Self-Regulatory Organizations; National Futures Association; Notice of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Amendments, as Modified by Amendment No. 1 Thereto, to the Interpretive Notice Regarding NFA Compliance Rule 2-9: Enhanced Supervisory Requirements, 202-205 [2010-33097]
Download as PDF
202
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 1 / Monday, January 3, 2011 / Notices
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–63602; File No. SR–NFA–
2010–04]
Self-Regulatory Organizations;
National Futures Association; Notice
of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness
of Proposed Amendments, as Modified
by Amendment No. 1 Thereto, to the
Interpretive Notice Regarding NFA
Compliance Rule 2–9: Enhanced
Supervisory Requirements
December 22, 2010.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(7) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Exchange Act’’),1 and Rule 19b–7
under the Exchange Act,2 notice is
hereby given that on October 7, 2010,
National Futures Association (‘‘NFA’’)
filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘SEC’’ or ‘‘Commission’’)
the proposed rule change described in
Items I, II, and III below, which Items
have been substantially prepared by the
NFA. On December 7, 2010, NFA filed
Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule
change. The Commission is publishing
this notice to solicit comments on the
proposed rule change from interested
persons. NFA also has filed this
proposed rule change with the
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission (‘‘CFTC’’).
On October 6, 2010, NFA requested
that the CFTC make a determination
that review of the proposed rule change
of NFA is not necessary.3 On October
20, 2010, the CFTC notified NFA that it
had determined not to review the
proposed rule change.4
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with NOTICES
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Description and Text of the Proposed
Rule Change
The proposed amendments to NFA
Compliance Rule 2–9’s Interpretive
Notice entitled ‘‘Enhanced Supervisory
Requirements’’ (‘‘Notice’’) would provide
limited relief for some Members that
currently would qualify for the
enhanced supervisory requirements
(‘‘Requirements’’) based on a firm
principal’s previous affiliation with
another Member firm that was subject to
the Requirements; makes changes to the
enhanced capital requirements in light
of a recent increase in the futures
commission merchant (‘‘FCM’’)
minimum capital requirement; makes
1 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(7).
CFR 240.19b–7.
3 See Letter from Thomas W. Sexton III, Senior
Vice President/General Counsel, NFA, to William
Penner, Deputy Directory, CFTC (Oct. 6, 2010).
4 See Letter from William Penner, Deputy
Director, CFTC, to Thomas W. Sexton III, General
Counsel, NFA (Oct. 20, 2010).
2 17
VerDate Mar<15>2010
15:48 Dec 30, 2010
Jkt 223001
changes to deal with the enhanced
capital requirements for commodity
pool operators (‘‘CPOs’’) and commodity
trading advisors (‘‘CTAs’’) in a manner
more consistent with the nature of their
business; requires specific items to be
included in a firm’s written supervisory
procedures; requires quarterly rather
than monthly reports on a firm’s
compliance with the Requirements; and
includes clarifying language in three
areas: (1) Charging abnormally high
commissions and fees; (2) the effect that
receiving a waiver has on determining
whether a Member is a firm that has met
the criteria for future situations
involving the Requirements; and (3) the
status of a ‘‘five year’’ Disciplined Firm
after it has been dropped from the ‘‘five
year’’ list.
The text of the Interpretive Notice is
available on NFA’s Web site at https://
www.nfa.futures.org, the Commission’s
Web site at https://www.sec.gov, the selfregulatory organization’s office, and at
the Commission’s Public Reference
Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission,
NFA included statements concerning
the purpose of and basis for the
proposed rule change and discussed any
comments it received on the proposed
rule change. The text of these statements
may be examined at the places specified
in Item IV below. NFA has prepared
summaries, set forth in sections A, B,
and C below, of the most significant
aspects of such statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
Section 15A(k) of the Exchange Act 5
makes NFA a national securities
association for the limited purpose of
regulating the activities of NFA
Members (‘‘Members’’) who are
registered as brokers or dealers under
Section 15(b)(11) of the Exchange Act.6
The Interpretive Notice entitled: ‘‘NFA
Compliance Rule 2–9: Enhanced
Supervisory Requirements’’ applies to
all Members, including those who are
registered as security futures brokers or
dealers under Section 15(b)(11) of the
Exchange Act.
Member firms trigger the
Requirements based upon the regulatory
background of either their associated
5 15
6 15
PO 00000
U.S.C. 78o–3(k).
U.S.C. 78o(b)(11).
Frm 00122
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
persons (‘‘APs’’) or principals. Member
firms triggering the Requirements must
record all telephone conversations with
customers and prospects, pre-submit
promotional material, adopt written
supervisory procedures and either
operate under a guarantee agreement or
maintain an enhanced capital level. The
proposed amendments to the Notice
include:
• Limited relief for some Members
that would currently qualify for the
Requirements based on a firm
principal’s previous affiliation with
another Member firm that was subject to
the Requirements;
• Changes to the enhanced capital
requirements in light of a recent
increase in the FCM minimum capital
requirement;
• Changes to deal with the enhanced
capital requirements for CPOs and CTAs
in a manner more consistent with the
nature of their business;
• Requiring specific items to be
included in a firm’s written supervisory
procedures;
• Requiring quarterly rather than
monthly reports on a firm’s compliance
with the Requirements; and
• Clarifying language regarding: (1)
Charging abnormally high commissions
and fees; (2) the effect that receiving a
waiver has on future situations
involving the Requirements; and (3) the
status of a ‘‘five year’’ Disciplined Firm
after it has been dropped from the ‘‘five
year’’ list.
Historically, a Member would trigger
the Requirements only if it had a
defined percentage of APs who had
previously worked for a Disciplined
Firm.
