Commodity Options and Agricultural Swaps, 6095-6110 [2011-1685]
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 23 / Thursday, February 3, 2011 / Proposed Rules
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Issued in Fort Worth, Texas on January 27,
2011.
Kimberly K. Smith,
Manager, Rotorcraft Directorate, Aircraft
Certification Service.
[FR Doc. 2011–2317 Filed 2–2–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING
COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 3, 32, 33, and 35
Commodity Options and Agricultural
Swaps
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
The Commodity Futures
Trading Commission (‘‘Commission’’ or
‘‘CFTC’’) is charged with proposing rules
to implement new statutory provisions
enacted by Title VII of the Dodd-Frank
Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act (‘‘Dodd-Frank Act’’). The
Dodd-Frank Act provides that swaps in
an agricultural commodity (as defined
by the Commission) are prohibited
unless entered into pursuant to a rule,
regulation or order of the Commission
adopted pursuant to Commodity
Exchange Act (‘‘CEA’’ or ‘‘Act’’). The
Dodd-Frank Act also includes options
(other than an option on a futures
contract) in its definition of swaps.
Broadly speaking, the rules proposed
herein would implement regulations
whereby swaps in agricultural
commodities and all commodity options
(including options on both agricultural
and non-agricultural commodities),
other than options on futures, may
transact subject to the same rules as all
other swaps. The proposed rules for
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SUMMARY:
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swaps in an agricultural commodity
would repeal and replace the
Commission’s regulations concerning
the exemption of swap agreements.
Because the Dodd-Frank Act defines
commodity options (other than options
on futures) as swaps, the proposed rules
for options would substantially amend
the Commission’s regulations regarding
commodity option transactions. Also,
current regulations on domestic
exchange-traded commodity option
transactions applies not only to
exchange-traded options on futures
(which are excluded from the DoddFrank definition of a swap), but also to
exchange-traded options on physical
commodities (which are within the
Dodd-Frank swap definition). Therefore,
the proposed rules would remove
references to options on physical
commodities from the Commission’s
regulations for exchange-traded options
on futures.
DATES: Written comments must be
received on or before April 4, 2011.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by RIN number 3038–AD21,
by any of the following methods:
• Agency Web site, via its Comments
Online process: https://
comments.cftc.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments
through the Web site.
• Mail: David A. Stawick, Secretary of
the Commission, Commodity Futures
Trading Commission, Three Lafayette
Centre, 1155 21st Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20581.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: Same as
mail above.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
Please submit your comments using
only one method.
All comments must be submitted in
English, or if not, accompanied by an
English translation. Comments will be
posted as received to https://
www.cftc.gov. You should submit only
information that you wish to make
available publicly. If you wish the
Commission to consider information
that you believe is exempt from
disclosure under the Freedom of
Information Act, a petition for
confidential treatment of the exempt
information may be submitted according
to the procedures established in § 145.9
of the Commission’s Regulations.1
The Commission reserves the right,
but shall have no obligation, to review,
pre-screen, filter, redact, refuse or
1 17 CFR 145.9. Unless otherwise indicated, the
rules and regulations referenced in this notice are
found in chapter 1 of title 17 of the Code of Federal
Regulations; 17 CFR Chapter 1 et seq.
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6095
remove any or all of your submission
from https://www.cftc.gov that it may
deem to be inappropriate for
publication, such as obscene language.
All submissions that have been redacted
or removed that contain comments on
the merits of the rulemaking will be
retained in the public comment file and
will be considered as required under the
Administrative Procedure Act and other
applicable laws, and may be accessible
under the Freedom of Information Act.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Donald Heitman, Senior Special
Counsel, (202) 418–5041,
dheitman@cftc.gov, or Ryne Miller,
Attorney Advisor, (202) 418–5921,
rmiller@cftc.gov, Division of Market
Oversight, Commodity Futures Trading
Commission, Three Lafayette Centre,
1155 21st Street, NW., Washington, DC
20581.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Introduction
On July 21, 2010, President Obama
signed the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act.2
Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act 3
amended the CEA 4 to establish a
comprehensive new regulatory
framework for swaps and security-based
swaps. The legislation was enacted to
reduce risk, increase transparency, and
promote market integrity within the
financial system by, among other things:
(1) Providing for the registration and
comprehensive regulation of swap
dealers and major swap participants;
(2) imposing clearing and trade
execution requirements on standardized
derivative products; (3) creating robust
recordkeeping and real-time reporting
regimes; and (4) enhancing the
Commission’s rulemaking and
enforcement authorities with respect to,
among others, all registered entities and
intermediaries subject to the
Commission’s oversight.
Section 723(c)(3) of the Dodd-Frank
Act provides that swaps in an
agricultural commodity (as defined by
the Commission) 5 are prohibited unless
entered into pursuant to a rule,
regulation or order of the Commission
adopted pursuant to CEA section 4(c).
2 See Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act, Public Law 111–203, 124
Stat. 1376 (2010). The text of the Dodd-Frank Act
may be accessed at https://www.cftc.gov./
LawRegulation/OTCDERIVATIVES/index.htm.
3 Pursuant to section 701 of the Dodd-Frank Act,
Title VII may be cited as the ‘‘Wall Street
Transparency and Accountability Act of 2010.’’
4 7 U.S.C. 1 et seq.
5 As discussed below, in accordance with the
mandate of the Dodd-Frank Act, the Commission
has recently proposed a definition of the term
‘‘agricultural commodity.’’ See 75 FR 65586, Oct. 26,
2010.
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Further, section 733 of the Dodd-Frank
Act, new CEA section 5h(b)(2), provides
that a swap execution facility (‘‘SEF’’)
may not list for trading or confirm the
execution of any swap in an agricultural
commodity (as defined by the
Commission) except pursuant to a rule
or regulation of the Commission
allowing the swap under such terms and
conditions as the Commission shall
prescribe.
In addition to the provisions on swaps
in an agricultural commodity, the DoddFrank Act definition of ‘‘swap’’ includes
options (other than options on futures).
Section 721 of the Dodd-Frank Act adds
new section 1a(47) to the CEA, defining
‘‘swap’’ to include not only ‘‘any
agreement, contract, or transaction
commonly known as,’’ among other
things, ‘‘an agricultural swap’’ or ‘‘a
commodity swap,’’ but also ‘‘[an] option
of any kind that is for the purchase or
sale, or based on the value, of * * *
commodities * * *.’’ 6 As a result of the
Dodd-Frank changes, the Commission is
issuing this notice proposing: (1) To
withdraw and replace current part 35; 7
(2) to substantially amend current part
32; 8 (3) to withdraw rule 3.13, which
will be rendered moot by the
withdrawal of rule 32.13; and (4) to
amend part 33 9 to remove references to
options on physical commodities. As
proposed, new part 35 and revised parts
32 and 33 will provide the regulatory
authority under which market
participants may enter into,
respectively, swaps in an agricultural
6 See new CEA section 1a(47), as added by section
721 of the Dodd-Frank Act. The Dodd-Frank swap
definition excludes exchange-traded options on
futures, but not exchange-traded options on
physical commodities (see new CEA section
1a(47)(B)(i)). Accordingly, the Commission is
amending part 33 of its regulations, ‘‘Regulation of
Domestic Exchange-Traded Commodity Option
Transactions,’’ to the extent that Part 33 applies to
exchange-traded options on physical commodities,
which are swaps under the Dodd-Frank definition.
The rules proposed herein would remove any
reference in part 33 to ‘‘options on physicals,’’ and
such transactions would become subject to the
regulations in revised part 32, discussed below.
Other options excluded from the definition of swap
are options on any security, certificate of deposit,
or group or index of securities, including any
interest therein or based on the value thereof, that
is subject to the Securities Act of 1933 and the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (see new CEA
section 1a(47)(B)(iii)) and foreign currency options
entered into on a national securities exchange
registered pursuant to section 6(a) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (see new CEA section
1a(47)(B)(iv)).
7 17 CFR Part 35.
8 17 CFR Part 32.
9 17 CFR Part 33.
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commodity (‘‘agricultural swaps’’) 10 and
commodity options.11
To that end, this notice includes a
background discussion of the statutory
and regulatory framework governing
agricultural swaps and commodity
options. The notice also provides an
overview and summary of the comments
received on the Commission’s
Advanced Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking regarding the agricultural
swaps provisions in the Dodd-Frank
Act.12 Finally, the notice includes an
explanation of the rulemakings
proposed herein, a discussion of CEA
section 4(c) as the authority for the
agricultural swaps aspect of this
rulemaking, a request for comment on
the proposed rulemaking, and a section
addressing related matters.
II. Background
A. Agricultural Swaps
i. Pre Dodd-Frank
Since 2000, bilateral swaps 13 between
certain sophisticated counterparties
have been generally exempted from the
Commission’s jurisdiction pursuant to
current CEA section 2(g),14 which was
added to the CEA by the Commodity
Futures Modernization Act of 2000
(‘‘CFMA’’).15 However, current section
2(g) specifically excludes an ‘‘agreement,
10 When this notice refers to ‘‘agricultural swaps,’’
it is referring to swaps in an agricultural
commodity, as identified in section 723(c)(3) of the
Dodd-Frank Act.
11 ‘‘Commodity option’’ and ‘‘commodity option
transaction’’ are defined in 17 CFR 1.3(hh). When
this notice refers generally to ‘‘commodity options’’
or ‘‘options,’’ the terms will refer to all commodity
options transactions other than those options on
futures that are excluded from the Dodd-Frank
definition of swap (see footnote 6, above).
12 See Agricultural Swaps, 75 FR 59666, Sept. 28,
2010.
13 Prior to the Dodd-Frank Act, the Commission
had defined a ‘‘swap’’ as follows: ‘‘A swap is a
privately negotiated exchange of one asset or cash
flow for another asset or cash flow. In a commodity
swap [including an agricultural swap], at least one
of the assets or cash flows is related to the price
of one or more commodities.’’ (See 72 FR 66099,
note 7, Nov. 27, 2007). As discussed above, see new
CEA section 1a(47) for the statutory definition of a
‘‘swap,’’ as added to the CEA by section 721 of the
Dodd-Frank Act.
14 Current section 2(g) provides:
No provision of this Act (other than section 5a (to
the extent provided in section 5a(g)), 5b, 5d, or
12(e)(2)) shall apply to or govern any agreement,
contract, or transaction in a commodity other than
an agricultural commodity if the agreement,
contract, or transaction is—
(1) Entered into only between persons that are
eligible contract participants at the time they enter
into the agreement, contract, or transaction;
(2) Subject to individual negotiation by the
parties; and
(3) Not executed or traded on a trading facility.
CEA section 2(g).
15 Current CEA section 2(g) was added to the CEA
as section 105(b) of the CFMA, enacted as
Appendix E to Public Law 106–554.
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contract, or transaction’’ in an
‘‘agricultural commodity’’ from the
CFMA swaps exemption.16
While the term ‘‘agricultural
commodity’’ is not specifically defined
in the Act,17 it is used in the Act in
conjunction with the definition of the
term ‘‘exempt commodity,’’ which is
defined as neither an ‘‘agricultural
commodity’’ nor an ‘‘excluded
commodity.’’ 18 The effect of current
CEA section 2(g) was that swaps
involving exempt and excluded
commodities were allowed to transact
largely outside of the Commission’s
jurisdiction or oversight. And while the
Dodd-Frank Act largely rewrites the
world of law and regulation applicable
to swaps in non-agricultural
commodities,19 swaps involving
agricultural commodities,20 including
both the enumerated agricultural
commodities and other non-enumerated
agricultural commodities,21 remain
subject to the Commission’s pre-CFMA
swaps regulations as set forth in part
35.22
Part 35 provides a broad exemption
for certain swap agreements. As noted,
part 35 originally applied to swaps in all
16 Notably, current CEA section 2(g) is not the
only statutory provision added by the CFMA that
excludes or exempts bilateral swaps between
eligible contract participants from the
Commission’s jurisdiction. Current CEA section
2(d)(1) excludes any such bilateral ‘‘agreement,
contract, or transaction’’ in excluded commodities
from Commission jurisdiction, while CEA section
2(h)(1) creates a similar exemption for a ‘‘contract,
agreement or transaction’’ in exempt commodities.
17 Note that the Commission has proposed for
comment a formal definition of agricultural
commodity. See Agricultural Commodity
Definition, 75 FR 65586, Oct. 26, 2010.
18 ‘‘The term ‘exempt commodity’ means a
commodity that is not an excluded commodity or
an agricultural commodity.’’ Current CEA section
1a(14). An ‘‘excluded commodity’’ is defined in
current CEA section 1a(13) to include financial
commodities such as interest rates, currencies,
economic indexes, and other similar items.
19 See Dodd-Frank non-agricultural swaps
discussion, below.
20 See 75 FR 59666, at 59667, Sept. 28, 2010, for
an explanation of the legislative history discussing
‘‘agricultural commodity’’ as used in CEA section
2(g).
21 ‘‘Enumerated agricultural commodities’’
typically refers to the list of commodities
specifically enumerated in the CEA definition of
‘‘commodity’’ at current CEA Section 1a(4)
(renumbered as section 1a(9) under Dodd-Frank):
Wheat, cotton, rice, corn, oats, barley, rye, flaxseed,
grain sorghums, mill feeds, butter, eggs, Solanum
tuberosum (Irish potatoes), wool, wool tops, fats
and oils (including lard, tallow, cottonseed oil,
peanut oil, soybean oil, and all other fats and oils),
cottonseed meal, cottonseed, peanuts, soybeans,
soybean meal, livestock, livestock products, and
frozen concentrated orange juice (but not onions).
22 17 CFR Part 35 remains in effect for agricultural
swaps because it was originally adopted under the
Commission’s CEA section 4(c) exemptive
authority, and section 723(c)(3)(B) of the DoddFrank Act grandfathers existing 4(c) exemptions in
the context of agricultural swaps.
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commodities.23 After the CFMA
amendments to the CEA, which
statutorily exempted swaps on ‘‘exempt’’
and ‘‘excluded’’ commodities from
virtually all of the Commission’s
jurisdiction, part 35 remained relevant
only for agricultural swaps. With the
exception of three outstanding
exemptive orders related to cleared
agricultural basis and calendar swaps 24
(which exempt certain swaps
transactions from part 35’s nonfungibility and counterparty
creditworthiness requirements), part 35
is the sole existing authority under
which market participants may transact
agricultural swaps that are not
options.25
23 Part 35 provides eligible swap participants (as
defined in § 35.1(b)(2)) with a general exemption
from the CEA for a swap that is not part of a
fungible class of agreements that are standardized
as to their material economic terms, where the
creditworthiness of each counterparty is a material
consideration in entering into or determining the
terms of the swap, and the swap is not entered into
and traded on or through a multilateral transaction
execution facility. See § 35.2.
24 Part 35, at § 35.2(d), also provides that ‘‘any
person may apply to the Commission for exemption
from any of the provisions of the Act (except
2(a)(1)(B) [liability of principal for act of agent]) for
other arrangements or facilities, on such terms and
conditions as the Commission deems appropriate,
including but not limited to, the applicability of
other regulatory regimes.’’ See 17 CFR 35.2(d). The
Commission has granted three such exemptions,
which have in each instance been styled as
exemptive orders pursuant to CEA section 4(c). See,
Order (1) Pursuant to Section 4(c) of the
Commodity Exchange Act (a) Permitting Eligible
Swap Participants To Submit for Clearing and ICE
Clear U.S., Inc. and Futures Commission Merchants
To Clear Certain Over-The-Counter Agricultural
Swaps and (b) Determining Certain Floor Brokers
and Traders To Be Eligible Swap Participants; and
(2) Pursuant to Section 4d of the Commodity
Exchange Act, Permitting Certain Customer
Positions in the Foregoing Swaps and Associated
Property To Be Commingled With Other Property
Held in Segregated Accounts, 73 FR 77015, Dec. 18,
2008;
Order (1) Pursuant to Section 4(c) of the
Commodity Exchange Act, Permitting the Chicago
Mercantile Exchange to Clear Certain Over-theCounter Agricultural Swaps and (2) Pursuant to
Section 4d of the Commodity Exchange Act,
Permitting Customer Positions in Such ClearedOnly Contracts and Associated Funds To Be
Commingled With Other Positions and Funds Held
in Customer Segregated Accounts, 74 FR 12316,
Mar. 24, 2009; and
Order (1) Pursuant to Section 4(c) of the
Commodity Exchange Act, Permitting the Kansas
City Board of Trade Clearing Corporation To Clear
Over-the-Counter Wheat Calendar Swaps and (2)
Pursuant to Section 4d of the Commodity Exchange
Act, Permitting Customer Positions in Such
Cleared-Only Swaps and Associated Funds To Be
Commingled With Other Positions and Funds Held
in Customer Segregated Accounts, 75 FR 34983,
June 21, 2010.
25 Options on agricultural commodities are
reviewed in detail in the options discussion of this
notice.
