Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery, 42633-42639 [2010-17606]
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 140 / Thursday, July 22, 2010 / Proposed Rules
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Point in Space Coordinates
(Lat. 43°35′15″ N., long. 71°11′19″ W.)
That airspace extending upward from 700
feet above the surface within a 6-mile radius
of the Point in Space Coordinates (lat.
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Issued in College Park, Georgia, on July 13,
2010.
Mark D. Ward,
Manager, Operations Support Group, Eastern
Service Center, Air Traffic Organization.
[FR Doc. 2010–17954 Filed 7–21–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING
COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 38, 39, and 40
RIN 3038–AC91
Business Continuity and Disaster
Recovery
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
The Commodity Futures
Trading Commission (‘‘CFTC’’ or
‘‘Commission’’) is proposing a rule that
would establish standards for recovery
and resumption of trading and clearing
operations by designated contract
markets (‘‘DCMs’’) and registered
derivatives clearing organizations
(‘‘DCOs’’) that the Commission
determines to be critical financial
markets or core clearing and settlement
organizations in the event of a widescale disruption affecting such entities’
trading or clearing operations. These
proposed standards would require such
entities to maintain business continuity
and disaster recovery resources
sufficient to meet a same-day recovery
time objective for trading and clearing,
and maintain geographic dispersal of
infrastructure and personnel sufficient
to enable achievement of a same-day
recovery time objective, in the event of
a wide-scale disruption. The proposed
amendments also revise application
guidance and acceptable practices under
the Core Principles for DCMs relating to
business continuity and disaster
recovery matters that would harmonize
acceptable practices for DCMs and
DCOs.
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SUMMARY:
Comments must be received on
or before August 23, 2010.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be sent to
David Stawick, Secretary, Commodity
Futures Trading Commission, Three
Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20581. Comments may
DATES:
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be submitted via e-mail at
BCDR@cftc.gov. ‘‘Business Continuity
and Disaster Recovery’’ must be in the
subject field of responses submitted via
e-mail, and clearly indicated on written
submissions. Comments may also be
submitted at https://
www.regulations.gov. All comments
must be submitted in English, or if not,
accompanied by an English translation.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Robert B. Wasserman, Associate
Director, Division of Clearing and
Intermediary Oversight, 202–418–5092,
rwasserman@cftc.gov; David Taylor,
Special Counsel, Division of Market
Oversight, 202–418–5488,
dtaylor@cftc.gov; Jocelyn Partridge,
Special Counsel, Division of Clearing
and Intermediary Oversight, 202–418–
5926, jpartridge@cftc.gov; or Cody J.
Alvarez, Attorney Advisor, Division of
Market Oversight, 202–418–5404,
calvarez@cftc.gov; Commodity Futures
Trading Commission, Three Lafayette
Centre, 1155 21st Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20581.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
A. Introduction
While the experience of the
Commission is that DCMs and DCOs
registered with it maintain adequate
business continuity and disaster
recovery (‘‘BC–DR’’) programs, the
Commission believes that additional
regulatory steps should be taken to
further improve the resiliency and
recovery capabilities of registered
entities, particularly those organizations
which meet the financial sector’s
accepted definitions of ‘‘critical
financial markets’’ and ‘‘core clearing
and settlement organizations.’’ 1 These
accepted definitions come from the
Interagency Paper on Sound Practices to
Strengthen the Resilience of the U.S.
Financial System, commonly known as
the ‘‘White Paper,’’ that was issued by
the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System (‘‘Fed’’), the Department
of the Treasury (‘‘Treasury’’), and the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘SEC’’) in 2003.2 Although the
Commission did not participate in the
issuance of the White Paper, the
Commission has determined that it
would be appropriate to apply standards
infra note 2.
FR 17809 (April 11, 2003). The White Paper
considers new risks present in the post-September
11 environment, addresses steps needed to
strengthen the overall resilience of the U.S.
financial system in the event of a wide-scale
disruption, and is the principal source of common
business continuity and disaster recovery standards
applicable across the U.S. financial sector.
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1 See
2 68
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analogous to those set forth in the White
Paper to DCMs and DCOs.3
B. Standards Established by Regulators
of Comparable Financial Entities
The White Paper explained that
critical financial markets are those
markets that provide the means for
financial institutions to adjust their cash
and securities positions and those of
their customers in order to manage
liquidity, market, and other risks to
their organizations, and provide support
for the provision of a wide range of
financial services to U.S. businesses and
consumers. The White Paper defined
‘‘critical financial markets’’ as ‘‘markets
for [(1)] federal funds, foreign exchange,
and commercial paper; [(2)] U.S.
government and agency securities; and
[(3)] corporate debt and equity
securities.’’ 4 ‘‘Core clearing and
settlement organizations’’ are those that
(a) provide clearing and settlement
services for critical financial markets, or
(b) act as large-value payment systems
operators and present systemic risk
should they be unable to perform.5 This
proposal would apply these White
Paper standards to futures markets
related to the aforementioned
instruments and extend it to futures
markets for essential physical
commodities.
The Commission believes that some of
the registered entities regulated by the
Commission may be ‘‘critical financial
markets’’ or ‘‘core clearing and
settlement organizations.’’ They provide
the means for financial institutions to
adjust their financial positions and
those of their customers in order to
manage liquidity, market, and other
risks, and provide support for provision
of a wide range of financial services to
U.S. businesses and consumers. Their
products include futures on U.S.
government and agency securities,
equity indexes, foreign exchange and
physical commodities that comprise
critical components of the world
financial system. For these reasons, it
might present unacceptable risks to the
U.S. financial system if these entities
were to become inoperative and
unavailable for an extended period of
time for any reason up to and including
a wide-scale disruption. The ability of
critical financial markets and core
clearing and settlement organizations to
recover and resume trading and clearing
promptly in the event of a wide-scale
3 Because there are no Derivatives Transaction
Facilities (‘‘DTEFs’’) currently registered with the
Commission, the Commission has chosen to refrain
from similarly modifying any regulations or
guidance applicable to DTEFs at this time.
4 See 68 FR at 17811.
5 See id. at 17811.
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 140 / Thursday, July 22, 2010 / Proposed Rules
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disruption is important to the U.S.
economy.
The White Paper calls for core
clearing and settlement organizations to
have the capacity to meet a same-day
recovery time objective (‘‘RTO’’); that is,
the capacity to recover and resume
clearing and settlement activities within
the business day on which the
disruption occurs.6 Further, the White
Paper recognizes that the ability to meet
a same-day RTO during a wide-scale
disruption requires an appropriate level
of geographic diversity between primary
and backup sites, with the latter as far
away as necessary to avoid being subject
to the same set of risks as the primary
site. Backup sites should not rely on the
same transportation,
telecommunications, power, water, or
other critical infrastructure components
as the primary location. In addition,
operation of the backup site should not
be impaired by a wide-scale evacuation
at, or the inaccessibility of staff that
service, the primary site. Therefore, the
White Paper calls for core clearing and
settlement organizations to maintain
backup facilities that are a significant
distance away from their primary
facilities, a distance sufficient to address
the risk that a wide-scale disruption
could make the organization’s labor
pool across the entire metropolitan or
other geographic area of the primary site
(including adjacent communities
economically integrated with it)
unavailable to support achievement of
the organization’s RTO.7
While the White Paper defines critical
financial markets, it establishes an RTO
only for core clearing and settlement
organizations. The Policy Statement:
Business Continuity Planning for
Trading Markets issued by the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘SEC Policy Statement’’) establishes an
RTO and a geographic dispersal of
disaster recovery resources requirement
for U.S. securities markets.8 The SEC
Policy Statement recognizes that U.S.
securities markets collectively
constitute critical financial markets. It
establishes a next-day, rather than sameday, RTO for securities markets because
securities trading is ‘‘relatively fungible
across markets,’’ since most securities
are traded on more than one market.9 As
a result, if trading on one securities
6 The
White Paper also mentions, as an
aspirational ‘‘overall goal,’’ an RTO of two hours for
core clearing and settlement organizations.
7 See generally, White Paper, 68 FR at 17813.
8 See 68 FR 56656 (October 1, 2003) (Release No.
34–48545; File No. S7–17–03).
9 We understand that an exception to this general
observation is the listing and trading of certain
index option products that may be subject to
exclusive licensing arrangements.
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market were incapacitated, that trading
could be shifted to one or more of the
other securities markets. By contrast,
trading of futures is generally not
fungible across markets. The geographic
dispersal requirement for securities
markets set in the SEC Policy Statement
is the same as that set forth in the White
Paper for core clearing and settlement
organizations.
C. Applicable Provisions of the
Commodity Exchange Act
The Commodity Exchange Act (‘‘CEA’’
or ‘‘Act’’) provides for the protection of
the ‘‘public interest’’ through a system of
effective self-regulation of trading
facilities, clearing systems and markets
participants under Commission
oversight. As specifically set forth in the
Act, ensuring the integrity of the futures
markets and the avoidance of systemic
risk are critical functions of the
Commission.10 Accordingly, the
Commission believes that this proposal
relating to BC–DR standards is essential
for the proper functioning of the futures
markets and the U.S. financial system.
The BC–DR requirements currently
applicable to DCMs are set forth in Core
Principle 6, Emergency Authority (‘‘Core
Principle 6’’),11 Core Principle 9,
Execution of Transactions (‘‘Core
Principle 9’’),12 and Part 38 of the
Commission’s Regulations. The BC–DR
requirements currently applicable to
DCOs are set forth in Core Principle I,
System Safeguards (‘‘Core Principle
I’’) 13 and Part 39 of the Commission’s
Regulations. Pursuant to these
provisions, DCMs and DCOs are
required to have appropriate emergency
authority, emergency procedures,
backup facilities, and disaster recovery
plans. Such entities must also ensure
the proper functioning, adequate
capacity, and security of their
automated trading and clearing systems,
and conduct adequate testing and
review of those systems.