In 2005, NFA’s Board made revisions
to the Notice after recognizing that the
principals of several firms that had
triggered the Requirements had avoided
them by simply closing their firms and
opening other firms that had a mix of
APs that did not trigger the
Requirements. NFA noted that the new
firms typically had APs from the closed
firm who had worked at Disciplined
Firms, but their percentage ratios to the
overall AP population of the new firms
were below the triggering point for
imposing the Requirements. NFA’s
Board addressed this issue by amending
the Notice to provide that once a firm
had triggered the Requirements, then
any other firms of which the principals
of the qualifying firm are also principals
would become subject to the
Requirements.
NFA believes that the 2005 revision
has been generally effective in
discouraging the practice of sham
reorganizations to avoid the
Requirements. However, NFA has found
E:\FR\FM\03JAN1.SGM
03JAN1
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 1 / Monday, January 3, 2011 / Notices
that there were some principals whose
firms triggered the Requirements with
backgrounds that suggested they were
not part of the population to which the
amendment was designed to apply. NFA
undertook the task of identifying
objective criteria that were met by
individuals who did not appear to be
part of the target group but were,
nevertheless, affected by the 2005
amendment. In doing so, NFA focused
on criteria similar to those that have
been adopted to provide exemptions to
some APs who previously worked at
Disciplined Firms. These criteria
include a clean personal regulatory
record and limited affiliation with
potentially problematic Members.
NFA has identified a set of five
criteria that apply to approximately 60
individuals and approximately five
entities that do not appear to raise
undue concerns regarding their ability
to effectively supervise their firms.
Those criteria include the following:
• The principal has not been
personally subject to a disciplinary
action by NFA or the CFTC;
• The principal has been a principal
of only one firm that has qualified for
the Requirements;
• The principal has never been a
principal or an AP of a current
Disciplined Firm;
• The firm in the principal’s history
that triggered the Requirements either
received a full waiver from the
Requirements or abided by the
Requirements for at least two years and
is no longer subject to the Requirements;
and
• The firm in the principal’s history
that triggered the Requirements has not
become subject to a sales practice action
since triggering the Requirements.
NFA believes that exempting
Members from adopting the
Requirements when those Requirements
are triggered by a principal who meets
the aforementioned five criteria would
eliminate the need for some waiver
petitions (which are typically granted),
saving time and undue complications
for the affected Members, the
Telemarketing Procedures Waiver
Committee (‘‘Waiver Committee’’) and
NFA staff. NFA believes that this
exemption could provide relief to
certain principals whose profiles
indicate that they are unlikely to pose
any supervisory issues. In addition,
NFA does not believe that this change
will diminish customer protection
because the principals that will be
exempted are those principals who
would almost always have been granted
a waiver based on meeting the
aforementioned criteria.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
15:48 Dec 30, 2010
Jkt 223001
The Notice currently provides that
FCMs affected by the Notice are
required to maintain adjusted net
capital (‘‘ANC’’) of at least $1,000,000.
When this provision was adopted the
minimum ANC level was $500,000.
However, the minimum ANC for all
FCMs was raised to $1,000,000 in March
2010, rendering the current provision
moot.
NFA proposes to revise the language
in the Notice regarding the enhanced
level of ANC required to be maintained
by affected FCMs to tie the required
enhanced ANC to the minimum ANC
for FCMs. The proposed amendments
would track the approach taken by the
Board in 2008 to deal with changes to
the enhanced ANC provision for Forex
Dealer Members (‘‘FDMs’’). Specifically,
rather than set a defined number, it
would tie the enhanced ANC level for
FCMs to the early warning requirement
under CFTC rules, which is currently
150% of required ANC. NFA believes
that this revision would not only bring
the current enhanced ANC obligation
into harmony with that required of
FDMs, but would also provide
flexibility in light of any future changes
to the level of the minimum ANC
required of FCMs.
The Notice currently requires CPOs
and CTAs that trigger the Requirements
to maintain ANC of at least $250,000. In
addition, affected CPOs and CTAs are
currently subject to the financial
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements applicable to FCMs.
According to NFA, it is relatively
uncommon for CPOs and CTAs to
qualify for the Requirements, and if
CPOs and CTAs do qualify, they often
request relief from the $250,000 capital
requirement even if they are required to
tape. The Waiver Committee has dealt
with ten waiver petitions from CPO or
CTA Members and completely denied
five of those petitions. Four of those
firms are no longer NFA Members. The
other five received partial waivers that
reduced the enhanced ANC
requirement. Two waivers set the
required ANC level at $100,000, two set
it at $75,000, and one eliminated the
obligation altogether. Three of the five
firms that received waivers remain NFA
Members. In granting these petitions,
the Waiver Committee recognized that
because CPOs and CTAs do not have a
minimum net capital requirement,
imposing the reduced $100,000
requirement was sufficient to meet the
purpose of the requirement.
In light of the Waiver Committee’s
past decisions regarding this issue, NFA
proposes to amend the Notice to reduce
the ANC required of CPOs and CTAs
that trigger the Requirements from the
PO 00000
Frm 00123
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
203
current $250,000 to $100,000. In
addition, the proposed amendments to
the Notice would provide that the
financial recordkeeping and reporting
obligations of affected CPOs and CTAs
be simplified by merely requiring them
to demonstrate compliance with their
enhanced ANC obligation to NFA upon
request.
The proposed amendments to the
Notice identify specific areas that would
need to be addressed by an affected
Member in the written supervisory
procedures they are required to prepare.
NFA believes that this addition will give
clear guidance as to the minimum
standards to be met in preparing written
supervisory procedures. Generally, the
proposed language requires procedures
for monitoring, cataloging and logging
taped conversations in an affected
Member’s written supervisory
procedures.