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ii. Dodd-Frank Swaps Provisions
a. Non-Agricultural Swaps
Under the CEA, as amended by the
Dodd-Frank Act, only eligible contract
participants (‘‘ECPs’’) 26 may enter into a
swap, unless such swap is entered into
on a designated contract market
(‘‘DCM’’),27 in which case any person
may enter into the swap.28
New CEA section 2(h), as added by
section 723(a)(3) of the Dodd-Frank Act,
establishes a clearing requirement for
swaps. Under that subsection, the
Commission would determine, based on
factors listed in the statute, whether a
swap, or a group, category, type, or class
of swaps, should be required to be
cleared. A swap that is required to be
cleared must be executed on a DCM or
a SEF,29 if a DCM or SEF makes the
swap available for trading. Swaps that
are not required to be cleared may be
executed bilaterally. Notwithstanding
the above, a swap entered into by a
commercial end user 30 is not subject to
the mandatory clearing requirement;
however an end user may opt to submit
the swap for clearing.
Section 731 of the Dodd-Frank Act
adds a new section 4s to the CEA that
provides for the registration and
regulation of swap dealers and major
swap participants.31 The new
requirements for swap dealers and
major swap participants include, in
part, capital and margin requirements,
business conduct standards, and
reporting, recordkeeping, and
documentation requirements.
Section 737 of the Dodd-Frank Act
amends current CEA section 4a
regarding position limits. Under the
Dodd-Frank provisions and amended
CEA section 4a, the Commission is
directed to adopt position limits for
futures and options traded on or subject
to the rules of a designated contract
market, and swaps that are
economically equivalent to such futures
26 ‘‘Eligible contract participant’’ is defined in
current CEA section 1a(12). Generally speaking, an
eligible contract participant is considered to be a
sophisticated investor.
27 A designated contract market is a board of trade
designated as a contract market under CEA section
5.
28 See new CEA section 2(e) as added by section
723(a)(2) of the Dodd-Frank Act.
29 The requirements for SEFs are set forth in new
CEA section 5h.
30 Generally, a commercial end user is described
in new CEA section 2(h)(7) as a non-financial entity
that is using swaps to hedge or mitigate commercial
risk and that notifies the Commission as to how it
generally meets its financial obligations associated
with entering into non-cleared swaps.
31 ‘‘Swap dealer’’ is defined in new CEA section
1a(49), as added by section 721(a)(21) of the DoddFrank Act. ‘‘Major swap participant’’ is defined in
new CEA section 1a(33), as added by section
721(a)(16) of the Dodd-Frank Act.
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and exchange-traded options for both
exempt and agricultural commodities.
b. Agricultural Swaps
As noted above, under section
723(c)(3) of the Dodd-Frank Act, swaps
in an ‘‘agricultural commodity’’ (as
defined by the Commission) 32 are
prohibited unless the swap is entered
into pursuant to an exemption granted
under CEA section 4(c). The
requirements of section 4(c) are
discussed in greater detail, below.33
Dodd-Frank section 723(c)(3)(B)
includes a ‘‘grandfather’’ clause
providing that any rule, regulation, or
order regarding agricultural swaps that
was issued pursuant to the
Commission’s exemptive authority in
CEA section 4(c), and that was in effect
on the date of enactment of the DoddFrank Act, would continue to be
permitted under such terms and
conditions as the Commission may
prescribe. Such rules, regulations or
orders would include part 35 with
respect to agricultural swaps and the
agricultural basis and calendar swaps
noted above, but would not include
options entered into pursuant to part
32.34
In addition to the provisions in
section 723(c)(3), section 733 of the
Dodd-Frank Act, new CEA section
5h(b), provides that a SEF may not list
for trading or confirm the execution of
any swap in an agricultural commodity
(as defined by the Commission) except
pursuant to a rule or regulation of the
Commission allowing the swap under
such terms and conditions as the
Commission shall prescribe.
B. Commodity Options
i. Commodity Options Are Swaps
The Dodd-Frank Act defines the term
‘‘swap’’ to include not only the various
types of swaps listed in the definition,
including commodity swaps and
agricultural swaps, but also options of
any kind (other than options on
32 See proposed definition of agricultural
commodity at 75 FR 65586, Oct. 26, 2010.
33 Generally speaking, section 4(c) provides that,
in order to grant an exemption, the Commission
must determine that: (1) The exemption would be
consistent with the public interest and the purposes
of the CEA; (2) any agreement, contract, or
transaction affected by the exemption would be
entered into by ‘‘appropriate persons’’ as defined in
section 4(c); and (3) any agreement, contract, or
transaction affected by the exemption would not
have a material adverse effect on the ability of the
Commission or any contract market to discharge its
regulatory or self-regulatory duties under the CEA.
34 Part 32 was not issued pursuant to the
Commission’s section 4(c) exemptive authority and
thus does not qualify for the Dodd-Frank
grandfather provision for existing 4(c) exemptions.
See section 723(c)(3)(B) of the Dodd-Frank Act.
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futures).35 Even before the Dodd-Frank
Act, commodity options have been
subject to the Commission’s plenary
authority under CEA section 4c(b).36
Based on that general prohibition of any
option transactions contrary to any
Commission rule, regulation or order
prohibiting options, or allowing them
under such conditions as the
Commission may prescribe, the only
options currently authorized under the
CEA are those specifically provided for
in the Commission’s regulations.
ii. Options on Agricultural
Commodities; Trade Options
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As noted above, the Commission
maintains plenary authority over
options and has used that authority to,
among other things, issue part 32 of the
Commission’s regulations. Part 32
includes a general ban on commodity
options,37 but allows for commodity
option transactions under certain
conditions. Part 32 specifically allows
for options on agricultural commodities
in two instances.38
First, rule 32.13 establishes rules for
trading bilateral options on the
‘‘enumerated’’ agricultural commodities
(‘‘agricultural trade options’’ or ‘‘ATOs’’)
whereby ATOs may only be sold by an
Agricultural Trade Option Merchant
(‘‘ATOM’’), who must first register with
the Commission as such pursuant to
CFTC rule 3.13. Since its 1998 adoption
35 See new CEA section 1a(47)(B), as added to the
CEA by section 721 of the Dodd-Frank Act. But see
also footnote 6, above, for the list of certain options
that are excluded from the swap definition.
36 Section 4c(b) provides:
No person shall offer to enter into, enter into or
confirm the execution of, any transaction involving
any commodity regulated under this Act which is
of the character of, or is commonly known to the
trade as, an ‘‘option’’, ‘‘privilege’’, ‘‘indemnity’’,
‘‘bid’’, ‘‘offer’’, ‘‘put’’, ‘‘call’’, ‘‘advance guaranty’’, or
‘‘decline guaranty’’, contrary to any rule, regulation,
or order of the Commission prohibiting any such
transaction or allowing any such transaction under
such terms and conditions as the Commission shall
prescribe. Any such order, rule, or regulation may
be made only after notice and opportunity for
hearing, and the Commission may set different
terms and conditions for different markets. CEA
section 4c(b); 7 U.S.C. 6c(b).
37 See Commission regulation 32.11, 17 CFR
32.11.
38 Note that part 32 was not issued under the
Commission’s section 4(c) exemptive authority.
After the effective date of the Dodd-Frank Act,
options on agricultural commodities will also fall
under the Dodd-Frank Act’s provisions governing
the trading of swaps (and, specifically, agricultural
swaps) since options on commodities fall within
the Act’s definition of a swap. Accordingly, it is
important to identify which options on agricultural
commodities are currently being traded pursuant to
part 32 and, where appropriate, to implement rules
to preserve that market (in addition to rules
proposed herein that will preserve the majority of
the existing non-agricultural trade option market,
subject to the same laws and rules as all other
swaps).
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and one amendment in 1999,39 the
ATOM registration scheme has attracted
only one registrant, which registrant has
since withdrawn its ATOM registration.
Accordingly, ATOs currently may only
be transacted pursuant to an exemptive
provision found at § 32.13(g)(1). The
exemption at § 32.13(g)(1) allows ATOs
to be sold when: (1) The option is
offered to a commercial (‘‘a producer,
processor, or commercial user of, or a
merchant handling’’ the underlying
commodity); (2) the commercial enters
the transaction solely for purposes
related to its business as such; and (3)
each party to the option contract has a
net worth of not less than $10 million.
In either case (whether transacted
pursuant to the ATOM registration
scheme or accomplished via the
exemption at § 32.13(g)), the phrase
‘‘agricultural trade option’’ refers
specifically to a trade option on an
agricultural commodity enumerated in
§ 32.2.
In addition to the ATO rules in
§ 32.13, part 32 includes, at § 32.4, a
basic trade option exemption applicable
to options on commodities other than
the enumerated agricultural
commodities. The terms of the § 32.4
exemption are essentially the same as
those of the § 32.13(g) exemption with
one significant difference—the § 32.4
trade option exemption does not
include any net worth requirement.
Under § 32.4, the option must be offered
to a producer, processor, or commercial
user of, or a merchant handling, the
commodity, who enters into the
commodity option transaction solely for
purposes related to its business as such.
Because the term ‘‘agricultural
commodity’’ as used in section 723(c)(3)
of the Dodd-Frank Act refers to more
than just the enumerated commodities,
the Commission recognizes that certain
options authorized under § 32.4 (e.g.
options on coffee, sugar, cocoa, and
other agricultural products that do not
appear in the enumerated commodity
list) would be considered options on an
agricultural commodity. As such, and
without adopting the rules proposed
herein, those options would be swaps
on an agricultural commodity and
would thereby fall under the DoddFrank Act’s general prohibition of
agricultural swaps.
iii. Remainder of Part 32
In addition to the foregoing provisions
regarding § 32.13 agricultural trade
options and § 32.4 general trade options,
part 32 contains various other
provisions that have been rendered
39 63 FR 18821, Apr. 16, 1998; and 64 FR 68011,
Dec. 6, 1999, respectively.
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obsolete, either by the Dodd-Frank Act,
by subsequent Commission rulemaking
actions, or by the passage of time. The
amendments proposed herein would
substantially update and revise part 32
and remove these unnecessary
provisions.
iv. Part 33
As noted above, current part 33
applies to both exchange-traded options
on futures and exchange-traded options
on physical commodities. However,
Dodd-Frank exempts only options on
futures from the swaps definition.
Therefore, options on physical
commodities, even if traded on a DCM,
are to be regulated as swaps.
Accordingly, these proposed rules
would remove all references to
exchange-traded options on physicals
from part 33.
III. The ANPRM
A. General Description of the ANPRM
On September 28, 2010 (75 FR 59666),
the Commission published an advanced
notice of proposed rulemaking
(‘‘ANPRM’’) and request for comment on
the appropriate conditions, restrictions
or protections to be included in any
rule, regulation or order of the
Commission adopted pursuant to
section 4(c) of the Act governing the
trading of swaps in an ‘‘agricultural
commodity,’’ 40 as defined by the
Commission.41 The Commission
requested specific input pertaining to
five topics: Current Agricultural Swaps
Business (overall size, the types of
entities, and any unique characteristics
of agricultural swaps that distinguish
them from other types of physical
commodity swaps); Agricultural Swaps
Clearing (the extent to which existing
swaps are cleared or uncleared, whether
existing swaps would generally qualify
for a commercial end-user exemption,
and the desirability of a clearing
requirement for swaps that do not
qualify for such an exemption); Trading
(description of any significant trading
problems encountered in this market);
Agricultural Swaps Purchasers (whether
agricultural swaps participants need
40 The Commission also informally solicited
comments on its Web site at https://www.cftc.gov/
LawRegulation/DoddFrankAct/
OTC_19_AgSwaps.html. In addition, Commission
staff has met with market participants and other
interested parties. A complete list of external
meetings held at the Commission may be found on
the Commission’s Web site at https://www.cftc.gov/
LawRegulation/DoddFrankAct/ExternalMeetings/
index.htm.
41 The Commission has published for comment a
proposed regulatory definition of the term,
‘‘agricultural commodity’’ (See: 75 FR 65586, Oct.
26, 2010, and plans to publish a final definition in
the near future.
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more protections than other physical
commodity swaps participants, or
whether special provisions are needed
to make it easier for producers to
participate); Designated Contract
Markets (should agricultural swaps be
permitted on DCMs to the same extent
as other swaps); Swap Execution
Facilities (should agricultural swaps be
permitted on SEFs to the same extent as
other swaps); and Trading Outside of
DCMs and SEFs (should agricultural
swaps be permitted to trade outside of
a DCM or SEF to the same extent as
other swaps, and generally should
agricultural swaps be treated any
differently than other types of physical
commodity swaps).
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B. Summary of Comments
Nineteen formal comment letters
representing a broad range of interests,
including producers, merchants, swap
dealers, commodity funds, futures
industry organizations, and academics/
think tanks, responded to the ANPRM.
In particular, comment letters were
received from: The American Farm
Bureau Federation, the American
Soybean Association, the Commodity
Markets Council, the National
Association of Wheat Growers, the
National Cattlemen’s Beef Association,
and the National Corn Growers
Association, who filed a joint statement
(collectively, ‘‘the Ag Associations’’); the
National Grain and Feed Association
(‘‘NGFA’’); the Commodity Markets
Council (‘‘CMC,’’ which filed a separate
letter in addition to signing onto the
joint statement noted above); the
National Milk Producers Federation
(‘‘NMPF’’); the Dairy Farmers of America
(‘‘DFA’’); the National Council of Farmer
Cooperatives (‘‘NCFC’’); the Gavilon
Group, LLC (‘‘Gavilon’’), a feed
manufacturer; Cargill, an agricultural
commodities merchant; Allenberg
Cotton, a cotton merchant; the
Agricultural Commodity Swaps
Working Group (‘‘Ag Swap Working
Group’’), comprised of financial
institutions that provide risk
management and investment products
to agricultural end users; the
International Swaps and Derivatives
Association (‘‘ISDA’’); United States
Commodity Funds (‘‘USCF’’); the
Alternative Investment Management
Association, Ltd. (‘‘AIMA’’);
International Assets Holding
Corporation (‘‘IAHC’’); Teucrium
Trading; the Futures Industry
Association (‘‘FIA’’); the CME Group,
Inc. (‘‘CME’’); the Institute for
Agriculture and Trade Policy (‘‘IATP’’);
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and Dr. Robert Pollin, a university
professor.42
The vast majority of commenters
supported the equal treatment of
agricultural swaps (including trade
options) under the same regulatory
scheme as other categories of swaps.
The following statement from the Ag
Associations is representative of this
sentiment:
Ag swaps are used, to varying degrees, by
our members because they provide a targeted,
customized, cost-effective, and efficient risk
management strategy * * * In a world with
increasing inherent volatility, the need for
risk management instruments has never been
greater.
We urge the Commission to treat swaps for
all commodities harmoniously. We believe
the comprehensive regulation of swaps
should not be based on distinctions among
commodity types. The generally applicable
protections under the Dodd-Frank Bill—such
as reporting, mandatory clearing, mandatory
trading of standardized swaps, minimum
capital requirements, and the CFTC’s
authority to impose position limits,
determine which swaps are subject to
clearing and trading and to exercise
emergency powers—will protect ag swaps
from fraud and manipulation.
Two commenters (Dr. Pollin and the
IATP) were generally opposed to the
trading of agricultural swaps under the
same conditions as other physical
commodity swaps. Both commenters
expressed the belief that speculative
investment in agricultural derivatives
has increased price volatility, to the
detriment of producers and consumers
of agricultural products, and that
trading in agricultural swaps could
potentially exacerbate this problem.
Commenters offered the following
specific information and/or individual
perspectives on the five topic areas
outlined above:
Current Agricultural Swaps Business.
Regarding the state of the current
agricultural swaps business (including
trade options), commenters generally
noted that agricultural swaps are used to
a considerable extent, but they were
unable to quantify the overall size of
this market. Swap participants include
commercial end users (producers,
processors and merchants), hedge funds,
swap dealers, and financial institutions.
Generally, commenters did not believe
that the characteristics of agricultural
swaps were significantly different from
the characteristics of other types of
physical commodity swaps.
Agricultural Swaps Clearing.
According to the commenters, most
agricultural swap activity (including
trade options) is not cleared (for
42 In addition, two comments were received that
did not directly address the ANPRM.
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example, the NCFC estimated that less
than one percent of its members’ swaps
are cleared). Several commenters
pointed to the small amount of swaps
cleared by DCOs under existing 4(c)
exemptions, relative to the presumed
size of the market, as evidence of how
few swaps are cleared. Commenters
representing agricultural producers and
merchants indicated that virtually all of
their swaps would qualify for the enduser exemption from the mandatory
clearing requirement of the Dodd-Frank
Act. Furthermore, most commenters
suggested that agricultural swaps should
be individually scrutinized as to their
clearability, rather than subjecting all
agricultural swaps to a clearing
requirement. (NCFC, for example,
observed that, ‘‘the low volume, small
sizes and odd lots [of many agricultural
swaps] would not be attractive for
exchanges or clearing houses to offer
those specific products.’’ Thus, ‘‘if all
entities are required to clear agricultural
swaps through an exchange or
standardize a non-standard transaction
(both in terms of quantity and
structure), costs would likely increase to
a point where the use of swaps as a bona
fide hedge/risk management tool would
not be available to segments of the
agricultural marketplace.’’) IATP,
however, supported mandatory clearing
for all agricultural swaps as a means of
discouraging producers from
participating directly in this market.
