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:58 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
Basis contract does not meet the
material price reference, price linkage,
or material liquidity criteria at this time.
Accordingly, the Commission is issuing
the attached Order declaring that the
Union-Dawn Basis contract is not a
SPDC.
Issuance of this Order indicates that
the Commission does not at this time
regard NGX as a registered entity in
connection with its Union-Dawn Basis
contract.51 Accordingly, with respect to
its Union-Dawn Basis contract, NGX is
not required to comply with the
obligations, requirements and timetables
prescribed in Commission rule
36.3(c)(4) for ECMs with SPDCs.
However, NGX must continue to comply
with the applicable reporting
requirements for ECMs.
c. The Phys, FP, (CA/GJ), AB–NIT
(Alberta Fixed Price) Contract and the
SPDC Indicia
The Alberta Fixed-Price contract calls
for physical delivery of natural gas at
the Alberta hub over a number of
different time periods. This contract
allows delivery of natural gas during the
following day, Friday plus two or three
days, Saturday plus three or four days,
Sunday plus two days, the remainder of
the month, throughout the nearby
calendar month, and during a specific
future calendar month. Each delivery
period is considered to be a separate
contract, and market participants value
each delivery period separately.
However, overlapping delivery days are
considered fungible, and, thus, may be
offset by traders. There is no standard
size for the Alberta Fixed-Priced
contract, although a minimum volume
of 94.78 mmBtu is required in
increments of 100 units per day. The
NGX lists the Alberta Fixed-Price
contract for 60 calendar months.
As noted above, the primary pricing
point for natural gas in North America
is the Henry Hub, which is located in
Erath, Louisiana. In addition to the
Henry Hub, there are a number of other
locations where natural gas is traded. In
2008, there were 33 natural gas market
centers in North America.52 Some of the
major trading centers include Alberta,
Northwest Rockies, Southern California
border and the Houston Ship Channel.
For locations that are directly connected
to the Henry Hub by one or more
pipelines and where there typically is
adequate shipping capacity, the price at
the other locations usually directly
tracks the price at the Henry Hub,
51 See
73 FR 75888, 75893 (Dec. 12, 2008).
https://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/oil_gas/
natural_gas/feature_articles/2009/ngmarketcenter/
ngmarketcenter.pdf.
52 See
PO 00000
Frm 00074
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
23737
adjusted for transportation costs.
However, at other locations that are not
directly connected to the Henry Hub or
where shipping capacity is limited, the
prices at those locations often diverge
from the Henry Hub price. Furthermore,
one local price may be significantly
different than the price at another
location even though the two markets’
respective distances from the Henry
Hub are the same. The reason for such
pricing disparities is that a given
location may experience supply and
demand factors that are specific to that
region, such as differences in pipeline
shipping capacity, unusually high or
low demand for heating or cooling or
supply disruptions caused by severe
weather. As a consequence, local
natural gas prices can differ from the
Henry Hub price by more than the cost
of shipping and such price differences
can vary in an unpredictable manner.
The Alberta hub is far removed from
the Henry Hub and is not directly
connected to the Henry Hub by an
existing pipeline. Located in the
Canadian province of Alberta, the
Alberta natural gas market is a major
connection point for long-distance
transmission systems that ship natural
gas to points throughout Canada and the
United States. The Alberta province is
Canada’s dominant natural gas
producing region; six of the nine
Canadian market centers are located in
the Alberta province. The throughput
capacity at the AECO–C hub is ten
billion cubic feet per day. Moreover, the
number of pipeline interconnections at
that hub was four in 2008. Lastly, the
AECO–C hub’s capacity is 20.4 billion
cubic feet per day.53
The local price at the Alberta hub
typically differs from the price at the
Henry Hub. Thus, the price of the Henry
Hub physically-delivered futures
contract is an imperfect proxy for the
Alberta price. Moreover, exogenous
factors, such as adverse weather, can
cause the Alberta gas price to differ from
the Henry Hub price by an amount that
is more or less than the cost of shipping,
making the NYMEX Henry Hub futures
contract even less precise as a hedging
tool than desired by market participants.
In its October 20, 2009, Federal
Register notice, the Commission
identified material liquidity and
material price reference as the potential
SPDC criteria applicable to the Alberta
Fixed-Price contract. Each of these
factors is discussed below.54
53 See https://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/oil_gas/
natural_gas/feature_articles/2009/ngmarketcenter/
ngmarketcenter.pdf
54 As noted above, the Commission did not find
an indication of arbitrage and price linkage in
E:\FR\FM\04MYN1.SGM
Continued
04MYN1
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
23738
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Notices
1. Material Price Reference Criterion
The Commission’s October 20, 2009,
Federal Register notice identified
material price reference as a potential
basis for a SPDC determination with
respect to this contract. The
Commission noted that the NGX forged
an alliance with ICE to use the ICE’s
matching engine to complete
transactions in physical gas contracts
traded on NGX. In return, the NGX
agreed to provide the clearing services
for such transactions. As part of the
agreement, NGX provides the ICE with
transaction data, which are then made
available to market participants on a
paid basis. The ICE offers the NGX data
in several packages, which vary in terms
of the amount of available historical
data. For example, the ICE offers the
‘‘OTC Gas End of Day’’ data package
with access to all price data, or just
current prices plus a selected number of
months (i.e., 12, 24, 36, or 48 months)
of historical data.
The Commission will rely on one of
two sources of evidence—direct or
indirect—to determine that the price of
a contract was being used as a material
price reference and therefore, serving a
significant price discovery function.55
With respect to direct evidence, the
Commission will consider the extent to
which, on a frequent and recurring
basis, cash market bids, offers or
transactions are directly based on or
quoted at a differential to, the prices
generated on the ECM in question.
Direct evidence may be established
when cash market participants are
quoting bid or offer prices or entering
into transactions at prices that are set
either explicitly or implicitly at a
differential to prices established for the
contract in question. Cash market prices
are set explicitly at a differential to the
section 2(h)(3) contract when, for
instance, they are quoted in dollars and
cents above or below the reference
contract’s price. Cash market prices are
set implicitly at a differential to a
section 2(h)(3) contract when, for
instance, they are arrived at after adding
to, or subtracting from the section
2(h)(3) contract, but then quoted or
reported at a flat price. With respect to
indirect evidence, the Commission will
consider the extent to which the price
of the contract in question is being
routinely disseminated in widely
distributed industry publications—or
offered by the ECM itself for some form
of remuneration—and consulted on a
frequent and recurring basis by industry
connection with this contract; accordingly, those
criteria are not discussed in reference to the Alberta
Fixed-Price contract.
55 17 CFR part 36, Appendix A.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:42 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
participants in pricing cash market
transactions.
The Alberta hub is a major trading
center for natural gas in North America.
Traders, including producers, keep
abreast of the prices of the Alberta
market center when conducting cash
deals. However, ICE’s cash-settled
AECO Financial Basis contract is used
more widely as a price reference than
the NGX Alberta Fixed-Price contract.
Traders look to the ICE contract’s
competitively determined price as an
indication of expected values of natural
gas at the Alberta hub when entering
into cash market transactions for natural
gas, especially those trades providing
for physical delivery in the future.
Traders use ICE’s AECO Financial Basis
contract, as well as other basis contracts,
to hedge cash market positions and
transactions. The substantial volume of
trading and open interest in the ICE
contract attests to its use for this
purpose.56 In contrast, trading volume
in the NGX Alberta Fixed-Price contract
is much smaller than in ICE’s AECO
Financial Basis contract. In this regard,
total trading volume in the NGX Alberta
Fixed Price contract in the third quarter
of 2009 was equivalent to 50,313
NYMEX physically-delivered NG
contracts, which has a size of 10,000
mmBtu.57
Accordingly, although the Alberta
Hub is a major trading center for natural
gas and, as noted, NGX provides price
information for the Alberta Fixed Price
contract to ICE which sells it, the
Commission has found upon further
evaluation that the Alberta Fixed Price
contract is not routinely consulted by
industry participants in pricing cash
market transactions and thus does not
meet the Commission’s Guidance for the
material price reference criterion. In this
regard, the ICE AECO Financial Basis
contract is routinely consulted by
industry participants in pricing cash
market transactions at this location.
Because both the NGX and the ICE
contracts basically price the same
commodity at the same location and
time 58 and the ICE contract has
56 In the third quarter of 2009, 6,320 separate
trades occurred on ICE’s electronic platform,
resulting in a daily average of 95.8 trades. During
the same period, the ICE contract had a total trading
volume on its electronic platform of 736,412
contracts (which was an average of 11,158 contracts
per day). Open interest in ICE’s AECO Financial
Basis Contract was 483,561 contracts as of
September 30, 2009.
57 Trading volume in the ICE AECO Financial
Basis contract during the third quarter of 2009 was
equivalent to 184,103 NYMEX NG contracts.
58 The Alberta natural gas price can be derived
using the Alberta Basis contract and the NYMEX
Henry Hub NG contract. In this regard, the imputed
price is the Henry Hub price plus or minus the basis
PO 00000
Frm 00075
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
significantly higher trading volume and
open interest, it is not necessary for
market participants to independently
refer to the NGX Alberta Fixed-Price
contract for pricing natural gas at this
location. Thus, the Alberta Fixed-Price
contract does not satisfy the direct price
reference test for existence of material
price reference. Furthermore, the
Commission notes that publication of
the NGX Alberta Fixed-Price contract’s
prices is not indirect evidence of
material price reference. The NGX
Alberta Fixed-Price contract’s prices are
published with those of numerous other
contracts, which are of more interest to
market participants. Thus, the
Commission has concluded that traders
likely do not specifically purchase the
ICE data packages for the NGX Alberta
Fixed-Price contract’s prices and do not
consult such prices on a frequent and
recurring basis in pricing cash market
transactions.
i. Federal Register Comments
NGX states its belief that the Alberta
Fixed Price contract does not meet the
material price reference factor because
there is insufficient trading activity in
this contract.
ii. Conclusion Regarding Material Price
Reference
Based on the above, the Commission
finds that the NGX Alberta Fixed-Price
contract does not meet the material
price reference criterion because cash
market transactions are not priced either
explicitly or implicitly on a frequent
and recurring basis at a differential to
the Alberta Fixed Price contract’s price
(direct evidence). Moreover, while the
Alberta Fixed-Price contract’s price data
is sold to market participants, market
participants likely do not specifically
purchase the ICE data packages for the
Alberta Fixed-Price contract’s prices
and do not consult such prices on a
frequent and recurring basis in pricing
cash market transactions (indirect
evidence).
2. Material Liquidity Criterion
As noted above, in its October 20,
2009, Federal Register notice, the
Commission identified material
liquidity and material price reference as
potential criteria for SPDC
determination of the Alberta Fixed-Price
contract. With respect to the material
liquidity criterion, the Commission
noted that the total number of
transactions executed in the contract on
NGX’s electronic platform during the
second quarter of 2009 was 122.1, 36.0,
at Alberta, as indicated by the NGX Alberta Basis
contract.
E:\FR\FM\04MYN1.SGM
04MYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Notices
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
7.0, 30.1, 7.4, 68.6 and 12.8 trades for
the following delivery periods—
following day, Friday plus two days,
Friday plus three days, Saturday plus
three days, Saturday plus four days,
Sunday plus two days, remainder of the
month, nearby calendar month, and any
single future calendar month,
respectively. During the same period,
the Alberta Fixed-Price contract had a
total trading volume of 1,209,505
mmBtu; 821,565 mmBtu; 223,874
mmBtu; 754,175 mmBtu; 672,568
mmBtu; 6,634,030 mmBtu; and
1,233,958 mmBtu for the following
delivery periods—next day, Friday plus
two days, Friday plus three days,
Saturday plus three days, Saturday plus
four days, Sunday plus two days,
remainder of the month, nearby
calendar month, and any single future
calendar month, respectively. Moreover,
the net open interest as of June 30, 2009,
was 96,003,450 mmBtu for next-month
delivery. For delivery two months out,
the open interest was 54,456,997
mmBtu.59
In a subsequent filing NGX reported
that total trading volume in the third
quarter of 2009 was 50,313 contracts (or
762 contracts on a daily basis). In term
of number of transactions, 4,694 trades
occurred in the third quarter of 2009 (73
trades per day), for those Alberta FixedPrice contracts that specify delivery in
the spot month. As of September 30,
2009, open interest in the Alberta FixedPrice contract was 23,961 NYMEXequivalent contracts.
The average number of trades per day
in the second and third quarters of 2009
was only moderately above the
minimum reporting level (5 trades per
day). Moreover, trading activity in the
Alberta Fixed-Price contract, as
characterized by total quarterly volume,
indicates that the Alberta Fixed-Price
contract experiences trading activity
similar to that of minor futures
markets.60 Thus, the Alberta Fixed-Price
contract does not meets a threshold of
trading activity that would render it of
potential importance and no additional
statistical analysis is warranted.61
59 Second quarter 2009 data was submitted to the
Commission is a different format than in later
filings. In this regard total trading volume and total
number of trades per quarter were not identified.
60 Based on the Commission’s experience, a
minor futures contract is, generally, one that has a
quarterly trading volume of 100,000 contracts or
less.