With respect to DCMs, Core Principle
6, Emergency Authority, requires DCMs
to adopt rules providing for the exercise
of emergency authority. The
Application Guidance set forth in
Appendix B to Part 38 of the
Commission’s Regulations relating to
Core Principle 6 notes that this
authority should allow the DCM to
10 Section 3(b), 7 U.S.C. 5(c). Congress gave the
Commission broad authority in Section 8a(5) of the
Act, 7 U.S.C. 12a(5), to make and promulgate rules,
such as those contained in this Proposal, that are
reasonably necessary to prevent disruptions to
market integrity, ensure the financial integrity of
futures and options transactions and promote the
avoidance of systemic risk.
11 7 U.S.C. 7(d)(6).
12 7 U.S.C. 7(d)(9).
13 7 U.S.C. 7a–1(c)(2)(I).
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‘‘intervene as necessary to maintain
markets with fair and orderly trading as
well as procedures for carrying out the
intervention.’’ 14 Core Principle 9,
Execution of Transactions, also requires
DCMs to ‘‘provide a competitive, open,
and efficient market and mechanism for
executing transactions.’’ Consistent with
Core Principle 9, DCMs are required to
periodically test and review automated
systems to ensure proper system
functioning, adequate capacity, and
security.15
With respect to DCOs, Core Principle
I, System Safeguards, requires DCOs to
maintain ‘‘a program of oversight and
risk analysis to ensure that the
automated systems of the [DCO]
function properly and have adequate
capacity and security.’’ It also requires
DCOs to ‘‘maintain emergency
procedures and a plan for disaster
recovery, and to periodically test
backup facilities sufficient to ensure
daily processing, clearing, and
settlement of transactions.’’ 16
In the near-decade that has passed
since the Act’s Core Principles were
established by the Commodity Futures
Modernization Act of 2000 (‘‘CFMA’’),17
historical events have resulted in
substantial and important changes in
BC–DR standards for financial sector
organizations. The events of September
11, 2001, the Northeast regional power
outages of 2003, the economic events of
2008–2009, and the current rise in cyber
threats have resulted in important
lessons learned, and in changed
thinking about how normal financial
institution operations could be
disrupted, and the preparedness
principles that should be followed to
ensure the financial sector’s ability to
recover and resume operations promptly
after a disruption. In light of these
developments, and of the vital
importance of critical financial markets
and core clearing and settlement
organizations to the national economy,
the Commission believes that the
additional, new standards proposed for
those DCMs and DCOs that the
Commission may determine to be
critical financial markets or core
clearing and settlement organizations
are essential to ensure the capacity of
such entities to recover and resume
operations promptly in the event they
are affected by a wide-scale disruption.
14 See Application Guidance set forth in
Appendix B to Part 38 of the Commission’s
Regulations relating to Core Principle 6.
15 See Application Guidance set forth in
Appendix B to Part 38 of the Commission’s
Regulations relating to Core Principle 9.
16 See Section 5b(c)(2)(I) of the Act, 7 U.S.C. 7a–
1(c)(2)(I).
17 See Public Law 106–554 (December 21, 2000).
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 140 / Thursday, July 22, 2010 / Proposed Rules
The Commission also believes that, to
better ensure the resiliency of futures
and options trading and the ability of
the industry to respond to current
threats to its operations, the application
guidance and acceptable practices
language concerning BC–DR standards
applicable to all DCMs should be
updated and harmonized with the BC–
DR standards applicable to DCOs. The
proposed amendments to the existing
BC–DR standards for all DCMs also seek
to better explain those standards
through the use of current terms of art
with respect to BC–DR matters. The
Commission believes the approach to
BC–DR standards taken by the White
Paper and the SEC Policy Statement,
particularly with respect to the recovery
time objective and geographic dispersal
requirements needed to provide
resiliency in the event of a wide-scale
disruption, is appropriate for the
Commission to take in adopting
requirements applicable to registered
entities that are critical financial
markets or core clearing and settlement
organizations.
The Commission believes that certain
DCMs and DCOs may be critical
financial markets or core clearing and
settlement organizations. Some DCMs
and DCOs provide the means for
financial institutions to adjust their
financial positions and those of their
customers in order to manage liquidity,
market, and other risks, and provide
support for provision of a wide range of
financial services to U.S. businesses and
consumers. The available products
include futures contracts and related
options on U.S. government and agency
securities, equity indexes, foreign
exchange and physical commodities
that comprise critical components of the
world financial system. For these
reasons, it might present unacceptable
risks to the U.S. financial system if such
DCMs or DCOs were to become
inoperative and unavailable for an
extended period of time for any reason
up to and including a wide-scale
disruption, and their ability to recover
and resume trading and clearing
promptly in the event of a wide-scale
disruption may be critically important
to the U.S. economy. Mitigating
systemic risk through the application of
consistent, same-day RTOs for clearing
and settlement activities across the
nation’s critical financial markets in the
event of a wide-scale disruption may be
important to financial sector resiliency.
Sufficient geographic dispersal of BC–
DR resources, including both technology
and personnel, is an essential means of
ensuring that critical financial markets
and core clearing and settlement
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organizations have the ability to recover
and resume trading and clearing within
a same-day RTO.
II. Proposed New Regulation 40.9
The Commission proposes
amendments to Part 40 of its
Regulations as follows: (1) The addition
of new definitions in Regulation 40.1;
(2) adoption of new Regulation 40.9
setting forth same-day RTO and
geographic dispersal requirements for
critical financial markets and core
clearing and settlement organizations;
and (3) the adoption of new Appendix
E providing guidance regarding the
Commission’s determination of critical
financial markets and core clearing and
settlement organizations. The
Commission also proposes to amend the
application guidance provided in
Appendix B to Part 38 and Appendix A
to Part 39 of the Commission’s
regulations to incorporate the new Part
40 requirements.
Five new definitions are proposed to
be added to Regulation 40.1. The terms
defined include ‘‘critical financial
market,’’ ‘‘core clearing and settlement
organization,’’ ‘‘relevant area,’’ ‘‘recovery
time objective,’’ and ‘‘wide-scale
disruption.’’
Proposed Regulation 40.1(j) would
define ‘‘critical financial market’’ to
mean a DCM that provides the means
for financial institutions to adjust their
financial positions and those of their
customers in order to manage liquidity,
market, and other risks to their
organizations, and provides support for
the provision of a wide range of
financial services to businesses and
consumers in the United States,
particularly including markets whose
trading impacts federal funds, foreign
exchange, commercial paper, U.S.
government and agency securities,
corporate debt, equity securities, or
physical commodities of broad, major
importance to the national or
international economy.
Proposed Regulation 40.1(k) would
define ‘‘core clearing and settlement
organization’’ as a DCO that provides
clearing and settlement services integral
to a critical financial market (or to
multiple DCMs that are critical financial
markets on a collective rather than
individual basis).
Proposed Regulation 40.1(l) would
define ‘‘relevant area,’’ for the purposes
of Part 40, as the metropolitan or other
geographic area within which a critical
financial market or core clearing and
settlement organization has physical
infrastructure or personnel necessary for
it to, as appropriate, (a) conduct
electronic trading, (b) disseminate
market data and provide price reporting,
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(c) conduct electronic surveillance and
maintain access to audit trail
information, or (d) conduct activities
necessary to the clearance and
settlement of existing and new
contracts, including communities
economically integrated with, adjacent
to, or within normal commuting
distance of that metropolitan or other
geographic area.
Proposed Regulation 40.1(m) would
define ‘‘recovery time objective’’ as the
time period within which an entity
should be able to achieve recovery and
resumption of, as appropriate, (a)
electronic trading, (b) market data
dissemination and price reporting, (c)
access to audit trail information and
electronic surveillance tools, or (d)
clearing and settlement of existing and
new contracts, after those capabilities
become temporarily inoperable for any
reason up to or including a wide-scale
disruption.
Proposed Regulation 40.1(n) would
define ‘‘wide-scale disruption’’ to mean
an event that causes a severe disruption
or destruction of transportation,
telecommunications, power, water, or
other critical infrastructure components
in a relevant area, or an event that
results in the evacuation or
unavailability of the population in a
relevant area.
Proposed Regulation 40.9(a) would
require any registered entity that the
Commission determines is a critical
financial market or core clearing and
settlement organization to maintain a
disaster recovery plan and BC–DR
resources, including infrastructure and
personnel, sufficient to enable it to
achieve a same-day RTO in the event of
a wide-scale disruption affecting the
relevant area of any of its normal-use
trading or clearing operations.
Proposed Regulation 40.9(b) would
provide that a same-day RTO is one
calling for recovery and resumption of
trading and clearing within the business
day on which the disruption occurs.18
Proposed Regulation 40.9(c) would set
forth the minimal requirements for
geographic dispersal of infrastructure
and personnel needed to meet a sameday RTO. It would provide that
infrastructure sufficient to enable a
critical financial market or core clearing
18 The same-day RTO is not intended to mandate
the specific response of a particular entity to a
particular disaster. Rather, the objective is intended
to establish the recovery goal that the BC–DR plans
of certain registrants must be designed to meet and,
in turn, the resources that such registrants are
expected to allocate to ensure that they are capable
of achieving the objective. The Commission
recognizes that a wide-scale disruption could occur
near the close of a business day, and would
interpret this requirement in a practical manner in
such an event.
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 140 / Thursday, July 22, 2010 / Proposed Rules
and settlement organization to meet a
same-day recovery time objective after
interruption of normal trading and
clearing by a wide-scale disruption must
be located outside the relevant area of
the infrastructure the entity normally
relies upon to (a) conduct electronic
trading, (b) disseminate market data and
provide price reporting, (c) conduct
electronic surveillance and maintain
access to audit trail information, or (d)
conduct activities necessary to the
clearance and settlement of existing and
new contracts, and may not rely on the
same critical transportation,
telecommunications, power, water, or
other critical infrastructure components
as the infrastructure the entity normally
relies upon for such activities. It would
also provide that personnel sufficient to
enable the critical financial market or
core clearing and settlement
organization to meet a same-day
recovery time objective, after
interruption of normal trading or
clearing by a wide-scale disruption
affecting the relevant area in which the
personnel the entity normally relies
upon to engage in such activities are
located, must live and work outside that
relevant area, so that they will not be
made unavailable by a wide-scale
evacuation or unavailability of
personnel who live or work in that
relevant area.