Trading Practices and Issues.
Commenters generally were not aware
of any specific problems pertaining to
the existing trade in agricultural swaps
and most saw no need for additional
requirements for trading agricultural
swaps relative to other types of swaps.
Some commenters did observe that the
Commission’s existing regulatory
requirements governing agricultural
trade options in the enumerated
agricultural commodities (as distinct
from other types of physical
commodities) have restricted the
development of this market to the
detriment of commercial end users (see,
for example, comments by CMC,
Gavilon and DFA).
Additional Protections for
Agricultural Swaps Purchasers. Most
commenters did not believe that
agricultural swaps participants need
more protection than participants in
other types of commodity swaps. Most
commenters also believed that the
Dodd-Frank Act requirement, limiting
swap purchasers to ‘‘eligible contract
participants’’ (‘‘ECPs’’), is appropriate to
apply to the purchasers of agricultural
commodity swaps. However, several
commenters suggested that transactions
within farmer cooperatives (that is,
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between individual farmer members and
their local elevator cooperative, and
between affiliated cooperatives at the
local, regional or national levels) should
not be subject to the ECP requirement
(for example, the NCFC states that
individual members who do not meet
the ECP requirement should be
permitted to purchase swaps directly
from their producer cooperatives, and
the NMPF argues that transactions
between members and their
cooperatives are internal transactions
and should be treated as such, rather
than be subject to provisions that govern
transactions between unaffiliated
parties). In addition, one commenter
favored making agricultural trade
options (but not other types of swaps)
available from registered swap dealers
to non-ECPs who enter into them
explicitly for commercial risk
management purposes (see Cargill
comment).
Trading on DCMs and SEFs.
Commenters generally supported the
listing and trading of agricultural swaps
(including options) on DCMs and SEFs
to the same extent as other physical
commodity swaps, with the exception of
Dr. Pollin and the IATP.
Trading off of DCMs and SEFs.
Commenters generally expressed the
opinion that agricultural swaps
(including options) should be permitted
to trade outside of DCMs and SEFs
under the same conditions that apply to
other types of physical commodity
swaps (again, with the exception of the
IATP and Dr. Pollin). Most commenters
did not believe there were any specific
agricultural commodities that would
require special or different protections.
IATP expressed the opinion that ‘‘A
higher collateral and capital
requirement should be applied to any
bilateral swaps a CFTC rule would
allow.’’ Dr. Pollin argued that there is no
good reason for offering any exemptions
from the blanket prohibition on
agricultural swaps contained in the
Dodd-Frank Act.
In addition to comments addressing
the five specific topic areas directly
related to the ANPRM, several
commenters requested that the
Commission provide clarity on the
treatment of certain types of swap
participants and transactions within the
overall regulatory scheme for swaps. In
this regard, several commenters
requested that the Commission clarify
that agricultural producer cooperatives
that enter into swaps with their own
members or third parties in the course
of marketing their members’ agricultural
products should be considered to be end
users for purposes of the clearing
exception, and further that the
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Commission should clarify that
producer cooperatives are excluded
from the definitions of swap dealer and
major swap participant (see, for
example, comments from NGFA, NCFC,
NMPF, and DFA). These issues are
beyond the scope of this proposed
rulemaking. The Commission has issued
proposed rules regarding: (1) The enduser exception to mandatory clearing of
swaps pursuant to § 723 of the DoddFrank Act; 43 and (2) further definition
of certain terms regarding market
participants, including the terms ‘‘swap
dealer’’ and ‘‘major swap participant,’’
pursuant to § 712(d) of the Dodd-Frank
Act.44 The Commission encourages all
interested parties to submit comments
addressing these proposed rules,
including responses to the requests for
comment set forth therein.
Some commenters also requested that
the Commission clarify that certain
types of transactions (embedded options
in forward contracts 45 and book-outs 46)
fall within the definition of an excluded
forward contract rather than the
definition of a swap. These issues, too,
are beyond the scope of this proposed
rulemaking. Commission staff, jointly
with staff of the SEC, is also considering
further definition of terms regarding
certain products, including the term
‘‘swap,’’ pursuant to § 712(d) of the
Dodd-Frank Act. Any comment
addressing the distinction between
swaps and forward contracts will be
shared with appropriate staff.
IV. Explanation of the Proposed Rules
A. Introduction
After considering the complete record
in this matter, including all comments
on the ANPRM, the Commission is
proposing the rulemaking contained
herein. Broadly speaking, the proposed
rules would implement regulations
whereby (1) swaps in agricultural
43 See: End User Exception to Mandatory Clearing
of Swaps, 75 FR 80747, Dec. 23, 2010 (comment
period closes February 22, 2011).
44 See: Further Definition of ‘‘Swap Dealer,’’
‘‘Security-Based Swap Dealer,’’ ‘‘Major Swap
Participant,’’ ‘‘Major Security-Based Swap
Participant’’ and ‘‘Eligible Contract Participant,’’ 75
FR 80174, Dec. 21, 2010 (joint rulemaking with
Securities and Exchange Commission (‘‘SEC’’),
comment period closes February 22, 2011).
45 See: Characteristics Distinguishing Cash and
Forward Contracts and ‘‘Trade’’ Options,
Interpretive Statement of the Commission’s General
Counsel, 50 FR 39656, Sept. 30, 1985, regarding the
differences between forward contracts and options.
46 A book-out is a separate, subsequent agreement
whereby two commercial parties to a forward
contract, who find themselves in a delivery chain
or circle at the same delivery point, can agree to
settle (or ‘‘book-out’’) their delivery obligations by
exchanging a net payment. See: Statutory
Interpretation Regarding Forward Transactions, 55
FR 39188, Sept. 25, 1990.
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commodities, and (2) all commodity
options (including options on both
agricultural and non-agricultural
commodities), other than options on
futures, may transact subject to the same
rules as all other swaps.
First, the proposal would withdraw
existing part 35 of the Commission’s
regulations—thus withdrawing the
provisions originally adopted in 1993 to
provide legal certainty for the bilateral
swaps market by largely exempting
bilateral swaps transactions from CEA
regulation.47 Second, pursuant to the
exemptive authority in CEA section 4(c),
the proposed rules would adopt a new
part 35 to provide the primary authority
for transacting swaps in an agricultural
commodity (‘‘agricultural swaps’’) as
authorized by Sections 723(c)(3) and
733 of the Dodd-Frank Act. Third, the
proposed rulemaking would
substantially update and revise the
existing framework for off-exchange
options in existing part 32. In part
pursuant to the exemptive authority in
CEA section 4(c) and in part pursuant to
the Commission’s general rulemaking
authority set out at CEA section 8a(5)
and the Commission’s plenary authority
over options, revised part 32 would
affirm that all commodity options (other
than options on futures) are swaps, and
as such will be subject to all provisions
of the CEA otherwise applicable to
swaps, including any rule, regulation, or
order thereunder. The proposed
rulemaking would also withdraw rule
3.13, which sets out procedures for the
registration of agricultural trade option
merchants and their associated persons.
Rule 3.13 will become moot upon the
withdrawal of rule 32.13, which
includes the underlying registration
requirement. Finally, the proposed rules
would revise part 33 to delete references
to exchange-traded options on physical
commodities (which will now be
regulated as swaps), leaving only
exchange-traded options on futures
subject to part 33.
B. Withdrawal of Current Part 35
In enacting the Futures Trading
Practices Act of 1992 (the ‘‘1992 Act’’),48
Congress added section 4(c) to the CEA
and authorized the Commission, by
rule, regulation, or order, to exempt any
agreement, contract or transaction, or
class thereof, from the exchange-trading
47 ‘‘[Part 35 * * *] exempt[s] swap agreements (as
defined herein) meeting specified criteria from
regulation under the Commodity Exchange Act (the
‘‘Act’’). This rule was proposed pursuant to
authority recently granted the Commission, a
purpose of which is to give the Commission a
means of improving the legal certainty of the market
for swaps agreements.’’ 58 FR 5587, Jan. 22, 1993.
48 Public Law 102–546 (Oct. 28, 1992).
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requirement of CEA section 4(a), or
(with minor exceptions not relevant
here) from any other provision of the
Act.49 Pursuant to its new authority in
section 4(c), the Commission proposed
in 1992 50 and adopted in 1993 51 part
35 of the Commission’s regulations,
generally exempting certain swap
agreements from the CEA. As explained
above, part 35 originally applied to all
commodities. However, certain
amendments to the CEA made by the
CFMA had the effect of making part 35
relevant only for swaps in agricultural
commodities.
The Dodd-Frank Act amends, repeals,
or replaces many CEA sections added by
the CFMA (including the statutory
exemptions for swaps in excluded and
exempt commodities at current CEA
sections 2(d), 2(g), and 2(h)). To avoid
any uncertainty as to whether the
Commission will allow bilateral swaps
in non-agricultural commodities to
revert to reliance on existing part 35 for
exemption from the CEA and the DoddFrank amendments, the Commission is
proposing to revoke current part 35 in
its entirety. Once part 35 is revoked, the
only swaps authorized under the CEA or
the Commission’s rules will be those
swaps that comport with the
requirements of the CEA, as amended by
the Dodd-Frank Act.52
C. Proposed New Part 35
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The provisions of proposed new part
35 would generally provide that
agricultural swaps may be transacted
subject to all provisions of the CEA, and
any Commission rule, regulation or
order thereunder, that is otherwise
applicable to swaps. New part 35 would
also clarify that by issuing a rule
allowing agricultural swaps to transact
subject to the laws and rules applicable
to all other swaps, the Commission is
allowing agricultural swaps to transact
on DCMs, SEFs, or otherwise to the
same extent that all other swaps are
allowed to trade on DCMs, SEFs, or
otherwise.
49 While section 4(c) was amended by the DoddFrank Act, for the purposes of this rulemaking its
function and effect have not changed. See 4(c)
discussion, below.
50 See the original proposal at 57 FR 53627, Nov.
12, 1992. See also 57 FR 58423, Dec. 28, 1992,
extending the comment period for an additional
fourteen days.
51 58 FR 5587, Jan. 22, 1993.
52 Section 723(c)(3)(B) of the Dodd-Frank Act
grandfathers existing 4(c) orders that relate to
agricultural swaps unless superseded by subsequent
Commission order. This notice of proposed
rulemaking is not taking any action to alter the
continued effectiveness of the orders identified in
footnote 24 above. See also, 76 FR [ _____ ] n. 38Jan.
20, 2011.
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D. Revisions to Part 32
Because commodity options (other
than options on futures) clearly fall
within the Dodd-Frank Act definition of
swap,53 the Commission is proposing to
substantially update and revise the now
duplicative off-exchange commodity
option regulations set forth in current
part 32. Revised part 32, authorized by
the Commission’s plenary options
authority, will provide legal certainty
for the commodity options market by
making it clear that commodity options
(other than options on futures) are
authorized to continue subject to all
provisions of the CEA, and any rule,
regulation, or order thereunder, that is
otherwise applicable to swaps.
In order to support the revisions to
part 32, including the withdrawal of
several sections in their entirety, the
Commission reviewed and analyzed
each provision of existing part 32,
including the corresponding history of
the Commission’s development of
commodity options regulation. Based on
its review, the Commission has
determined that there would be little
practical effect and no detrimental
consequences in adopting the proposed
revisions to the existing commodity
options regime in part 32.
i. 1978 Suspension of Commodity
Options (§ 32.11)
From a historical perspective, the
Commission adopted its first broad antifraud rule applicable to commodity
options transactions on June 24, 1975.54
After an unsuccessful effort to generally
permit off-exchange commodity options
subject to certain rules and regulations
(that is, original part 32),55 the
Commission issued a general
suspension of commodity options
transactions in 1978.56 The suspension
was adopted by the Commission on
April 17, 1978 and was added to the
original part 32 as § 32.11.57 Upon its
adoption in 1978, § 32.11 suspended all
commodity option transactions (except
for those trade options authorized by
§ 32.4) 58 that had been otherwise
53 See
footnote 6 above.
FR 26504, June 24, 1975. Originally
designated as 17 CFR 30.01, the provision was redesignated as § 32.9 and incorporated into the
original part 32 regulations adopted on November
24, 1976.
55 See discussion and review of original part 32
below.
56 Exchange-traded options on futures were not
affected since they were not available at the time
and only later became available when the
Commission initiated a pilot program to allow
exchange-traded options on futures in 1981. See
46 FR 54500, Nov. 3, 1981.
57 See 43 FR 16153, Apr. 17, 1978.
58 Dealer options, which were also being traded
at the time, were also subsequently exempted from
54 40
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authorized by original part 32. Aside
from later amendments that authorized
commodity options conducted on or
subject to the rules of a contract
market 59 or a foreign board of trade,60
current § 32.11 remains in the same
form as when originally adopted in
1978. Accordingly, the bulk of original
part 32, as discussed below, has been
obsolete and/or irrelevant since the
adoption of § 32.11 in 1978. This
includes the registration requirements
in § 32.3, the disclosure requirements in
§ 32.5, the segregation requirements in
§ 32.6, and the books and recordkeeping
requirements in § 32.7.
ii. Original Part 32 (§§ 32.1–32.10)
Original part 32 was adopted by the
Commission on November 24, 1976, and
included substantially the same
provisions as they exist in current
§§ 32.1–32.10.61
a. 32.1
The definitions section, § 32.1, has
been substantively modified only
once 62 since its adoption in 1976. That
revision added a scope provision as
§ 32.1(a). The purpose of adding the
scope provision was to make clear that
part 32 applied only to off-exchange
bilateral options, and that it would not
apply to commodity options conducted
on or subject to the rules of a contract
market. The § 32.1(a) scope provision
was amended once in 1987 to also
exclude from part 32 commodity
options conducted on or subject to the
rules of a foreign board of trade.63
Beyond that, § 32.1 has not been
substantively amended since its
adoption in 1976.
Because commodity options (other
than options on futures) are now swaps
and will be authorized to transact
subject to the swaps rules, the scope
provision in § 32.1 has been updated
and retained in revised part 32 as
appropriate. The proposal would delete
the definitions in current § 32.1 as
duplicative—the terms therein are
already defined elsewhere, either in
other Commission regulations or in the
CEA, and there is no need for their
repetition in part 32.
b. 32.2
As originally adopted, § 32.2(a)
prohibited commodity options
transactions on a list of enumerated
the general options ban. See 43 FR 23704, June 1,
1978. Dealer options are discussed below in
connection with the withdrawal of rule 32.12.
59 See 47 FR at 57016, Dec. 22, 1982.
60 See 52 FR at 29003, Aug. 5, 1987.
61 See 43 FR 51808, Nov. 24, 1976.
62 See 47 FR at 57016, Dec. 22, 1982.
63 See 52 FR at 29003, Aug. 5, 1987.
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agricultural commodities and § 32.2(b)
prohibited commodity options
involving any contract of sale of any
commodity for future delivery traded on
or subject to the rules of any contract
market or involving the prices of such
contracts, unless done pursuant to a
subsequent Commission rulemaking.
Section 32.2 was amended once in 1992
to remove § 32.2(b),64 and § 32.2 was
amended again in 1998 to reference the
Commission’s newly adopted
Agricultural Trade Option rules in
§ 32.13. Because this proposal would
treat agricultural swaps the same as
swaps in any other commodity, and
because all commodity options (other
than options on futures) are now swaps,
it is no longer necessary to distinguish
between agricultural and nonagricultural commodities for the
purposes of the Commission’s options
regulations, and thus the Commission is
proposing to withdraw § 32.2.
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c. 32.3, 32.5, 32.6, and 32.7
As adopted in 1976, § 32.3 provided
that only firms registered as futures
commission merchants, or registered
associated persons of such firms, could
offer or sell commodity options under
part 32. Section 32.5 imposed certain
disclosure requirements for options
sellers, § 32.6 addressed segregation of
funds, and § 32.7 set forth the books and
recordkeeping requirements. Because
the 1978 suspension of commodity
options in § 32.11 remains in effect, the
requirements in §§ 32.3, 32.5, 32.6, and
32.7 (the ‘‘abandoned sections’’) are of
no practical effect—there are no
authorized transactions subject to these
abandoned sections. The commodity
options that are allowed to transact
outside of the § 32.11 suspension (e.g.,
§ 32.4 trade options, § 32.12 dealer
options, § 32.13 agricultural trade
options, and commodity option
transactions conducted on or subject to
the rules of a contract market or a
foreign board of trade) are each
exempted from the requirements of the
abandoned sections. Accordingly, the
proposal would withdraw §§ 32.3, 32.5,
32.6, and 32.7.
d. 32.4
From its adoption, part 32 has
included, in § 32.4, an exemption for
commodity options used by commercial
entities entering into the commodity
option transactions solely for purposes
related to their business.65 The so-called
64 See
57 FR 27925, June 23, 1992. At that time,
original § 32.2(a) was re-designated as simply
§ 32.2.