The Notice currently requires affected
Members to file monthly reports
regarding their compliance with the
Requirements. It has been NFA’s
experience in reviewing these reports
that most of them tend to be repetitious
in nature. Nevertheless, NFA feels that
the reports are useful in that they
periodically bring the Member’s focus to
bear on the Requirements, create a
written historical record and, on
occasion, may provide the impetus for
corrective action by the Member. NFA
proposes to change the frequency of the
obligation to file such reports from
monthly to quarterly. NFA believes that
lengthening the frequency for filing the
reports will not in any way diminish
customer protection because the reports
alone do not typically form the basis of
an NFA investigation or disciplinary
action. Moreover, NFA uses other
methods to monitor Member
compliance with the Requirements.
Members that charge 50% or more of
their active customers round-turn
commissions, fees and other charges
that total $100 or more per futures, forex
or option contract are required to adopt
the Requirements. NFA represents that
it has recently encountered situations in
which Members purchase out-of-themoney options and charge a
commission just short of $100. In these
situations there are additional charges if
the option is liquidated that would
bring total charges above $100; however,
NFA believes that it is often the case
that the out-of-the-money options expire
worthless and no additional costs are
assessed. The result is that some
Members are able to avoid the
Requirements by encouraging their
customers to take on riskier out-of-themoney positions that are less likely to
E:\FR\FM\03JAN1.SGM
03JAN1
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with NOTICES
204
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 1 / Monday, January 3, 2011 / Notices
incur liquidation charges that would
raise costs to $100 or more.
Members that engage in the practice
described above are, in NFA’s view,
clearly within the group of Members
that the Board believed should be
subject to the Requirements when it
chose to use high commissions and fees
as a trigger for imposing the
Requirements. Therefore, the proposed
amendments to the Notice provide that
trading an options contract that would
result in total commissions, fees and
other charges of $100 or more if the
trade was liquidated will be deemed to
have been charged $100 even if the
contract is not ultimately liquidated.
The proposed amendments to the
Notice would add language that NFA
believes would clarify that a Member
that receives a full or partial waiver is
still deemed to be a Member that has
met the criteria for purposes of the
Notice.
From 1993 until 2007, the term
‘‘Disciplined Firm’’ included only
Members that had been permanently
barred from the industry as the result of
a sales practice or promotional material
action. In 2007, the amendments to the
Notice added Members that had been
sanctioned in any way in a sales
practice or promotional material action
within the preceding five years to the
definition of a Disciplined Firm. This
resulted in the creation of a list of ‘‘five
year’’ Disciplined Firms that is separate
from the list of permanent Disciplined
Firms. The electronic reporting system
that monitors Disciplined Firms
automatically removes these firms from
the Disciplined Firm list once five years
have passed.
According to NFA, there has been
some confusion expressed as to whether
a ‘‘five year’’ Disciplined Firm is still
considered to be a Disciplined Firm for
purposes of triggering the Requirements
once the firm is dropped from the ‘‘five
year’’ list. NFA believes that the
proposed amendments to the Notice
would eliminate this confusion by
simply adding the word ‘‘current’’ before
the term ‘‘Disciplined Firm’’ in four
relevant places in Section III (B)(1) of
the Notice.
Amendments to the Interpretive
Notice regarding NFA Compliance Rule
2–9: Enhanced Supervisory
Requirements were previously filed
with the SEC in SR–NFA–2003–01,
Exchange Act Release No. 34–47533
(Mar. 19, 2003), 68 FR 14733 (Mar. 26,
2003); SR–NFA–2005–01, Exchange Act
Release No. 34–52808 (Nov. 18, 2005),
70 FR 71347 (Nov. 28, 2005); SR–NFA–
2006–01, Exchange Act Release No. 34–
53568 (Mar. 29, 2006), 71 FR 16850
(Apr. 4, 2006); SR–NFA–2007–03,
VerDate Mar<15>2010
15:48 Dec 30, 2010
Jkt 223001
Exchange Act Release No. 34–55710
(May 4, 2007), 72 FR 26858 (May 11,
2007); SR–NFA–2007–07, Exchange Act
Release No. 34–57142 (Jan. 14, 2008), 73
FR 3502 (Jan. 18, 2008); and SR–NFA–
2008–01, Exchange Act Release No. 34–
57640 (Apr. 9, 2008), 73 FR 20341 (Apr.
15, 2008).
2. Statutory Basis
NFA believes that the proposed rule
change is authorized by, and consistent
with, Section 15A(k)(2)(B) of the
Exchange Act.7 That section sets out
requirements for rules of futures
associations, registered under Section
17 of the Commodity Exchange Act,8
that are a registered national securities
association for the limited purpose of
regulating the activities of members who
are registered as brokers or dealers in
security futures products pursuant to
Section 15(b)(11) of the Exchange Act.
Under Section 15A(k)(2)(B), the rules of
such a limited purpose national
securities association must be designed
to prevent fraudulent and manipulative
acts and practices, to promote just and
equitable principles of trade, and, in
general, to protect investors and the
public interest, including rules
governing sales practices and the
advertising of security futures products
reasonably comparable to the rules of a
registered national securities association
applicable to security futures products.
NFA believes the proposed rule change
would meet these requirements by:
Providing limited relief for some
Members that would currently qualify
for the Requirements based on a
principal’s previous affiliation with
another Member firm that was subject to
the Requirements; changing the
enhanced capital requirements in light
of a recent increase in the FCM
minimum capital requirement; changing
the enhanced capital requirements for
CPOs and CTAs in a manner more
consistent with the nature of their
business; requiring specific items to be
included in a firm’s written supervisory
procedures; requiring quarterly rather
than monthly reports on a firm’s
compliance with the Requirements; and
clarifying language regarding—charging
abnormally high commissions and fees;
the effect that receiving a waiver has on
determining whether a Member is a firm
that has met the criteria for futures
situation involving the Requirements;
and the status of a ‘‘five year’’
Disciplined Firm after it has been
dropped from the ‘‘five year’’ list.