61 In establishing guidance to illustrate how it
will evaluate the various criteria, or combinations
of criteria, when determining whether a contract is
a SPDC, the Commission made clear that ‘‘material
liquidity itself would not be sufficient to make a
determination that a contract is a [SPDC], * * * but
combined with other factors it can serve as a
guidepost indicating which contracts are
functioning as [SPDCs].’’ For the reasons discussed
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:58 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
i. Federal Register Comments
NGX stated in its comment letter that
the Alberta Fixed-Price contract does
not meet the material liquidity criterion
for SPDC determination for a number of
reasons.
First, NGX opined that the
Commission ‘‘seems to have applied a
threshold for ‘‘material liquidity’’ that is
extremely low, and in general
insufficient to support a determination
that these contracts are no longer
emerging markets but in fact serve a
significant price discovery function.’’
NGX also noted that the Commission’s
Guidance states that material liquidity
was intended to be a ‘‘broad concept that
captures the ability to transact
immediately with little or no price
concession’’. The Guidance also states
that where ‘‘material liquidity exists, a
more or less continuous stream of prices
can be observed and the prices should
be similar’’, such as ‘‘where trades occur
multiple times per minutes. NGX then
opined that ‘‘[t]he levels of liquidity
outlined above for the Proposed
Contracts cannot be what Congress
intended in establishing the dividing
line between contracts ripe for
regulation and those still emerging and
in need of further incubation.
In this regard, the Commission notes
that it adopted a five trades-per-day
threshold as a reporting requirement to
enable it to ‘‘independently be aware of
ECM contracts that may develop into
SPDCs’’ 62 rather than solely relying
upon an ECM on its own to identify any
such potential SPDCs to the
Commission. Thus, any contract that
meets this threshold may be subject to
scrutiny as a potential SPDC but this
does not mean that the contract will be
found to be a SPDC merely because it
met the reporting threshold.
Furthermore, the Commission observes
that a continuous stream of prices
would indeed be an indication of
liquidity for certain markets but the
Guidance also notes that ‘‘quantifying
the levels of immediacy and price
concession that would define material
liquidity may differ from one market or
commodity to another.’’
ii. Conclusion Regarding Material
Liquidity
For the reasons discussed above, the
Commission finds that the Alberta
above, the Commission has found that the Alberta
Fixed-Price contract does not meet either the price
linkage or material price reference criterion. In light
of this finding and the Commission’s Guidance
cited above, there is no need to evaluate further the
material liquidity criteria since it cannot be used
alone as a basis for a SPDC determination.
62 73 FR 75892 (December 12, 2008).
PO 00000
Frm 00076
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
23739
Fixed-Price contract does not meet the
material liquidity criterion.
3. Overall Conclusion Regarding the
Alberta Fixed-Price Contract
After considering the entire record in
this matter, including the comments
received, the Commission has
determined that the Alberta Fixed-Price
contract does not perform a significant
price discovery function under the
criteria established in section 2(h)(7) of
the CEA. Specifically, the Commission
has determined that the Alberta FixedPrice contract does not meet the
material price reference or material
liquidity criteria at this time.
Accordingly, the Commission is issuing
the attached Order declaring that the
Alberta Fixed-Price contract is not a
SPDC.
Issuance of this Order indicates that
the Commission does not at this time
regard NGX as a registered entity in
connection with its Alberta Fixed-Price
contract.63 Accordingly, with respect to
its Alberta Fixed-Price contract, NGX is
not required to comply with the
obligations, requirements and timetables
prescribed in Commission rule
36.3(c)(4) for ECMs with SPDCs.
However, NGX must continue to comply
with the applicable reporting
requirements.
d. The Phys, FP, (US/MM), Union-Dawn
(Union-Dawn Fixed-Price) Contract and
the SPDC Indicia
The Union-Dawn Fixed-Price contract
calls for physical delivery of natural gas
at the Dawn hub over two different time
periods: The following day and
Saturday plus three days. Each delivery
period is considered to be a separate
contract, and the market participants
value each delivery period separately.
However, overlapping delivery days are
considered fungible, and, thus, may be
offset by traders. There is no standard
size for the Union-Dawn Fixed-Priced
contract, although a minimum volume
of 100 mmBtu required in increments of
100 units per day. The NGX lists the
Union-Dawn Fixed-Price contract for 60
calendar months.
Union Gas, Ltd., is a major Canadian
natural gas storage, transmission, and
distribution company based in Ontario,
Canada. Union Gas offers premium
storage and transportation services to
customers at the Dawn hub, which the
largest underground storage facility in
Canada and one of the largest in North
America. The Dawn hub offers
customers an important link for natural
gas moving from Western Canadian and
U.S. supply basins to markets in central
63 See
E:\FR\FM\04MYN1.SGM
73 FR 75888, 75893 (Dec. 12, 2008).
04MYN1
23740
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Notices
Canada and the northeast United States.
The throughput capacity at the Dawn
hub is 9.3 billion cubic feet per day.
Moreover, the number of pipeline
interconnections at that hub was ten in
2008. Lastly, the Dawn hub’s capacity is
12.8 billion cubic feet per day.64
In its October 20, 2009, Federal
Register notice, the Commission
identified material liquidity and
material price reference as the potential
SPDC criteria applicable to the UnionDawn Fixed-Price contract. Each of
these factors is discussed below.65
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
1. Material Price Reference Criterion
The Commission’s October 20, 2009,
Federal Register notice identified
material price reference as a potential
basis for a SPDC determination with
respect to this contract. The
Commission noted that NGX forged an
alliance with ICE to use the ICE’s
matching engine to complete
transactions in physical gas contracts
traded on NGX. In return, the NGX
agreed to provide the clearing services
for such transactions. As part of the
agreement, NGX provides the ICE with
transaction data, which are then made
available to market participants on a
paid basis. The ICE offers the NGX data
in several packages, which vary in terms
of the amount of available historical
data. For example, the ICE offers the
‘‘OTC Gas End of Day’’ data packages
with access to all price data, or just
current prices plus a selected number of
months (i.e., 12, 24, 36, or 48 months)
of historical data.
The Commission will rely on one of
two sources of evidence—direct or
indirect—to determine that the price of
a contract was being used as a material
price reference and therefore, serving a
significant price discovery function.66
With respect to direct evidence, the
Commission will consider the extent to
which, on a frequent and recurring
basis, cash market bids, offers or
transactions are directly based on or
quoted at a differential to, the prices
generated on the ECM in question.
Direct evidence may be established
when cash market participants are
quoting bid or offer prices or entering
into transactions at prices that are set
either explicitly or implicitly at a
differential to prices established for the
contract in question. Cash market prices
64 See https://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/oil_gas/
natural_gas/feature_articles/2009/ngmarketcenter/
ngmarketcenter.pdf.
65 As noted above, the Commission did not find
an indication of arbitrage and price linkage in
connection with this contract; accordingly, those
criteria are not discussed in reference to the UnionDawn Fixed-Price contract.
66 17 CFR part 36, Appendix A.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:58 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
are set explicitly at a differential to the
section 2(h)(3) contract when, for
instance, they are quoted in dollars and
cents above or below the reference
contract’s price. Cash market prices are
set implicitly at a differential to a
section 2(h)(3) contract when, for
instance, they are arrived at after adding
to, or subtracting from the section
2(h)(3) contract, but then quoted or
reported at a flat price. With respect to
indirect evidence, the Commission will
consider the extent to which the price
of the contract in question is being
routinely disseminated in widely
distributed industry publications—or
offered by the ECM itself for some form
of remuneration—and consulted on a
frequent and recurring basis by industry
participants in pricing cash market
transactions.
The Dawn hub is a major trading
center for natural gas in the United
States. Traders use the NGX UnionDawn Fixed-Price contract to hedge
cash market positions and transactions.
Nevertheless, the relatively small
volume of trading and open interest 67 in
the Union-Dawn Fixed-Price contract
does not support a finding that the
contract is consulted on a frequent and
recurring basis in establishing cash
market transaction prices. Thus, the
Union-Dawn Fixed-Price contract does
not satisfy the direct price reference test
for existence of material price reference.
Furthermore, the Commission notes that
publication of the Union-Dawn FixedPrice contract’s prices is not indirect
evidence of material price reference.
The Union-Dawn Fixed-Price contract’s
prices are published with those of
numerous other contracts, which are of
more interest to market participants.
Thus, the Commission has concluded
that traders likely do not specifically
purchase ICE data packages for the NGX
Union-Dawn Fixed-Price contract’s
prices and do not consult such prices on
a frequent and recurring basis in pricing
cash market transactions.
i. Federal Register Comments
NGX states its belief that the Union
Dawn Fixed Price contract does not
meet the material price reference factor
because there is insufficient trading
activity in this contract.
67 In the third quarter of 2009, the Union-Dawn
Fixed-Price contract had a total trading volume that
was equivalent to 145 NYMEX physically-delivered
NG futures contracts (the size of one NYMEX NG
contract is 10,000 mmBtu); the Union-Dawn
contract also had an open interest equivalent to
1,738 NYMEX NG futures contracts.
PO 00000
Frm 00077
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
ii. Conclusion Regarding Material Price
Reference
Based on the above, the Commission
finds that the NGX Union-Dawn FixedPrice contract does not meet the
material price reference criterion
because cash market transactions are not
priced either explicitly or implicitly on
a frequent and recurring basis at a
differential to the Union-Dawn FixedPrice contract’s price (direct evidence).
Moreover, while the Union-Dawn FixedPrice contract’s price data is sold to
market participants, traders likely do
not specifically purchase the ICE data
packages for the NGX Union-Dawn
Fixed-Price contract’s prices and do not
consult such prices on a frequent and
recurring basis in pricing cash market
transactions (indirect evidence).
2. Material Liquidity Criterion
As noted above, in its October 20,
2009, Federal Register notice, the
Commission identified material
liquidity and material price reference as
potential criteria for SPDC
determination of the Union-Dawn
Fixed-Price contract. With respect to the
material liquidity criterion, the
Commission noted that the total number
of transactions executed on NGX’s
electronic platform in the Union-Dawn
Fixed-Price contract during the second
quarter of 2009 was 114.1 trades and
23.9 trades for next-day delivery and
delivery Saturday plus the next three
days, respectively. During the same
period, the Union-Dawn Fixed-Price
contract had an average daily trading
volume of 812,800 mmBtu and 458,000
mmBtu for the delivery periods next day
and Saturday plus three days,
respectively. Moreover, the net open
interest as of June 30, 2009, was
2,241,600 mmBtu for next-day delivery
(equivalent to 224 NYMEX NG
contracts).68
In a subsequent filing, NGX reported
that total trading volume in the third
quarter of 2009 was the equivalent of
8,333 NYMEX NG contracts (or 130
contracts on a daily basis).69 In term of
number of transactions, 7,899 trades
occurred over the entire third quarter,
which equates to 123 trades per day.70
As of September 30, 2009, open interest
68 Second quarter 2009 data was submitted to the
Commission is a different format than in later
filings. In this regard total trading volume and total
number of trades per quarter were not identified.
69 Approximately 96 percent of the contracted
natural gas volume was specified for delivery on
either the next day or on the weekend. The
remaining volume was to be delivered over the
specified month or during the remainder of the
current month.
70 Nearly all (more than 99 percent) of the trades
were in contracts that specified next-day or
weekend delivery of natural gas.
E:\FR\FM\04MYN1.SGM
04MYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Notices
in the Union-Dawn Fixed-Price contract
was 1,738 NYMEX NG contracts.
The Commission notes that while
trading activity in the Union-Dawn
Fixed-Price appears to be substantial, it
is important to keep in mind that the
majority of trades involve close to
immediate delivery, many times on a
daily basis. With deliveries occurring
each day, it is reasonable that more
contracts would be traded compared to
those contracts that specify delivery
over an entire month. Moreover, trading
activity in the Union-Dawn Fixed-Price
contract, as characterized by total
quarterly volume, indicates that the
Union-Dawn Fixed-Price contract
experiences less trading activity than
minor futures markets.71 Thus, the
Union-Dawn Fixed-Price contract does
not meets a threshold of trading activity
that would render it of potential
importance and no additional statistical
analysis is warranted.72
i. Federal Register Comments
NGX stated in its comment letter that
the Union-Dawn Fixed-Price contract
does not meet the material liquidity
criterion for SPDC determination for a
number of reasons.
First, NGX opined that the
Commission ‘‘seems to have applied a
threshold for ‘‘material liquidity’’ that is
extremely low, and in general
insufficient to support a determination
that these contracts are no longer
emerging markets but in fact serve a
significant price discovery function’’.
NGX also noted that the Commission’s
Guidance states that material liquidity
was intended to be a ‘‘broad concept that
captures the ability to transact
immediately with little or no price
concession’’. The Guidance also states
that where ‘‘material liquidity exists, a
more or less continuous stream of prices
can be observed and the prices should
be similar’’, such as ‘‘where trades occur
multiple times per minutes. NGX then
opined that ‘‘[t]he levels of liquidity
outlined above for the Proposed
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
71 Based
on the Commission’s experience, a
minor futures contract is, generally, one that has a
quarterly trading volume of 100,000 contracts or
less.