65 § 32.4(a) exempts a commodity option when it
is offered to ‘‘a producer, processor, or commercial
user of, or a merchant handling, the commodity
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‘‘trade option exemption’’ has remained
unchanged since 1976 and has provided
legal certainty for that segment of the
commodity options market available to
commercial end users. This notice
proposes revising the trade option
exemption to provide that commodity
options may transact subject to the same
laws, rules, regulations, and orders
otherwise applicable to all swaps. The
rationale for the revision is that the
swaps rules already allow for the
equivalent of a trade option—the DoddFrank amendments permit bilateral
swaps, where both parties are ECPs,66 to
remain uncleared at the election of a
commercial end user. The primary
substantive change to this market will
be that, while current § 32.4 imposes no
minimum net worth requirement on
participants, both purchasers and sellers
of commodity options under revised
§ 32.4 will have to qualify as ECPs, just
as swaps (other than swaps on a DCM)
may only be entered into by ECPs. The
Commission is specifically requesting
comment as to whether this distinction
will significantly affect hedging
opportunities available to currently
active market participants.
e. 32.8 and 32.9
Sections 32.8 and 32.9 address
unlawful representations and fraud in
connection with commodity option
transactions. These two consumer
protection provisions are important to
both the Commission and the
commodity options markets. Even
though commodity options are now
swaps, subject to the swaps rules and
any anti-fraud or other customer
protection rules otherwise applicable to
swaps, the Commission views §§ 32.8
and 32.9 as important protections for
commodity options participants. With
the exception of a minor revision
expanding the unlawful representation
prohibition of § 32.8(a) to all
Commission registrants, §§ 32.8 and
32.9 will be retained in substantially the
same form as they currently exist. The
retention of §§ 32.8 and 32.9 will not
affect the applicability to options of any
anti-fraud or other similar rule that is
applicable to a swap. That is, §§ 32.8
and 32.9 are being retained in addition
to any other protections provided by the
general swaps rules.
which is the subject of the commodity option
transaction, or the products or by-products thereof,
and that such producer, processor, commercial user
or merchant is offered or enters into the commodity
option transaction solely for purposes related to its
business as such.’’ See § 32.4(a).
66 See footnote 26, above.
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f. 32.10
Section 32.10 grandfathered
commodity options transactions
occurring prior to the effective adoption
of original part 32. Revised part 32
would update the current text with a
similar grandfather provision for
existing commodity options transacted
pursuant to current part 32. Generally,
commodity options transacted pursuant
to current part 32 (and prior to the
effective date of any revision to current
part 32) will remain enforceable upon
the adoption of any revision to part 32.
iii. Subsequent Additions to Part 32—
§§ 32.12 and 32.13
a. 32.12—Dealer Options
Section 32.12, commonly known as
the dealer options exemption, was
added to original part 32 on June 1,
1978.67 The dealer options rules
provided an exemption from the
Commission’s then recently adopted
options ban at § 32.11 (recall that the
§ 32.11 options ban was originally
adopted on April 17, 1978).68 Amended
two times shortly after its adoption—
once to adjust a net worth
requirement 69 and again to include
certain reporting requirements 70—the
§ 32.12 dealer options rules were
intended to grandfather the ongoing
businesses of certain commercial option
grantors who, as of May 1, 1978, were
both in the business of granting options
on a physical commodity and in the
business of buying, selling, producing,
or otherwise utilizing that commodity.
The primary factor in the
Commission’s determination to
withdraw § 32.12 at this time is that the
dealer option business has apparently
ceased to exist. Since at least September
11, 2001,71 and likely for at least
another decade before that,72 the
Commission has not received a single
report required to be filed by an entity
transacting dealer options under § 32.12.
That observation, in conjunction with
67 See
43 FR 23704, June 1, 1978.
43 FR 16153, Apr. 17, 1978.
69 See 43 FR 47492, Oct. 16, 1978.
70 See 43 FR 52467, Nov. 13, 1978.
71 September 11, 2001 is, of course, the day that
the Commission’s hard copy records contained in
its New York regional office in the World Trade
Center were lost. The records would have included
any § 32.12 reports, which were required to be filed
with and retained at the Commission’s New York
regional office in hard copy form.
72 Interviews of long-serving Commission staff
indicate no recollections of entities transacting
pursuant to the § 32.12 dealer options exemption
for at least the past 20 years. The apparent cessation
of the dealer options business should not come as
a surprise. It was widely expected at the time that
when exchange-traded options became available
(which happened starting in 1981) the dealer option
business would fade away. It appears that this is,
in fact, what happened.
68 See
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the requirement that to rely on § 32.12
a dealer has to have been in this
business as of May 1, 1978, implies that
no entity is legally relying on § 32.12 for
any currently transacted business
activity. The Commission is specifically
requesting comment as to whether there
is any reason not to withdraw § 32.12 in
its entirety, and whether any person,
group of persons, or class of transactions
is prejudiced or otherwise harmed by
such action.
b. 32.13—Agricultural Trade Options
Section 32.13 and agricultural trade
options are described in the Background
section above. Added to part 32 in
1998,73 and amended once thereafter,74
the ATOM registration regime has been
largely unused. It has attracted only one
registrant, which registrant has since
withdrawn its registration. However, the
exemption for agricultural trade options
meeting certain conditions as specified
in § 32.13(g) appears to be widely used.
Because the Commission is proposing to
authorize agricultural swaps in new part
35, and to re-authorize commodity
options to transact as swaps (with no
distinction as between agricultural and
non-agricultural commodities) in
revised § 32.4, the Commission is
proposing to withdraw § 32.13 in its
entirety.75 The primary effect of the
change would be to remove the $10
million net worth requirement for
parties relying on the § 32.13(g)
exemption for agricultural trade options.
Under revised § 32.4, parties need only
qualify as ECPs, which category would
include certain persons with a net worth
of less than $10 million.
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E. Part 33
As noted above, the Commission is
proposing to amend part 33 to remove
references to options on physical
commodities. All options on physicals
would now be regulated as swaps,
leaving only exchange-traded options on
futures subject to part 33. Treating
options on physicals that are traded on
a DCM as swaps would have little
practical effect since anyone (including
non-ECPs) could continue to trade such
instruments on a DCM. In addition,
qualified persons (ECPs) could trade
similar options on physical
commodities in the non-DCM
environment, including on SEFs, subject
to the same rules as other physical
commodity swaps.
73 See
63 FR 18832, Apr. 16, 1998.
64 FR 68011, Dec. 6, 1999.
75 In addition, the proposal would withdraw
§ 3.13 in its entirety. Section 3.13 outlines the
registration procedures for ATOMs, and will
become be moot upon the withdrawal of § 32.13.
74 See
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V. Findings Pursuant to Section 4(c)
As noted above, section 723(c)(3)(A)
of the Dodd-Frank Act prohibits swaps
in an agricultural commodity. However,
section 723(c)(3)(B) of the Dodd-Frank
Act explicitly provides that the
Commission may permit swaps in an
agricultural commodity pursuant to
CEA section 4(c), the Commission’s
general exemptive authority, ‘‘under
such terms and conditions as the
Commission shall prescribe.’’
Accordingly, certain of the amendments
proposed herein are proposed for
adoption pursuant to section 4(c), as
amended by the Dodd-Frank Act.
Section 4(c)(1) of the CEA authorizes
the CFTC to exempt any transaction or
class of transactions from any of the
provisions of the CEA (subject to
exceptions not relevant here) in order to
‘‘promote responsible economic or
financial innovation and fair
competition.’’ 76 The Commission may
grant such an exemption by rule,
regulation, or order, after notice and
opportunity for hearing, and may do so
on application of any person or on its
own initiative. In enacting section 4(c),
Congress noted that the goal of the
76 New section 4(c)(1) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 6(c)(1),
as amended by the Dodd-Frank Act, provides in full
that:
In order to promote responsible economic or
financial innovation and fair competition, the
Commission by rule, regulation, or order, after
notice and opportunity for hearing, may (on its own
initiative or on application of any person, including
any board of trade designated or registered as a
contract market or derivatives transaction execution
facility for transactions for future delivery in any
commodity under section 5 of this Act) exempt any
agreement, contract, or transaction (or class thereof)
that is otherwise subject to subsection (a) (including
any person or class of persons offering, entering
into, rendering advice or rendering other services
with respect to, the agreement, contract, or
transaction), either unconditionally or on stated
terms or conditions or for stated periods and either
retroactively or prospectively, or both, from any of
the requirements of subsection (a), or from any
other provision of this Act (except subparagraphs
(C)(ii) and (D) of section 2(a)(1), except that—
(A) unless the Commission is expressly
authorized by any provision described in this
subparagraph to grant exemptions, with respect to
amendments made by subtitle A of the Wall Street
Transparency and Accountability Act of 2010—
(i) with respect to—
(I) paragraphs (2), (3), (4), (5), and (7), paragraph
(18)(A)(vii)(III), paragraphs (23), (24), (31), (32),
(38), (39), (41), (42), (46), (47), (48), and (49) of
section 1a, and sections 2(a)(13), (2)(c)(1)(D), 4a(a),
4a(b), 4d(c), 4d(d), 4r, 4s, 5b(a), 5b(b), 5(d), 5(g),
5(h), 5b(c), 5b(i), 8e, and 21; and
(II) section 206(e) of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act
(Pub. L. 106–102; 15 U.S.C. 78c note); and
(ii) in sections 721(c) and 742 of the Dodd-Frank
Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act;
and
(B) the Commission and the Securities and
Exchange Commission may by rule, regulation, or
order jointly exclude any agreement, contract, or
transaction from section 2(a)(1)(D)) if the
Commissions determine that the exemption would
be consistent with the public interest.
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6103
provision ‘‘is to give the Commission a
means of providing certainty and
stability to existing and emerging
markets so that financial innovation and
market development can proceed in an
effective and competitive manner.’’ 77
In order to analyze the effect of
permitting agricultural swaps to trade
under the same terms and conditions as
other swaps, it is appropriate to
examine some of the major components
of the Dodd-Frank Act that apply to
swaps generally. Section 727 of the
Dodd-Frank Act adds, among other
things, a new CEA section 2(a)(13) that
mandates that swap transaction and
pricing data be made available to the
public. Section 723(a)(3) of the DoddFrank Act adds a new CEA section 2(h)
that provides that the Commission shall
determine which swaps are subject to a
mandatory clearing requirement. New
CEA section 2(h) also provides that
swaps that are required to be cleared
must be executed on a DCM or SEF, if
a DCM or SEF makes the swap available
for trading. As noted above, part 35, as
it is currently written, does not permit
clearing of agricultural swaps and does
not contemplate any reporting of
agricultural swaps data.
Permitting agricultural swaps to trade
under the same terms and conditions as
other swaps should provide greater
certainty and stability to existing and
emerging markets so that financial
innovation and market development can
proceed in an effective and competitive
manner. Treating all swaps, including
agricultural swaps, in a consistent
manner should provide greater certainty
to markets. The Dodd-Frank Act
reporting and trade execution
requirements should lead to greater
market and price transparency, which
may improve market competition,
innovation, and development.
Centralized clearing of agricultural
swaps by robustly regulated central
clearinghouses should reduce systemic
risk and provide greater certainty and
stability to markets by reducing
counterparty risk.
The Commission is requesting
comment on whether swaps in
agricultural commodities should be
subject to the same legal requirements
as swaps in other commodities.
Section 4(c)(2) of the CEA provides:
That the Commission may grant
exemptions only when it determines
that the requirements for which an
exemption is being provided should not
be applied to the agreements, contracts
or transactions at issue; that the
exemption is consistent with the public
77 House Conf. Report No. 102–978, 1992
U.S.C.C.A.N. 3179, 3213.
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interest and the purposes of the CEA;
that the agreements, contracts or
transactions will be entered into solely
between appropriate persons; and that
the exemption will not have a material
adverse effect on the ability of the
Commission or Commission-regulated
markets to discharge their regulatory or
self-regulatory responsibilities under the
CEA.78
The purposes of the CEA include
‘‘ensur[ing] the financial integrity of all
transactions subject to this Act and the
avoidance of systemic risk’’ and
‘‘promot[ing] responsible innovation and
fair competition among boards of trade,
other markets and market
participants.’’ 79 As noted above,
centralized clearing of agricultural
swaps (which is not permitted under the
current part 35 rules) should reduce
systemic risk. Also, allowing
agricultural swaps to trade under the
general swaps rules contained in the
Dodd-Frank Act would allow
agricultural swaps to trade on SEFs and
DCMs (which is prohibited under the
current part 35 rules) which may result
in increased innovation and
competition in the agricultural swaps
market. Reducing systemic risk and
increasing innovation and competition
by permitting agricultural swaps to
trade under the same terms and
conditions as other swaps would be
consistent with the purposes listed
above, the general purposes of the CEA,
and the public interest. The
Commission is requesting comment on
this issue.
As noted above, the Dodd-Frank Act
contains substantial new clearing and
trade execution requirements for swaps.
The clearing requirement is designed,
among other things, to reduce the
counterparty risk of a swap, and
therefore systemic risk. The swap
reporting and trade execution
requirements should provide additional
market information to the Commission,
the markets, and the public. Thus,
78 Section 4(c)(2) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 6(c)(2),
provides in full that:
The Commission shall not grant any exemption
under paragraph (1) from any of the requirements
of subsection (a) of this section unless the
Commission determines that—
(A) The requirement should not be applied to the
agreement, contract, or transaction for which the
exemption is sought and that the exemption would
be consistent with the public interest and the
purposes of this Act; and
(B) The agreement, contract, or transaction—
(i) Will be entered into solely between
appropriate persons; and
(ii) Will not have a material adverse effect on the
ability of the Commission or any contract market or
derivatives transaction execution facility to
discharge its regulatory or self-regulatory duties
under this Act.
79 CEA section 3(b), (7 U.S.C. 5(b)).
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treating agricultural swaps in the same
manner as other swaps may enhance the
ability of the Commission or
Commission-regulated markets to
discharge their regulatory or selfregulatory responsibilities under the
CEA.
Section 4(c)(3) of the CEA includes
within the term ‘‘appropriate persons’’ a
number of specified categories of
persons, and also in subparagraph (K)
thereof ‘‘such other persons that the
Commission determines to be
appropriate in light of * * * the
applicability of appropriate regulatory
protections.’’ Section 723(a)(2) of the
Dodd-Frank Act adds, among other
things, a new CEA section 2(e) that
provides: ‘‘It shall be unlawful for any
person, other than an eligible contract
participant, to enter into a swap unless
the swap is entered into on, or subject
to the rules of, a [DCM].’’ 80 In light of
the comprehensive new regulatory
scheme for swaps and the
enhancements made to the already
robust regulatory system concerning
DCMs 81 that are contained in the DoddFrank Act, the limitation on
participation to eligible contract
participants outside of a DCM, and the
ability of others to enter into a swap on
a DCM, should limit participation to
appropriate persons. The Commission
requests comment on this issue.
VI. Request for Comments Regarding
the Proposed Rules
In addition to specifically requesting
comment on the foregoing questions
related to the issuance of a 4(c) order,
and the other questions set out in the
preceding sections of this notice of
proposed rulemaking, the Commission
poses the following questions:
1. Generally, will the rule changes
and amendments proposed herein
provide an appropriate regulatory
framework for the transacting of (a)
agricultural swaps, and (b) trade options
on all commodities?
2. Does the proposal for new part 35
appropriately address all outstanding
issues as they relate to the transaction
of swaps in an agricultural commodity?
3. Regarding the proposed revisions to
part 32, and specifically the revised
§ 32.4 trade option exemption, will such
revisions significantly affect hedging
opportunities available to currently
active users of the trade options market?
In other words, is there any reason not
to revise § 32.4 as proposed? In
80 New
CEA section 2(e), (7 U.S.C. 2(e)).
for example, new CEA section 5(d) (7
U.S.C. 7(d)) as added by section 735(b) of the DoddFrank Act and amended CEA section 5c (7 U.S.C.
7a–2) as amended by section 745 of the Dodd-Frank
Act.
81 See,
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particular, are there persons who offer
or purchase trade options on nonenumerated agricultural commodities
(e.g., coffee, sugar, cocoa) under current
§ 32.4 who would not qualify as ECPs
and would therefore be ineligible to
participate in such options under
revised § 32.4? If so, should such
participants be excepted from the
general requirement that all swaps
participants must be ECPs unless the
transaction takes place on a DCM?
4. Regarding the proposed withdrawal
of § 32.12 in its entirety, would such
action (in conjunction with the adoption
of the new rules proposed herein)
prejudice or otherwise harm any person,
group of persons, or class of
transactions? In other words, is there
any reason not to withdraw § 32.12 as
proposed?
5. Similarly, and regarding the
proposed withdrawal of § 32.13 (the
agricultural trade option provision) in
its entirety, would such action (in
conjunction with the adoption of the
new rules proposed herein) prejudice or
otherwise harm any person, group of
persons, or class of transactions? In
other words, is there any reason not to
withdraw § 32.13 as proposed?