7 15
87
PO 00000
U.S.C. 78o–3(k)(2)(D).
U.S.C. 21.
Frm 00124
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
NFA believes that the portion of the
proposed rule change that exempts
Members from adopting the
Requirements when those Requirements
are triggered by a principal who meets
the specified five criteria should lessen
the burden on competition by
eliminating the need for waiver requests
that are typically granted and decreasing
the number of firms that are subject to
the requirement by automatically
exempting firms that qualify based on
principals whose profiles indicate that
they are unlikely to pose supervisory
problems.
NFA does not believe that the
proposed changes to CPO and CTA
capital requirements and reporting
requirements for firms that trigger the
Requirements would impose any burden
on competition.
Although the proposed rule change
would require FCMs subject to the
Requirements to maintain additional
capital, NFA believes that the increase
is necessary in order to maintain the
purpose behind the Requirements, and
is also consistent with the approach
NFA adopted with respect to FDMs. The
minimum capital level for all FCMs was
recently increased to $1,000,000, which
is the same amount currently required
of FCMs subject to the enhanced
requirement. In order for the enhanced
Requirements to maintain their original
purpose, NFA believes that the capital
requirement must be increased. Rather
than setting another fixed dollar
amount, the proposed amendment
would tie the required enhanced ANC to
the early warning requirement under
CFTC rules (150% of minimum ANC).
This revision would impose the same
standard on FCM and FDM Members
and take into consideration any future
changes to ANC levels.
The proposed rule change identifies
specific areas that need to be addressed
by an affected Member in the written
supervisory procedures it is currently
required to prepare. NFA represents that
the changes would not impose
additional substantive requirements on
Members. Rather, NFA believes this
language would address requests for
Members for specific guidance on how
to comply with their obligation to
monitor, catalog and log taped
conversations. Therefore, NFA does not
believe this change imposes any burden
on competition.
The current rule requires Members
that charge 50% or more of their active
customers round-turn commissions, fees
and other charges that total $100 or
more per futures, forex or option
E:\FR\FM\03JAN1.SGM
03JAN1
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 1 / Monday, January 3, 2011 / Notices
contract to adopt the Requirements.
NFA has identified a trend where some
Members encourage their customers to
take on riskier out-of-the money options
at a cost just below $100. Because in
NFA’s view these positions are much
less likely to be liquidated and charged
a liquidation fee, the total cost remains
under the $100 threshold. NFA states
that the proposed rule change may
increase the number of Members subject
to the Requirements because option
contracts that would result in total
commission, fees and other charges of
$100 or more if the trade was liquidated
will be deemed to have been charged
$100 even if the trade is not liquidated.
NFA believes that the additional burden
is necessary, however, because Members
that engage in this practice are clearly
within the group of Members that NFA’s
Board believed should be subject to the
enhanced Requirements when it chose
to use high commissions and fees as a
trigger for imposing the Requirements.
NFA believes that the proposed
provision that changes a Member’s
reporting obligation with respect to its
report on compliance with the
Requirements will also lessen the
burden on Members. Under this
provision, a Member will be permitted
to file this report on a quarterly rather
than monthly basis.
NFA believes that the final two
proposed revisions do not add any
burden to competition because they are
merely clarifying current requirements.
One proposed rule change would add
language that NFA believes makes it
clear that a Member that receives a full
or partial waiver is still deemed to be a
Member that has met the criteria for
purposes of the Notice. Another
proposed rule change would add the
word ‘‘current’’ before the term
‘‘Disciplined Firm’’ in four relevant
places in order to clarify that a ‘‘five
year’’ Disciplined Firm will no longer be
a Disciplined Firm for purposes of
triggering the Requirements once the
firm is dropped from the ‘‘five year’’ list.
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with NOTICES
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
NFA states that it worked with its
Member Advisory Committees in
developing the rule change. NFA did
not, however, publish the rule change to
its membership for comment. NFA
states that it did not receive comment
letters concerning the rule change.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
15:48 Dec 30, 2010
Jkt 223001
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
205
also will be available for inspection and
copying at the principal office of NFA.
All comments received will be posted
without change; the Commission does
not edit personal identifying
information from submissions. You
should submit only information that
you wish to make publicly available.
On October 20, 2010, the CFTC
notified NFA that it had approved the
rule change, and therefore, NFA is
permitted to make the amendments
effective as of this date.
Within 60 days of the date of
effectiveness of the proposed rule
change, the Commission, after
consultation with the CFTC, may
summarily abrogate the proposed rule
change and require that the proposed
rule change be refiled in accordance
with the provisions of Section 19(b)(1)
of the Act.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.9
Florence E. Harmon,
Deputy Secretary.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Exchange
Act. Comments may be submitted by
any of the following methods:
Agency Information Collection
Activities: Proposed Request
[FR Doc. 2010–33097 Filed 12–30–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
The Social Security Administration
(SSA) publishes a list of information
collection packages requiring clearance
by the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) in compliance with
Electronic Comments
Public Law 104–13, the Paperwork
• Use the Commission’s Internet
Reduction Act of 1995, effective October
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
1, 1995. This notice includes revisions
rules/sro.shtml); or
to OMB-approved information
• Send an e-mail to rulecollections.
comments@sec.gov. Please include File
SSA is soliciting comments on the
Number SR–NFA–2010–04.
accuracy of the agency’s burden
estimate; the need for the information;
Paper Comments
its practical utility; ways to enhance its
• Send paper comments in triplicate
quality, utility, and clarity; and ways to
to Elizabeth M. Murphy, Secretary,
minimize burden on respondents,
Securities and Exchange Commission,
including the use of automated
100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC
collection techniques or other forms of
20549–1090.
information technology. Mail, e-mail, or
fax your comments and
All submissions should refer to File
recommendations on the information
Number SR–NFA–2010–04. This file
collection(s) to the OMB Desk Officer
number should be included on the
subject line if e-mail is used. To help the and SSA Reports Clearance Officer at
the following addresses or fax numbers.