72 In establishing guidance to illustrate how it
will evaluate the various criteria, or combinations
of criteria, when determining whether a contract is
a SPDC, the Commission made clear that ‘‘material
liquidity itself would not be sufficient to make a
determination that a contract is a [SPDC], * * * but
combined with other factors it can serve as a
guidepost indicating which contracts are
functioning as [SPDCs].’’ For the reasons discussed
above, the Commission has found that the Alberta
Fixed-Price contract does not meet either the price
linkage or material price reference criterion. In light
of this finding and the Commission’s Guidance
cited above, there is no need to evaluate further the
material liquidity criteria since it cannot be used
alone as a basis for a SPDC determination.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:58 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
Contracts cannot be what Congress
intended in establishing the dividing
line between contracts ripe for
regulation and those still emerging and
in need of further incubation.
In this regard, the Commission notes
that it adopted a five trades-per-day
threshold as a reporting requirement to
enable it to ‘‘independently be aware of
ECM contracts that may develop into
SPDCs’’ 73 rather than solely relying
upon an ECM on its own to identify any
such potential SPDCs to the
Commission. Thus, any contract that
meets this threshold may be subject to
scrutiny as a potential SPDC but this
does not mean that the contract will be
found to be a SPDC merely because it
met the reporting threshold.
Furthermore, the Commission observes
that a continuous stream of prices
would indeed be an indication of
liquidity for certain markets but the
Guidance also notes that ‘‘quantifying
the levels of immediacy and price
concession that would define material
liquidity may differ from one market or
commodity to another.’’
ii. Conclusion Regarding Material
Liquidity
Based on the above, the Commission
finds that the NGX Union-Dawn FixedPrice contract does not meet the
material liquidity criterion.
3. Overall Conclusion Regarding the
Union-Dawn Fixed-Price Contract
After considering the entire record in
this matter, including the comments
received, the Commission has
determined that the Union-Dawn FixedPrice contract does not perform a
significant price discovery function
under the criteria established in section
2(h)(7) of the CEA. Specifically, the
Commission has determined that the
NGX Union-Dawn Fixed-Price contract
does not meet the material price
reference or material liquidity criteria at
this time. Accordingly, the Commission
is issuing the attached Order declaring
that the Union-Dawn Fixed-Price
contract is not a SPDC.
Issuance of this Order indicates that
the Commission does not at this time
regard NGX as a registered entity in
connection with its Union-Dawn FixedPrice contract.74 Accordingly, with
respect to its Union-Dawn Fixed-Price
contract, NGX is not required to comply
with the obligations, requirements and
timetables prescribed in Commission
rule 36.3(c)(4) for ECMs with SPDCs.
However, NGX must continue to comply
73 73
FR 75892 (December 12, 2008).
73 FR 75888, 75893 (Dec. 12, 2008).
74 See
PO 00000
Frm 00078
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
23741
with the applicable reporting
requirements for ECMs.
e. The Phys, ID, 7a (CA/GJ), AB–NIT (7a
Index) Contract and the SPDC Indicia
The NGX 7a Index contract calls for
physical delivery of natural gas at the
Alberta, Canada, trading hub during the
specified calendar month. When trading
this contract, market participants price
the difference between the anticipated
value of natural gas at the time of
delivery and the average of actual trades
on the NGX system. The average of
transactions on the NGX system is
reported as a volume-weighted average
price index in the first publication of
the delivery month of Canadian
Enerdata, Ltd.’s Canadian Gas Price
Reporter. At the time of delivery, the
negotiated price premium or discount is
added or subtracted to the published
index price. There is no standard size
for the 7a Index contract, although a
minimum volume of 94.78 mmBtu is
required in increments of 100 units per
day. The NGX lists the 7a Index contract
for 60 calendar months.
Located in the Canadian province of
Alberta, the Alberta natural gas market
is a major connection point for longdistance transmission systems that ship
natural gas to points throughout Canada
and the United States. The Alberta
province is Canada’s dominant natural
gas producing region; six of the nine
Canadian market centers are located in
the Alberta province. The throughput
capacity at the AECO–C hub is ten
billion cubic feet per day. Moreover, the
number of pipeline interconnections at
that hub was four in 2008. Lastly, the
AECO–C hub’s capacity is 20.4 billion
cubic feet per day.75
In its October 20, 2009, Federal
Register notice, the Commission
identified material liquidity and
material price reference as the potential
SPDC criteria applicable to the 7a Index
contract. Each of these factors is
discussed below.76
1. Material Price Reference Criterion
The Commission’s October 20, 2009,
Federal Register notice identified
material price reference as a potential
basis for a SPDC determination with
respect to this contract. The
Commission noted that NGX forged an
alliance with ICE to use ICE’s matching
engine to complete transactions in
75 See https://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/oil_gas/
natural_gas/feature_articles/2009/ngmarketcenter/
ngmarketcenter.pdf.
76 As noted above, the Commission did not find
an indication of arbitrage and price linkage in
connection with this contract; accordingly, those
criteria are not discussed in reference to the 7a
Index contract.
E:\FR\FM\04MYN1.SGM
04MYN1
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
23742
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Notices
physical gas contracts traded on NGX.
In return, NGX agreed to provide the
clearing services for such transactions.
As part of the agreement, NGX provides
ICE with transaction data, which are
then made available to market
participants on a paid basis. ICE offers
the NGX data in several packages,
which vary in terms of the amount of
available historical data. For example,
the ICE offers the ‘‘OTC Gas End of Day’’
data packages with access to all price
data, or just current prices plus a
selected number of months (i.e., 12, 24,
36, or 48 months) of historical data.
The Commission will rely on one of
two sources of evidence—direct or
indirect—to determine that the price of
a contract was being used as a material
price reference and therefore, serving a
significant price discovery function.77
With respect to direct evidence, the
Commission will consider the extent to
which, on a frequent and recurring
basis, cash market bids, offers or
transactions are directly based on or
quoted at a differential to, the prices
generated on the ECM in question.
Direct evidence may be established
when cash market participants are
quoting bid or offer prices or entering
into transactions at prices that are set
either explicitly or implicitly at a
differential to prices established for the
contract in question. Cash market prices
are set explicitly at a differential to the
section 2(h)(3) contract when, for
instance, they are quoted in dollars and
cents above or below the reference
contract’s price. Cash market prices are
set implicitly at a differential to a
section 2(h)(3) contract when, for
instance, they are arrived at after adding
to, or subtracting from the section
2(h)(3) contract, but then quoted or
reported at a flat price. With respect to
indirect evidence, the Commission will
consider the extent to which the price
of the contract in question is being
routinely disseminated in widely
distributed industry publications—or
offered by the ECM itself for some form
of remuneration—and consulted on a
frequent and recurring basis by industry
participants in pricing cash market
transactions.
The Alberta hub is a major trading
center for natural gas in North America.
Traders, including producers, keep
abreast of the prices of the Alberta
market center when conducting cash
deals. However, ICE’s cash-settled
AECO Financial Basis contract is used
more widely as a price reference than
the NGX 7a Index contract. Traders look
to the ICE contract’s competitively
determined price as an indication of
77 17
CFR part 36, Appendix A.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:58 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
expected values of natural gas at the
Alberta hub when entering into cash
market transactions for natural gas,
especially those trades providing for
physical delivery in the future. Traders
use ICE’s Alberta contract, as well as
other basis contracts, to hedge cash
market positions and transactions. The
substantial volume of trading and open
interest in the ICE contract attests to its
use for this purpose.78 In contrast,
trading volume in the 7a Index contract
is much smaller than in ICE’s cashsettled version of the contract. In this
regard, total trading volume in the NGX
7a Index contract in the third quarter of
2009 was equivalent to 1,946 NYMEX
physically-delivered natural gas
contracts, which has a size of 10,000
mmBtu.
Accordingly, although the Alberta
Hub is a major trading center for natural
gas and, as noted, NGX provides price
information for the 7a Index contract to
ICE which sells it, the Commission has
found upon further evaluation that the
7a Index contract is not routinely
consulted by industry participants in
pricing cash market transactions and
thus does not meet the Commission’s
Guidance for the material price
reference criterion. In this regard, the
ICE AECO Financial Basis contract is
routinely consulted by industry
participants in pricing cash market
transactions at this location. Because
both the NGX and the ICE contracts
basically price the same commodity at
the same location and time and the ICE
contract has significantly higher trading
volume and open interest, it is not
necessary for market participants to
independently refer to the 7a Index
contract for pricing natural gas at this
location. Thus, the 7a Index contract
does not satisfy the direct price
reference test for existence of material
price reference. Furthermore, the
Commission notes that publication of
the 7a Index contract’s prices is not
indirect evidence of material price
reference. The 7a Index contract’s prices
are published with those of numerous
other contracts, which are of more
interest to market participants. Thus,
the Commission has concluded that
traders likely do not specifically
purchase the ICE data packages for the
7a Index contract’s prices and do not
consult such prices on a frequent and
78 In the third quarter of 2009, 6,320 separate
trades occurred on ICE’s electronic platform,
resulting in a daily average of 95.8 trades. During
the same period, the ICE contract had a total trading
volume on its electronic platform of 736,412
contracts (which was an average of 11,158 contracts
per day). As of September 30, 2009, open interest
in the ICE AECO Financial Basis contract was
483,561 contracts.
PO 00000
Frm 00079
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
recurring basis in pricing cash market
transactions.
i. Federal Register Comments
NGX expressed the opinion that the
7a Index contract does not meet the
material price reference criteria because
it lacks sufficient trading activity.
ii. Conclusion Regarding Material Price
Reference
Based on the above, the Commission
finds that the NGX 7a Index contract
does not meet the material price
reference criterion because cash market
transactions are not priced either
explicitly or implicitly on a frequent
and recurring basis at a differential to
the 7a Index contract’s price (direct
evidence). Moreover, while the 7a Index
contract’s price data is sold to market
participants, market participants likely
do not specifically purchase the ICE
data packages for the 7a Index contract’s
prices and do not consult such prices on
a frequent and recurring basis in pricing
cash market transactions (indirect
evidence).
2. Material Liquidity Criterion
As noted above, in its October 20,
2009, Federal Register notice, the
Commission identified material
liquidity and material price reference as
potential criteria for SPDC
determination of the 7a Index contract.
To assess whether a contract meets the
material liquidity criterion, the
Commission first examines trading
activity as a general measurement of the
contract’s size and potential importance.
If the Commission finds that the
contract in question meets a threshold
of trading activity that would render it
of potential importance, the
Commission will then perform a
statistical analysis to measure the effect
that changes to the subject-contract’s
prices potentially may have on prices
for other contracts listed on an ECM or
a DCM.
The Commission noted that the
average number of transactions in the 7a
Index contract was 10.9 in the second
quarter of 2009. During the same period,
the 7a Index contract had an average
daily trading volume of 2,438,627
mmBtu (244 NYMEX-equivalent
contracts of 10,000 mmBtu size).
Moreover, the net open interest as of
June 30, 2009, was 6,287,794 mmBtu
(629 NYMEX-equivalent contracts of
10,000 mmBtu size) for delivery in the
following month.79
79 Second quarter 2009 data was submitted to the
Commission is a different format than in later
filings. In this regard total trading volume and total
number of trades per quarter were not identified.
E:\FR\FM\04MYN1.SGM
04MYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Notices
In a subsequent filing dated
November 13, 2009, NGX reported that
total trading volume in the third quarter
of 2009 was 1,964 NYMEX-equivalent
contracts. In terms of number of
transactions, 1,056 trades occurred in
the third quarter of 2009 (an average of
17 trades per day). As of September 30,
2009, open interest in the 7a Index
contract was 14,355 NYMEX-equivalent
contracts.
The Commission notes that trading
activity in the 7a Index contract
increased between the second and third
quarters of 2009. In any case, the
number of trades per day was only
slightly more than the minimum
reporting threshold (5 trades per day).
Moreover, trading activity in the 7a
Index contract, as characterized by total
quarterly volume, indicates that the
Index contract experiences trading
activity similar to that of minor futures
markets.80 Thus, the 7a Index contract
does not meets a threshold of trading
activity that would render it of potential
importance and no additional statistical
analysis is warranted.81
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
i. Federal Register Comments
NGX stated in its comment letter that
the 7a Index contract does not meet the
material liquidity criterion for SPDC
determination for a number of reasons.
First NGX opined that the
Commission ‘‘seems to have applied a
threshold for ‘‘material liquidity’’ that is
extremely low, and in general
insufficient to support a determination
that these contracts are no longer
emerging markets but in fact serve a
significant price discovery function’’.
NGX also noted that the Commission’s
Guidance states that material liquidity
was intended to be a ‘‘broad concept that
captures the ability to transact
immediately with little or no price
concession.’’ The Guidance also states
that where ‘‘material liquidity exists, a
more or less continuous stream of prices
can be observed and the prices should
be similar’’, such as ‘‘where trades occur
80 Based on the Commission’s experience, a
minor futures contract is, generally, one that has a
quarterly trading volume of 100,000 contracts or
less.
81 In establishing guidance to illustrate how it
will evaluate the various criteria, or combinations
of criteria, when determining whether a contract is
a SPDC, the Commission made clear that ‘‘material
liquidity itself would not be sufficient to make a
determination that a contract is a [SPDC], * * * but
combined with other factors it can serve as a
guidepost indicating which contracts are
functioning as [SPDCs].’’ For the reasons discussed
above, the Commission has found that the TCO
contract does not meet either the price linkage or
material price reference criterion. In light of this
finding and the Commission’s Guidance cited
above, there is no need to evaluate further the
material liquidity criteria since it cannot be used
alone as a basis for a SPDC determination.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:58 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
multiple times per minutes. NGX then
opined that ‘‘[t]he levels of liquidity
outlined above for the Proposed
Contracts cannot be what Congress
intended in establishing the dividing
line between contracts ripe for
regulation and those still emerging and
in need of further investigation.