Proposed Regulation 40.9(d) would
require every registered entity that the
Commission determines is a critical
financial market or core clearing and
settlement organization to conduct
regular, periodic tests of its business
continuity and disaster recovery plans
and resources and its capacity to
achieve a same-day RTO in the event of
a wide-scale disruption.
New Appendix E to Part 40 would
provide guidance on the process the
Commission will follow, and the factors
it will consider, to determine that a
registered entity is a critical financial
market or a core clearing and settlement
organization. Appendix E would also
describe the notice and opportunity for
comment that the Commission would
provide in this connection.
In connection with its proposal to
adopt new Regulation 40.9, the
Commission has also proposed
conforming amendments to certain
application guidance provisions of
Commission Regulations relating to
various Core Principles. Specifically,
Appendix B to Part 38 and Appendix A
to Part 39 are proposed to be amended
to revise acceptable practices provisions
under Core Principle 6 and Core
Principle 9 in Part 38 and application
guidance under Core Principle I in Part
39, to note that Proposed Regulation
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40.9 would govern the obligations of
registered entities that the Commission
determines to be critical financial
markets or core clearing and settlement
organizations, with respect to
maintenance and geographic dispersal
of disaster recovery resources sufficient
to meet a same-day RTO in the event of
a wide-scale disruption. These proposed
revisions would further note that,
therefore, Proposed Regulation 40.9
itself would establish the application
guidance and acceptable practices for
core principle compliance relating to
those matters set forth in Regulation
40.9.
As previously discussed, the
Commission in this proposal would
amend the acceptable practices
provisions for Core Principle 9 set forth
in Appendix B to Part 38, to harmonize
the language of those provisions
regarding BC–DR matters with the
language of the parallel application
guidance provisions for Core Principle I
in Part 39. Moreover, the proposed
revisions would also better explain the
BC–DR standards currently applicable
to DCMs. DCMs that have not been
determined to be critical financial
markets would be subject to the
generally applicable BC–DR
requirements set forth in these
revisions, but would not be required to
comply with the additional obligations
imposed on critical markets by new
Regulation 40.9. The Commission is
aware that proposed legislation pending
before Congress would amend the Act,19
including certain portions that govern
DCMs and DCOs.20 At the time the
Commission approved this proposed
rulemaking, that legislation contained
provisions that would create a new Core
Principle 20, System Safeguards,
explicitly setting forth BC–DR
requirements for all DCMs. In the event
that this pending legislation is enacted
into law, the proposed application
guidance and acceptable practices
provisions relating to Core Principle 9
set forth below may be considered by
the Commission in connection with
creation of application guidance and
acceptable practices provisions relating
to Core Principle 20.
III. Proposed Effective Date
The Commission requests comment
on a reasonable date for the proposed
amendments to become effective.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
The Commission requests comments
on all aspects of the proposed rule
amendments, including the question of
what RTO (e.g., the proposed same-day
RTO or the aspirational two-hour RTO
also mentioned in the White Paper) is
appropriate. As noted above, at the time
that the Commission approved this
proposal, legislation was pending before
Congress that would amend the CEA.
The Commission specifically requests
comment on the effect, if any, the
legislation would have on this proposal.
V. Related Matters
A. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act
(‘‘RFA’’) requires that Federal agencies,
in proposing rules, consider the impact
of those rules on small businesses.21
New requirements related to the
proposed rule amendments would fall
on DCMs and DCOs which the
Commission may determine to be
critical financial markets or core
clearing and settlement organizations.
The Commission has previously
determined that DCMs and DCOs are
not small entities for purposes of the
RFA.22 Accordingly, the Commission
does not expect the rules proposed
herein to have a significant economic
impact on any small entities. Therefore,
the Chairman, on behalf of the
Commission, hereby certifies, pursuant
to 5 U.S.C. 605(b), that the actions
proposed to be taken herein will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
These proposed rule amendments will
not impose any new recordkeeping or
information collection requirements, or
other collections of information that
require approval of the Office of
Management and Budget under the
Paperwork Reduction Act.23 All
recordkeeping or information collection
requirements relevant to the subject of
this proposed rulemaking, or discussed
herein, already exist under current law.
Accordingly, the Paperwork Reduction
Act does not apply. The Commission
invites public comment on the accuracy
of its estimate that no additional
recordkeeping or information collection
requirements or changes to existing
collection requirements would result
from the amendments proposed herein.
C. Cost-Benefit Analysis
Section 15(a) of the Act requires the
Commission to consider the costs and
benefits of its actions before issuing a
21 5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.
47 FR 18618 at 18619 (April 30, 1982) with
respect to DCMs, and 66 FR 45604 at 45609 (August
29, 2001) with respect to DCOs.
23 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
22 See
U.S.C. 1 et seq.
Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act, H.R. 4173, 111th Cong. (2010).
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20 Dodd-Frank
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new regulation or order under the Act.24
By its terms, Section 15(a) does not
require the Commission to quantify the
costs and benefits of a new rule or to
determine whether the benefits of the
adopted rule outweigh its costs. Rather,
section 15(a) requires the Commission
to ‘‘consider the costs and benefits’’ of a
subject rule. Section 15(a) further
specifies that the costs and benefits of
proposed rules 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. In
conducting its analysis, the Commission
may, in its discretion, give greater
weight to any one of the five
enumerated areas of concern and may
determine that, notwithstanding its
costs, a particular rule is necessary or
appropriate to protect the public interest
or to effectuate any of the provisions or
to accomplish any of the purposes of the
Act.25
As discussed above, the proposed rule
amendments would require DCMs and
DCOs that the Commission determines
to be critical financial markets or core
clearing and settlement organizations to
(1) maintain business continuity and
disaster recovery resources sufficient to
meet a same-day RTO for trading and
clearing, and (2) maintain geographic
dispersal of infrastructure and
personnel sufficient to enable
achievement of a same-day RTO in the
event of a wide-scale disruption. The
Commission cannot fully quantify the
costs that would be borne by such
entities in complying with the proposed
rule amendments, as the Commission
has not yet determined which entities
are critical financial markets or core
clearing or settlement organizations.
Moreover, the cost to comply with the
proposed rule amendments would be
likely to vary depending on the nature
and location of infrastructure and
personnel available to enable
achievement of a same-day RTO that are
presently maintained by each such
entity.
Notwithstanding the potential costs
that could be incurred by DCMs or
DCOs that the Commission determines
to be critical financial markets or core
clearing and settlement organizations in
complying with the proposed rule
24 7
U.S.C. 19(a).
Fishermen’s Dock Co-op., Inc. v. Brown, 75
F3d 164 (4th Cir. 1996); Center for Auto Safety v.
Peck, 751 F.2d 1336 (DC Cir. 1985) (agency has
discretion to weigh factors in undertaking costbenefit analyses).
25 E.g.,
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amendments, the Commission believes
the benefits of the proposed rule
amendments are significant and
important. The ability of critical
financial markets and core clearing and
settlement organizations to recover and
resume trading and clearing promptly in
the event of a wide-scale disruption is
significant to the U.S. economy.
Therefore, the proposed rule
amendments may be crucially important
to sound risk management practices for
such markets, an area of concern that
may deserve great weight in this
connection. As such, they may be
needed to protect market participants
and ensure the continued efficiency,
competitiveness, financial integrity, and
price discovery function of such
markets in the event of a wide-scale
disruption. Accordingly, the
Commission believes that the proposal
is consistent with the Act and would
serve to protect the public interest by
promoting market integrity and the
avoidance of systemic risk.
After considering the costs and
benefits noted above, the Commission
has determined to issue the proposed
rule amendments. The Commission
invites public comment on its
application of the cost-benefit provision.
Commenters are also invited to submit
any data that they may have quantifying
the costs and benefits of the proposed
rule amendments with their comment
letter.
VI. Text of Proposed Amendments
List of Subjects
17 CFR Part 38
Commodity futures, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
17 CFR Part 39
Commodity futures, Consumer
protection, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
17 CFR Part 40
Commodity futures, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
In light of the foregoing, and pursuant
to the authority in the Act, and in
particular Sections 3, 5, 5c(a) and 8a(5)
of the Act, the Commission hereby
proposes to amend Parts 38, 39, and 40
of Title 17 of the Code of Federal
Regulations as follows:
PART 38—DESIGNATED CONTRACT
MARKETS
1. The authority citation for part 38
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 2, 5, 6, 6c, 7, 7a–2 and
12a, as amended by Appendix E of Pub. L.
106–554, 114 Stat. 2763A–365.
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2. Amend Appendix B to Part 38 by
revising paragraph (b) of Core Principle
6; and paragraph (a)(2) and paragraph
(b) of Core Principle 9, to read as
follows:
Appendix B to Part 38—Guidance on,
and Acceptable Practices in,
Compliance With Core Principles
*
*
*
*
*
Core Principle 6 of section 5(d) of the Act:
EMERGENCY AUTHORITY * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Acceptable practices. Commission
Regulation 40.9 governs the obligations of
designated contract markets that the
Commission has determined to be critical
financial markets with respect to
maintenance and geographic dispersal of
disaster recovery resources sufficient to meet
a same-day recovery time objective in the
event of a wide-scale disruption. Therefore,
Regulation 40.9 itself establishes the
guidance and acceptable practices for core
principle compliance in that respect.