Commission process and review your
(OMB), Office of Management and
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will Budget, Attn: Desk Officer for SSA. Fax:
post all comments on the Commission’s 202–395–6974. E-mail address:
OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov.
Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/
(SSA), Social Security
rules/sro.shtml ). Copies of the
Administration, DCBFM, Attn: Reports
submission, all subsequent
Clearance Officer, 1333 Annex Building,
amendments, all written statements
6401 Security Blvd., Baltimore, MD
with respect to the proposed rule
21235. Fax: 410–965–6400. E-mail
change that are filed with the
address: OPLM.RCO@ssa.gov.
Commission, and all written
The information collections below are
communications relating to the
pending at SSA. SSA will submit them
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than to OMB within 60 days from the date of
this notice. To be sure we consider your
those that may be withheld from the
comments, we must receive them no
public in accordance with the
later than March 4, 2011. Individuals
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
can obtain copies of the collection
available for Web site viewing and
instruments by calling the SSA Reports
printing in the Commission’s Public
Clearance Officer at 410–965–8783 or by
Reference Room, 100 F Street, NE.,
writing to the above e-mail address.
Washington, DC 20549, on official
business days between the hours of 10
9 17 CFR 200.30–3(a)(73).
a.m. and 3 p.m. Copies of such filing
PO 00000
Frm 00125
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
E:\FR\FM\03JAN1.SGM
03JAN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 1 (Monday, January 3, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 202-205]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-33097]
[[Page 202]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-63602; File No. SR-NFA-2010-04]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; National Futures Association;
Notice of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Amendments, as
Modified by Amendment No. 1 Thereto, to the Interpretive Notice
Regarding NFA Compliance Rule 2-9: Enhanced Supervisory Requirements
December 22, 2010.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(7) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(``Exchange Act''),\1\ and Rule 19b-7 under the Exchange Act,\2\ notice
is hereby given that on October 7, 2010, National Futures Association
(``NFA'') filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (``SEC'' or
``Commission'') the proposed rule change described in Items I, II, and
III below, which Items have been substantially prepared by the NFA. On
December 7, 2010, NFA filed Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule
change. The Commission is publishing this notice to solicit comments on
the proposed rule change from interested persons. NFA also has filed
this proposed rule change with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission
(``CFTC'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(7).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On October 6, 2010, NFA requested that the CFTC make a
determination that review of the proposed rule change of NFA is not
necessary.\3\ On October 20, 2010, the CFTC notified NFA that it had
determined not to review the proposed rule change.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ See Letter from Thomas W. Sexton III, Senior Vice President/
General Counsel, NFA, to William Penner, Deputy Directory, CFTC
(Oct. 6, 2010).
\4\ See Letter from William Penner, Deputy Director, CFTC, to
Thomas W. Sexton III, General Counsel, NFA (Oct. 20, 2010).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Description and Text of the Proposed
Rule Change
The proposed amendments to NFA Compliance Rule 2-9's Interpretive
Notice entitled ``Enhanced Supervisory Requirements'' (``Notice'')
would provide limited relief for some Members that currently would
qualify for the enhanced supervisory requirements (``Requirements'')
based on a firm principal's previous affiliation with another Member
firm that was subject to the Requirements; makes changes to the
enhanced capital requirements in light of a recent increase in the
futures commission merchant (``FCM'') minimum capital requirement;
makes changes to deal with the enhanced capital requirements for
commodity pool operators (``CPOs'') and commodity trading advisors
(``CTAs'') in a manner more consistent with the nature of their
business; requires specific items to be included in a firm's written
supervisory procedures; requires quarterly rather than monthly reports
on a firm's compliance with the Requirements; and includes clarifying
language in three areas: (1) Charging abnormally high commissions and
fees; (2) the effect that receiving a waiver has on determining whether
a Member is a firm that has met the criteria for future situations
involving the Requirements; and (3) the status of a ``five year''
Disciplined Firm after it has been dropped from the ``five year'' list.
The text of the Interpretive Notice is available on NFA's Web site
at https://www.nfa.futures.org, the Commission's Web site at https://www.sec.gov, the self-regulatory organization's office, and at the
Commission's Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, NFA included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for the proposed rule change and
discussed any comments it received on the proposed rule change. The
text of these statements may be examined at the places specified in
Item IV below. NFA has prepared summaries, set forth in sections A, B,
and C below, of the most significant aspects of such statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for the Proposed Rule Change
1. Purpose
Section 15A(k) of the Exchange Act \5\ makes NFA a national
securities association for the limited purpose of regulating the
activities of NFA Members (``Members'') who are registered as brokers
or dealers under Section 15(b)(11) of the Exchange Act.\6\ The
Interpretive Notice entitled: ``NFA Compliance Rule 2-9: Enhanced
Supervisory Requirements'' applies to all Members, including those who
are registered as security futures brokers or dealers under Section
15(b)(11) of the Exchange Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(k).