WGCEF also stated that the 7a
contract lacks sufficient liquidity to
perform a significant price discovery
function. They cite the data in the
Notice of Intent as evidence that trade
frequency in terms of multiple trades
per day is extremely low.
In this regard, the Commission notes
that it adopted a five trades-per-day
threshold as a reporting requirement to
enable it to ‘‘independently be aware of
ECM contracts that may develop into
SPDCs’’ 82 rather than solely relying
upon an ECM on its own to identify any
such potential SPDCs to the
Commission. Thus, any contract that
meets this threshold may be subject to
scrutiny as a potential SPDC but this
does not mean that the contract will be
found to be a SPDC merely because it
met the reporting threshold.
Furthermore, the Commission observes
that a continuous stream of prices
would indeed be an indication of
liquidity for certain markets but the
Guidance also notes that ‘‘quantifying
the levels of immediacy and price
concession that would define material
liquidity may differ from one market or
commodity to another.’’
ii. Conclusion Regarding Material
Liquidity
For the reasons discussed above, the
Commission finds that the 7a Index
contract does not meet the material
liquidity criterion.
3. Overall Conclusion Regarding the 7a
Index Contract
After considering the entire record in
this matter, including the comments
received, the Commission has
determined that the 7a Index contract
does not perform a significant price
discovery function under the criteria
established in section 2(h)(7) of the
CEA. Specifically, the Commission has
determined that the 7a Index contract
does not meet the material price
reference or material liquidity criteria at
this time. Accordingly, the Commission
will issue the attached Order declaring
that the 7a Index contract is not a SPDC.
Issuance of this Order indicates that
the Commission does not at this time
regard NGX as a registered entity in
connection with its 7a Index contract.83
82 73
FR 75892 (December 12, 2008).
73 FR 75888, 75893 (Dec. 12, 2008).
83 See
PO 00000
Frm 00080
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
23743
Accordingly, with respect to its 7a Index
contract NGX is not required to comply
with the obligations, requirements and
timetables prescribed in Commission
rule 36.3(c)(4) for ECMs with SPDCs.
However, NGX must continue to comply
with the applicable reporting
requirements.
V. Related Matters
a. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(‘‘PRA’’) 84 imposes certain requirements
on Federal agencies, including the
Commission, in connection with their
conducting or sponsoring any collection
of information as defined by the PRA.
Certain provisions of Commission rule
36.3 impose new regulatory and
reporting requirements on ECMs,
resulting in information collection
requirements within the meaning of the
PRA. OMB previously has approved and
assigned OMB control number 3038–
0060 to this collection of information.
b. Cost-Benefit Analysis
Section 15(a) of the CEA85 requires
the Commission to consider the costs
and benefits of its actions before issuing
an order under the Act. By its terms,
section 15(a) does not require the
Commission to quantify the costs and
benefits of an order or to determine
whether the benefits of the order
outweigh its costs; rather, it requires
that the Commission ‘‘consider’’ the
costs and benefits of its actions. Section
15(a) further specifies that the costs and
benefits shall be evaluated in light of
five broad areas of market and public
concern: (1) Protection of market
participants and the public; (2)
efficiency, competitiveness and
financial integrity of futures markets; (3)
price discovery; (4) sound risk
management practices; and (5) other
public interest considerations. The
Commission may in its discretion give
greater weight to any one of the five
enumerated areas and could in its
discretion determine that,
notwithstanding its costs, a particular
order is necessary or appropriate to
protect the public interest or to
effectuate any of the provisions or
accomplish any of the purposes of the
Act.
When a futures contract begins to
serve a significant price discovery
function, that contract, and the ECM on
which it is traded, warrants increased
oversight to deter and prevent price
manipulation or other disruptions to
market integrity, both on the ECM itself
and in any related futures contracts
84 44
85 7
U.S.C. 3507(d).
U.S.C. 19(a).
E:\FR\FM\04MYN1.SGM
04MYN1
23744
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Notices
trading on DCMs. An Order finding that
a particular contract is a SPDC triggers
this increased oversight and imposes
obligations on the ECM calculated to
accomplish this goal. The increased
oversight engendered by the issue of a
SPDC Order increases transparency and
helps to ensure fair competition among
ECMs and DCMs trading similar
products and competing for the same
business. Moreover, the ECM on which
the SPDC is traded must assume, with
respect to that contract, all the
responsibilities and obligations of a
registered entity under the CEA and
Commission regulations. Additionally,
the ECM must comply with nine core
principles established by section 2(h)(7)
of the Act—including the obligation to
establish position limits and/or
accountability standards for the SPDC.
Section 4(i) of the CEA authorize the
Commission to require reports for
SPDCs listed on ECMs. These increased
responsibilities, along with the CFTC’s
increased regulatory authority, subject
the ECM’s risk management practices to
the Commission’s supervision and
oversight and generally enhance the
financial integrity of the markets.
The Commission has concluded that
NGX’s Alberta Basis, Union-Dawn Basis,
Alberta Fixed-Price, Union-Dawn FixedPrice and 7a Index contracts that are the
subject of the attached Orders are not
SPDCs; accordingly, the Commission’s
Orders impose no additional costs and
no additional statutorily or regulatory
mandated responsibilities on the ECM.
c. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act
(‘‘RFA’’) 86 requires that agencies
consider the impact of their rules on
small businesses. The requirements of
CEA section 2(h)(7) and the Part 36
rules affect ECMs. The Commission
previously has determined that ECMs
are not small entities for purposes of the
RFA.87 Accordingly, the Chairman, on
behalf of the Commission, hereby
certifies pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b) that
these Orders, taken in connection with
section 2(h)(7) of the Act and the Part
36 rules, will not have a significant
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
VI. Orders
a. Order Relating to the Phys, BS, LD1
(US/MM), AB–NIT Contract
After considering the complete record
in this matter, including the comment
letters received in response to its
request for comments, the Commission
86 5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.
FR 42256, 42268 (Aug. 10, 2001).
87 66
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:58 May 03, 2010
Jkt 220001
has determined to issue the following
Order:
The Commission, pursuant to its
authority under section 2(h)(7) of the
Act, hereby determines that the Phys,
BS, LD1 (US/MM), AB–NIT contract,
traded on the Natural Gas Exchange,
Inc., does not at this time satisfy the
material price preference, price linkage
or material liquidity criteria for
significant price discovery contracts.
Consistent with this determination, the
Natural Gas Exchange, Inc., is not
considered a registered entity 88 with
respect to the Phys, BS, LD1 (US/MM),
AB–NIT contract and is not subject to
the provisions of the Commodity
Exchange Act applicable to registered
entities. Further, the obligations,
requirements and timetables prescribed
in Commission rule 36.3(c)(4) governing
core principle compliance by the
Natural Gas Exchange, Inc., are not
applicable to the Phys, BS, LD1 (US/
MM), AB/NIT contract with the
issuance of this Order.
This Order is based on the
representations made to the
Commission by the Natural Gas
Exchange, Inc., dated August 25, 2009,
and October 15, 2009, and other
supporting material. Any material
change or omissions in the facts and
circumstances pursuant to which this
order is granted might require the
Commission to reconsider its current
determination that the Phys, BS, LD1
(US/MM), AB–NIT contract is not a
significant price discovery contract.
Additionally, to the extent that it
continues to rely upon the exemption in
Section 2(h)(3) of the Act, the Natural
Gas Exchange, Inc., must continue to
comply with all of the applicable
requirements of Section 2(h)(3) and
Commission Regulation 36.3.
b. Order Relating to the Phys, BS, LD1
(US/MM), Union-Dawn Contract
After considering the complete record
in this matter, including the comment
letters received in response to its
request for comments, the Commission
has determined to issue the following
Order:
The Commission, pursuant to its
authority under section 2(h)(7) of the
Act, hereby determines that the Phys,
BS, LD1 (US/MM), Union-Dawn
contract, traded on the Natural Gas
Exchange, Inc., does not at this time
satisfy the material price reference,
price linkage or material liquidity
criteria for significant price discovery
contracts. Consistent with this
determination, the Natural Gas
Exchange, Inc., is not considered a
registered entity 89 with respect to the
Phys, BS, LD1 (US/MM), Union-Dawn
contract and is not subject to the
provisions of the Commodity Exchange
Act applicable to registered entities.
Further, the obligations, requirements
and timetables prescribed in
Commission rule 36.3(c)(4) governing
core principle compliance by the
Natural Gas Exchange, Inc., are not
applicable to the Phys, BS, LD1 (US/
MM), Union-Dawn contract with the
issuance of this Order.
This Order is based on the
representations made to the
Commission by the Natural Gas
Exchange, Inc., August 25, 2009, and
October 15, 2009, and other supporting
material. Any material change or
omissions in the facts and
circumstances pursuant to which this
order is granted might require the
Commission to reconsider its current
determination that the Phys, BS, LD1
(US/MM), Union-Dawn contract is not a
significant price discovery contract.
Additionally, to the extent that it
continues to rely upon the exemption in
Section 2(h)(3) of the Act, the Natural
Gas Exchange, Inc., must continue to
comply with all of the applicable
requirements of Section 2(h)(3) and
Commission Regulation 36.3.
c. Order Relating to the Phys, FP, (CA/
GJ), AB–NIT Contract
After considering the complete record
in this matter, including the comment
letters received in response to its
request for comments, the Commission
has determined to issue the following
Order:
The Commission, pursuant to its
authority under section 2(h)(7) of the
Act, hereby determines that the Phys,
FP, (CA/GJ), AB–NIT contract, traded on
the Natural Gas Exchange, Inc., does not
at this time satisfy the material price
reference or material liquidity reference
criteria for significant price discovery
contracts. Consistent with this
determination, the Natural Gas
Exchange, Inc., is not considered a
registered entity 90 with respect to the
Phys, FP, (CA/GJ), AB–NIT contract and
is not subject to the provisions of the
Commodity Exchange Act applicable to
registered entities. Further, the
obligations, requirements and timetables
prescribed in Commission rule
36.3(c)(4) governing core principle
compliance by the Natural Gas
Exchange, Inc., are not applicable to the
Phys, FP, (CA/GJ), AB–NIT contract
with the issuance of this Order.
89 7
88 7
PO 00000
U.S.C. 1a(29).
Frm 00081
Fmt 4703
90 7
Sfmt 4703
U.S.C. 1a(29).
U.S.C. 1a(29).
E:\FR\FM\04MYN1.SGM
04MYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Notices
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
This Order is based on the
representations made to the
Commission by the Natural Gas
Exchange, Inc., dated August 25, 2009,
and October 15, 2009, and other
supporting material. Any material
change or omissions in the facts and
circumstances pursuant to which this
order is granted might require the
Commission to reconsider its current
determination that the Phys, FP, (CA/
GJ), AB–NIT contract is not a significant
price discovery contract. Additionally,
to the extent that it continues to rely
upon the exemption in Section 2(h)(3)
of the Act, the Natural Gas Exchange,
Inc., must continue to comply with all
of the applicable requirements of
Section 2(h)(3) and Commission
Regulation 36.3.
d. Order Relating to the Phys, FP, (US/
MM), Union-Dawn Contract
After considering the complete record
in this matter, including the comment
letters received in response to its
request for comments, the Commission
has determined to issue the following
Order:
The Commission, pursuant to its
authority under section 2(h)(7) of the
Act, hereby determines that the Phys,
FP, (US/MM), Union-Dawn contract,
traded on the Natural Gas Exchange,
Inc., does not at this time satisfy the
material price reference or material
liquidity criteria for significant price
discovery contracts. Consistent with this
determination, the Natural Gas
Exchange, Inc., is not considered a
registered entity 91 with respect to the
Phys, FP, (US/MM), Union-Dawn
contract and is not subject to the
provisions of the Commodity Exchange
Act applicable to registered entities.
Further, the obligations, requirements
and timetables prescribed in
Commission rule 36.3(c)(4) governing
core principle compliance by the
Natural Gas Exchange, Inc., are not
applicable to the Phys, FP, (US/MM),
Union-Dawn contract with the issuance
of this Order.
This Order is based on the
representations made to the
Commission by the Natural Gas
Exchange, Inc., dated August 25, 2009,
and October, 15, 2009, and other
supporting material. Any material
change or omissions in the facts and
circumstances pursuant to which this
order is granted might require the
Commission to reconsider its current
determination that the Phys, FP, (US/
MM), Union-Dawn contract is not a
significant price discovery contract.
Additionally, to the extent that it
91 7
U.S.C. 1a(29).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:58 May 03, 2010
continues to rely upon the exemption in
Section 2(h)(3) of the Act, the Natural
Gas Exchange, Inc., must continue to
comply with all of the applicable
requirements of Section 2(h)(3) and
Commission Regulation 36.3.
e. Order Relating to the Phys, ID, 7a
(CA/GJ), AB–NIT Contract
After considering the complete record
in this matter, including the comment
letters received in response to its
request for comments, the Commission
has determined to issue the following
Order:
The Commission, pursuant to its
authority under section 2(h)(7) of the
Act, hereby determines that the Phys,
ID, 7a (CA/GJ), AB–NIT contract, traded
on the Natural Gas Exchange, Inc., does
not at this time satisfy the material price
reference or material liquidity criteria
for significant price discovery contracts.