6. Do the proposals as they relate to
part 33 appropriately limit the scope of
part 33 to DCM-traded options on
futures, leaving DCM-traded options on
physical commodities subject to part
32?
7. Do the proposals outlined herein
omit or fail to appropriately consider
any other areas of concern regarding
agricultural swaps and options in any
commodity?
VII. Related Matters
A. Cost Benefit Analysis
Section 15(a) of the CEA 82 requires
the Commission to consider the costs
and benefits of its actions before issuing
a rulemaking under the Act. By its
terms, section 15(a) does not require the
Commission to quantify the costs and
benefits of the rulemaking or to
determine whether the benefits of the
rulemaking outweigh its costs; rather, it
requires that the Commission ‘‘consider’’
the costs and benefits of its actions.
Section 15(a) further specifies that the
costs and benefits shall be evaluated in
light of five broad areas of market and
public concern: (1) Protection of market
participants and the public;
(2) efficiency, competitiveness and
financial integrity of futures markets;
(3) price discovery; (4) sound risk
management practices; and (5) other
public interest considerations. The
82 7
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Commission may in its discretion give
greater weight to any one of the five
enumerated areas and could in its
discretion determine that,
notwithstanding its costs, a particular
rule is necessary or appropriate to
protect the public interest or to
effectuate any of the provisions or
accomplish any of the purposes of the
Act.
i. Summary of proposed requirements.
The proposed rule would replace the
swap exemption in part 35 and the
commodity options provisions in part
32 with new rules providing, in general,
that agricultural swaps and options
(other than options on futures) would be
treated the same as all other swaps. The
proposed rule would also amend part 33
to remove references to options on
physical commodities. While the
proposed rule does not contain the
substantive requirements that govern
swaps generally (those requirements are
found in the swaps-related rulemakings
that implement the Dodd-Frank Act), for
purposes of this analysis, it is
appropriate to consider the costs and
benefits of treating agricultural swaps
and options as all other swaps are
treated.
ii. Costs. With respect to costs, the
Commission has determined that
allowing agricultural swaps to continue
to trade under the requirements of the
current part 35 would result in
substantial costs. The Dodd-Frank Act
added numerous provisions to the CEA
to protect market participants and the
public, such as the segregation of funds
for uncleared swaps, swap dealer
registration and regulation, including
business conduct standards, and
limitations on conflicts of interest.
Current part 35 exempts qualifying
swaps from nearly all sections of the
CEA, so that these and other protections
contained in Dodd-Frank would not
apply to agricultural swaps entered into
under part 35.
The Dodd-Frank Act contains
numerous provisions designed to
improve price discovery and foster
sound risk management practices, such
as the provisions encouraging the
clearing of swaps and trading of swaps
on DCMs and SEFs. Current part 35, by
its terms, would not allow for the
clearing or trade execution provisions
contained in Dodd-Frank.
Other alternatives to current part 35
could include writing a new part that
made agricultural swaps subject to some
of the provisions contained in the DoddFrank Act, but not other provisions, or
accepting all of the provisions of DoddFrank and adding additional
requirements. The costs of either of
these alternatives (and of retaining
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current part 35, as well) would be to the
efficiency of markets, of swap
participants, and of the Commission.
Since many users of agricultural swaps
would likely engage in other types of
swaps also, those users would be subject
to two regulatory regimes and the
compliance costs that would accompany
following both regimes. Moreover, the
Commission would be required to
develop and implement two regimes.
Also, several of those who commented
regarding the ANPRM noted that the
new Dodd-Frank Act regulatory regime
is robust and comprehensive and
provides significant protections to
market participants, so that any
concerns regarding agricultural swaps
that may have existed under the
provisions of the CFMA should be
allayed. Several commenters noted that
agricultural swaps are important risk
management tools and that such swaps
should be available on the same terms
and conditions as other swaps that are
used to manage risk.
With respect to options generally, the
Commission has determined that
retaining the current parts 32 and 33
would have substantial costs. As noted
above, new CEA § 1a(47) defines swaps
to include options, other than options
on futures. The options rules contained
in part 32 are a confusing tangle of
largely obsolete rules and, even more
important, the general option rules in
parts 32 and 33 do not conform to the
requirements in the Dodd-Frank Act.
iii. Benefits. With respect to benefits,
the Commission has determined that
replacing parts 32 and 35 with rules that
allow agricultural swaps and options to
trade under the same terms and
conditions as other swaps and
amending part 33 to delete references to
options on physical commodities will
have substantial benefits.
Treating agricultural swaps the same
as other swaps would subject those
swaps to the numerous provisions in the
Dodd-Frank Act that protect market
participants and the public, such as the
segregation of funds for uncleared
swaps, limitations on conflicts of
interest, and swap dealer registration
and regulation, including business
conduct standards. Moreover, the
clearing requirement in the Dodd-Frank
Act is intended to reduce systemic risk
which should further protect the public.
The provisions in the Dodd-Frank Act
encouraging the clearing of swaps and
trading of swaps on DCMs and SEFs
should improve price discovery and
foster sound risk management practices.
The current provisions of part 35 do not
permit such clearing or trade execution.
The Dodd-Frank Act mandates that
swap transaction and pricing data be
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6105
made available to the public. The
reporting and trade execution
requirements should lead to greater
market and price transparency. Also,
having a single set of regulations
governing all swap transactions should
improve efficiency and compliance
costs for markets and market
participants.
With respect to options generally, the
Commission has determined that
replacing part 32 and allowing options
(other than options on futures) to trade
in the same manner as other swaps will
have substantial benefits similar to
those for agricultural swaps discussed
above. Moreover, the current part 32 is
outdated and largely obsolete under its
own terms. Finally, the current language
of parts 32 and 33 regarding options
generally does not comply with the
swap provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act
and must be replaced.
iv. Conclusion. After considering the
section 15(a) factors, the Commission
has determined that the benefits of the
proposed parts 32 and 35, and the
amendments to part 33, outweigh the
costs. Accordingly, the Commission has
determined to propose parts 32 and 35,
and the amendments to part 33. The
Commission invites public comment on
its cost-benefit considerations.
Commenters are also invited to submit
any data or other information that they
may have quantifying or qualifying the
costs and benefits of the Proposal with
their comment letters.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
The Regulatory Flexibility Act
(‘‘RFA’’) requires that agencies consider
whether the rules they propose will
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities
and, if so, provide a regulatory
flexibility analysis respecting the
impact.83 The proposed rule, in
replacing part 35, would affect eligible
swap participants (‘‘ESPs’’) (by
eliminating the ESP category and
requiring agricultural swap participants
to be eligible contract participants
(‘‘ECPs’’), unless the transaction occurs
on a designated contract market
(‘‘DCM’’)). Regarding options, the
proposed rule, in amending part 33,
would affect entities that currently
engage in options on physical
commodities on a DCM, and, in
replacing part 32, would affect those
entities that currently engage in options
under § 32.4 and § 32.13(g). By
mandating that agricultural swaps and
options be treated as all other swaps, the
effect of the proposed rule has the
potential to affect DCMs, derivatives
83 5
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clearing organizations (‘‘DCOs’’), futures
commission merchants (‘‘FCMs’’), large
traders and ECPs, as well as swap
dealers (‘‘SDs’’), major swap participants
(‘‘MSPs’’), commodity pool operators
(‘‘CPOs’’), swap execution facilities
(‘‘SEFs’’), and swap data repositories
(‘‘SDRs’’).
i. DCMs, DCOs, FCMs, CPOs, large
traders, ECPs, and ESPs. The
Commission has previously determined
that DCMs, DCOs, FCMs, CPOs, large
traders, ECPs, and ESPs are not small
entities for purposes of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act.84 Accordingly, the
Chairman, on behalf of the Commission,
hereby certifies pursuant to 5 U.S.C.
605(b) that the proposed rules will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities
with respect to these entities.
ii. SDs, MSPs, SEFs, and SDRs. SDs,
MSPs, SEFs, and SDRs are new
categories of registrant under the DoddFrank Act. Therefore, the Commission
has not previously addressed the
question of whether SDs, MSPs, SEFs,
and SDRs are, in fact, ‘‘small entities’’ for
purposes of the RFA. For the reasons
that follow, the Commission is hereby
determining that none of these entities
would be small entities. Accordingly,
the Chairman, on behalf of the
Commission, hereby certifies pursuant
to 5 U.S.C. 605(b) that the proposed
rules, with respect to SDs, MSPs, SEFs,
and SDRs, will not have a significant
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
a. SDs: As noted above, the
Commission previously has determined
that FCMs are not small entities for the
purpose of the RFA based upon, among
other things, the requirements that
FCMs meet certain minimum financial
requirements that enhance the
protection of customers’ segregated
funds and protect the financial
condition of FCMs generally.85 SDs
similarly will be subject to minimum
capital and margin requirements, and
are expected to comprise the largest
global financial firms. Entities that
engage in a de minimis quantity of swap
dealing in connection with transactions
with or on behalf of its customers will
be exempted from designation as an SD.
For purposes of the RFA in this
proposed rulemaking, the Commission
is hereby determining that SDs not be
considered to be ‘‘small entities’’ for
essentially the same reasons that FCMs
have previously been determined not to
be small entities.
b. MSPs: The Commission also has
determined that large traders are not
small entities for the purpose of the
RFA.86 The Commission considered the
size of a trader’s position to be the only
appropriate test for purposes of large
trader reporting.87 MSPs, among other
things, maintain substantial positions in
swaps, creating substantial counterparty
exposure that could have serious
adverse effects on the financial stability
of the United States banking system or
financial markets. For purposes of the
RFA, the Commission is hereby
determining that MSPs not be
considered to be ‘‘small entities’’ for
essentially the same reasons that large
traders have previously been
determined not to be small entities.
c. SEFs: The Dodd-Frank Act defines
a SEF to mean a trading system or
platform in which multiple participants
have the ability to accept bids and offers
made by multiple participants in the
facility or system, through any means of
interstate commerce, including any
trading facility that facilitates the
execution of swaps between persons
and is not a DCM. The Commission
previously determined that a DCM is
not a small entity because, among other
things, it may only be designated when
it meets specific criteria, including
expenditure of sufficient resources to
establish and maintain adequate selfregulatory programs. Likewise, the
Commission will register an entity as a
SEF only after it has met specific
criteria, including the expenditure of
sufficient resources to establish and
maintain an adequate self-regulatory
program. Accordingly, as with DCMs,
the Commission is hereby determining
that SEFs are not ‘‘small entities’’ for
purposes of the RFA.
d. SDRs: The Commission previously
determined DCMs and DCOs not to be
small entities because of ‘‘the central
role’’ they play in ‘‘the regulatory
scheme concerning futures trading.’’ 88
Because of the ‘‘importance of futures
trading in the national economy,’’ to be
designated as a contract market or
registered as a DCO, the respective
entity must meet stringent requirements
set forth in the CEA.89 Similarly, swap
transactions that are reported and
disseminated by SDRs are an important
86 Id.
at 18620.
87 Id.
84 See, respectively and as indicated, 47 FR
18618, 18619, Apr. 30, 1982 (DCMs, CPOs, FCMs,
and large traders); 66 FR 45604, at 45609, Aug. 29,
2001 (DCOs); 66 FR 20740, 20743, Apr. 25, 2001
(ECPs); and 57 FR 53627, 53630, Nov. 12, 1992 and
58 FR 5587, 5593, Jan. 22, 1993 (ESPs).
85 47 FR, at 18619.
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88 47 FR at 18619 (DCMs) and 66 FR at 45609
(DCOs).
89 See new CEA section 5(d), as added by section
735(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act regarding DCM core
principles and new CEA section 5b(c)(2), as added
by section 725(c) of the Dodd-Frank Act regarding
DCO core principles.
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part of the national economy. SDRs will
receive data from market participants
and will be obligated to facilitate swaps
execution by reporting real-time data.90
Similar to DCOs and DCMs, SDRs will
play a central role both in the regulatory
scheme covering swaps trading and in
the overall market for swap transactions.
Additionally, the Dodd-Frank Act
allows DCOs to register as SDRs.
Accordingly, for essentially the same
reasons that DCOs and DCMs have
previously been determined not to be
small entities, the Commission is hereby
determining that SDRs are not ‘‘small
entities’’ for purposes of the RFA.
iii. Entities Eligible to Engage in
Options on Physical Commodities on
DCMs under Part 33. Under the current
part 33, there is no regulatory financial
threshold that must be met in order to
engage in options on physical
commodities on a DCM, so small
entities would be eligible to engage in
such transactions. In fact, there is no
regulatory financial threshold that must
be met in order to engage in any type
of transaction on a DCM. As noted
above, new CEA section 1a(47) provides
that options are swaps, other than
options on futures. New CEA section
2(e) provides that non-ECPs may enter
into swaps, if the swaps are effected on
a DCM. Therefore, even though an
option on a physical commodity is
defined to be a swap under the DoddFrank Act, small entities will continue
to be eligible to enter into such options
on a DCM under the rules proposed
herein, just as they are eligible to enter
into such options on a DCM under the
current part 33. Thus, the rule will have
no effect on the eligibility of small
entities to enter into an option on a
physical commodity on a DCM.
Accordingly, the Chairman, on behalf of
the Commission, hereby certifies
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b) that the
proposed rules will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
with respect to entities eligible to
engage in options on physical
commodities on DCMs under part 33.
iv. Entities Engaged in Options under
§ 32.13(g). The Commission has not
previously addressed the question of
whether entities engaged in agricultural
trade options under § 32.13(g) are, in
fact, ‘‘small entities’’ for purposes of the
RFA. For the reasoning that follows, the
Commission is hereby determining that
entities engaged in options under
§ 32.13(g) would not be small entities.
As noted above, the Commission
previously has determined that ECPs are
90 See new CEA section 21, as added by section
728 of the Dodd-Frank Act.
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not small entities for the purpose of the
RFA based upon, among other things,
the financial and institutional
requirements contained in the
definition. Also as noted above, the
exemption at § 32.13(g) allows for
options on the enumerated agricultural
commodities to be sold when: (1) The
option is offered to a commercial (‘‘a
producer, processor, or commercial user
of, or a merchant handling’’ the
underlying commodity); (2) the
commercial enters the transaction solely
for purposes related to its business as
such; and (3) each party to the option
contract has a net worth of not less than
$10 million. There are two analogous
provisions in the ECP definition, new
CEA sections 1a(18)(A)(v)(III) and
1a(18)(A)(xi)(II). New CEA section
1a(18)(A)(v)(III) provides that an ECP
includes a corporation, partnership,
proprietorship, organization, trust, or
other entity that has a net worth
exceeding $1,000,000 and enters into a
swap in connection with the entity’s
business or to manage the risk
associated with an asset or liability
owned or incurred or reasonably likely
to be owned or incurred by the entity in
the conduct of the entity’s business.
New CEA section 1a(18)(A)(xi)(II)
provides that an ECP includes an
individual who has assets invested on a
discretionary basis, the aggregate of
which is in excess of $5,000,000 and
who enters the swap in order to manage
the risk associated with an asset owned
or liability incurred, or reasonably likely
to be owned or incurred, by the
individual. The participation
requirements of § 32.13(g)(1) are similar
to, if not more restrictive than, the
analogous ECP provisions.
For purposes of the RFA in this
proposed rulemaking, the Commission
is hereby determining that entities
engaged in options under § 32.13(g) not
be considered to be ‘‘small entities’’ for
essentially the same reasons that ECPs
have previously been determined not to
be small entities. Accordingly, the
Chairman, on behalf of the Commission,
hereby certifies pursuant to 5 U.S.C.
605(b) that the proposed rules, with
respect to entities engaged in options
under § 32.13(g), will not have a
significant impact on a substantial
number of small entities.
v. Entities Engaged in Options under
§ 32.4. The Commission has not
previously addressed the question of
whether entities engaged in trade
options under § 32.4 are, in fact, ‘‘small
entities’’ for purposes of the RFA. As
noted above, under § 32.4, an option
must be offered to a producer,
processor, or commercial user of, or a
merchant handling, the commodity,
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who enters into the commodity option
transaction solely for purposes related
to its business as such. The § 32.4 trade
option exemption does not include any
net worth requirement.
Because there is no net worth
requirement in § 32.4, thus allowing
commercial entities of any economic
status to effect option transactions, the
Commission is not in a position to
determine whether entities engaged in
options under § 32.4 include a
substantial number of small entities on
which the proposed rule would have a
significant economic impact. Therefore,
the Commission offers, pursuant to
5 U.S.C. 603, the following initial
regulatory flexibility analysis, which it
shall transmit to the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration as § 603 requires:
• A description of the reasons why
action by the agency is being
considered. The Commission is taking
this regulatory action to withdraw § 32.4
because the Dodd-Frank Act has defined
the term ‘‘swap’’ to include options. This
new definition renders § 32.4 obsolete
in its current form.
• A succinct statement of the
objectives of, and legal basis for, the
proposed rule. The objective of the
withdrawal of § 32.4 is to make the
Commission’s regulations comport with
the CEA as revised by the Dodd-Frank
Act. As stated previously, the legal basis
for the proposed withdrawal is the new
CEA definition of swap, new section
1a(47)(A)(i), and the agricultural swaps
provisions in section 723(c)(3) of the
Dodd-Frank Act.