*
*
*
*
*
Core Principle 9 of section 5(d) of the Act:
EXECUTION OF TRANSACTIONS * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(2) The board of trade shall:
(i) Establish and maintain a program of risk
analysis and oversight to identify and
minimize sources of operational risk, through
the development of appropriate controls and
procedures;
(ii) Establish and maintain a program of
regular, periodic testing to ensure that all
automated systems used by the board of trade
function properly and have adequate security
and capacity; and
(iii) Establish and maintain emergency
procedures, backup facilities, a disaster
recovery plan, and regular, periodic testing to
ensure timely recovery and resumption of
order processing and trade matching, market
data dissemination and price reporting,
market and trade practice surveillance, and
maintenance of a comprehensive and
accurate audit trail.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Acceptable practices. (1) Testing and
review of automated systems should be
conducted by qualified, independent
professionals. Such qualified independent
professionals may be independent
contractors or employees of the board of
trade, but should not be persons responsible
for development or operation of the systems
being tested. Pursuant to the provisions of
Commission Regulations Sections 1.31 and
1.35, the board of trade must keep records of
all such tests, and make all test results
available to the Commission upon request.
(2) In fulfilling its obligations set forth in
the Application Guidance above with respect
to its automated systems, the board of trade
should follow the guidelines issued by the
International Organization of Securities
Commissions (‘‘IOSCO’’) in 1990 (the ‘‘IOSCO
Principles’’), and adopted by the Commission
on November 21, 1990 (55 FR 48670), as
supplemented and amended, and any similar
guidelines issued by the Commission or its
staff.
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(3) Commission Regulation 40.9 governs
the obligations of registered entities that the
Commission has determined to be critical
financial markets, with respect to
maintenance and geographic dispersal of
disaster recovery resources sufficient to meet
a same-day recovery time objective in the
event of a wide-scale disruption. Therefore,
Regulation 40.9 itself establishes the
guidance and acceptable practices for core
principle compliance in that respect.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 39—DERIVATIVES CLEARING
ORGANIZATIONS
3. The authority citation for part 39
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 7b as added by
Appendix E of Pub. L. 106–554, 114 Stat.
2763A–365.
4. Amend Appendix A to Part 39 by
adding a new paragraph 3 after
paragraph 2.b. of the guidance under
Core Principle I, as follows:
Appendix A to Part 39—Application
Guidance and Compliance With Core
Principles
*
*
*
*
*
Core Principle I: SYSTEM SAFEGUARDS
* * *
*
*
*
*
*
2. * * *
b. * * *
3. Commission Regulation 40.9 governs the
obligations of derivatives clearing
organizations that the Commission
determines to be core clearing and settlement
organizations, with respect to maintenance
and geographic dispersal of disaster recovery
resources sufficient to meet a same-day
recovery time objective in the event of a
wide-scale disruption. Therefore, Regulation
40.9 itself establishes the guidance for core
principle compliance in that respect.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 40—PROVISIONS COMMON TO
REGISTERED ENTITIES
5. The authority citation for part 40
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1a, 2, 5, 6, 6c, 7, 7a,
8 and 12a, as amended by Title XIII of the
Food, Conservation and Energy Act of 2008,
Public Law No. 110–246, 122 Stat. 1624 (June
18, 2008).
6. Amend § 40.1 by adding paragraphs
(j) through (n) to read as follows:
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
§ 40.1
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(j) Critical financial market means a
designated contract market that
provides the means for financial
institutions to adjust their financial
positions and those of their customers
in order to manage liquidity, market,
and other risks to their organizations,
and provides support for the provision
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of a wide range of financial services to
businesses and consumers in the United
States, particularly including markets
whose trading impacts federal funds,
foreign exchange, commercial paper,
U.S. government and agency securities,
corporate debt, equity securities, or
physical commodities of broad, major
importance to the national and
international economy. Guidance as to
how the Commission will determine
whether a registered entity is a critical
financial market is set forth in
Appendix E to Part 40.
(k) Core clearing and settlement
organization means a derivatives
clearing organization that provides
clearing and settlement services integral
to a critical financial market (or to
multiple designated contract markets
that are critical financial markets on a
collective rather than individual basis).
Guidance as to how the Commission
will determine whether a derivatives
clearing organization is a core clearing
and settlement organization is set forth
in Appendix E to Part 40.
(l) Relevant area means the
metropolitan or other geographic area
within which a critical financial market
or core clearing and settlement
organization has physical infrastructure
or personnel necessary for it to, as
appropriate, conduct electronic trading,
disseminate market data and provide
price reporting, conduct electronic
surveillance and maintain access to
audit trail information, or conduct
activities necessary to the clearance and
settlement of existing and new
contracts; including communities
economically integrated with, adjacent
to, or within normal commuting
distance of that metropolitan or other
geographic area.
(m) Recovery time objective means the
time period within which an entity
should be able to achieve recovery and
resumption of, as appropriate, electronic
trading, market data dissemination and
price reporting, access to audit trail
information and electronic surveillance
tools, or clearing and settlement of
existing and new contracts, after those
capabilities become temporarily
inoperable for any reason up to or
including a wide-scale disruption.
(n) Wide-scale disruption means an
event that causes a severe disruption or
destruction of transportation,
telecommunications, power, water, or
other critical infrastructure components
in a relevant area, or an event that
results in an evacuation or
unavailability of the population in a
relevant area.
7. Add § 40.9 to read as follows:
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§ 40.9 Disaster recovery requirements for
critical financial markets and core clearing
and settlement organizations.
(a) Each designated contract market or
derivatives clearing organization that
the Commission determines is a critical
financial market or a core clearing and
settlement organization must maintain a
disaster recovery plan and business
continuity and disaster recovery
resources, including infrastructure and
personnel, sufficient to enable it to
achieve a same-day recovery time
objective in the event that its normal
trading or clearing and settlement
capabilities become temporarily
inoperable for any reason up to and
including a wide-scale disruption.
(b) A same-day recovery time
objective is a recovery time objective
within the same business day on which
normal trading or clearing and
settlement capabilities become
temporarily inoperable for any reason
up to and including a wide-scale
disruption.
(c) To ensure its ability to achieve a
same-day recovery time objective in the
event of a wide-scale disruption, each
designated contract market or
derivatives clearing organization that
the Commission determines is a critical
financial market or a core clearing and
settlement organization must maintain a
degree of geographic dispersal of both
infrastructure and personnel such that:
(1) Infrastructure sufficient to enable
the entity to meet a same-day recovery
time objective after interruption of
normal trading and clearing by a widescale disruption is located outside the
relevant area of the infrastructure the
entity normally relies upon to conduct
electronic trading, disseminate market
data and provide price reporting,
conduct electronic surveillance and
maintain access to audit trail
information, or conduct activities
necessary to the clearance and
settlement of existing and new
contracts, and does not rely on the same
critical transportation,
telecommunications, power, water, or
other critical infrastructure components
the entity normally relies upon for such
activities; and
(2) Personnel sufficient to enable the
entity to meet a same-day recovery time
objective, after interruption of normal
trading or clearing by a wide-scale
disruption affecting the relevant area in
which the personnel the entity normally
relies upon to engage in such activities
are located, live and work outside that
relevant area.
(d) Each registered entity that the
Commission determines is a critical
financial market or core clearing and
settlement organization must conduct
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regular, periodic tests of its business
continuity and disaster recovery plans
and resources and its capacity to
achieve a same-day recovery time
objective in the event of a wide-scale
disruption.
*
*
*
*
*
8. Add Appendix E to Part 40 to read
as follows:
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
Appendix E to Part 40—Guidance on
Critical Financial Market and Core
Clearing and Settlement Organization
Determination
(a) Critical financial market determination.
(1) The Commission may determine, in its
discretion, whether a designated contract
market is a critical financial market. In
making such a determination, the
Commission will evaluate each such entity
on a case-by-case basis, giving consideration
to whether the entity provides the means for
financial institutions to adjust their financial
positions and those of their customers in
order to manage liquidity, market, and other
risks to their organizations, and provides
support for the provision of a wide range of
financial services to businesses and
consumers in the United States; or whether
the entity conducts trading that impacts
Federal funds, foreign exchange, commercial
paper, U.S. government and agency
securities, corporate debt, equity securities,
or physical commodities of broad, major
importance to the national and international
economy. The Commission may also
consider other relevant factors that it finds
important.
(2) The Commission will notify the
designated contract market that it intends to
undertake a determination with respect to
whether it is a critical financial market. The
entity may provide written data, views, and
arguments relevant to the Commission’s
determination. Any such written data, views,
and arguments shall be filed with the
Secretary of the Commission, in the form and
manner specified by the Commission, within
30 calendar days of receiving notice or
within such other time specified by the
Commission. After prompt consideration of
all relevant information, the Commission will
issue an order directly to the designated
contract market explaining the Commission’s
determination of whether it is a critical
financial market as defined by § 40.1(j).
(b) Core clearing and settlement
organization determination. (1) The
Commission may determine, in its discretion,
whether a derivatives clearing organization is
a core clearing and settlement organization.
In making such a determination, the
Commission will evaluate each such entity
on a case-by-case basis, giving consideration
to whether the entity provides clearing and
settlement services integral to a critical
financial market (or to multiple designated
contract markets that are critical financial
markets on a collective rather than individual
basis). The Commission may also consider
other relevant factors that it finds important.
(2) The Commission will notify the
derivatives clearing organization that it
intends to undertake a determination with
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respect to whether it is a core clearing and
settlement organization. The entity may
provide written data, views, and arguments
relevant to the Commission’s determination.
Any such written data, views, and arguments
shall be filed with the Secretary of the
Commission, in the form and manner
specified by the Commission, within 30
calendar days of receiving notice or within
such other time specified by the Commission.
After prompt consideration of all relevant
information, the Commission will issue an
order directly to the derivatives clearing
organization explaining the Commission’s
determination of whether it is a core clearing
and settlement organization as defined by
§ 40.1(k).
Issued in Washington, DC, on July 14,
2010, by the Commission.
David A. Stawick,
Secretary of the Commission.
[FR Doc. 2010–17606 Filed 7–21–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION
20 CFR Parts 404 and 416
[Docket No. SSA–2007–0092]
RIN 0960–AG72
Amendments to Procedures for Certain
Determinations and Decisions
Social Security Administration.
Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
We propose to revise the
procedures for how claimants who
request hearings before administrative
law judges (ALJs) may seek further
review of their fully favorable revised
determinations based on prehearing
case reviews or fully favorable attorney
advisor decisions. We also propose to
notify claimants who receive partially
favorable determinations based on
prehearing case reviews that an ALJ will
still hold a hearing unless all parties to
the hearing tell us in writing that we
should dismiss the hearing requests. We
expect that these changes will simplify
the process and free up scarce
administrative resources that we can
better use to reduce the hearings level
case backlog.
DATES: To ensure that your comments
are considered, we must receive them
no later than September 20, 2010.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
by any one of three methods—Internet,
fax, or mail. Do not submit the same
comments multiple times or by more
than one method. Regardless of which
method you choose, please state that
your comments refer to Docket No.
SSA–2007–0092 so that we can
associate your comments with the
correct regulation:
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
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42639
Caution: You should be careful to
include in your comments only
information that you wish to make
publicly available. We strongly urge you
not to include in your comments any
personal information, such as Social
Security numbers or medical
information.
1. Internet: We strongly recommend
this method for submitting your
comments. Visit the Federal
eRulemaking portal at https://
www.regulations.gov. Use the Search
function of the Web page to find docket
number SSA–2007–0092 and then
submit your comment. Once you submit
your comment, the system will issue
you a tracking number to confirm your
submission. You will not be able to
view your comment immediately as we
must manually post each comment. It
may take up to a week for your
comment to be viewable.
2. Fax: Fax comments to (410) 966–
2830.
3. Mail: Address your comments to
the Office of Regulations, Social
Security Administration, 137 Altmeyer
Building, 6401 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, Maryland 21235–6401.
Comments are available for public
viewing on the Federal eRulemaking
portal at https://www.regulations.gov or
in person, during regular business
hours, by arranging with the contact
person identified below.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Joshua Silverman, Office of Regulations,
Social Security Administration, 6401
Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD
21235–6401, (410) 594–2128. For
information on eligibility or filing for
benefits, call our national toll-free
number, 1–800–772–1213 or TTY 1–
800–325–0778, or visit our Internet site,
Social Security Online, at https://
www.socialsecurity.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Electronic Version
The electronic file of this document is
available on the date of publication in
the Federal Register at https://
www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/.
Background
In most cases, we decide claims for
benefits using an administrative review
process that consists of four levels:
Initial determination, reconsideration,
hearing, and appeal. 20 CFR 404.900
and 416.1400. We make an initial
determination at the first level. A
claimant who is dissatisfied with the
initial determination may request
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 140 (Thursday, July 22, 2010)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 42633-42639]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-17606]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 38, 39, and 40
RIN 3038-AC91
Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery
AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (``CFTC'' or
``Commission'') is proposing a rule that would establish standards for
recovery and resumption of trading and clearing operations by
designated contract markets (``DCMs'') and registered derivatives
clearing organizations (``DCOs'') that the Commission determines to be
critical financial markets or core clearing and settlement
organizations in the event of a wide-scale disruption affecting such
entities' trading or clearing operations. These proposed standards
would require such entities to maintain business continuity and
disaster recovery resources sufficient to meet a same-day recovery time
objective for trading and clearing, and maintain geographic dispersal
of infrastructure and personnel sufficient to enable achievement of a
same-day recovery time objective, in the event of a wide-scale
disruption. The proposed amendments also revise application guidance
and acceptable practices under the Core Principles for DCMs relating to
business continuity and disaster recovery matters that would harmonize
acceptable practices for DCMs and DCOs.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before August 23, 2010.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be sent to David Stawick, Secretary,
Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Three Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st
Street, NW., Washington, DC 20581. Comments may be submitted via e-mail
at BCDR@cftc.gov. ``Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery'' must be
in the subject field of responses submitted via e-mail, and clearly
indicated on written submissions. Comments may also be submitted at
https://www.regulations.gov. All comments must be submitted in English,
or if not, accompanied by an English translation.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Robert B. Wasserman, Associate
Director, Division of Clearing and Intermediary Oversight, 202-418-
5092, rwasserman@cftc.gov; David Taylor, Special Counsel, Division of
Market Oversight, 202-418-5488, dtaylor@cftc.gov; Jocelyn Partridge,
Special Counsel, Division of Clearing and Intermediary Oversight, 202-
418-5926, jpartridge@cftc.gov; or Cody J. Alvarez, Attorney Advisor,
Division of Market Oversight, 202-418-5404, calvarez@cftc.gov;
Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Three Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st
Street, NW., Washington, DC 20581.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
A. Introduction
While the experience of the Commission is that DCMs and DCOs
registered with it maintain adequate business continuity and disaster
recovery (``BC-DR'') programs, the Commission believes that additional
regulatory steps should be taken to further improve the resiliency and
recovery capabilities of registered entities, particularly those
organizations which meet the financial sector's accepted definitions of
``critical financial markets'' and ``core clearing and settlement
organizations.'' \1\ These accepted definitions come from the
Interagency Paper on Sound Practices to Strengthen the Resilience of
the U.S. Financial System, commonly known as the ``White Paper,'' that
was issued by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
(``Fed''), the Department of the Treasury (``Treasury''), and the
Securities and Exchange Commission (``SEC'') in 2003.\2\ Although the
Commission did not participate in the issuance of the White Paper, the
Commission has determined that it would be appropriate to apply
standards analogous to those set forth in the White Paper to DCMs and
DCOs.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See infra note 2.
\2\ 68 FR 17809 (April 11, 2003). The White Paper considers new
risks present in the post-September 11 environment, addresses steps
needed to strengthen the overall resilience of the U.S. financial
system in the event of a wide-scale disruption, and is the principal
source of common business continuity and disaster recovery standards
applicable across the U.S. financial sector.
\3\ Because there are no Derivatives Transaction Facilities
(``DTEFs'') currently registered with the Commission, the Commission
has chosen to refrain from similarly modifying any regulations or
guidance applicable to DTEFs at this time.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Standards Established by Regulators of Comparable Financial Entities
The White Paper explained that critical financial markets are those
markets that provide the means for financial institutions to adjust
their cash and securities positions and those of their customers in
order to manage liquidity, market, and other risks to their
organizations, and provide support for the provision of a wide range of
financial services to U.S. businesses and consumers. The White Paper
defined ``critical financial markets'' as ``markets for [(1)] federal
funds, foreign exchange, and commercial paper; [(2)] U.S. government
and agency securities; and [(3)] corporate debt and equity
securities.'' \4\ ``Core clearing and settlement organizations'' are
those that (a) provide clearing and settlement services for critical
financial markets, or (b) act as large-value payment systems operators
and present systemic risk should they be unable to perform.\5\ This
proposal would apply these White Paper standards to futures markets
related to the aforementioned instruments and extend it to futures
markets for essential physical commodities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See 68 FR at 17811.
\5\ See id. at 17811.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission believes that some of the registered entities
regulated by the Commission may be ``critical financial markets'' or
``core clearing and settlement organizations.'' They provide the means
for financial institutions to adjust their financial positions and
those of their customers in order to manage liquidity, market, and
other risks, and provide support for provision of a wide range of
financial services to U.S. businesses and consumers. Their products
include futures on U.S. government and agency securities, equity
indexes, foreign exchange and physical commodities that comprise
critical components of the world financial system. For these reasons,
it might present unacceptable risks to the U.S. financial system if
these entities were to become inoperative and unavailable for an
extended period of time for any reason up to and including a wide-scale
disruption. The ability of critical financial markets and core clearing
and settlement organizations to recover and resume trading and clearing
promptly in the event of a wide-scale
[[Page 42634]]
disruption is important to the U.S. economy.
The White Paper calls for core clearing and settlement
organizations to have the capacity to meet a same-day recovery time
objective (``RTO''); that is, the capacity to recover and resume
clearing and settlement activities within the business day on which the
disruption occurs.\6\ Further, the White Paper recognizes that the
ability to meet a same-day RTO during a wide-scale disruption requires
an appropriate level of geographic diversity between primary and backup
sites, with the latter as far away as necessary to avoid being subject
to the same set of risks as the primary site. Backup sites should not
rely on the same transportation, telecommunications, power, water, or
other critical infrastructure components as the primary location. In
addition, operation of the backup site should not be impaired by a
wide-scale evacuation at, or the inaccessibility of staff that service,
the primary site. Therefore, the White Paper calls for core clearing
and settlement organizations to maintain backup facilities that are a
significant distance away from their primary facilities, a distance
sufficient to address the risk that a wide-scale disruption could make
the organization's labor pool across the entire metropolitan or other
geographic area of the primary site (including adjacent communities
economically integrated with it) unavailable to support achievement of
the organization's RTO.\7\
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\6\ The White Paper also mentions, as an aspirational ``overall
goal,'' an RTO of two hours for core clearing and settlement
organizations.
\7\ See generally, White Paper, 68 FR at 17813.
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While the White Paper defines critical financial markets, it
establishes an RTO only for core clearing and settlement organizations.
The Policy Statement: Business Continuity Planning for Trading Markets
issued by the Securities and Exchange Commission (``SEC Policy
Statement'') establishes an RTO and a geographic dispersal of disaster
recovery resources requirement for U.S. securities markets.\8\ The SEC
Policy Statement recognizes that U.S. securities markets collectively
constitute critical financial markets. It establishes a next-day,
rather than same-day, RTO for securities markets because securities
trading is ``relatively fungible across markets,'' since most
securities are traded on more than one market.\9\ As a result, if
trading on one securities market were incapacitated, that trading could
be shifted to one or more of the other securities markets. By contrast,
trading of futures is generally not fungible across markets. The
geographic dispersal requirement for securities markets set in the SEC
Policy Statement is the same as that set forth in the White Paper for
core clearing and settlement organizations.
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\8\ See 68 FR 56656 (October 1, 2003) (Release No. 34-48545;
File No. S7-17-03).
\9\ We understand that an exception to this general observation
is the listing and trading of certain index option products that may
be subject to exclusive licensing arrangements.