Consistent with this determination, the
Natural Gas Exchange, Inc., is not
considered a registered entity 92 with
respect to the Phys, ID, 7a (CA/GJ), AB–
NIT contract and is not subject to the
provisions of the Commodity Exchange
Act applicable to registered entities.
Further, the obligations, requirements
and timetables prescribed in
Commission rule 36.3(c)(4) governing
core principle compliance by the
Natural Gas Exchange, Inc., are not
applicable to the Phys, ID, 7a (CA/GJ),
AB–NIT contract with the issuance of
this Order.
This Order is based on the
representations made to the
Commission by the Natural Gas
Exchange, Inc., dated August 25, 2009,
and October 15, 2009, and other
supporting material. Any material
change or omissions in the facts and
circumstances pursuant to which this
order is granted might require the
Commission to reconsider its current
determination that the Phys, ID, 7a (CA/
GJ), AB–NIT contract is not a significant
price discovery contract. Additionally,
to the extent that it continues to rely
upon the exemption in Section 2(h)(3)
of the Act, the Natural Gas Exchange,
Inc., must continue to comply with all
of the applicable requirements of
Section 2(h)(3) and Commission
Regulation 36.3.
Issued in Washington, DC on April 28,
2010, by the Commission.
David A. Stawick,
Secretary of the Commission.
CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY
COMMISSION
[CPSC Docket No. 10–C0003]
Jo-Ann Stores, Inc., Provisional
Acceptance of a Settlement Agreement
and Order
AGENCY: Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
SUMMARY: It is the policy of the
Commission to publish settlements
which it provisionally accepts under the
Consumer Product Safety Act in the
Federal Register in accordance with the
terms of 16 CFR 1118.20(e). Published
below is a provisionally-accepted
Settlement Agreement with Jo-Ann
Stores, Inc., containing a civil penalty of
$50,000.00.
DATES: Any interested person may ask
the Commission not to accept this
agreement or otherwise comment on its
contents by filing a written request with
the Office of the Secretary by May 19,
2010.
ADDRESSES: Persons wishing to
comment on this Settlement Agreement
should send written comments to the
Comment 10–C0003, Office of the
Secretary, Consumer Product Safety
Commission, 4330 East West Highway,
Room 820, Bethesda, Maryland 20814–
4408.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Sean R. Ward, Trial Attorney, Division
of Compliance, Office of the General
Counsel, Consumer Product Safety
Commission, 4330 East West Highway,
Bethesda, Maryland 20814–4408;
telephone (301) 504–7602.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The text of
the Agreement and Order appears
below.
Dated: April 28, 2010.
Todd A. Stevenson,
Secretary.
In the Matter of Jo-Ann Stores, Inc.
Settlement Agreement
1. In accordance with 16 CFR 1118.20,
Jo-Ann Stores, Inc. (‘‘Jo-Ann’’) and the
staff (‘‘Staff’’) of the United States
Consumer Product Safety Commission
(‘‘CPSC’’ or the ‘‘Commission’’) enter into
this Settlement Agreement
(‘‘Agreement’’). The Agreement and the
incorporated attached Order (‘‘Order’’)
settle the Staff’s allegations set forth
below.
[FR Doc. 2010–10314 Filed 5–3–10; 8:45 am]
Parties
BILLING CODE P
2. The Commission is an independent
federal regulatory agency established
pursuant to the Consumer Product
92 7
Jkt 220001
23745
PO 00000
U.S.C. 1a(29).
Frm 00082
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
E:\FR\FM\04MYN1.SGM
04MYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 85 (Tuesday, May 4, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 23729-23745]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-10314]
[[Page 23729]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
Orders Finding that the (1) Phys,\1\ BS,\2\ LD1 \3\ (US/MM), AB-
NIT;\4\ (2) Phys, BS, LD1 (US/MM), Union-Dawn; \5\ (3) Phys, FP,\6\
(CA/GJ),\7\ AB-NIT; (4) Phys, FP, (US/MM), Union-Dawn; and (5) Phys,
ID,\8\ 7a \9\ (CA/GJ), AB-NIT Contracts, Offered for Trading on the
Natural Gas Exchange, Inc., Do Not Perform a Significant Price
Discovery Function
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The acronym ``Phys'' indicates physical delivery of natural
gas.
\2\ The acronym ``BS'' indicates that the contract is a cash-
settled basis swap.
\3\ The acronym ``LD1'' indicates the final settlement price of
the New York Mercantile Exchange's (``NYMEX's'') physically-
delivered Henry Hub Natural Gas futures contract for the
corresponding contract month, which is expressed in U.S. dollars and
cents per million British thermal units (mmBtu).
\4\ The acronym ``AB-NIT'' refers to the Alberta, Canada, market
center and Nova Inventory Transfer hub.
\5\ ``Union-Dawn'' refers to the Union Gas, Ltd.'s, Dawn hub,
which is located in Canada across the U.S. border from Detroit,
Michigan.
\6\ The acronym ``FP'' refers to a fixed-price contract.
\7\ The abbreviation CA/GJ refers the Canadian dollars per
gigajoule, which is a unit of measure for energy. One GJ is equal to
0.9478 mmBtu.
\8\ The acronym ``ID'' refers to an index contract.
\9\ The term ``7a'' refers to a price index that is computed as
a volume-weighted average of transactions that occur on the Natural
Gas Exchange's trading platform during a particular calendar month.
Such transactions specify the physical delivery of natural gas at
the AB-NIT hub in the following calendar month.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
ACTION: Final orders.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: On October 20, 2009, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission
(``CFTC'' or ``Commission'') published for comment in the Federal
Register \10\ a notice of its intent to undertake a determination
whether the (1) Phys, BS, LD1 (US/MM), AB-NIT (``Alberta Basis''); (2)
Phys, BS, LD1 (US/MM), Union-Dawn (``Union-Dawn Basis''); (3) Phys, FP,
(CA/GJ), AB-NIT (``Alberta Fixed-Price''); (4) Phys, FP, (US/MM),
Union-Dawn (``Union-Dawn Fixed-Price''); and (5) Phys, ID, 7a (CA/GJ),
AB-NIT (``7a Index'') contracts, which are listed for trading on the
Natural Gas Exchange, Inc. (``NGX''), an exempt commercial market
(``ECM'') under sections 2(h)(3)-(5) of the Commodity Exchange Act
(``CEA'' or the ``Act''), perform a significant price discovery
function pursuant to section 2(h)(7) of the CEA. The Commission
undertook this review based upon an initial evaluation of information
and data provided by NGX as well as other available information. The
Commission has reviewed the entire record in this matter, including all
comments received, and has determined to issue orders finding that the
Alberta Basis, Union-Dawn Basis, Alberta Fixed-Price, Union-Dawn Fixed-
Price and 7a Index contracts do not perform a significant price
discovery function. Authority for this action is found in section
2(h)(7) of the CEA and Commission rule 36.3(c) promulgated thereunder.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ 74 FR 53724 (October 20, 2009).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
DATES: Effective Date: April 28, 2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Gregory K. Price, Industry Economist,
Division of Market Oversight, Commodity Futures Trading Commission,
Three Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st Street, NW., Washington, DC 20581.
Telephone: (202) 418-5515. E-mail: gprice@cftc.gov; or Susan Nathan,
Senior Special Counsel, Division of Market Oversight, same address.
Telephone: (202) 418-5133. E-mail: snathan@cftc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Introduction
The CFTC Reauthorization Act of 2008 (``Reauthorization Act'') \11\
significantly broadened the CFTC's regulatory authority with respect to
ECMs by creating, in section 2(h)(7) of the CEA, a new regulatory
category--ECMs on which significant price discovery contracts
(``SPDCs'') are traded--and treating ECMs in that category as
registered entities under the CEA.\12\ The legislation authorizes the
CFTC to designate an agreement, contract or transaction as a SPDC if
the Commission determines, under criteria established in section
2(h)(7), that it performs a significant price discovery function. When
the Commission makes such a determination, the ECM on which the SPDC is
traded must assume, with respect to that contract, all the
responsibilities and obligations of a registered entity under the Act
and Commission regulations, and must comply with nine core principles
established by new section 2(h)(7)(C).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ Incorporated as Title XIII of the Food, Conservation and
Energy Act of 2008, Public Law 110-246, 122 Stat. 1624 (June 18,
2008).
\12\ 7 U.S.C. 1a(29).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On March 16, 2009, the CFTC promulgated final rules implementing
the provisions of the Reauthorization Act.\13\ As relevant here, rule
36.3 imposes increased information reporting requirements on ECMs to
assist the Commission in making prompt assessments whether particular
ECM contracts may be SPDCs. In addition to filing quarterly reports of
its contracts, an ECM must notify the Commission promptly concerning
any contract traded in reliance on the exemption in section 2(h)(3) of
the CEA that averaged five trades per day or more over the most recent
calendar quarter, and for which the exchange sells its price
information regarding the contract to market participants or industry
publications, or whose daily closing or settlement prices on 95 percent
or more of the days in the most recent quarter were within 2.5 percent
of the contemporaneously determined closing, settlement or other daily
price of another contract.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ 74 FR 12178 (Mar. 23, 2009); these rules became effective
on April 22, 2009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commission rule 36.3(c)(3) established the procedures by which the
Commission makes and announces its determination whether a particular
ECM contract serves a significant price discovery function. Under those
procedures, the Commission will publish notice in the Federal Register
that it intends to undertake an evaluation whether the specified
agreement, contract or transaction performs a significant price
discovery function and to receive written views, data and arguments
relevant to its determination from the ECM and other interested
persons. Upon the close of the comment period, the Commission will
consider, among other things, all relevant information regarding the
subject contract and issue an order announcing and explaining its
determination whether or not the contract is a SPDC. The issuance of an
affirmative order signals the effectiveness of the Commission's
regulatory authorities over an ECM with respect to a SPDC; at that time
such an ECM becomes subject to all provisions of the CEA applicable to
registered entities.\14\ The issuance of such an order also triggers
the obligations, requirements and timetables prescribed in Commission
rule 36.3(c)(4).\15\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ Public Law 110-246 at 13203; Joint Explanatory Statement of
the Committee of Conference, H.R. Rep. No. 110-627, 110 Cong., 2d
Sess. 978, 986 (Conference Committee Report). See also 73 FR 75888,
75894 (Dec. 12, 2008).
\15\ For an initial SPDC, ECMs have a grace period of 90
calendar days from the issuance of a SPDC determination order to
submit a written demonstration of compliance with the applicable
core principles. For subsequent SPDCs, ECMs have a grace period of
30 calendar days to demonstrate core principle compliance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Notice of Intent To Undertake SPDC Determination
On October 20, 2009, the Commission published in the Federal
Register notice of its intent to undertake a determination whether the
Alberta Basis, Union-Dawn Basis, Alberta Fixed-
[[Page 23730]]
Price, Union-Dawn Fixed Price and 7a Index contracts perform a
significant price discovery function and requested comment from
interested parties.\16\ Comments were received from the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission (``FERC''), NGX and Working Group of Commercial
Energy Firms (``WGCEF'').\17\ The comment letter from FERC \18\ did not
directly address the issue of whether or not the subject contracts are
SPDCs. NGX stated that the subject contracts lack sufficient liquidity
to perform a significant price discovery function. WGCEF argued that
the Alberta Basis and Union-Dawn Basis contracts fail to meet the
material price reference, price linkage and material liquidity criteria
for SPDC determination. Similarly, the 7a Index contracts lack
sufficient liquidity to perform a significant price discovery
function.\19\ NGX's and the Working Group's comments are more
extensively discussed below, as applicable.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ The Commission's Part 36 rules establish, among other
things, procedures by which the Commission makes and announces its
determination whether a specific ECM contract serves a significant
price discovery function. Under those procedures, the Commission
publishes a notice in the Federal Register that it intends to
undertake a determination whether a specified agreement, contract or
transaction performs a significant price discovery function and to
receive written data, views and arguments relevant to its
determination from the ECM and other interested persons.
\17\ FERC is an independent Federal regulatory agency that,
among other things, regulates the interstate transmission of natural
gas, oil and electricity. NGX is Canada's leading energy exchange
and North America's largest physical clearing and settlement
facility; NGX is wholly owned by the TMX Group, Inc. WGCEF describes
itself as ``a diverse group of commercial firms in the domestic
energy industry whose primary business activity is the physical
delivery of one or more energy commodities to customers, including
industrial, commercial and residential consumers'' and whose
membership consists of ``energy producers, marketers and
utilities.'' FIEG describes itself as an association of investment
and commercial banks who are active participants in various sectors
of the natural gas markets, ``including acting as marketers,
lenders, underwriters of debt and equity securities, and proprietary
investors.'' The comment letters are available on the Commission's
website: comment letters are available on the Commission's Web site:
https://www.cftc.gov/lawandregulation/federalregister/federalregistercomments/2009/09-029.html.