• A description of and, where
feasible, an estimate of the number of
small entities to which the proposed
rule will apply. The small entities to
which the proposed withdrawal of
§ 32.4 may apply are those commercial
small entities that would be smaller
than an ECP and additionally would
have annual receipts of less than
$750,000, the threshold for the
definition of small entity in the RFA.91
Because there are no reporting or
registration requirements in § 32.4, it is
difficult to quantify the exact number of
small entities, if any, to which the
proposed rule may apply.
• A description of the projected
reporting, recordkeeping, and other
compliance requirements of the
proposed rule, including an estimate of
the classes of small entities which will
be subject to the requirement and the
type of professional skills necessary for
preparation of the report or record. The
proposed withdrawal of § 32.4 does not
contain any reporting, recordkeeping, or
91 5
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Frm 00023
Fmt 4702
other compliance requirements.
However, because the Dodd-Frank Act
provides that options are swaps, the
swaps rules being promulgated under
the Dodd-Frank Act in other
rulemakings will contain reporting,
recordkeeping, and other compliance
requirements. However, the withdrawal
of 32.4 and the application of the DoddFrank Act swaps rules will limit option
transactions to eligible contract
participants, which have been
determined not to be small entities.
Therefore, any entity that is not an ECP
will be unable to enter into option
transactions except on a DCM. Thus,
there will be no reporting,
recordkeeping or compliance
requirements applicable to any small
entity.
• An identification, to the extent
practicable, of all relevant Federal rules
which may duplicate, overlap or conflict
with the proposed rule. Small entities
that do not qualify as ECPs will be
unable to engage in options transactions
except on a DCM under an existing
regulatory scheme. Accordingly, there
will be no rules applicable to them that
could duplicate, overlap, or conflict
with any other Federal rules.
• Description of any significant
alternatives to the proposed rule which
accomplish the stated objectives of
applicable statutes and which minimize
any significant economic impact of the
proposed rule on small entities. These
may include, for example, (1) the
establishment of differing compliance or
reporting requirements or timetables
that take into account the resources
available to small entities; (2) the
clarification, consolidation, or
simplification of compliance and
reporting requirements under the rule
for such small entities; (3) the use of
performance rather than design
standards; and (4) an exemption from
coverage of the rule, or any part thereof,
for such small entities.
A potential alternative to limiting
trade options under § 32.4 to ECPs
would be to create a special rule to
allow non-ECPs to engage in such
transactions. However, the vast majority
of commenters responding to the
ANPRM, including both agricultural
and non-agricultural interests,92
supported treating agricultural swaps
the same as other swaps, which would
entail limiting participation in trade
options (other than options on a DCM)
to ECPs.
Given these facts, the Commission has
determined to treat all trade options in
the same manner as any other swap and
92 See
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summary of comments at III B above.
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thus limit participation to ECPs, unless
the swap is transacted on a DCM.
C. Paperwork Reduction Act
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
(PRA),93 an agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid
control number from the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB). The
Commission believes that these
proposed rules will not impose any new
information collection requirements that
require approval of OMB under the
PRA. The Commission notes that these
proposed rules will involve the
withdrawal of certain provisions related
to Commission forms, and will
ultimately result in the expiration,
cancellation, or removal of such
forms.94 Because the proposals would
ultimately result in removing or deleting
form filing and/or recordkeeping
burdens, it will not result in the creation
of any new information collection
subject to OMB review or approval
under the PRA.
As a general matter, these proposed
rules would allow agricultural swaps
and options to trade under the same
terms and conditions as all other swaps
and these proposed rules do not, by
themselves, impose any new
information collection requirements.
Collections of information that may be
associated with engaging in agricultural
swaps or options are, or will be,
addressed within each of the general
swap-related rulemakings implementing
the Dodd-Frank Act. The Commission
invites public comment on the accuracy
of its estimate that no additional
information collection requirements or
changes to existing collection
requirements would result from the
rules proposed herein.
17 CFR Part 33
Commodity futures, Consumer
protection, Fraud, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
17 CFR Part 35
Commodity futures.
In consideration of the foregoing and
pursuant to the authority contained in
the Act, as indicated herein, the
Commission hereby proposes to amend
chapter I of title 17 of the Code of
Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 3—REGISTRATION
1. The authority citation for part 3
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 522, 522b; 7 U.S.C. 1a,
2, 6, 6a, 6b, 6c, 6d, 6e, 6f, 6g, 6h, 6i, 6k, 6m,
6n, 6o, 6p, 8, 9, 9a, 12, 12a, 13b, 13c, 16a,
18, 19, 21, 23.
§ 3.13
PART 32—REGULATION OF
COMMODITY OPTION TRANSACTIONS
Sec.
32.1
32.2
32.3
32.4
Scope.
[Reserved.]
[Reserved.]
Commodity option transactions;
general authorization.
32.5 [Reserved.]
32.6 [Reserved.]
32.7 [Reserved.]
32.8 Unlawful representations; execution of
orders.
32.9 Fraud in connection with commodity
option transactions.
32.10 Option transactions entered into prior
to the effective date of this part.
32.11 [Reserved.]
32.12 [Reserved.]
32.13 [Reserved.]
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1a, 2 note, 6c(b), and
6(c), unless otherwise noted.
§ 32.1
VIII. Proposed Rules
[Removed and Reserved]
2. Remove and reserve § 3.13.
3. Revise part 32 to read as follows:
Scope.
Administrative practice and
procedure, Brokers, Commodity futures,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
The provisions of this part shall apply
to all commodity option transactions,
except for commodity option
transactions on a contract of sale of a
commodity for future delivery
conducted or executed on or subject to
the rules of either a designated contract
market or a foreign board of trade.
17 CFR Part 32
§ 32.2
[Reserved]
Commodity futures, Consumer
protection, Fraud, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
§ 32.3
§ 32.5
[Reserved]
§ 32.6
[Reserved]
§ 32.7
[Reserved]
§ 32.8 Unlawful representations; execution
of orders.
It shall be unlawful for:
(a) Any person required to be
registered with the Commission in
accordance with the Act expressly or
impliedly to represent that the
Commission, by declaring effective the
registration of such person or otherwise,
has directly or indirectly approved such
person, or any commodity option
transaction solicited or accepted by
such person;
(b) Any person in or in connection
with an offer to enter into, the entry
into, or the confirmation of the
execution of, any commodity option
transaction expressly or impliedly to
represent that compliance with the
provisions of this part constitutes a
guarantee of the fulfillment of the
commodity option transaction;
(c) Any person, upon receipt of an
order for a commodity option
transaction, unreasonably to fail to
secure prompt execution of such order.
§ 32.9 Fraud in connection with
commodity option transactions.
It shall be unlawful for any person
directly or indirectly:
(a) To cheat or defraud or attempt to
cheat or defraud any other person;
(b) To make or cause to be made to
any other person any false report or
statement thereof or cause to be entered
for any person any false record thereof;
or
(c) To deceive or attempt to deceive
any other person by any means
whatsoever; in or in connection with an
offer to enter into, the entry into, or the
confirmation of the execution of, any
commodity option transaction.
[Reserved]
List of Subjects
17 CFR Part 3
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any transaction in interstate commerce
that is a commodity option transaction,
subject to all provisions of the Act,
including any Commission rule,
regulation, or order thereunder,
otherwise applicable to any other swap.
93 44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
94 The affected forms include any forms that
relate to the agricultural trade option rules in
current 17 CFR 32.13 and the dealer option rules
in current 17 CFR 32.12.
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§ 32.4 Commodity option transactions;
general authorization.
Subject to the provisions of this part,
any person or group of persons may
offer to enter into, enter into, confirm
the execution of, maintain a position in,
or otherwise conduct activity related to
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§ 32.10 Option transactions entered into
prior to [effective date of final rule].
Nothing contained in this part shall
be construed to affect any lawful
activities that occurred prior to
[effective date of final rule].
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§ 32.11
[Reserved]
§ 32.12
[Reserved]
§ 32.13
[Reserved]
PART 33—REGULATION OF
COMMODITY OPTION TRANSACTIONS
THAT ARE OPTIONS ON CONTRACTS
OF SALE OF A COMMODITY FOR
FUTURE DELIVERY
4. The authority citation for part 33 is
revised to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1a, 2, 4, 6, 6a, 6b, 6c,
6d, 6e, 6f, 6g, 6h, 6i, 6j, 6k, 6l, 6m, 6n, 6o,
7, 7a, 7b, 8, 9, 11, 12a, 12c, 13a, 13a–1, 13b,
19, and 21, unless otherwise noted.
5. Revise the part heading to read as
set forth above.
6. In § 33.2, revise paragraph (b) to
read as follows:
§ 33.2 Applicability of Act and rules; scope
of part 33.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) The provisions of this part apply
to commodity option transactions that
are options on contracts of sale of a
commodity for future delivery except
for commodity option transactions that
are options on contracts of sale of a
commodity for future delivery
conducted or executed on or subject to
the rules of a foreign board of trade.
*
*
*
*
*
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§ 33.4
[Amended]
7. Amend § 33.4 as follows:
a. Remove the words ‘‘or for options
on physicals in any commodity
regulated under the Act,’’ in the
introductory text;
b. Remove and reserve paragraph
(a)(4);
c. Remove and reserve paragraph
(a)(5)(iv);
d. Remove the words ‘‘or underlying
physical’’ from paragraph (b)(1)(iii); and
e. Remove the words ‘‘, options on
physicals,’’ from paragraph (d)(3).
8. Amend § 33.7 as follows:
a. Revise the second paragraph of the
Options Disclosure Statement in
paragraph (b) introductory text;
b. Remove the phrase ‘‘or underlying
physical commodity’’ from paragraph
(b)(1) each time it appears;
c. Remove the phrase ‘‘(e.g.,
commitment to sell the physical)’’ from
paragraph (b)(1) the first time it appears;
d. Designate the undesignated
paragraphs following paragraph (b)(1) as
paragraphs (b)(1)(i), (ii), (iii), (iv), and
(v), and revise newly designated
paragraph (b)(1)(v);
e. Remove the phrase ‘‘or physical
commodity’’ from paragraph (b)(2)
introductory text and from paragraph
(b)(2)(i);
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f. Designate the undesignated
paragraphs following paragraph (b)(3) as
paragraphs (b)(3)(i), (ii), and (iii);
g. Designate paragraph (b)(4) as
paragraph (b)(4)(i) and the undesignated
paragraph that follows as paragraph
(b)(4)(ii);
h. Designate paragraph (b)(5) as
paragraph (b)(5)(i) and the undesignated
paragraph that follows as paragraph
(b)(5)(ii), and remove the phrase ‘‘or
underlying physical commodity’’ from
newly designated paragraph (b)(5)(i)
both times it appears;
i. Revise newly designated paragraph
(b)(5)(ii);
j. Remove the phrase ‘‘or underlying
physical commodity’’ from paragraph
(b)(6);
k. Remove the phrase ‘‘or the physical
commodity’’ and the phrase ‘‘or
underlying physical commodity’’ from
paragraph (b)(7)(ii);
l. Remove and reserve paragraph
(b)(7)(iv);
m. Remove the phrase ‘‘or underlying
physical commodity’’ from paragraph
(b)(7)(v); and
n. Remove the phrase ‘‘or underlying
physical commodity’’ from paragraph
(b)(7)(x).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 33.7
Disclosure.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
BOTH THE PURCHASER AND THE
GRANTOR SHOULD KNOW THAT THE
OPTION IF EXERCISED, RESULTS IN
THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A
FUTURES CONTRACT (AN ‘‘OPTION
ON A FUTURES CONTRACT’’).
*
*
*
*
*
(1) * * *
(v) The grantor of a put option on a
futures contract who has a short
position in the underlying futures
contract is subject to the full risk of a
rise in the price in the underlying
position reduced by the premium
received for granting the put. In
exchange for the premium received for
granting a put option on a futures
contract, the option grantor gives up all
of the potential gain resulting from a
decrease in the price of the underlying
futures contract below the option strike
price upon exercise or expiration of the
option.
(5) * * *
(ii) Also, an option customer should
be aware of the risk that the futures
price prevailing at the opening of the
next trading day may be substantially
different from the futures price which
prevailed when the option was
exercised.
*
*
*
*
*
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Frm 00025
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
6109
9. Revise part 35 to read as follows:
PART 35—SWAPS IN AN
AGRICULTURAL COMMODITY
(AGRICULTURAL SWAPS)
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 2 note, 6c(b), and 6(c),
unless otherwise noted.
§ 35.1
Agricultural swaps, generally.
(a) Any person or group of persons
may offer to enter into, enter into,
confirm the execution of, maintain a
position in, or otherwise conduct
activity related to, any transaction in
interstate commerce that is a swap in an
agricultural commodity subject to all
provisions of the Act, including any
Commission rule, regulation, or order
thereunder, otherwise applicable to any
other swap; and
(b) In addition to paragraph (a) of this
section, any transaction in interstate
commerce that is a swap in an
agricultural commodity may be
transacted on a swap execution facility,
designated contract market, or otherwise
in accordance with all provisions of the
Act, including any Commission rule,
regulation, or order thereunder,
applicable to any other swap eligible to
be transacted on a swap execution
facility, designated contract market, or
otherwise.
Issued in Washington, DC on January 20,
2011 by the Commission.
David A. Stawick,
Secretary of the Commission.
Appendices to Commodity Options and
Agricultural Swaps—Commission
Voting Summary and Statements of
Commissioners
Note: The following appendices will not
appear in the Code of Federal Regulations.
Appendix 1—Commission Voting
Summary
On this matter, Chairman Gensler and
Commissioners Dunn, Sommers, Chilton and
O’Malia voted in the affirmative; no
Commissioner voted in the negative.
Appendix 2—Statement of Chairman
Gary Gensler
I support the proposed rulemaking to
authorize agricultural swap and commodity
option transactions and subject them to the
same rules applicable to all other swaps. The
Dodd-Frank Act prohibits such transactions
if the Commission does not specifically
authorize them. The Commission was
informed on this proposal by the public
comments received in response to an
advanced notice of proposed rulemaking
published in September of last year that
addressed agricultural swaps. Those
comments overwhelmingly supported
treating agricultural swaps similarly to the
treatment of other swaps brought under
E:\FR\FM\03FEP1.SGM
03FEP1
6110
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 23 / Thursday, February 3, 2011 / Proposed Rules
regulation by the Dodd-Frank Act.
Agricultural producers, packers, processers
and handlers will benefit from the ability to
use agricultural swaps to hedge their risk and
also will benefit from the transparency
brought forth under the Dodd-Frank Act. I
believe this proposed rulemaking provides an
appropriate regulatory framework for the
transaction of agricultural swaps and
commodity options, and I look forward to
hearing the public’s views on this matter.
[FR Doc. 2011–1685 Filed 2–2–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 229, 239 and 249
[Release Nos. 33–9179; 34–63794; File No.
S7–41–10]
RIN 3235–AK83
Mine Safety Disclosure
Securities and Exchange
Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule; extension of
comment period.
AGENCY:
The Securities and Exchange
Commission is extending the comment
period for a release proposing
amendments to its rules to implement
Section 1503 of the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act. [Release No. 33–9164; 75 FR 80374
(December 22, 2010)]. The original
comment period for Release No. 33–
9164 is scheduled to end on January 31,
2011. The Commission is extending the
time period in which to provide the
Commission with comments on that
release for 30 days until Wednesday,
March 2, 2011. This action will allow
interested persons additional time to
analyze the issues and prepare their
comments.
SUMMARY:
Comments should be received on
or before March 2, 2011.
ADDRESSES: Comments may be
submitted by any of the following
methods:
DATES:
jdjones on DSK8KYBLC1PROD with PROPOSALS-1
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s Internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/proposed.shtml);
• Send an e-mail to rulecomments@sec.gov. Please include File
Number S7–41–10 on the subject line;
or
• Use the Federal Rulemaking Portal
(https://www.regulations.gov). Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Elizabeth M. Murphy, Secretary,
VerDate Mar<15>2010
14:22 Feb 02, 2011
Jkt 223001
Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC
20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number S7–41–10. This file number
should be included on the subject line
if e-mail is used. To help us 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/
proposed.shtml). Comments are also
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. All comments
received will be posted without change;
we do not edit personal identifying
information from submissions. You
should submit only information that
you wish to make available publicly.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jennifer Zepralka, Senior Special
Counsel, or Jennifer Riegel, AttorneyAdvisor, Division of Corporation
Finance at (202) 551–3300, at the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC
20549.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Commission has requested comment on
a release proposing amendments to its
rules to implement Section 1503 of the
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act (the ‘‘Act’’).