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C. Applicable Provisions of the Commodity Exchange Act
The Commodity Exchange Act (``CEA'' or ``Act'') provides for the
protection of the ``public interest'' through a system of effective
self-regulation of trading facilities, clearing systems and markets
participants under Commission oversight. As specifically set forth in
the Act, ensuring the integrity of the futures markets and the
avoidance of systemic risk are critical functions of the
Commission.\10\ Accordingly, the Commission believes that this proposal
relating to BC-DR standards is essential for the proper functioning of
the futures markets and the U.S. financial system.
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\10\ Section 3(b), 7 U.S.C. 5(c). Congress gave the Commission
broad authority in Section 8a(5) of the Act, 7 U.S.C. 12a(5), to
make and promulgate rules, such as those contained in this Proposal,
that are reasonably necessary to prevent disruptions to market
integrity, ensure the financial integrity of futures and options
transactions and promote the avoidance of systemic risk.
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The BC-DR requirements currently applicable to DCMs are set forth
in Core Principle 6, Emergency Authority (``Core Principle 6''),\11\
Core Principle 9, Execution of Transactions (``Core Principle 9''),\12\
and Part 38 of the Commission's Regulations. The BC-DR requirements
currently applicable to DCOs are set forth in Core Principle I, System
Safeguards (``Core Principle I'') \13\ and Part 39 of the Commission's
Regulations. Pursuant to these provisions, DCMs and DCOs are required
to have appropriate emergency authority, emergency procedures, backup
facilities, and disaster recovery plans. Such entities must also ensure
the proper functioning, adequate capacity, and security of their
automated trading and clearing systems, and conduct adequate testing
and review of those systems.
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\11\ 7 U.S.C. 7(d)(6).
\12\ 7 U.S.C. 7(d)(9).
\13\ 7 U.S.C. 7a-1(c)(2)(I).
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With respect to DCMs, Core Principle 6, Emergency Authority,
requires DCMs to adopt rules providing for the exercise of emergency
authority. The Application Guidance set forth in Appendix B to Part 38
of the Commission's Regulations relating to Core Principle 6 notes that
this authority should allow the DCM to ``intervene as necessary to
maintain markets with fair and orderly trading as well as procedures
for carrying out the intervention.'' \14\ Core Principle 9, Execution
of Transactions, also requires DCMs to ``provide a competitive, open,
and efficient market and mechanism for executing transactions.''
Consistent with Core Principle 9, DCMs are required to periodically
test and review automated systems to ensure proper system functioning,
adequate capacity, and security.\15\
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\14\ See Application Guidance set forth in Appendix B to Part 38
of the Commission's Regulations relating to Core Principle 6.
\15\ See Application Guidance set forth in Appendix B to Part 38
of the Commission's Regulations relating to Core Principle 9.
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With respect to DCOs, Core Principle I, System Safeguards, requires
DCOs to maintain ``a program of oversight and risk analysis to ensure
that the automated systems of the [DCO] function properly and have
adequate capacity and security.'' It also requires DCOs to ``maintain
emergency procedures and a plan for disaster recovery, and to
periodically test backup facilities sufficient to ensure daily
processing, clearing, and settlement of transactions.'' \16\
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\16\ See Section 5b(c)(2)(I) of the Act, 7 U.S.C. 7a-1(c)(2)(I).
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In the near-decade that has passed since the Act's Core Principles
were established by the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000
(``CFMA''),\17\ historical events have resulted in substantial and
important changes in BC-DR standards for financial sector
organizations. The events of September 11, 2001, the Northeast regional
power outages of 2003, the economic events of 2008-2009, and the
current rise in cyber threats have resulted in important lessons
learned, and in changed thinking about how normal financial institution
operations could be disrupted, and the preparedness principles that
should be followed to ensure the financial sector's ability to recover
and resume operations promptly after a disruption. In light of these
developments, and of the vital importance of critical financial markets
and core clearing and settlement organizations to the national economy,
the Commission believes that the additional, new standards proposed for
those DCMs and DCOs that the Commission may determine to be critical
financial markets or core clearing and settlement organizations are
essential to ensure the capacity of such entities to recover and resume
operations promptly in the event they are affected by a wide-scale
disruption.
[[Page 42635]]
The Commission also believes that, to better ensure the resiliency of
futures and options trading and the ability of the industry to respond
to current threats to its operations, the application guidance and
acceptable practices language concerning BC-DR standards applicable to
all DCMs should be updated and harmonized with the BC-DR standards
applicable to DCOs. The proposed amendments to the existing BC-DR
standards for all DCMs also seek to better explain those standards
through the use of current terms of art with respect to BC-DR matters.
The Commission believes the approach to BC-DR standards taken by the
White Paper and the SEC Policy Statement, particularly with respect to
the recovery time objective and geographic dispersal requirements
needed to provide resiliency in the event of a wide-scale disruption,
is appropriate for the Commission to take in adopting requirements
applicable to registered entities that are critical financial markets
or core clearing and settlement organizations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ See Public Law 106-554 (December 21, 2000).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission believes that certain DCMs and DCOs may be critical
financial markets or core clearing and settlement organizations. Some
DCMs and DCOs provide the means for financial institutions to adjust
their financial positions and those of their customers in order to
manage liquidity, market, and other risks, and provide support for
provision of a wide range of financial services to U.S. businesses and
consumers. The available products include futures contracts and related
options on U.S. government and agency securities, equity indexes,
foreign exchange and physical commodities that comprise critical
components of the world financial system. For these reasons, it might
present unacceptable risks to the U.S. financial system if such DCMs or
DCOs were to become inoperative and unavailable for an extended period
of time for any reason up to and including a wide-scale disruption, and
their ability to recover and resume trading and clearing promptly in
the event of a wide-scale disruption may be critically important to the
U.S. economy. Mitigating systemic risk through the application of
consistent, same-day RTOs for clearing and settlement activities across
the nation's critical financial markets in the event of a wide-scale
disruption may be important to financial sector resiliency. Sufficient
geographic dispersal of BC-DR resources, including both technology and
personnel, is an essential means of ensuring that critical financial
markets and core clearing and settlement organizations have the ability
to recover and resume trading and clearing within a same-day RTO.
II. Proposed New Regulation 40.9
The Commission proposes amendments to Part 40 of its Regulations as
follows: (1) The addition of new definitions in Regulation 40.1; (2)
adoption of new Regulation 40.9 setting forth same-day RTO and
geographic dispersal requirements for critical financial markets and
core clearing and settlement organizations; and (3) the adoption of new
Appendix E providing guidance regarding the Commission's determination
of critical financial markets and core clearing and settlement
organizations. The Commission also proposes to amend the application
guidance provided in Appendix B to Part 38 and Appendix A to Part 39 of
the Commission's regulations to incorporate the new Part 40
requirements.
Five new definitions are proposed to be added to Regulation 40.1.
The terms defined include ``critical financial market,'' ``core
clearing and settlement organization,'' ``relevant area,'' ``recovery
time objective,'' and ``wide-scale disruption.''
Proposed Regulation 40.1(j) would define ``critical financial
market'' to mean a DCM that provides the means for financial
institutions to adjust their financial positions and those of their
customers in order to manage liquidity, market, and other risks to
their organizations, and provides support for the provision of a wide
range of financial services to businesses and consumers in the United
States, particularly including markets whose trading impacts federal
funds, foreign exchange, commercial paper, U.S. government and agency
securities, corporate debt, equity securities, or physical commodities
of broad, major importance to the national or international economy.
Proposed Regulation 40.1(k) would define ``core clearing and
settlement organization'' as a DCO that provides clearing and
settlement services integral to a critical financial market (or to
multiple DCMs that are critical financial markets on a collective
rather than individual basis).
Proposed Regulation 40.1(l) would define ``relevant area,'' for the
purposes of Part 40, as the metropolitan or other geographic area
within which a critical financial market or core clearing and
settlement organization has physical infrastructure or personnel
necessary for it to, as appropriate, (a) conduct electronic trading,
(b) disseminate market data and provide price reporting, (c) conduct
electronic surveillance and maintain access to audit trail information,
or (d) conduct activities necessary to the clearance and settlement of
existing and new contracts, including communities economically
integrated with, adjacent to, or within normal commuting distance of
that metropolitan or other geographic area.
Proposed Regulation 40.1(m) would define ``recovery time
objective'' as the time period within which an entity should be able to
achieve recovery and resumption of, as appropriate, (a) electronic
trading, (b) market data dissemination and price reporting, (c) access
to audit trail information and electronic surveillance tools, or (d)
clearing and settlement of existing and new contracts, after those
capabilities become temporarily inoperable for any reason up to or
including a wide-scale disruption.
Proposed Regulation 40.1(n) would define ``wide-scale disruption''
to mean an event that causes a severe disruption or destruction of
transportation, telecommunications, power, water, or other critical
infrastructure components in a relevant area, or an event that results
in the evacuation or unavailability of the population in a relevant
area.
Proposed Regulation 40.9(a) would require any registered entity
that the Commission determines is a critical financial market or core
clearing and settlement organization to maintain a disaster recovery
plan and BC-DR resources, including infrastructure and personnel,
sufficient to enable it to achieve a same-day RTO in the event of a
wide-scale disruption affecting the relevant area of any of its normal-
use trading or clearing operations.