\18\ FERC stated that the subject contracts call for physical
delivery of natural gas in Canada, and thus do not appear to be
interstate commerce under the Natural Gas Act (``NGA'').
Accordingly, FERC expressed the opinion that a determination by the
Commission that any of the contracts performs a significant price
discovery function ``would not appear to conflict with FERC's
exclusive jurisdiction under NGA over certain sales of natural gas
in interstate commerce for resale or with its other regulatory
responsibilities under the NGA'' and further that ``FERC staff will
continue to monitor for any such conflict * * * [and] advise the
CFTC'' should any such potential conflict arise. CL01.
\19\ WGCEF did not address whether the Alberta Fixed Price or
Union-Dawn Fixed Price contracts are SPDCs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. Section 2(h)(7) of the CEA
The Commission is directed by section 2(h)(7) of the CEA to
consider the following criteria in determining a contract's significant
price discovery function:
Price Linkage--the extent to which the agreement, contract
or transaction uses or otherwise relies on a daily or final settlement
price, or other major price parameter, of a contract or contracts
listed for trading on or subject to the rules of a designated contract
market (``DCM'') or derivatives transaction execution facility
(``DTEF''), or a SPDC traded on an electronic trading facility, to
value a position, transfer or convert a position, cash or financially
settle a position, or close out a position.
Arbitrage--the extent to which the price for the
agreement, contract or transaction is sufficiently related to the price
of a contract or contracts listed for trading on or subject to the
rules of a DCM or DTEF, or a SPDC traded on or subject to the rules of
an electronic trading facility, so as to permit market participants to
effectively arbitrage between the markets by simultaneously maintaining
positions or executing trades in the contracts on a frequent and
recurring basis.
Material price reference--the extent to which, on a
frequent and recurring basis, bids, offers or transactions in a
commodity are directly based on, or are determined by referencing or
consulting, the prices generated by agreements, contracts or
transactions being traded or executed on the electronic trading
facility.
Material liquidity--the extent to which the volume of
agreements, contracts or transactions in a commodity being traded on
the electronic trading facility is sufficient to have a material effect
on other agreements, contracts or transactions listed for trading on or
subject to the rules of a DCM, DTEF or electronic trading facility
operating in reliance on the exemption in section 2(h)(3).
Not all criteria must be present to support a determination that a
particular contract performs a significant price discovery function,
and one or more criteria may be inapplicable to a particular
contract.\20\ Moreover, the statutory language neither prioritizes the
criteria nor specifies the degree to which a SPDC must conform to the
various criteria. In Guidance issued in connection with the Part 36
rules governing ECMs with SPDCs, the Commission observed that these
criteria do not lend themselves to a mechanical checklist or formulaic
analysis. Accordingly, the Commission has indicated that in making its
determinations it will consider the circumstances under which the
presence of a particular criterion, or combination of criteria, would
be sufficient to support a SPDC determination.\21\ For example, for
contracts that are linked to other contracts or that may be arbitraged
with other contracts, the Commission will consider whether the price of
the potential SPDC moves in such harmony with the other contract that
the two markets essentially become interchangeable. This co-movement of
prices would be an indication that activity in the contract had reached
a level sufficient for the contract to perform a significant price
discovery function. In evaluating a contract's price discovery role as
a price reference, the Commission the extent to which, on a frequent
and recurring basis, bids, offers or transactions are directly based
on, or are determined by referencing, the prices established for the
contract.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ In its October 20, 2009, Federal Register release, the
Commission identified material price reference, price linkage and
material liquidity as the possible criteria for SPDC determination
of the Alberta Basis and Union-Dawn Basis contracts (arbitrage was
not identified as a possible criterion). With respect to the Alberta
Fixed-Price, Union-Dawn Fixed-Price and 7a Index contracts, the
Federal Register release identified material price reference and
material liquidity as the possible criteria for SPDC determination
(price linkage and arbitrage were not identified as possible
criteria). The criteria not indentified in the initial release will
not be discussed further in this document or the associated Orders.
\21\ 17 CFR part 36, Appendix A.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
IV. Findings and Conclusions
The Commission's findings and conclusions with respect to the
Alberta Basis, Union-Dawn Basis, Alberta Fixed-Price, Union-Dawn Fixed-
Price and 7a Index contracts are discussed separately below.
a. The Phys, BS, LD1 (US/MM), AB-NIT (Alberta Basis Contract) and the
SPDC Indicia
The Alberta Basis contract calls for the physical delivery of
natural gas based on the final settlement price for New York Mercantile
Exchange's (``NYMEX's'') Henry Hub physically-delivered Natural Gas
(``NG'') futures contract for the specified calendar month, plus or
minus the price differential (basis) between the Alberta delivery point
and the Henry Hub. There is no standard size for the Alberta Basis
contract, although a minimum
[[Page 23731]]
volume of 100 million British thermal units (``mmBtu'') is required in
increments of 100 units per day. The Alberta Basis contract is listed
for 60 consecutive calendar months.
The Henry Hub,\22\ which is located in Erath, Louisiana, is the
primary cash market trading and distribution center for natural gas in
the United States. It also is the delivery point and pricing basis for
the NYMEX's actively traded, physically-delivered natural gas futures
contract, which is the most important pricing reference for natural gas
in the United States. The Henry Hub, which is operated by Sabine Pipe
Line, LLC, serves as a juncture for 13 different pipelines. These
pipelines bring in natural gas from fields in the Gulf Coast region and
ship it to major consumption centers along the East Coast and Midwest.
The throughput shipping capacity of the Henry Hub is 1.8 trillion mmBtu
per day.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ The term ``hub'' refers to a juncture where two or more
natural gas pipelines are connected. Hubs also serve as pricing
points for natural gas at the particular locations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to the Henry Hub, there are a number of other locations
where natural gas is traded. In 2008, there were 33 natural gas market
centers in North America.\23\ Some of the major trading centers include
Alberta, Northwest Rockies, Southern California border and the Houston
Ship Channel. For locations that are directly connected to the Henry
Hub by one or more pipelines and where there typically is adequate
shipping capacity, the price at the other locations usually directly
tracks the price at the Henry Hub, adjusted for transportation costs.
However, at other locations that are not directly connected to the
Henry Hub or where shipping capacity is limited, the prices at those
locations often diverge from the Henry Hub price. Furthermore, one
local price may be significantly different than the price at another
location even though the two markets' respective distances from the
Henry Hub are the same. The reason for such pricing disparities is that
a given location may experience supply and demand factors that are
specific to that region, such as differences in pipeline shipping
capacity, unusually high or low demand for heating or cooling or supply
disruptions caused by severe weather. As a consequence, local natural
gas prices can differ from the Henry Hub price by more than the cost of
shipping and such price differences can vary in an unpredictable
manner.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ See https://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/oil_gas/natural_gas/feature_articles/2009/ngmarketcenter/ngmarketcenter.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Alberta hub is far removed from the Henry Hub and is not
directly connected to the Henry Hub by an existing pipeline. Located in
the Canadian province of Alberta, the Alberta natural gas market is a
major connection point for long-distance transmission systems that ship
natural gas to points throughout Canada and the United States. The
Alberta province is Canada's dominant natural gas producing region; six
of the nine Canadian market centers are located in the Alberta
province. The throughput capacity at the AECO-C hub is ten billion
cubic feet per day. Moreover, the number of pipeline interconnections
at that hub was four in 2008. Lastly, the AECO-C hub's capacity is 20.4
billion cubic feet per day.\24\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ See https://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/oil_gas/natural_gas/feature_articles/2009/ngmarketcenter/ngmarketcenter.pdf
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The local price at the Alberta hub typically differs from the price
at the Henry Hub. Thus, the price of the Henry Hub physically-delivered
futures contract is an imperfect proxy for the Alberta price. Moreover,
exogenous factors, such as adverse weather, can cause the Alberta gas
price to differ from the Henry Hub price by an amount that is more or
less than the cost of shipping, making the NYMEX Henry Hub futures
contract even less precise as a hedging tool than desired by market
participants. Basis contracts \25\ allow traders to more accurately
discover prices at alternative locations and hedge price risk that is
associated with natural gas at such locations. In this regard, a
position at a local price for an alternative location can be
established by adding the appropriate basis swap position to a position
taken in the NYMEX physically-delivered Henry Hub contract (or in the
NYMEX or ICE Henry Hub look-alike contract, which cash settle based on
the NYMEX physically-delivered NG contract's final settlement price).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ Basis contracts denote the difference in the price of
natural gas at a specified location minus the price of natural gas
at the Henry Hub. The differential can be either a positive or
negative value.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In its October 20, 2009, Federal Register notice, the Commission
identified material price reference, price linkage and material
liquidity as the potential SPDC criteria applicable to the Alberta
Basis contract.\26\ Each of these criteria is discussed below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ As noted above, the Commission did not find an indication
of arbitrage in connection with this contract; accordingly, that
criterion is not discussed in reference to the Alberta Basis
contract.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Material Price Reference Criterion
The Commission's October 20, 2009, Federal Register notice
identified material price reference as a potential basis for a SPDC
determination with respect to the Alberta Basis contract. The
Commission noted that NGX forged an alliance with the
IntercontinentalExchange, Inc., (``ICE'') to use the ICE's matching
engine to complete transactions in physical natural gas contracts
traded on NGX. In return, NGX agreed to provide clearing services for
such transactions. As part of the agreement, NGX provides ICE with
transaction data, which are then made available to market participants
on a paid basis. ICE offers NGX's price data in several packages, which
vary in terms of the amount of available historical data. For example,
the ICE offers the ``OTC Gas End of Day'' data package with access to
all price data, or just current prices plus a selected number of months
(i.e., 12, 24, 36, or 48 months) of historical data.
The Commission will rely on one of two sources of evidence--direct
or indirect--to determine that the price of a contract was being used
as a material price reference and therefore, serving a significant
price discovery function.\27\ With respect to direct evidence, the
Commission will consider the extent to which, on a frequent and
recurring basis, cash market bids, offers or transactions are directly
based on or quoted at a differential to, the prices generated on the
ECM in question. Direct evidence may be established when cash market
participants are quoting bid or offer prices or entering into
transactions at prices that are set either explicitly or implicitly at
a differential to prices established for the contract in question. Cash
market prices are set explicitly at a differential to the section
2(h)(3) contract when, for instance, they are quoted in dollars and
cents above or below the reference contract's price. Cash market prices
are set implicitly at a differential to a section 2(h)(3) contract
when, for instance, they are arrived at after adding to, or subtracting
from the section 2(h)(3) contract, but then quoted or reported at a
flat price. With respect to indirect evidence, the Commission will
consider the extent to which the price of the contract in question is
being routinely disseminated in widely distributed industry
publications--or offered by the ECM itself for some form of
remuneration--and consulted on a frequent and recurring basis by
industry
[[Page 23732]]
participants in pricing cash market transactions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ 17 CFR part 36, Appendix A.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Alberta hub is a major trading center for natural gas in North
America. Traders, including producers, keep abreast of the prices of
the Alberta market center when conducting cash deals. However, ICE's
cash-settled AECO Financial Basis contract is used more widely as a
price reference than the NGX Alberta Basis contract. Traders look to
ICE contract's competitively determined price as an indication of
expected values of natural gas at the Alberta hub when entering into
cash market transactions for natural gas, especially those trades
providing for physical delivery in the future. Moreover, traders use
ICE's AECO Financial Basis contract, as well as other basis contracts,
to hedge cash market positions and transactions. The substantial volume
of trading and open interest in the ICE contract attests to its use for
this purpose.\28\ In contrast, trading volume in the NGX Alberta Basis
contract is much smaller than in ICE's cash-settled version of the
contract. In this regard, total trading volume in the NGX Alberta Basis
contract in the third quarter of 2009 was equivalent to 52,158 NYMEX
physically-delivered natural gas contracts, which has a size of 10,000
mmBtu.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ In the third quarter of 2009, 6,320 separate trades
occurred on ICE's electronic platform in its AECO Financial Basis
contract, resulting in a daily average of 95.8 trades. During the
same period, the ICE contract had a total trading volume on its
electronic platform of 736,412 contracts (which was an average of
11,158 contracts per day). As of September 30, 2009, open interest
in the ICE AECO Financial Basis contract was 483,561 contracts.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accordingly, although the Alberta Hub is a major trading center for
natural gas and, as noted, NGX provides price information for the
Alberta Basis contract to ICE which sells it, the Commission has found
upon further evaluation that the Alberta Basis contract is not
routinely consulted by industry participants in pricing cash market
transactions and thus does not meet the Commission's Guidance for the
material price reference criterion. In this regard, the ICE AECO
natural gas futures contract is routinely consulted by industry
participants in pricing cash market transactions at this location.