\6\ 15 U.S.C. 78o(b)(11).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Member firms trigger the Requirements based upon the regulatory
background of either their associated persons (``APs'') or principals.
Member firms triggering the Requirements must record all telephone
conversations with customers and prospects, pre-submit promotional
material, adopt written supervisory procedures and either operate under
a guarantee agreement or maintain an enhanced capital level. The
proposed amendments to the Notice include:
Limited relief for some Members that would currently
qualify for the Requirements based on a firm principal's previous
affiliation with another Member firm that was subject to the
Requirements;
Changes to the enhanced capital requirements in light of a
recent increase in the FCM minimum capital requirement;
Changes to deal with the enhanced capital requirements for
CPOs and CTAs in a manner more consistent with the nature of their
business;
Requiring specific items to be included in a firm's
written supervisory procedures;
Requiring quarterly rather than monthly reports on a
firm's compliance with the Requirements; and
Clarifying language regarding: (1) Charging abnormally
high commissions and fees; (2) the effect that receiving a waiver has
on future situations involving the Requirements; and (3) the status of
a ``five year'' Disciplined Firm after it has been dropped from the
``five year'' list.
Historically, a Member would trigger the Requirements only if it
had a defined percentage of APs who had previously worked for a
Disciplined Firm.
In 2005, NFA's Board made revisions to the Notice after recognizing
that the principals of several firms that had triggered the
Requirements had avoided them by simply closing their firms and opening
other firms that had a mix of APs that did not trigger the
Requirements. NFA noted that the new firms typically had APs from the
closed firm who had worked at Disciplined Firms, but their percentage
ratios to the overall AP population of the new firms were below the
triggering point for imposing the Requirements. NFA's Board addressed
this issue by amending the Notice to provide that once a firm had
triggered the Requirements, then any other firms of which the
principals of the qualifying firm are also principals would become
subject to the Requirements.
NFA believes that the 2005 revision has been generally effective in
discouraging the practice of sham reorganizations to avoid the
Requirements. However, NFA has found
[[Page 203]]
that there were some principals whose firms triggered the Requirements
with backgrounds that suggested they were not part of the population to
which the amendment was designed to apply. NFA undertook the task of
identifying objective criteria that were met by individuals who did not
appear to be part of the target group but were, nevertheless, affected
by the 2005 amendment. In doing so, NFA focused on criteria similar to
those that have been adopted to provide exemptions to some APs who
previously worked at Disciplined Firms. These criteria include a clean
personal regulatory record and limited affiliation with potentially
problematic Members.
NFA has identified a set of five criteria that apply to
approximately 60 individuals and approximately five entities that do
not appear to raise undue concerns regarding their ability to
effectively supervise their firms. Those criteria include the
following:
The principal has not been personally subject to a
disciplinary action by NFA or the CFTC;
The principal has been a principal of only one firm that
has qualified for the Requirements;
The principal has never been a principal or an AP of a
current Disciplined Firm;
The firm in the principal's history that triggered the
Requirements either received a full waiver from the Requirements or
abided by the Requirements for at least two years and is no longer
subject to the Requirements; and
The firm in the principal's history that triggered the
Requirements has not become subject to a sales practice action since
triggering the Requirements.
NFA believes that exempting Members from adopting the Requirements
when those Requirements are triggered by a principal who meets the
aforementioned five criteria would eliminate the need for some waiver
petitions (which are typically granted), saving time and undue
complications for the affected Members, the Telemarketing Procedures
Waiver Committee (``Waiver Committee'') and NFA staff. NFA believes
that this exemption could provide relief to certain principals whose
profiles indicate that they are unlikely to pose any supervisory
issues. In addition, NFA does not believe that this change will
diminish customer protection because the principals that will be
exempted are those principals who would almost always have been granted
a waiver based on meeting the aforementioned criteria.
The Notice currently provides that FCMs affected by the Notice are
required to maintain adjusted net capital (``ANC'') of at least
$1,000,000. When this provision was adopted the minimum ANC level was
$500,000. However, the minimum ANC for all FCMs was raised to
$1,000,000 in March 2010, rendering the current provision moot.
NFA proposes to revise the language in the Notice regarding the
enhanced level of ANC required to be maintained by affected FCMs to tie
the required enhanced ANC to the minimum ANC for FCMs. The proposed
amendments would track the approach taken by the Board in 2008 to deal
with changes to the enhanced ANC provision for Forex Dealer Members
(``FDMs''). Specifically, rather than set a defined number, it would
tie the enhanced ANC level for FCMs to the early warning requirement
under CFTC rules, which is currently 150% of required ANC. NFA believes
that this revision would not only bring the current enhanced ANC
obligation into harmony with that required of FDMs, but would also
provide flexibility in light of any future changes to the level of the
minimum ANC required of FCMs.
The Notice currently requires CPOs and CTAs that trigger the
Requirements to maintain ANC of at least $250,000. In addition,
affected CPOs and CTAs are currently subject to the financial
recordkeeping and reporting requirements applicable to FCMs.
According to NFA, it is relatively uncommon for CPOs and CTAs to
qualify for the Requirements, and if CPOs and CTAs do qualify, they
often request relief from the $250,000 capital requirement even if they
are required to tape. The Waiver Committee has dealt with ten waiver
petitions from CPO or CTA Members and completely denied five of those
petitions. Four of those firms are no longer NFA Members. The other
five received partial waivers that reduced the enhanced ANC
requirement. Two waivers set the required ANC level at $100,000, two
set it at $75,000, and one eliminated the obligation altogether. Three
of the five firms that received waivers remain NFA Members. In granting
these petitions, the Waiver Committee recognized that because CPOs and
CTAs do not have a minimum net capital requirement, imposing the
reduced $100,000 requirement was sufficient to meet the purpose of the
requirement.