Proposed Regulation 40.9(b) would provide that a same-day RTO is
one calling for recovery and resumption of trading and clearing within
the business day on which the disruption occurs.\18\
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\18\ The same-day RTO is not intended to mandate the specific
response of a particular entity to a particular disaster. Rather,
the objective is intended to establish the recovery goal that the
BC-DR plans of certain registrants must be designed to meet and, in
turn, the resources that such registrants are expected to allocate
to ensure that they are capable of achieving the objective. The
Commission recognizes that a wide-scale disruption could occur near
the close of a business day, and would interpret this requirement in
a practical manner in such an event.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Regulation 40.9(c) would set forth the minimal
requirements for geographic dispersal of infrastructure and personnel
needed to meet a same-day RTO. It would provide that infrastructure
sufficient to enable a critical financial market or core clearing
[[Page 42636]]
and settlement organization to meet a same-day recovery time objective
after interruption of normal trading and clearing by a wide-scale
disruption must be located outside the relevant area of the
infrastructure the entity normally relies upon to (a) conduct
electronic trading, (b) disseminate market data and provide price
reporting, (c) conduct electronic surveillance and maintain access to
audit trail information, or (d) conduct activities necessary to the
clearance and settlement of existing and new contracts, and may not
rely on the same critical transportation, telecommunications, power,
water, or other critical infrastructure components as the
infrastructure the entity normally relies upon for such activities. It
would also provide that personnel sufficient to enable the critical
financial market or core clearing and settlement organization to meet a
same-day recovery time objective, after interruption of normal trading
or clearing by a wide-scale disruption affecting the relevant area in
which the personnel the entity normally relies upon to engage in such
activities are located, must live and work outside that relevant area,
so that they will not be made unavailable by a wide-scale evacuation or
unavailability of personnel who live or work in that relevant area.
Proposed Regulation 40.9(d) would require every registered entity
that the Commission determines is a critical financial market or core
clearing and settlement organization to conduct regular, periodic tests
of its business continuity and disaster recovery plans and resources
and its capacity to achieve a same-day RTO in the event of a wide-scale
disruption.
New Appendix E to Part 40 would provide guidance on the process the
Commission will follow, and the factors it will consider, to determine
that a registered entity is a critical financial market or a core
clearing and settlement organization. Appendix E would also describe
the notice and opportunity for comment that the Commission would
provide in this connection.
In connection with its proposal to adopt new Regulation 40.9, the
Commission has also proposed conforming amendments to certain
application guidance provisions of Commission Regulations relating to
various Core Principles. Specifically, Appendix B to Part 38 and
Appendix A to Part 39 are proposed to be amended to revise acceptable
practices provisions under Core Principle 6 and Core Principle 9 in
Part 38 and application guidance under Core Principle I in Part 39, to
note that Proposed Regulation 40.9 would govern the obligations of
registered entities that the Commission determines to be critical
financial markets or core clearing and settlement organizations, with
respect to maintenance and geographic dispersal of disaster recovery
resources sufficient to meet a same-day RTO in the event of a wide-
scale disruption. These proposed revisions would further note that,
therefore, Proposed Regulation 40.9 itself would establish the
application guidance and acceptable practices for core principle
compliance relating to those matters set forth in Regulation 40.9.
As previously discussed, the Commission in this proposal would
amend the acceptable practices provisions for Core Principle 9 set
forth in Appendix B to Part 38, to harmonize the language of those
provisions regarding BC-DR matters with the language of the parallel
application guidance provisions for Core Principle I in Part 39.
Moreover, the proposed revisions would also better explain the BC-DR
standards currently applicable to DCMs. DCMs that have not been
determined to be critical financial markets would be subject to the
generally applicable BC-DR requirements set forth in these revisions,
but would not be required to comply with the additional obligations
imposed on critical markets by new Regulation 40.9. The Commission is
aware that proposed legislation pending before Congress would amend the
Act,\19\ including certain portions that govern DCMs and DCOs.\20\ At
the time the Commission approved this proposed rulemaking, that
legislation contained provisions that would create a new Core Principle
20, System Safeguards, explicitly setting forth BC-DR requirements for
all DCMs. In the event that this pending legislation is enacted into
law, the proposed application guidance and acceptable practices
provisions relating to Core Principle 9 set forth below may be
considered by the Commission in connection with creation of application
guidance and acceptable practices provisions relating to Core Principle
20.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ 1 U.S.C. 1 et seq.
\20\ Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act,
H.R. 4173, 111th Cong. (2010).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. Proposed Effective Date
The Commission requests comment on a reasonable date for the
proposed amendments to become effective.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
The Commission requests comments on all aspects of the proposed
rule amendments, including the question of what RTO (e.g., the proposed
same-day RTO or the aspirational two-hour RTO also mentioned in the
White Paper) is appropriate. As noted above, at the time that the
Commission approved this proposal, legislation was pending before
Congress that would amend the CEA. The Commission specifically requests
comment on the effect, if any, the legislation would have on this
proposal.
V. Related Matters
A. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (``RFA'') requires that Federal
agencies, in proposing rules, consider the impact of those rules on
small businesses.\21\ New requirements related to the proposed rule
amendments would fall on DCMs and DCOs which the Commission may
determine to be critical financial markets or core clearing and
settlement organizations. The Commission has previously determined that
DCMs and DCOs are not small entities for purposes of the RFA.\22\
Accordingly, the Commission does not expect the rules proposed herein
to have a significant economic impact on any small entities. Therefore,
the Chairman, on behalf of the Commission, hereby certifies, pursuant
to 5 U.S.C. 605(b), that the actions proposed to be taken herein will
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
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\21\ 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.
\22\ See 47 FR 18618 at 18619 (April 30, 1982) with respect to
DCMs, and 66 FR 45604 at 45609 (August 29, 2001) with respect to
DCOs.
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B. Paperwork Reduction Act
These proposed rule amendments will not impose any new
recordkeeping or information collection requirements, or other
collections of information that require approval of the Office of
Management and Budget under the Paperwork Reduction Act.\23\ All
recordkeeping or information collection requirements relevant to the
subject of this proposed rulemaking, or discussed herein, already exist
under current law. Accordingly, the Paperwork Reduction Act does not
apply. The Commission invites public comment on the accuracy of its
estimate that no additional recordkeeping or information collection
requirements or changes to existing collection requirements would
result from the amendments proposed herein.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
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C. Cost-Benefit Analysis
Section 15(a) of the Act requires the Commission to consider the
costs and benefits of its actions before issuing a
[[Page 42637]]
new regulation or order under the Act.\24\ By its terms, Section 15(a)
does not require the Commission to quantify the costs and benefits of a
new rule or to determine whether the benefits of the adopted rule
outweigh its costs. Rather, section 15(a) requires the Commission to
``consider the costs and benefits'' of a subject rule. Section 15(a)
further specifies that the costs and benefits of proposed rules 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. In conducting its analysis, the Commission
may, in its discretion, give greater weight to any one of the five
enumerated areas of concern and may determine that, notwithstanding its
costs, a particular rule is necessary or appropriate to protect the
public interest or to effectuate any of the provisions or to accomplish
any of the purposes of the Act.\25\
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\24\ 7 U.S.C. 19(a).
\25\ E.g., Fishermen's Dock Co-op., Inc. v. Brown, 75 F3d 164
(4th Cir. 1996); Center for Auto Safety v. Peck, 751 F.2d 1336 (DC
Cir. 1985) (agency has discretion to weigh factors in undertaking
cost-benefit analyses).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed above, the proposed rule amendments would require DCMs
and DCOs that the Commission determines to be critical financial
markets or core clearing and settlement organizations to (1) maintain
business continuity and disaster recovery resources sufficient to meet
a same-day RTO for trading and clearing, and (2) maintain geographic
dispersal of infrastructure and personnel sufficient to enable
achievement of a same-day RTO in the event of a wide-scale disruption.
The Commission cannot fully quantify the costs that would be borne by
such entities in complying with the proposed rule amendments, as the
Commission has not yet determined which entities are critical financial
markets or core clearing or settlement organizations. Moreover, the
cost to comply with the proposed rule amendments would be likely to
vary depending on the nature and location of infrastructure and
personnel available to enable achievement of a same-day RTO that are
presently maintained by each such entity.
Notwithstanding the potential costs that could be incurred by DCMs
or DCOs that the Commission determines to be critical financial markets
or core clearing and settlement organizations in complying with the
proposed rule amendments, the Commission believes the benefits of the
proposed rule amendments are significant and important. The ability of
critical financial markets and core clearing and settlement
organizations to recover and resume trading and clearing promptly in
the event of a wide-scale disruption is significant to the U.S.
economy. Therefore, the proposed rule amendments may be crucially
important to sound risk management practices for such markets, an area
of concern that may deserve great weight in this connection. As such,
they may be needed to protect market participants and ensure the
continued efficiency, competitiveness, financial integrity, and price
discovery function of such markets in the event of a wide-scale
disruption. Accordingly, the Commission believes that the proposal is
consistent with the Act and would serve to protect the public interest
by promoting market integrity and the avoidance of systemic risk.
After considering the costs and benefits noted above, the
Commission has determined to issue the proposed rule amendments. The
Commission invites public comment on its application of the cost-
benefit provision. Commenters are also invited to submit any data that
they may have quantifying the costs and benefits of the proposed rule
amendments with their comment letter.
VI. Text of Proposed Amendments
List of Subjects
17 CFR Part 38
Commodity futures, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
17 CFR Part 39
Commodity futures, Consumer protection, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
17 CFR Part 40
Commodity futures, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
In light of the foregoing, and pursuant to the authority in the
Act, and in particular Sections 3, 5, 5c(a) and 8a(5) of the Act, the
Commission hereby proposes to amend Parts 38, 39, and 40 of Title 17 of
the Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 38--DESIGNATED CONTRACT MARKETS
1. The authority citation for part 38 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 2, 5, 6, 6c, 7, 7a-2 and 12a, as amended by
Appendix E of Pub. L. 106-554, 114 Stat. 2763A-365.
2. Amend Appendix B to Part 38 by revising paragraph (b) of Core
Principle 6; and paragraph (a)(2) and paragraph (b) of Core Principle
9, to read as follows:
Appendix B to Part 38--Guidance on, and Acceptable Practices in,
Compliance With Core Principles
* * * * *
Core Principle 6 of section 5(d) of the Act: EMERGENCY AUTHORITY
* * *
* * * * *
(b) Acceptable practices. Commission Regulation 40.9 governs the
obligations of designated contract markets that the Commission has
determined to be critical financial markets with respect to
maintenance and geographic dispersal of disaster recovery resources
sufficient to meet a same-day recovery time objective in the event
of a wide-scale disruption. Therefore, Regulation 40.9 itself
establishes the guidance and acceptable practices for core principle
compliance in that respect.