Because both the NGX and the ICE contracts basically price the same
commodity at the same location and time and the ICE contract has
significantly higher trading volume and open interest, it is not
necessary for market participants to independently refer to the NGX
Alberta Basis contract for pricing natural gas at this location. Thus,
the Alberta Basis contract does not satisfy the direct price reference
test for existence of material price reference. Furthermore, the
Commission notes that publication of the Alberta Basis contract's
prices is not indirect evidence of material price reference. The
Alberta Basis contract's prices are published with those of numerous
other contracts, including ICE's AECO Financial Basis contract, which
are of more interest to market participants. Thus, the Commission has
concluded that traders likely do not specifically purchase ICE data
packages for the NGX Alberta Basis contract's prices and do not consult
such prices on a frequent and recurring basis in pricing cash market
transactions.
i. Federal Register Comments
NGX states its opinion that the Alberta Basis contract does not
satisfy the material price reference criteria because the contract
lacks sufficient liquidity, and ``the consideration of liquidity is
implicitly understood to be a relevant, if not fundamental factor,
where material price reference is being considered.'' \29\ Furthermore,
NGX opined that the Commission purported ``to adopt a threshold as low
as 5, 10 or 20 trades per day as sufficiently material to attract a
SPDC designation.'' \30\ In this regard, the Commission adopted a five
trades-per-day threshold as a reporting requirement to enable it to
``independently be aware of ECM contracts that may develop into SPDCs''
\31\ rather than solely relying upon an ECM on its own to identify any
such potential SPDCs to the Commission. Thus, any contract that meets
this threshold may be subject to scrutiny as a potential SPDC. However,
this does not mean that the contract will be found to be a SPDC merely
because it met the reporting threshold. WGCEF states that there is no
direct evidence that any contracts on any market settle to or reference
the NGX Alberta Basis price. Moreover, WGCEF ``does not believe the
fact that ICE publishes the settlement prices of NGX physical
transactions constitutes sufficient evidence of a Material Price
Reference necessary to satisfy the requirements of CEA Section
2(h)(7)(B)(iii).'' It notes that the publication of NGX price data by
ICE is the result of a unique arrangement between ICE and NGX, whereby
ICE serves as the exclusive trading platform for NGX contracts and NGX
does not publish any trade data on its own website. ``Given this unique
arrangement,'' WGCEF asserts, ``it is only logical that ICE publishes
transaction data regarding the NGX physical deals in its ``OTC Gas End
of Day'' publication.'' As noted above, the Commission believes that
publication of the Alberta Basis contract's prices is not indirect
evidence of material price reference. The Alberta Basis contract's
prices are published with those of numerous other contracts, including
ICE's AECO Financial Basis contract, which are of more interest to
market participants. As a result, the Commission has concluded that
traders likely do not specifically purchase ICE data packages for the
NGX Alberta Basis contract's prices and do not consult such prices on a
frequent and recurring basis in pricing cash market transactions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ CL 02.
\30\ Id.
\31\ 73 FR 75892 (December 12, 2008)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ii. Conclusion Regarding Material Price Reference
Based on the above, the Commission finds that the NGX Alberta Basis
contract does not meet the material price reference criterion because
cash market transactions are not priced either explicitly or implicitly
on a frequent and recurring basis at a differential to the Alberta
Basis contract's price (direct evidence). Moreover, while the Alberta
Basis contract's price data is sold to market participants, market
participants likely do not specifically purchase the ICE data packages
for the Alberta contract's prices and do not consult such prices on a
frequent and recurring basis in pricing cash market transactions
(indirect evidence).
2. Price Linkage Criterion
In its October 20, 2009, Federal Register notice, the Commission
identified price linkage as a potential basis for a SPDC determination
with respect to the Alberta Basis contract. In this regard, the final
settlement of the Alberta Basis contract is based, in part, on the
final settlement price of NYMEX's Henry Hub physically delivered NG
futures contract, where NYMEX is registered with the Commission as a
DCM.
The Commission's Guidance on Significant Price Discovery Contracts
notes that a ``price-linked contract is a contract that relies on a
contract traded on another trading facility to settle, value or
otherwise offset the price-linked contract.'' \32\ Furthermore, the
Guidance notes that ``[f]or a linked contract, the mere fact that a
contract is linked to another contract will not be sufficient to
support a determination that a contract performs a significant
[[Page 23733]]
price discovery function. To assess whether such a determination is
warranted, the Commission will examine the relationship between
transaction prices of the linked contract and the prices of the
referenced contract. The Commission believes that where material
liquidity exists, prices for the linked contract would be observed to
be substantially the same as, or move substantially in conjunction
with, the prices of the referenced contract.'' The Guidance proposes a
threshold price relationship such that prices of the ECM linked
contract will fall within a 2.5 percent price range for 95 percent of
contemporaneously determined closing, settlement or other daily prices
over the most recent quarter. Finally, the Commission also stated in
the Guidance that it would consider a linked contract that has a
trading volume equivalent to 5 percent of the volume of trading in the
contract to which it is linked to have sufficient volume potentially to
be deemed SPDC (``minimum threshold'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ Appendix A to the Part 36 rules.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To assess whether the Alberta Basis contract meets the price
linkage criterion, Commission staff obtained price data from NGX and
performed the statistical tests cited above. Staff found that, while
the Alberta Basis contract price is determined, in part, by the final
settlement price of the NYMEX physically delivered natural gas futures
contract (a DCM contract), the imputed Alberta price (derived by adding
the NYMEX Henry Hub Natural Gas price to the Alberta Basis price) is
not within 2.5 percent of the settlement price of the corresponding
NYMEX Henry Hub natural gas futures contract on 95 percent or more of
the days. Specifically, during the third quarter of 2009, none of the
Alberta Basis natural gas prices derived from the NGX basis values were
within 2.5 percent of the daily settlement price of the NYMEX Henry Hub
futures contract. In addition, staff found that the Alberta Basis
contract fails to meet the volume threshold requirement. In particular,
the total trading volume in the NYMEX NG contract during the third
quarter of 2009 was 14,022,963 contracts, with 5 percent of that number
being 701,148 contracts. Trades on the NGX centralized market in the
Alberta Basis contract during the same period was 52,168 NYMEX-
equivalent contracts. Thus, centralized-market trades in the Alberta
Basis contract amounted to less than the minimum threshold.
i. Federal Register Comments
NGX states its belief that the Alberta Basis contract does not meet
the price linkage factor because there is insufficient trading activity
in this contract.
WGCEF acknowledges that the Alberta Basis contract is technically
linked to the NYMEX Henry Hub NG contract. However, WGCEF contends that
a comparison of the Alberta Basis contract price with NYMEX NG
settlement prices from July 21, 2009 through November 2, 2009 clearly
establishes that prices for these contracts are not substantially the
same and do not move substantially in conjunction with one another.
ii. Conclusion Regarding the Price Linkage Criterion
The Commission finds that the NGX Alberta Basis contract does not
meet the price linkage criterion because it fails the price
relationship and volume test provided for in the Commission's Guidance.
3. Material Liquidity Criterion
As noted above, in its October 20, 2009, Federal Register notice,
the Commission identified material liquidity, price linkage and
material price reference as potential criteria for SPDC determination
of the AB contract. To assess whether a contract meets the material
liquidity criterion, the Commission first examines trading activity as
a general measurement of the contract's size and potential importance.
If the Commission finds that the contract in question meets a threshold
of trading activity that would render it of potential importance, the
Commission will then perform a statistical analysis to measure the
effect that changes to the subject-contract's prices potentially may
have on prices for other contracts listed on an ECM or a DCM.
With respect to the material liquidity criterion, the Commission
noted that the average number of transactions in the Alberta Basis
nearby month contract was 23.2 trades per day in the second quarter of
2009. During the same period, the Alberta Basis contract had an average
daily trading volume of 5,869,000 mmBtu (or 587 NYMEX-equivalent
contracts of 10,000 mmBtu size). Moreover, open interest as of June 30,
2009, was 150,213,600 mmBtu in the nearby month (15,021 NYMEX
equivalents) and 10,112,200 mmBtu (1,011 NYMEX equivalents) for
delivery two months out.\33\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ Second quarter 2009 data was submitted to the Commission in
a different format than in later filings. In this regard total
trading volume and total number of trades per quarter were not
identified.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In a subsequent filing, NGX reported that in the third quarter of
2009 the total number of transactions was 2,640 trades (an average of
40 trades per day). Trading volume in the third quarter of 2009 was
521,580,000 mmBtu (52,158 NYMEX-equivalent contracts) or an average of
7,900,000 mmBtu (790 NYMEX-equivalent contracts) on a daily basis. As
of September 30, 2009, open interest in the Alberta Basis contract was
6,440,000 mmBtu (644 NYMEX-equivalent contracts).
The number of trades per day remained relatively low from the
second to third quarters of 2009, and averaged only slightly more than
the reporting level of five trades per day. Moreover, trading activity
in the Alberta Basis contract, as characterized by total quarterly
volume, indicates that the Alberta Basis contract experiences trading
activity that is similar to that of minor futures markets.\34\ Thus,
the Alberta Basis contract does not meet a threshold of trading
activity that would render it of potential importance and no additional
statistical analysis is warranted.\35\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ Based on the Commission's experience, a minor futures
contract is, generally, one that has a quarterly trading volume of
100,000 contracts or less.
\35\ In establishing guidance to illustrate how it will evaluate
the various criteria, or combinations of criteria, when determining
whether a contract is an SPDC, the Commission made clear that
``material liquidity itself would not be sufficient to make a
determination that a contract is a [SPDC], * * * but combined with
other factors it can serve as a guidepost indicating which contracts
are functioning as [SPDCs].'' For the reasons discussed above, the
Commission has found that the Union-Dawn Basis contract does not
meet either the price linkage or material price reference criterion.
In light of this finding and the Commission's Guidance cited above,
there is no need to evaluate further the material liquidity criteria
since it cannot be used alone as a basis for an SPDC determination.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
i. Federal Register Comments
NGX stated in its comment letter that the Alberta Basis contract
does not meet the material liquidity criterion for SPDC determination
for a number of reasons.
First, NGX opined that the Commission ``seems to have applied a
threshold for `material liquidity' that is extremely low, and in
general insufficient to support a determination that these contracts
are no longer emerging markets but in fact serve a significant price
discovery function.'' NGX also noted that the Commission's Guidance
states that material liquidity was intended to be a ``broad concept
that captures the ability to transact immediately with little or no
price concession.'' The Guidance also states that where ``material
liquidity exists, a more or less continuous stream of prices can be
observed and the prices should be similar,'' such as ``where trades
occur multiple times per minute.'' NGX then opined that ``[t]he levels
of liquidity
[[Page 23734]]
outlined above for the Proposed Contracts cannot be what Congress
intended in establishing the dividing line between contracts ripe for
regulation and those still emerging and in need of further
incubation.''
WGCEF used arguments similar to those of NGX in opining that the
Alberta Basis contract does not meet the material liquidity criterion.
For example, WGCEF stated that the Alberta Basis contract does not have
an effect on other contracts that are listed for trading, particularly
the NYMEX NG contract. WGCEF pointed out the Commission's Guidance
which states that a ``continuous stream of prices'' should be observed
in markets with material liquidity. In addition, WGCEF indicated that
in liquid markets observed prices should be similar to each other and
that transactions should occur multiple times per minute; ``the trade
frequency of the Alberta Basis Contract in terms of multiple trades per
minute is very low.'' In this regard, the Commission notes that it
adopted a five trades-per-day threshold as a reporting requirement to
enable it to ``independently be aware of ECM contracts that may develop
into SPDCs'' \36\ rather than solely relying upon an ECM on its own to
identify any such potential SPDCs to the Commission. Thus, any contract
that meets this threshold may be subject to scrutiny as a potential
SPDC but this does not mean that the contract will be found to be a
SPDC merely because it met the reporting threshold. Furthermore, the
Commission observes that a continuous stream of prices would indeed be
an indication of liquidity for certain markets but the Guidance also
notes that ``quantifying the levels of immediacy and price concession
that would define material liquidity may differ from one market or
commodity to another.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ 73 FR 75892 (December 12, 2008).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ii. Conclusion Regarding Material Liquidity
For the reasons discussed above, the Commission finds that the
Alberta Basis contract does not meet the material liquidity criterion.
4. Overall Conclusion Regarding the Alberta Basis Contract
After considering the entire record in this matter, including the
comments received, the Commission has determined that the NGX Alberta
Basis contract does not perform a significant price discovery function
under the criteria established in section 2(h)(7) of the CEA.
Specifically, the Commission has determined that the NGX Alberta Basis
contract does not meet the material price reference, price linkage, or
material liquidity criteria at this time. Accordingly, the Commission
is issuing the attached Order declaring that the Alberta Basis contract
is not a SPDC.
Issuance of this Order indicates that the Commission does not at
this time regard NGX as a registered entity in connection with its
Alberta Basis contract.\37\ Accordingly, with respect to its Alberta
Basis contract, NGX is not required to comply with the obligations,
requirements and timetables prescribed in Commission rule 36.3(c)(4)
for ECMs with SPDCs. However, NGX must continue to comply with the
applicable reporting requirements for ECMs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ See 73 FR 75888, 75893 (Dec. 12, 2008).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. The Phys, BS, LD1 (US/MM), Union-Dawn (Union-Dawn Basis) Contract
and the SPDC Indicia
The NGX Union-Dawn Basis contract is a monthly contract that calls
for physical delivery of natural gas based on the final settlement
price for NYMEX's Henry Hub physically-delivered natural gas futures
contract for the specified calendar month, plus or minus the price
differential (basis) between the Dawn delivery point and the Henry Hub.
There is no standard size for the Union-Dawn Basis contract, although a
minimum volume of 100 mmBtu is required in increments of 100 units per
day. The Union-Dawn Basis contract is listed for 60 consecutive
calendar months.