Section 1503(a) of the Act requires
issuers that are operators, or that have
a subsidiary that is an operator, of a coal
or other mine to disclose in their
periodic reports filed with the
Commission information regarding
specified health and safety violations,
orders and citations, related assessments
and legal actions, and mining-related
fatalities. Section 1503(b) of the Act
mandates the filing of a Form 8–K
disclosing the receipt of certain orders
and notices from the Mine Safety and
Health Administration. The disclosure
requirements set forth in the Act are
currently in effect,1 but the Commission
is proposing to amend its rules to
implement and specify the scope and
application of the disclosure
requirements set forth in the Act and to
require a limited amount of additional
disclosure to provide context for certain
items required by the Act. This release
was published in the Federal Register
on December 22, 2010.
The Commission originally requested
that comments on the release be
received by January 31, 2011. The
1 See
PO 00000
Section 1503(f) of the Act.
Frm 00026
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
nature of the proposed disclosure
requirements differs from the disclosure
traditionally required by the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, and the proposal
requested comment on a variety of
significant aspects of the proposed
rules. The Commission has received
requests for an extension of time for
public comment on the proposal to,
among other things, allow for the
collection of information and improve
the quality of responses.2 The
Commission believes that providing the
public additional time to consider
thoroughly the matters addressed by the
release and to submit comprehensive
comments to the release would benefit
the Commission in its consideration of
final rules. Therefore, the Commission
is extending the comment period for
Release No. 33–9164 ‘‘Mine Safety
Disclosure’’ for 30 days, to Wednesday,
March 2, 2011.
By the Commission.
Dated: January 28, 2011.
Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2011–2373 Filed 2–2–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 229 and 249
[Release No. 34–63793; File No. S7–40–10]
RIN 3235–AK84
Conflict Minerals
Securities and Exchange
Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule; extension of
comment period.
AGENCY:
The Securities and Exchange
Commission is extending the comment
period for a release proposing
amendments to its rules to implement
Section 1502 of the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act. [Release No. 34–63547; 75 FR
80948 (December 23, 2010)]. The
original comment period for Release No.
34–63547 is scheduled to end on
January 31, 2011. The Commission is
extending the time period in which to
provide the Commission with comments
on that release for 30 days until
Wednesday, March 2, 2011. This action
will allow interested persons additional
SUMMARY:
2 See, e.g., National Mining Association (January
3, 2011); National Stone, Sand & Gravel Association
(January 13, 2011); and World Gold Council
(January 7, 2011). Comments are available on the
Commission’s Internet Web site at https://
www.sec.gov/comments/s7-41-10/s74110.shtml.
E:\FR\FM\03FEP1.SGM
03FEP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 23 (Thursday, February 3, 2011)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 6095-6110]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-1685]
=======================================================================
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COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 3, 32, 33, and 35
Commodity Options and Agricultural Swaps
AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (``Commission'' or
``CFTC'') is charged with proposing rules to implement new statutory
provisions enacted by Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act (``Dodd-Frank Act''). The Dodd-Frank Act
provides that swaps in an agricultural commodity (as defined by the
Commission) are prohibited unless entered into pursuant to a rule,
regulation or order of the Commission adopted pursuant to Commodity
Exchange Act (``CEA'' or ``Act''). The Dodd-Frank Act also includes
options (other than an option on a futures contract) in its definition
of swaps. Broadly speaking, the rules proposed herein would implement
regulations whereby swaps in agricultural commodities and all commodity
options (including options on both agricultural and non-agricultural
commodities), other than options on futures, may transact subject to
the same rules as all other swaps. The proposed rules for swaps in an
agricultural commodity would repeal and replace the Commission's
regulations concerning the exemption of swap agreements. Because the
Dodd-Frank Act defines commodity options (other than options on
futures) as swaps, the proposed rules for options would substantially
amend the Commission's regulations regarding commodity option
transactions. Also, current regulations on domestic exchange-traded
commodity option transactions applies not only to exchange-traded
options on futures (which are excluded from the Dodd-Frank definition
of a swap), but also to exchange-traded options on physical commodities
(which are within the Dodd-Frank swap definition). Therefore, the
proposed rules would remove references to options on physical
commodities from the Commission's regulations for exchange-traded
options on futures.
DATES: Written comments must be received on or before April 4, 2011.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by RIN number 3038-AD21,
by any of the following methods:
Agency Web site, via its Comments Online process: https://comments.cftc.gov. Follow the instructions for submitting comments
through the Web site.
Mail: David A. Stawick, Secretary of the Commission,
Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Three Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st
Street, NW., Washington, DC 20581.
Hand Delivery/Courier: Same as mail above.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Please submit your comments using only one method.
All comments must be submitted in English, or if not, accompanied
by an English translation. Comments will be posted as received to
https://www.cftc.gov. You should submit only information that you wish
to make available publicly. If you wish the Commission to consider
information that you believe is exempt from disclosure under the
Freedom of Information Act, a petition for confidential treatment of
the exempt information may be submitted according to the procedures
established in Sec. 145.9 of the Commission's Regulations.\1\
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\1\ 17 CFR 145.9. Unless otherwise indicated, the rules and
regulations referenced in this notice are found in chapter 1 of
title 17 of the Code of Federal Regulations; 17 CFR Chapter 1 et
seq.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission reserves the right, but shall have no obligation, to
review, pre-screen, filter, redact, refuse or remove any or all of your
submission from https://www.cftc.gov that it may deem to be
inappropriate for publication, such as obscene language. All
submissions that have been redacted or removed that contain comments on
the merits of the rulemaking will be retained in the public comment
file and will be considered as required under the Administrative
Procedure Act and other applicable laws, and may be accessible under
the Freedom of Information Act.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Donald Heitman, Senior Special
Counsel, (202) 418-5041, dheitman@cftc.gov, or Ryne Miller, Attorney
Advisor, (202) 418-5921, rmiller@cftc.gov, Division of Market
Oversight, Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Three Lafayette
Centre, 1155 21st Street, NW., Washington, DC 20581.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Introduction
On July 21, 2010, President Obama signed the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act.\2\ Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act
\3\ amended the CEA \4\ to establish a comprehensive new regulatory
framework for swaps and security-based swaps. The legislation was
enacted to reduce risk, increase transparency, and promote market
integrity within the financial system by, among other things: (1)
Providing for the registration and comprehensive regulation of swap
dealers and major swap participants; (2) imposing clearing and trade
execution requirements on standardized derivative products; (3)
creating robust recordkeeping and real-time reporting regimes; and (4)
enhancing the Commission's rulemaking and enforcement authorities with
respect to, among others, all registered entities and intermediaries
subject to the Commission's oversight.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ See Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act, Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010). The text of the
Dodd-Frank Act may be accessed at https://www.cftc.gov./
LawRegulation/OTCDERIVATIVES/index.htm.
\3\ Pursuant to section 701 of the Dodd-Frank Act, Title VII may
be cited as the ``Wall Street Transparency and Accountability Act of
2010.''
\4\ 7 U.S.C. 1 et seq.
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Section 723(c)(3) of the Dodd-Frank Act provides that swaps in an
agricultural commodity (as defined by the Commission) \5\ are
prohibited unless entered into pursuant to a rule, regulation or order
of the Commission adopted pursuant to CEA section 4(c).
[[Page 6096]]
Further, section 733 of the Dodd-Frank Act, new CEA section 5h(b)(2),
provides that a swap execution facility (``SEF'') may not list for
trading or confirm the execution of any swap in an agricultural
commodity (as defined by the Commission) except pursuant to a rule or
regulation of the Commission allowing the swap under such terms and
conditions as the Commission shall prescribe.
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\5\ As discussed below, in accordance with the mandate of the
Dodd-Frank Act, the Commission has recently proposed a definition of
the term ``agricultural commodity.'' See 75 FR 65586, Oct. 26, 2010.
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In addition to the provisions on swaps in an agricultural
commodity, the Dodd-Frank Act definition of ``swap'' includes options
(other than options on futures). Section 721 of the Dodd-Frank Act adds
new section 1a(47) to the CEA, defining ``swap'' to include not only
``any agreement, contract, or transaction commonly known as,'' among
other things, ``an agricultural swap'' or ``a commodity swap,'' but
also ``[an] option of any kind that is for the purchase or sale, or
based on the value, of * * * commodities * * *.'' \6\ As a result of
the Dodd-Frank changes, the Commission is issuing this notice
proposing: (1) To withdraw and replace current part 35; \7\ (2) to
substantially amend current part 32; \8\ (3) to withdraw rule 3.13,
which will be rendered moot by the withdrawal of rule 32.13; and (4) to
amend part 33 \9\ to remove references to options on physical
commodities. As proposed, new part 35 and revised parts 32 and 33 will
provide the regulatory authority under which market participants may
enter into, respectively, swaps in an agricultural commodity
(``agricultural swaps'') \10\ and commodity options.\11\
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\6\ See new CEA section 1a(47), as added by section 721 of the
Dodd-Frank Act. The Dodd-Frank swap definition excludes exchange-
traded options on futures, but not exchange-traded options on
physical commodities (see new CEA section 1a(47)(B)(i)).
Accordingly, the Commission is amending part 33 of its regulations,
``Regulation of Domestic Exchange-Traded Commodity Option
Transactions,'' to the extent that Part 33 applies to exchange-
traded options on physical commodities, which are swaps under the
Dodd-Frank definition. The rules proposed herein would remove any
reference in part 33 to ``options on physicals,'' and such
transactions would become subject to the regulations in revised part
32, discussed below. Other options excluded from the definition of
swap are options on any security, certificate of deposit, or group
or index of securities, including any interest therein or based on
the value thereof, that is subject to the Securities Act of 1933 and
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (see new CEA section
1a(47)(B)(iii)) and foreign currency options entered into on a
national securities exchange registered pursuant to section 6(a) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (see new CEA section
1a(47)(B)(iv)).
\7\ 17 CFR Part 35.
\8\ 17 CFR Part 32.
\9\ 17 CFR Part 33.
\10\ When this notice refers to ``agricultural swaps,'' it is
referring to swaps in an agricultural commodity, as identified in
section 723(c)(3) of the Dodd-Frank Act.
\11\ ``Commodity option'' and ``commodity option transaction''
are defined in 17 CFR 1.3(hh). When this notice refers generally to
``commodity options'' or ``options,'' the terms will refer to all
commodity options transactions other than those options on futures
that are excluded from the Dodd-Frank definition of swap (see
footnote 6, above).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To that end, this notice includes a background discussion of the
statutory and regulatory framework governing agricultural swaps and
commodity options. The notice also provides an overview and summary of
the comments received on the Commission's Advanced Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking regarding the agricultural swaps provisions in the Dodd-
Frank Act.\12\ Finally, the notice includes an explanation of the
rulemakings proposed herein, a discussion of CEA section 4(c) as the
authority for the agricultural swaps aspect of this rulemaking, a
request for comment on the proposed rulemaking, and a section
addressing related matters.
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\12\ See Agricultural Swaps, 75 FR 59666, Sept. 28, 2010.
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II. Background
A. Agricultural Swaps
i. Pre Dodd-Frank
Since 2000, bilateral swaps \13\ between certain sophisticated
counterparties have been generally exempted from the Commission's
jurisdiction pursuant to current CEA section 2(g),\14\ which was added
to the CEA by the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000
(``CFMA'').\15\ However, current section 2(g) specifically excludes an
``agreement, contract, or transaction'' in an ``agricultural
commodity'' from the CFMA swaps exemption.\16\
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\13\ Prior to the Dodd-Frank Act, the Commission had defined a
``swap'' as follows: ``A swap is a privately negotiated exchange of
one asset or cash flow for another asset or cash flow. In a
commodity swap [including an agricultural swap], at least one of the
assets or cash flows is related to the price of one or more
commodities.'' (See 72 FR 66099, note 7, Nov. 27, 2007). As
discussed above, see new CEA section 1a(47) for the statutory
definition of a ``swap,'' as added to the CEA by section 721 of the
Dodd-Frank Act.
\14\ Current section 2(g) provides:
No provision of this Act (other than section 5a (to the extent
provided in section 5a(g)), 5b, 5d, or 12(e)(2)) shall apply to or
govern any agreement, contract, or transaction in a commodity other
than an agricultural commodity if the agreement, contract, or
transaction is--
(1) Entered into only between persons that are eligible contract
participants at the time they enter into the agreement, contract, or
transaction;
(2) Subject to individual negotiation by the parties; and
(3) Not executed or traded on a trading facility.
CEA section 2(g).
\15\ Current CEA section 2(g) was added to the CEA as section
105(b) of the CFMA, enacted as Appendix E to Public Law 106-554.
\16\ Notably, current CEA section 2(g) is not the only statutory
provision added by the CFMA that excludes or exempts bilateral swaps
between eligible contract participants from the Commission's
jurisdiction. Current CEA section 2(d)(1) excludes any such
bilateral ``agreement, contract, or transaction'' in excluded
commodities from Commission jurisdiction, while CEA section 2(h)(1)
creates a similar exemption for a ``contract, agreement or
transaction'' in exempt commodities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While the term ``agricultural commodity'' is not specifically
defined in the Act,\17\ it is used in the Act in conjunction with the
definition of the term ``exempt commodity,'' which is defined as
neither an ``agricultural commodity'' nor an ``excluded commodity.''
\18\ The effect of current CEA section 2(g) was that swaps involving
exempt and excluded commodities were allowed to transact largely
outside of the Commission's jurisdiction or oversight. And while the
Dodd-Frank Act largely rewrites the world of law and regulation
applicable to swaps in non-agricultural commodities,\19\ swaps
involving agricultural commodities,\20\ including both the enumerated
agricultural commodities and other non-enumerated agricultural
commodities,\21\ remain subject to the Commission's pre-CFMA swaps
regulations as set forth in part 35.\22\
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\17\ Note that the Commission has proposed for comment a formal
definition of agricultural commodity. See Agricultural Commodity
Definition, 75 FR 65586, Oct. 26, 2010.
\18\ ``The term `exempt commodity' means a commodity that is not
an excluded commodity or an agricultural commodity.'' Current CEA
section 1a(14). An ``excluded commodity'' is defined in current CEA
section 1a(13) to include financial commodities such as interest
rates, currencies, economic indexes, and other similar items.
\19\ See Dodd-Frank non-agricultural swaps discussion, below.
\20\ See 75 FR 59666, at 59667, Sept. 28, 2010, for an
explanation of the legislative history discussing ``agricultural
commodity'' as used in CEA section 2(g).
\21\ ``Enumerated agricultural commodities'' typically refers to
the list of commodities specifically enumerated in the CEA
definition of ``commodity'' at current CEA Section 1a(4) (renumbered
as section 1a(9) under Dodd-Frank): Wheat, cotton, rice, corn, oats,
barley, rye, flaxseed, grain sorghums, mill feeds, butter, eggs,
Solanum tuberosum (Irish potatoes), wool, wool tops, fats and oils
(including lard, tallow, cottonseed oil, peanut oil, soybean oil,
and all other fats and oils), cottonseed meal, cottonseed, peanuts,
soybeans, soybean meal, livestock, livestock products, and frozen
concentrated orange juice (but not onions).
\22\ 17 CFR Part 35 remains in effect for agricultural swaps
because it was originally adopted under the Commission's CEA section
4(c) exemptive authority, and section 723(c)(3)(B) of the Dodd-Frank
Act grandfathers existing 4(c) exemptions in the context of
agricultural swaps.
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Part 35 provides a broad exemption for certain swap agreements. As
noted, part 35 originally applied to swaps in all
[[Page 6097]]
commodities.\23\ After the CFMA amendments to the CEA, which
statutorily exempted swaps on ``exempt'' and ``excluded'' commodities
from virtually all of the Commission's jurisdiction, part 35 remained
relevant only for agricultural swaps. With the exception of three
outstanding exemptive orders related to cleared agricultural basis and
calendar swaps \24\ (which exempt certain swaps transactions from part
35's non-fungibility and counterparty creditworthiness requirements),
part 35 is the sole existing authority under which market participants
may transact agricultural swaps that are not options.\25\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ Part 35 provides eligible swap participants (as defined in
Sec. 35.1(b)(2)) with a general exemption from the CEA for a swap
that is not part of a fungible class of agreements that are
standardized as to their material economic terms, where the
creditworthiness of each counterparty is a material consideration in
entering into or determining the terms of the swap, and the swap is
not entered into and traded on or through a multilateral transaction
execution facility. See Sec. 35.2.