In light of the Waiver Committee's past decisions regarding this
issue, NFA proposes to amend the Notice to reduce the ANC required of
CPOs and CTAs that trigger the Requirements from the current $250,000
to $100,000. In addition, the proposed amendments to the Notice would
provide that the financial recordkeeping and reporting obligations of
affected CPOs and CTAs be simplified by merely requiring them to
demonstrate compliance with their enhanced ANC obligation to NFA upon
request.
The proposed amendments to the Notice identify specific areas that
would need to be addressed by an affected Member in the written
supervisory procedures they are required to prepare. NFA believes that
this addition will give clear guidance as to the minimum standards to
be met in preparing written supervisory procedures. Generally, the
proposed language requires procedures for monitoring, cataloging and
logging taped conversations in an affected Member's written supervisory
procedures.
The Notice currently requires affected Members to file monthly
reports regarding their compliance with the Requirements. It has been
NFA's experience in reviewing these reports that most of them tend to
be repetitious in nature. Nevertheless, NFA feels that the reports are
useful in that they periodically bring the Member's focus to bear on
the Requirements, create a written historical record and, on occasion,
may provide the impetus for corrective action by the Member. NFA
proposes to change the frequency of the obligation to file such reports
from monthly to quarterly. NFA believes that lengthening the frequency
for filing the reports will not in any way diminish customer protection
because the reports alone do not typically form the basis of an NFA
investigation or disciplinary action. Moreover, NFA uses other methods
to monitor Member compliance with the Requirements.
Members that charge 50% or more of their active customers round-
turn commissions, fees and other charges that total $100 or more per
futures, forex or option contract are required to adopt the
Requirements. NFA represents that it has recently encountered
situations in which Members purchase out-of-the-money options and
charge a commission just short of $100. In these situations there are
additional charges if the option is liquidated that would bring total
charges above $100; however, NFA believes that it is often the case
that the out-of-the-money options expire worthless and no additional
costs are assessed. The result is that some Members are able to avoid
the Requirements by encouraging their customers to take on riskier out-
of-the-money positions that are less likely to
[[Page 204]]
incur liquidation charges that would raise costs to $100 or more.
Members that engage in the practice described above are, in NFA's
view, clearly within the group of Members that the Board believed
should be subject to the Requirements when it chose to use high
commissions and fees as a trigger for imposing the Requirements.
Therefore, the proposed amendments to the Notice provide that trading
an options contract that would result in total commissions, fees and
other charges of $100 or more if the trade was liquidated will be
deemed to have been charged $100 even if the contract is not ultimately
liquidated.
The proposed amendments to the Notice would add language that NFA
believes would clarify that a Member that receives a full or partial
waiver is still deemed to be a Member that has met the criteria for
purposes of the Notice.
From 1993 until 2007, the term ``Disciplined Firm'' included only
Members that had been permanently barred from the industry as the
result of a sales practice or promotional material action. In 2007, the
amendments to the Notice added Members that had been sanctioned in any
way in a sales practice or promotional material action within the
preceding five years to the definition of a Disciplined Firm. This
resulted in the creation of a list of ``five year'' Disciplined Firms
that is separate from the list of permanent Disciplined Firms. The
electronic reporting system that monitors Disciplined Firms
automatically removes these firms from the Disciplined Firm list once
five years have passed.
According to NFA, there has been some confusion expressed as to
whether a ``five year'' Disciplined Firm is still considered to be a
Disciplined Firm for purposes of triggering the Requirements once the
firm is dropped from the ``five year'' list. NFA believes that the
proposed amendments to the Notice would eliminate this confusion by
simply adding the word ``current'' before the term ``Disciplined Firm''
in four relevant places in Section III (B)(1) of the Notice.
Amendments to the Interpretive Notice regarding NFA Compliance Rule
2-9: Enhanced Supervisory Requirements were previously filed with the
SEC in SR-NFA-2003-01, Exchange Act Release No. 34-47533 (Mar. 19,
2003), 68 FR 14733 (Mar. 26, 2003); SR-NFA-2005-01, Exchange Act
Release No. 34-52808 (Nov. 18, 2005), 70 FR 71347 (Nov. 28, 2005); SR-
NFA-2006-01, Exchange Act Release No. 34-53568 (Mar. 29, 2006), 71 FR
16850 (Apr. 4, 2006); SR-NFA-2007-03, Exchange Act Release No. 34-55710
(May 4, 2007), 72 FR 26858 (May 11, 2007); SR-NFA-2007-07, Exchange Act
Release No. 34-57142 (Jan. 14, 2008), 73 FR 3502 (Jan. 18, 2008); and
SR-NFA-2008-01, Exchange Act Release No. 34-57640 (Apr. 9, 2008), 73 FR
20341 (Apr. 15, 2008).
2. Statutory Basis
NFA believes that the proposed rule change is authorized by, and
consistent with, Section 15A(k)(2)(B) of the Exchange Act.\7\ That
section sets out requirements for rules of futures associations,
registered under Section 17 of the Commodity Exchange Act,\8\ that are
a registered national securities association for the limited purpose of
regulating the activities of members who are registered as brokers or
dealers in security futures products pursuant to Section 15(b)(11) of
the Exchange Act. Under Section 15A(k)(2)(B), the rules of such a
limited purpose national securities association must be designed to
prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices, to promote just
and equitable principles of trade, and, in general, to protect
investors and the public interest, including rules governing sales
practices and the advertising of security futures products reasonably
comparable to the rules of a registered national securities association
applicable to security futures products. NFA believes the proposed rule
change would meet these requirements by: Providing limited relief for
some Members that would currently qualify for the Requirements based on
a principal's previous affiliation with another Member firm that was
subject to the Requirements; changing the enhanced capital requirements
in light of a recent increase in the FCM minimum capital requirement;
changing the enhanced capital requirements for CPOs and CTAs in a
manner more consistent with the nature of their business; requiring
specific items to be included in a firm's written supervisory
procedures; requiring quarterly rather than monthly reports on a firm's
compliance with the Requirements; and clarifying language regarding--
charging abnormally high commissions and fees; the effect that
receiving a waiver has on determining whether a Member is a firm that
has met the criteria for futures situation involving the Requirements;
and the status of a ``five year'' Disciplined Firm after it has been
dropped from the ``five year'' list.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(k)(2)(D).