* * * * *
Core Principle 9 of section 5(d) of the Act: EXECUTION OF
TRANSACTIONS * * *
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(2) The board of trade shall:
(i) Establish and maintain a program of risk analysis and
oversight to identify and minimize sources of operational risk,
through the development of appropriate controls and procedures;
(ii) Establish and maintain a program of regular, periodic
testing to ensure that all automated systems used by the board of
trade function properly and have adequate security and capacity; and
(iii) Establish and maintain emergency procedures, backup
facilities, a disaster recovery plan, and regular, periodic testing
to ensure timely recovery and resumption of order processing and
trade matching, market data dissemination and price reporting,
market and trade practice surveillance, and maintenance of a
comprehensive and accurate audit trail.
* * * * *
(b) Acceptable practices. (1) Testing and review of automated
systems should be conducted by qualified, independent professionals.
Such qualified independent professionals may be independent
contractors or employees of the board of trade, but should not be
persons responsible for development or operation of the systems
being tested. Pursuant to the provisions of Commission Regulations
Sections 1.31 and 1.35, the board of trade must keep records of all
such tests, and make all test results available to the Commission
upon request.
(2) In fulfilling its obligations set forth in the Application
Guidance above with respect to its automated systems, the board of
trade should follow the guidelines issued by the International
Organization of Securities Commissions (``IOSCO'') in 1990 (the
``IOSCO Principles''), and adopted by the Commission on November 21,
1990 (55 FR 48670), as supplemented and amended, and any similar
guidelines issued by the Commission or its staff.
[[Page 42638]]
(3) Commission Regulation 40.9 governs the obligations of
registered entities that the Commission has determined to be
critical financial markets, with respect to maintenance and
geographic dispersal of disaster recovery resources sufficient to
meet a same-day recovery time objective in the event of a wide-scale
disruption. Therefore, Regulation 40.9 itself establishes the
guidance and acceptable practices for core principle compliance in
that respect.
* * * * *
PART 39--DERIVATIVES CLEARING ORGANIZATIONS
3. The authority citation for part 39 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 7b as added by Appendix E of Pub. L. 106-
554, 114 Stat. 2763A-365.
4. Amend Appendix A to Part 39 by adding a new paragraph 3 after
paragraph 2.b. of the guidance under Core Principle I, as follows:
Appendix A to Part 39--Application Guidance and Compliance With Core
Principles
* * * * *
Core Principle I: SYSTEM SAFEGUARDS * * *
* * * * *
2. * * *
b. * * *
3. Commission Regulation 40.9 governs the obligations of
derivatives clearing organizations that the Commission determines to
be core clearing and settlement organizations, with respect to
maintenance and geographic dispersal of disaster recovery resources
sufficient to meet a same-day recovery time objective in the event
of a wide-scale disruption. Therefore, Regulation 40.9 itself
establishes the guidance for core principle compliance in that
respect.
* * * * *
PART 40--PROVISIONS COMMON TO REGISTERED ENTITIES
5. The authority citation for part 40 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1a, 2, 5, 6, 6c, 7, 7a, 8 and 12a, as
amended by Title XIII of the Food, Conservation and Energy Act of
2008, Public Law No. 110-246, 122 Stat. 1624 (June 18, 2008).
6. Amend Sec. 40.1 by adding paragraphs (j) through (n) to read as
follows:
Sec. 40.1 Definitions.
* * * * *
(j) Critical financial market means a designated contract market
that provides the means for financial institutions to adjust their
financial positions and those of their customers in order to manage
liquidity, market, and other risks to their organizations, and provides
support for the provision of a wide range of financial services to
businesses and consumers in the United States, particularly including
markets whose trading impacts federal funds, foreign exchange,
commercial paper, U.S. government and agency securities, corporate
debt, equity securities, or physical commodities of broad, major
importance to the national and international economy. Guidance as to
how the Commission will determine whether a registered entity is a
critical financial market is set forth in Appendix E to Part 40.
(k) Core clearing and settlement organization means a derivatives
clearing organization that provides clearing and settlement services
integral to a critical financial market (or to multiple designated
contract markets that are critical financial markets on a collective
rather than individual basis). Guidance as to how the Commission will
determine whether a derivatives clearing organization is a core
clearing and settlement organization is set forth in Appendix E to Part
40.
(l) Relevant area means the metropolitan or other geographic area
within which a critical financial market or core clearing and
settlement organization has physical infrastructure or personnel
necessary for it to, as appropriate, conduct electronic trading,
disseminate market data and provide price reporting, conduct electronic
surveillance and maintain access to audit trail information, or conduct
activities necessary to the clearance and settlement of existing and
new contracts; including communities economically integrated with,
adjacent to, or within normal commuting distance of that metropolitan
or other geographic area.
(m) Recovery time objective means the time period within which an
entity should be able to achieve recovery and resumption of, as
appropriate, electronic trading, market data dissemination and price
reporting, access to audit trail information and electronic
surveillance tools, or clearing and settlement of existing and new
contracts, after those capabilities become temporarily inoperable for
any reason up to or including a wide-scale disruption.
(n) Wide-scale disruption means an event that causes a severe
disruption or destruction of transportation, telecommunications, power,
water, or other critical infrastructure components in a relevant area,
or an event that results in an evacuation or unavailability of the
population in a relevant area.
7. Add Sec. 40.9 to read as follows:
Sec. 40.9 Disaster recovery requirements for critical financial
markets and core clearing and settlement organizations.
(a) Each designated contract market or derivatives clearing
organization that the Commission determines is a critical financial
market or a core clearing and settlement organization must maintain a
disaster recovery plan and business continuity and disaster recovery
resources, including infrastructure and personnel, sufficient to enable
it to achieve a same-day recovery time objective in the event that its
normal trading or clearing and settlement capabilities become
temporarily inoperable for any reason up to and including a wide-scale
disruption.
(b) A same-day recovery time objective is a recovery time objective
within the same business day on which normal trading or clearing and
settlement capabilities become temporarily inoperable for any reason up
to and including a wide-scale disruption.
(c) To ensure its ability to achieve a same-day recovery time
objective in the event of a wide-scale disruption, each designated
contract market or derivatives clearing organization that the
Commission determines is a critical financial market or a core clearing
and settlement organization must maintain a degree of geographic
dispersal of both infrastructure and personnel such that:
(1) Infrastructure sufficient to enable the entity to meet a same-
day recovery time objective after interruption of normal trading and
clearing by a wide-scale disruption is located outside the relevant
area of the infrastructure the entity normally relies upon to conduct
electronic trading, disseminate market data and provide price
reporting, conduct electronic surveillance and maintain access to audit
trail information, or conduct activities necessary to the clearance and
settlement of existing and new contracts, and does not rely on the same
critical transportation, telecommunications, power, water, or other
critical infrastructure components the entity normally relies upon for
such activities; and
(2) Personnel sufficient to enable the entity to meet a same-day
recovery time objective, after interruption of normal trading or
clearing by a wide-scale disruption affecting the relevant area in
which the personnel the entity normally relies upon to engage in such
activities are located, live and work outside that relevant area.
(d) Each registered entity that the Commission determines is a
critical financial market or core clearing and settlement organization
must conduct
[[Page 42639]]
regular, periodic tests of its business continuity and disaster
recovery plans and resources and its capacity to achieve a same-day
recovery time objective in the event of a wide-scale disruption.
* * * * *
8. Add Appendix E to Part 40 to read as follows:
Appendix E to Part 40--Guidance on Critical Financial Market and Core
Clearing and Settlement Organization Determination
(a) Critical financial market determination. (1) The Commission
may determine, in its discretion, whether a designated contract
market is a critical financial market. In making such a
determination, the Commission will evaluate each such entity on a
case-by-case basis, giving consideration to whether the entity
provides the means for financial institutions to adjust their
financial positions and those of their customers in order to manage
liquidity, market, and other risks to their organizations, and
provides support for the provision of a wide range of financial
services to businesses and consumers in the United States; or
whether the entity conducts trading that impacts Federal funds,
foreign exchange, commercial paper, U.S. government and agency
securities, corporate debt, equity securities, or physical
commodities of broad, major importance to the national and
international economy. The Commission may also consider other
relevant factors that it finds important.
(2) The Commission will notify the designated contract market
that it intends to undertake a determination with respect to whether
it is a critical financial market. The entity may provide written
data, views, and arguments relevant to the Commission's
determination. Any such written data, views, and arguments shall be
filed with the Secretary of the Commission, in the form and manner
specified by the Commission, within 30 calendar days of receiving
notice or within such other time specified by the Commission. After
prompt consideration of all relevant information, the Commission
will issue an order directly to the designated contract market
explaining the Commission's determination of whether it is a
critical financial market as defined by Sec. 40.1(j).
(b) Core clearing and settlement organization determination. (1)
The Commission may determine, in its discretion, whether a
derivatives clearing organization is a core clearing and settlement
organization. In making such a determination, the Commission will
evaluate each such entity on a case-by-case basis, giving
consideration to whether the entity provides clearing and settlement
services integral to a critical financial market (or to multiple
designated contract markets that are critical financial markets on a
collective rather than individual basis). The Commission may also
consider other relevant factors that it finds important.
(2) The Commission will notify the derivatives clearing
organization that it intends to undertake a determination with
respect to whether it is a core clearing and settlement
organization. The entity may provide written data, views, and
arguments relevant to the Commission's determination. Any such
written data, views, and arguments shall be filed with the Secretary
of the Commission, in the form and manner specified by the
Commission, within 30 calendar days of receiving notice or within
such other time specified by the Commission. After prompt
consideration of all relevant information, the Commission will issue
an order directly to the derivatives clearing organization
explaining the Commission's determination of whether it is a core
clearing and settlement organization as defined by Sec. 40.1(k).
Issued in Washington, DC, on July 14, 2010, by the Commission.
David A. Stawick,
Secretary of the Commission.
[FR Doc. 2010-17606 Filed 7-21-10; 8:45 am]
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