The Henry Hub,\38\ which is located in Erath, Louisiana, is the
primary cash market trading and distribution center for natural gas in
the United States. It also is the delivery point and pricing basis for
the NYMEX's actively traded, physically-delivered natural gas futures
contract, which is the most important pricing reference for natural gas
in the United States. The Henry Hub, which is operated by Sabine Pipe
Line, LLC, serves as a juncture for 13 different pipelines. These
pipelines bring in natural gas from fields in the Gulf Coast region and
ship it to major consumption centers along the East Coast and Midwest.
The throughput shipping capacity of the Henry Hub is 1.8 trillion mmBtu
per day.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ The term ``hub'' refers to a juncture where two or more
natural gas pipelines are connected. Hubs also serve as pricing
points for natural gas at the particular locations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to the Henry Hub, there are a number of other locations
where natural gas is traded. In 2008, there were 33 natural gas market
centers in North America.\39\ Some of the major trading centers include
Alberta, Northwest Rockies, Southern California border and the Houston
Ship Channel. For locations that are directly connected to the Henry
Hub by one or more pipelines and where there typically is adequate
shipping capacity, the price at the other locations usually directly
tracks the price at the Henry Hub, adjusted for transportation costs.
However, at other locations that are not directly connected to the
Henry Hub or where shipping capacity is limited, the prices at those
locations often diverge from the Henry Hub price. Furthermore, one
local price may be significantly different than the price at another
location even though the two markets' respective distances from the
Henry Hub are the same. The reason for such pricing disparities is that
a given location may experience supply and demand factors that are
specific to that region, such as differences in pipeline shipping
capacity, unusually high or low demand for heating or cooling or supply
disruptions caused by severe weather. As a consequence, local natural
gas prices can differ from the Henry Hub price by more than the cost of
shipping and such price differences can vary in an unpredictable
manner.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ See https://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/oil_gas/natural_gas/feature_articles/2009/ngmarketcenter/ngmarketcenter.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Union Gas, Ltd., is a major Canadian natural gas storage,
transmission, and distribution company based in Ontario, Canada. Union
Gas offers premium storage and transportation services to customers at
the Dawn hub, which is the largest underground storage facility in
Canada and one of the largest in North America. The Dawn hub offers
customers an important link for natural gas moving from Western
Canadian and U.S. supply basins to markets in central Canada and the
northeast United States. The throughput capacity at the Dawn hub is 9.3
billion cubic feet per day. Moreover, the number of pipeline
interconnections at that hub was ten in 2008. Lastly, the Dawn hub's
capacity is 12.8 billion cubic feet per day.\40\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ See https://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/oil_gas/natural_gas/feature_articles/2009/ngmarketcenter/ngmarketcenter.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The local price at the Dawn hub typically differs from the price at
the Henry Hub. Thus, the price of the Henry Hub physically-delivered
futures contract is an imperfect proxy for the Dawn price. Moreover,
exogenous factors, such as adverse weather, can cause the Dawn gas
price to differ from the Henry Hub price by an amount that is more or
less than the cost of shipping, making the NYMEX Henry Hub futures
[[Page 23735]]
contract even less precise as a hedging tool than desired by market
participants. Basis contracts \41\ allow traders to more accurately
discover prices at alternative locations and hedge price risk that is
associated with natural gas at such locations. In this regard, a
position at a local price for an alternative location can be
established by adding the appropriate basis swap position to a position
taken in the NYMEX physically-delivered Henry Hub contract (or in the
NYMEX or ICE Henry Hub look-alike contract, which cash settle based on
the NYMEX physically-delivered natural gas contract's final settlement
price).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ Basis contracts denote the difference in the price of
natural gas at a specified location minus the price of natural gas
at the Henry Hub. The differential can be either a positive or
negative value.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In its October 20, 2009, Federal Register notice, the Commission
identified material price reference, price linkage and material
liquidity as the potential SPDC criteria applicable to the Union-Dawn
Basis contract. Each of these criteria is discussed below.\42\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ As noted above, the Commission did not find an indication
of arbitrage in connection with this contract; accordingly, that
criterion is not discussed in reference to the Union-Dawn Basis
contract.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Material Price Reference Criterion
The Commission's October 20, 2009, Federal Register notice
identified material price reference as a potential basis for a SPDC
determination with respect to this contract. The Commission noted that
NGX forged an alliance with ICE to use ICE's matching engine to
complete transactions in physical natural gas contracts traded on NGX.
In return, NGX agreed to provide the clearing services for such
transactions. As part of the agreement, NGX provides ICE with
transaction data, which are then made available to market participants
on a paid basis. ICE offers the NGX data in several packages, which
vary in terms of the amount of available historical data. For example,
the ICE offers the ``OTC Gas End of Day'' data packages with access to
all price data, or just current prices plus a selected number of months
(i.e., 12, 24, 36, or 48 months) of historical data.
The Commission will rely on one of two sources of evidence--direct
or indirect--to determine that the price of a contract was being used
as a material price reference and therefore, serving a significant
price discovery function.\43\ With respect to direct evidence, the
Commission will consider the extent to which, on a frequent and
recurring basis, cash market bids, offers or transactions are directly
based on or quoted at a differential to, the prices generated on the
ECM in question. Direct evidence may be established when cash market
participants are quoting bid or offer prices or entering into
transactions at prices that are set either explicitly or implicitly at
a differential to prices established for the contract in question. Cash
market prices are set explicitly at a differential to the section
2(h)(3) contract when, for instance, they are quoted in dollars and
cents above or below the reference contract's price. Cash market prices
are set implicitly at a differential to a section 2(h)(3) contract
when, for instance, they are arrived at after adding to, or subtracting
from the section 2(h)(3) contract, but then quoted or reported at a
flat price. With respect to indirect evidence, the Commission will
consider the extent to which the price of the contract in question is
being routinely disseminated in widely distributed industry
publications--or offered by the ECM itself for some form of
remuneration--and consulted on a frequent and recurring basis by
industry participants in pricing cash market transactions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ 17 CFR part 36, Appendix A.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Union-Dawn hub is a relatively important trading center for
natural gas in North America. Traders use the NGX Union-Dawn Basis
contract to hedge cash market positions and transactions. Nevertheless,
the relatively small volume of trading and open interest \44\ in the
Union-Dawn Basis contract does not support a finding that the contract
is consulted on a frequent and recurring basis in establishing cash
market transaction prices. Thus, the Union-Dawn Basis contract does not
satisfy the direct price reference test for existence of material price
reference. Furthermore, the Commission notes that publication of the
Union-Dawn Basis contract's prices is not indirect evidence of material
price reference. The Union-Dawn Basis contract's prices are published
with those of numerous other contracts, including ICE's AECO Financial
Basis contract, which are of more interest to market participants.
Thus, the Commission has concluded that traders likely do not
specifically purchase ICE data packages for the NGX Union-Dawn Basis
contract's prices and do not consult such prices on a frequent and
recurring basis in pricing cash market transactions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ In the third quarter of 2009, the Union-Dawn Basis contract
had a total trading volume that was equivalent to 28,090 NYMEX
physically-delivered NG futures contracts (the size of one NYMEX NG
contract is 10,000 mmBtu); the Union-Dawn contract also had an open
interest equivalent to 2,948 NYMEX NG futures contracts.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
i. Federal Register Comments
NGX expressed the opinion that the Union Dawn Basis contract does
not meet the material price reference criterion because there is
insufficient trading activity in this contract.
WGCEF stated that there is no evidence that the Union-Dawn Basis
contract does not directly affect the ``settlement of the NYMEX NG
Contract nor does it influence physical pricing at the Henry Hub.''
\45\ Moreover, there is no evidence that a contract in any market is
tied directly or indirectly to the settlement price of the Union-Dawn
Basis contract. With respect to indirect evidence, WGCEF believes that
ICE's publication of the NGX contract's settlement prices does not
``constitute sufficient evidence'' of material price reference, and is
simply an extension of the ``unique [business] arrangement'' between
ICE and NGX.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ CL 03.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ii. Conclusion Regarding Material Price Reference
Based on the above, the Commission finds that the NGX Union-Dawn
Basis contract does not meet the material price reference criterion
because cash market transactions are not priced either explicitly or
implicitly on a frequent and recurring basis at a differential to the
Union-Dawn Basis contract's price (direct evidence). Moreover, while
the Union-Dawn Basis contract's price data is sold to market
participants, individuals likely do not specifically purchase the ICE
data packages for the Union-Dawn Basis contract's prices and do not
consult such prices on a frequent and recurring basis in pricing cash
market transactions (indirect evidence).
2. Price Linkage Criterion
In its October 20, 2009, Federal Register notice, the Commission
identified price linkage as a potential basis for a SPDC determination
with respect to the Union-Dawn Basis contract. In this regard, the
final settlement of the Union-Dawn Basis contract is based, in part, on
the final settlement price of the NYMEX's Henry Hub physically-
delivered natural gas futures contract, where the NYMEX is registered
with the Commission as a DCM.
The Commission's Guidance on Significant Price Discovery Contracts
notes that a ``price-linked contract is a contract that relies on a
contract traded on another trading facility to settle, value or
otherwise offset the price-
[[Page 23736]]
linked contract.'' \46\ Furthermore, the Guidance notes that ``[f]or a
linked contract, the mere fact that a contract is linked to another
contract will not be sufficient to support a determination that a
contract performs a significant price discovery function. To assess
whether such a determination is warranted, the Commission will examine
the relationship between transaction prices of the linked contract and
the prices of the referenced contract. The Commission believes that
where material liquidity exists, prices for the linked contract would
be observed to be substantially the same as, or move substantially in
conjunction with, the prices of the referenced contract.'' The Guidance
proposes a threshold price relationship such that prices of the ECM
linked contract will fall within a 2.5 percent price range for 95
percent of contemporaneously determined closing, settlement or other
daily prices over the most recent quarter. Finally, the Commission also
stated in the Guidance that it would consider a linked contract that
has a trading volume equivalent to 5 percent of the volume of trading
in the contract to which it is linked to have sufficient volume
potentially to be deemed a SPDC (``minimum threshold'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ Appendix A to the Part 36 rules.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To assess whether the Union-Dawn contract meets the price linkage
criterion, Commission staff obtained price data from NGX and performed
the statistical tests cited above. Staff found that, while the Union-
Dawn Basis contract price is determined, in part, by the final
settlement price of the NYMEX physically-delivered natural gas futures
contract (a DCM contract), the imputed Union-Dawn price (derived by
adding the NYMEX Henry Hub Natural Gas price to the Union-Dawn Basis
price) is not within 2.5 percent of the settlement price of the
corresponding NYMEX Henry Hub natural gas futures contract on 95
percent or more of the days. Specifically, during the third quarter of
2009, 27.4 percent of the Union-Dawn Basis natural gas prices derived
from the NGX basis values were within 2.5 percent of the daily
settlement price of the NYMEX Henry Hub futures contract. In addition,
staff found that the Union-Dawn Basis contract fails to meet the volume
threshold requirement. In particular, the total trading volume in the
NYMEX NG contract during the third quarter of 2009 was 14,022,963
contracts, with 5 percent of that number being 701,148 contracts.
Trades on the NGX centralized market in the Union-Dawn Basis contract
during the same period was 28,090 NYMEX-equivalent contracts. Thus,
centralized-market trades in the Union-Dawn Basis contract amounted to
less than the minimum threshold.
i. Federal Register Comments
NGX states its belief that the Union Dawn Basis contract does not
meet the price linkage factor because there is insufficient trading
activity in this contract. WGCEF acknowledges that the Union-Dawn Basis
is technically linked to the NYMEX physically-delivered NG futures
contract. The Working Group notes that a comparison of the Union-Dawn
Basis with NYMEX NG settlement prices from July 21, 2009, through
November 2, 2009, clearly establishes that these contracts are not
substantially the same and do not move substantially in conjunction
with one another.
ii. Conclusion Regarding the Price Linkage Criterion
The Commission finds that the Union-Dawn Basis contract does not
meet the price linkage criterion because it fails the price
relationship and volume tests provided for in the Commission's
Guidance.
3. Material Liquidity Criterion
As noted above, in its October 20, 2009, Federal Register notice,
the Commission identified material liquidity, price linkage and
material price reference as potential criteria for SPDC determination
of the Union-Dawn Basis contract. To assess whether a contract meets
the material liquidity criterion, the Commission first examines trading
activity as a general measurement of the contract's size and potential
importance. If the Commission finds that the contract in question meets
a threshold of trading activity that would render it of potential
importance, the Commission will then perform a statistical analysis to
measure the effect that changes to the subject-contract's prices
potentially may have on prices for other contracts listed on an ECM or
a DCM.
In its October 20, 2009, Federal Register release, the Commission
noted that the total number of transactions executed on NGX's
electronic platform in the nearby month of the Union-Dawn Basis
contract was 8.3 trades per day in the second quarter of 2009. During
the same period, the Union-Dawn Basis contract had an average daily
trading volume of 1,332,400 mmBtu (or 133 NYMEX-equivalent contracts
per day). Moreover, open interest as of June 30, 2009, was 28,203,800
mmBtu (2,820 NYMEX-equivalent contracts) in the nearby contract month
and 12,908,400 mmBtu (1,291 NYMEX-equivalent contracts) for delivery
two months out.\47\