\8\ 7 U.S.C. 21.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition
NFA believes that the portion of the proposed rule change that
exempts Members from adopting the Requirements when those Requirements
are triggered by a principal who meets the specified five criteria
should lessen the burden on competition by eliminating the need for
waiver requests that are typically granted and decreasing the number of
firms that are subject to the requirement by automatically exempting
firms that qualify based on principals whose profiles indicate that
they are unlikely to pose supervisory problems.
NFA does not believe that the proposed changes to CPO and CTA
capital requirements and reporting requirements for firms that trigger
the Requirements would impose any burden on competition.
Although the proposed rule change would require FCMs subject to the
Requirements to maintain additional capital, NFA believes that the
increase is necessary in order to maintain the purpose behind the
Requirements, and is also consistent with the approach NFA adopted with
respect to FDMs. The minimum capital level for all FCMs was recently
increased to $1,000,000, which is the same amount currently required of
FCMs subject to the enhanced requirement. In order for the enhanced
Requirements to maintain their original purpose, NFA believes that the
capital requirement must be increased. Rather than setting another
fixed dollar amount, the proposed amendment would tie the required
enhanced ANC to the early warning requirement under CFTC rules (150% of
minimum ANC). This revision would impose the same standard on FCM and
FDM Members and take into consideration any future changes to ANC
levels.
The proposed rule change identifies specific areas that need to be
addressed by an affected Member in the written supervisory procedures
it is currently required to prepare. NFA represents that the changes
would not impose additional substantive requirements on Members.
Rather, NFA believes this language would address requests for Members
for specific guidance on how to comply with their obligation to
monitor, catalog and log taped conversations. Therefore, NFA does not
believe this change imposes any burden on competition.
The current rule requires Members that charge 50% or more of their
active customers round-turn commissions, fees and other charges that
total $100 or more per futures, forex or option
[[Page 205]]
contract to adopt the Requirements. NFA has identified a trend where
some Members encourage their customers to take on riskier out-of-the
money options at a cost just below $100. Because in NFA's view these
positions are much less likely to be liquidated and charged a
liquidation fee, the total cost remains under the $100 threshold. NFA
states that the proposed rule change may increase the number of Members
subject to the Requirements because option contracts that would result
in total commission, fees and other charges of $100 or more if the
trade was liquidated will be deemed to have been charged $100 even if
the trade is not liquidated. NFA believes that the additional burden is
necessary, however, because Members that engage in this practice are
clearly within the group of Members that NFA's Board believed should be
subject to the enhanced Requirements when it chose to use high
commissions and fees as a trigger for imposing the Requirements.
NFA believes that the proposed provision that changes a Member's
reporting obligation with respect to its report on compliance with the
Requirements will also lessen the burden on Members. Under this
provision, a Member will be permitted to file this report on a
quarterly rather than monthly basis.
NFA believes that the final two proposed revisions do not add any
burden to competition because they are merely clarifying current
requirements. One proposed rule change would add language that NFA
believes makes it clear that a Member that receives a full or partial
waiver is still deemed to be a Member that has met the criteria for
purposes of the Notice. Another proposed rule change would add the word
``current'' before the term ``Disciplined Firm'' in four relevant
places in order to clarify that a ``five year'' Disciplined Firm will
no longer be a Disciplined Firm for purposes of triggering the
Requirements once the firm is dropped from the ``five year'' list.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others
NFA states that it worked with its Member Advisory Committees in
developing the rule change. NFA did not, however, publish the rule
change to its membership for comment. NFA states that it did not
receive comment letters concerning the rule change.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
On October 20, 2010, the CFTC notified NFA that it had approved the
rule change, and therefore, NFA is permitted to make the amendments
effective as of this date.
Within 60 days of the date of effectiveness of the proposed rule
change, the Commission, after consultation with the CFTC, may summarily
abrogate the proposed rule change and require that the proposed rule
change be refiled in accordance with the provisions of Section 19(b)(1)
of the Act.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Exchange Act. Comments may be submitted
by any of the following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's Internet comment form (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml); or
Send an e-mail to rule-comments@sec.gov. Please include
File Number SR-NFA-2010-04.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-NFA-2010-04. This file
number should be included on the subject line if e-mail is used. To
help the Commission process and review your comments more efficiently,
please use only one method. The Commission will post all comments on
the Commission's Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml
). Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments, all written
statements with respect to the proposed rule change that are filed with
the Commission, and all written communications relating to the proposed
rule change between the Commission and any person, other than those
that may be withheld from the public in accordance with the provisions
of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be available for Web site viewing and printing in
the Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F Street, NE., Washington,
DC 20549, on official business days between the hours of 10 a.m. and 3
p.m. Copies of such filing also will be available for inspection and
copying at the principal office of NFA. All comments received will be
posted without change; the Commission does not edit personal
identifying information from submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make publicly available.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(73).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Florence E. Harmon,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2010-33097 Filed 12-30-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P