\24\ Part 35, at Sec. 35.2(d), also provides that ``any person
may apply to the Commission for exemption from any of the provisions
of the Act (except 2(a)(1)(B) [liability of principal for act of
agent]) for other arrangements or facilities, on such terms and
conditions as the Commission deems appropriate, including but not
limited to, the applicability of other regulatory regimes.'' See 17
CFR 35.2(d). The Commission has granted three such exemptions, which
have in each instance been styled as exemptive orders pursuant to
CEA section 4(c). See,
Order (1) Pursuant to Section 4(c) of the Commodity Exchange Act
(a) Permitting Eligible Swap Participants To Submit for Clearing and
ICE Clear U.S., Inc. and Futures Commission Merchants To Clear
Certain Over-The-Counter Agricultural Swaps and (b) Determining
Certain Floor Brokers and Traders To Be Eligible Swap Participants;
and (2) Pursuant to Section 4d of the Commodity Exchange Act,
Permitting Certain Customer Positions in the Foregoing Swaps and
Associated Property To Be Commingled With Other Property Held in
Segregated Accounts, 73 FR 77015, Dec. 18, 2008;
Order (1) Pursuant to Section 4(c) of the Commodity Exchange
Act, Permitting the Chicago Mercantile Exchange to Clear Certain
Over-the-Counter Agricultural Swaps and (2) Pursuant to Section 4d
of the Commodity Exchange Act, Permitting Customer Positions in Such
Cleared-Only Contracts and Associated Funds To Be Commingled With
Other Positions and Funds Held in Customer Segregated Accounts, 74
FR 12316, Mar. 24, 2009; and
Order (1) Pursuant to Section 4(c) of the Commodity Exchange
Act, Permitting the Kansas City Board of Trade Clearing Corporation
To Clear Over-the-Counter Wheat Calendar Swaps and (2) Pursuant to
Section 4d of the Commodity Exchange Act, Permitting Customer
Positions in Such Cleared-Only Swaps and Associated Funds To Be
Commingled With Other Positions and Funds Held in Customer
Segregated Accounts, 75 FR 34983, June 21, 2010.
\25\ Options on agricultural commodities are reviewed in detail
in the options discussion of this notice.
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ii. Dodd-Frank Swaps Provisions
a. Non-Agricultural Swaps
Under the CEA, as amended by the Dodd-Frank Act, only eligible
contract participants (``ECPs'') \26\ may enter into a swap, unless
such swap is entered into on a designated contract market
(``DCM''),\27\ in which case any person may enter into the swap.\28\
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\26\ ``Eligible contract participant'' is defined in current CEA
section 1a(12). Generally speaking, an eligible contract participant
is considered to be a sophisticated investor.
\27\ A designated contract market is a board of trade designated
as a contract market under CEA section 5.
\28\ See new CEA section 2(e) as added by section 723(a)(2) of
the Dodd-Frank Act.
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New CEA section 2(h), as added by section 723(a)(3) of the Dodd-
Frank Act, establishes a clearing requirement for swaps. Under that
subsection, the Commission would determine, based on factors listed in
the statute, whether a swap, or a group, category, type, or class of
swaps, should be required to be cleared. A swap that is required to be
cleared must be executed on a DCM or a SEF,\29\ if a DCM or SEF makes
the swap available for trading. Swaps that are not required to be
cleared may be executed bilaterally. Notwithstanding the above, a swap
entered into by a commercial end user \30\ is not subject to the
mandatory clearing requirement; however an end user may opt to submit
the swap for clearing.
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\29\ The requirements for SEFs are set forth in new CEA section
5h.
\30\ Generally, a commercial end user is described in new CEA
section 2(h)(7) as a non-financial entity that is using swaps to
hedge or mitigate commercial risk and that notifies the Commission
as to how it generally meets its financial obligations associated
with entering into non-cleared swaps.
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Section 731 of the Dodd-Frank Act adds a new section 4s to the CEA
that provides for the registration and regulation of swap dealers and
major swap participants.\31\ The new requirements for swap dealers and
major swap participants include, in part, capital and margin
requirements, business conduct standards, and reporting, recordkeeping,
and documentation requirements.
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\31\ ``Swap dealer'' is defined in new CEA section 1a(49), as
added by section 721(a)(21) of the Dodd-Frank Act. ``Major swap
participant'' is defined in new CEA section 1a(33), as added by
section 721(a)(16) of the Dodd-Frank Act.
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Section 737 of the Dodd-Frank Act amends current CEA section 4a
regarding position limits. Under the Dodd-Frank provisions and amended
CEA section 4a, the Commission is directed to adopt position limits for
futures and options traded on or subject to the rules of a designated
contract market, and swaps that are economically equivalent to such
futures and exchange-traded options for both exempt and agricultural
commodities.
b. Agricultural Swaps
As noted above, under section 723(c)(3) of the Dodd-Frank Act,
swaps in an ``agricultural commodity'' (as defined by the Commission)
\32\ are prohibited unless the swap is entered into pursuant to an
exemption granted under CEA section 4(c). The requirements of section
4(c) are discussed in greater detail, below.\33\
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\32\ See proposed definition of agricultural commodity at 75 FR
65586, Oct. 26, 2010.
\33\ Generally speaking, section 4(c) provides that, in order to
grant an exemption, the Commission must determine that: (1) The
exemption would be consistent with the public interest and the
purposes of the CEA; (2) any agreement, contract, or transaction
affected by the exemption would be entered into by ``appropriate
persons'' as defined in section 4(c); and (3) any agreement,
contract, or transaction affected by the exemption would not have a
material adverse effect on the ability of the Commission or any
contract market to discharge its regulatory or self-regulatory
duties under the CEA.
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Dodd-Frank section 723(c)(3)(B) includes a ``grandfather'' clause
providing that any rule, regulation, or order regarding agricultural
swaps that was issued pursuant to the Commission's exemptive authority
in CEA section 4(c), and that was in effect on the date of enactment of
the Dodd-Frank Act, would continue to be permitted under such terms and
conditions as the Commission may prescribe. Such rules, regulations or
orders would include part 35 with respect to agricultural swaps and the
agricultural basis and calendar swaps noted above, but would not
include options entered into pursuant to part 32.\34\
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\34\ Part 32 was not issued pursuant to the Commission's section
4(c) exemptive authority and thus does not qualify for the Dodd-
Frank grandfather provision for existing 4(c) exemptions. See
section 723(c)(3)(B) of the Dodd-Frank Act.
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In addition to the provisions in section 723(c)(3), section 733 of
the Dodd-Frank Act, new CEA section 5h(b), provides that a SEF may not
list for trading or confirm the execution of any swap in an
agricultural commodity (as defined by the Commission) except pursuant
to a rule or regulation of the Commission allowing the swap under such
terms and conditions as the Commission shall prescribe.
B. Commodity Options
i. Commodity Options Are Swaps
The Dodd-Frank Act defines the term ``swap'' to include not only
the various types of swaps listed in the definition, including
commodity swaps and agricultural swaps, but also options of any kind
(other than options on
[[Page 6098]]
futures).\35\ Even before the Dodd-Frank Act, commodity options have
been subject to the Commission's plenary authority under CEA section
4c(b).\36\ Based on that general prohibition of any option transactions
contrary to any Commission rule, regulation or order prohibiting
options, or allowing them under such conditions as the Commission may
prescribe, the only options currently authorized under the CEA are
those specifically provided for in the Commission's regulations.
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\35\ See new CEA section 1a(47)(B), as added to the CEA by
section 721 of the Dodd-Frank Act. But see also footnote 6, above,
for the list of certain options that are excluded from the swap
definition.
\36\ Section 4c(b) provides:
No person shall offer to enter into, enter into or confirm the
execution of, any transaction involving any commodity regulated
under this Act which is of the character of, or is commonly known to
the trade as, an ``option'', ``privilege'', ``indemnity'', ``bid'',
``offer'', ``put'', ``call'', ``advance guaranty'', or ``decline
guaranty'', contrary to any rule, regulation, or order of the
Commission prohibiting any such transaction or allowing any such
transaction under such terms and conditions as the Commission shall
prescribe. Any such order, rule, or regulation may be made only
after notice and opportunity for hearing, and the Commission may set
different terms and conditions for different markets. CEA section
4c(b); 7 U.S.C. 6c(b).
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ii. Options on Agricultural Commodities; Trade Options
As noted above, the Commission maintains plenary authority over
options and has used that authority to, among other things, issue part
32 of the Commission's regulations. Part 32 includes a general ban on
commodity options,\37\ but allows for commodity option transactions
under certain conditions. Part 32 specifically allows for options on
agricultural commodities in two instances.\38\
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\37\ See Commission regulation 32.11, 17 CFR 32.11.
\38\ Note that part 32 was not issued under the Commission's
section 4(c) exemptive authority. After the effective date of the
Dodd-Frank Act, options on agricultural commodities will also fall
under the Dodd-Frank Act's provisions governing the trading of swaps
(and, specifically, agricultural swaps) since options on commodities
fall within the Act's definition of a swap. Accordingly, it is
important to identify which options on agricultural commodities are
currently being traded pursuant to part 32 and, where appropriate,
to implement rules to preserve that market (in addition to rules
proposed herein that will preserve the majority of the existing non-
agricultural trade option market, subject to the same laws and rules
as all other swaps).
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First, rule 32.13 establishes rules for trading bilateral options
on the ``enumerated'' agricultural commodities (``agricultural trade
options'' or ``ATOs'') whereby ATOs may only be sold by an Agricultural
Trade Option Merchant (``ATOM''), who must first register with the
Commission as such pursuant to CFTC rule 3.13. Since its 1998 adoption
and one amendment in 1999,\39\ the ATOM registration scheme has
attracted only one registrant, which registrant has since withdrawn its
ATOM registration. Accordingly, ATOs currently may only be transacted
pursuant to an exemptive provision found at Sec. 32.13(g)(1). The
exemption at Sec. 32.13(g)(1) allows ATOs to be sold when: (1) The
option is offered to a commercial (``a producer, processor, or
commercial user of, or a merchant handling'' the underlying commodity);
(2) the commercial enters the transaction solely for purposes related
to its business as such; and (3) each party to the option contract has
a net worth of not less than $10 million.
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\39\ 63 FR 18821, Apr. 16, 1998; and 64 FR 68011, Dec. 6, 1999,
respectively.
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In either case (whether transacted pursuant to the ATOM
registration scheme or accomplished via the exemption at Sec.
32.13(g)), the phrase ``agricultural trade option'' refers specifically
to a trade option on an agricultural commodity enumerated in Sec.
32.2.
In addition to the ATO rules in Sec. 32.13, part 32 includes, at
Sec. 32.4, a basic trade option exemption applicable to options on
commodities other than the enumerated agricultural commodities. The
terms of the Sec. 32.4 exemption are essentially the same as those of
the Sec. 32.13(g) exemption with one significant difference--the Sec.
32.4 trade option exemption does not include any net worth requirement.
Under Sec. 32.4, the option must be offered to a producer, processor,
or commercial user of, or a merchant handling, the commodity, who
enters into the commodity option transaction solely for purposes
related to its business as such.
Because the term ``agricultural commodity'' as used in section
723(c)(3) of the Dodd-Frank Act refers to more than just the enumerated
commodities, the Commission recognizes that certain options authorized
under Sec. 32.4 (e.g. options on coffee, sugar, cocoa, and other
agricultural products that do not appear in the enumerated commodity
list) would be considered options on an agricultural commodity. As
such, and without adopting the rules proposed herein, those options
would be swaps on an agricultural commodity and would thereby fall
under the Dodd-Frank Act's general prohibition of agricultural swaps.
iii. Remainder of Part 32
In addition to the foregoing provisions regarding Sec. 32.13
agricultural trade options and Sec. 32.4 general trade options, part
32 contains various other provisions that have been rendered obsolete,
either by the Dodd-Frank Act, by subsequent Commission rulemaking
actions, or by the passage of time. The amendments proposed herein
would substantially update and revise part 32 and remove these
unnecessary provisions.
iv. Part 33
As noted above, current part 33 applies to both exchange-traded
options on futures and exchange-traded options on physical commodities.
However, Dodd-Frank exempts only options on futures from the swaps
definition. Therefore, options on physical commodities, even if traded
on a DCM, are to be regulated as swaps. Accordingly, these proposed
rules would remove all references to exchange-traded options on
physicals from part 33.
III. The ANPRM
A. General Description of the ANPRM
On September 28, 2010 (75 FR 59666), the Commission published an
advanced notice of proposed rulemaking (``ANPRM'') and request for
comment on the appropriate conditions, restrictions or protections to
be included in any rule, regulation or order of the Commission adopted
pursuant to section 4(c) of the Act governing the trading of swaps in
an ``agricultural commodity,'' \40\ as defined by the Commission.\41\
The Commission requested specific input pertaining to five topics:
Current Agricultural Swaps Business (overall size, the types of
entities, and any unique characteristics of agricultural swaps that
distinguish them from other types of physical commodity swaps);
Agricultural Swaps Clearing (the extent to which existing swaps are
cleared or uncleared, whether existing swaps would generally qualify
for a commercial end-user exemption, and the desirability of a clearing
requirement for swaps that do not qualify for such an exemption);
Trading (description of any significant trading problems encountered in
this market); Agricultural Swaps Purchasers (whether agricultural swaps
participants need
[[Page 6099]]
more protections than other physical commodity swaps participants, or
whether special provisions are needed to make it easier for producers
to participate); Designated Contract Markets (should agricultural swaps
be permitted on DCMs to the same extent as other swaps); Swap Execution
Facilities (should agricultural swaps be permitted on SEFs to the same
extent as other swaps); and Trading Outside of DCMs and SEFs (should
agricultural swaps be permitted to trade outside of a DCM or SEF to the
same extent as other swaps, and generally should agricultural swaps be
treated any differently than other types of physical commodity swaps).
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\40\ The Commission also informally solicited comments on its
Web site at https://www.cftc.gov/LawRegulation/DoddFrankAct/OTC_19_AgSwaps.html. In addition, Commission staff has met with market
participants and other interested parties. A complete list of
external meetings held at the Commission may be found on the
Commission's Web site at https://www.cftc.gov/LawRegulation/DoddFrankAct/ExternalMeetings/index.htm.
\41\ The Commission has published for comment a proposed
regulatory definition of the term, ``agricultural commodity'' (See:
75 FR 65586, Oct. 26, 2010, and plans to publish a final definition
in the near future.
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B. Summary of Comments
Nineteen formal comment letters representing a broad range of
interests, including producers, merchants, swap dealers, commodity
funds, futures industry organizations, and academics/think tanks,
responded to the ANPRM. In particular, comment letters were received
from: The American Farm Bureau Federation, the American Soybean
Association, the Commodity Markets Council, the National Association of
Wheat Growers, the National Cattlemen's Beef Association, and the
National Corn Growers Association, who filed a joint statement
(collectively, ``the Ag Associations''); the National Grain and Feed
Association (``NGFA''); the Commodity Markets Council (``CMC,'' which
filed a separate letter in addition to signing onto the joint statement
noted above); the National Milk Producers Federation (``NMPF''); the
Dairy Farmers of America (``DFA''); the National Council of Farmer
Cooperatives (``NCFC''); the Gavilon Group, LLC (``Gavilon''), a feed
manufacturer; Cargill, an agricultural commodities merchant; Allenberg
Cotton, a cotton merchant; the Agricultural Commodity Swaps Working
Group (``Ag Swap Working Group''), comprised of financial institutions
that provide risk management and investment products to agricultural
end users; the International Swaps and Derivatives Association
(``ISDA''); United States Commodity Funds (``USCF''); the Alternative
Investment Management Association, Ltd. (``AIMA''); International
Assets Holding Corporation (``IAHC''); Teucrium Trading; the Futures
Industry Association (``FIA''); the CME Group, Inc. (``CME''); the
Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy (``IATP''); and Dr. Robert
Pollin, a university professor.\42\
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\42\ In addition, two comments were received that did not
directly address the ANPRM.
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The vast majority of commenters supported the equal treatment of
agricultural swaps (including trade options) under the same regulatory
scheme as other categories of swaps. The following statement from the
Ag Associations is representative of this sentiment:
Ag swaps are used, to varying degrees, by our members because
they provide a targeted, customized, cost-effective, and efficient
risk management strategy * * * In a world with increasing inherent
volatility, the need for risk management instruments has never been
greater.
We urge the Commission to treat swaps for all commodities
harmoniously. We believe the comprehensive regulation of swaps
should not be based on distinctions among commodity types. The
generally applicable protections under the Dodd-Frank Bill--such as
reporting, mandatory clearing, mandatory trading of standardized
swaps, minimum capital requirements, and the CFTC's authority to
impose position limits, determine which swaps are subject to
clearing and trading and to exercise emergency powers--will protect
ag swaps from fraud and manipulation.
Two commenters (Dr. Pollin and the IATP) were generally opposed to
the trading of agricultural swaps under the same conditions as other
physical commodity swaps. Both commenters expressed the belief that
speculative investment in agricultural derivatives has increased price
volatility, to the detriment of producers and consumers of agricultural
products, and that trading in agricultural swaps could potentially
exacerbate this problem.
Commenters offered the following specific information and/or
individual perspectives on the five topic areas outlined above:
Current Agricultural Swaps Business. Regarding the state of the
current agricultural swaps business (including trade options),
commenters generally noted that agricultural swaps are used to a
considerable extent, but they were unable to quantify the overall size
of this market. Swap participants include commercial end users
(producers, processors and merchants), hedge funds, swap dealers, and
financial institutions. Generally, commenters did not believe that the
characteristics of agricultural swaps were significantly different from
the characteristics of other types of physical commodity swaps.
Agricultural Swaps Clearing. According to the commenters, most
agricultural swap activity (including trade options) is not cleared
(for example, the NCFC estimated that less than one percent of its
members' swaps are cleared). Several commenters pointed to the small
amount of swaps cleared by DCOs under existing 4(c) exemptions,
relative to the presumed size of the market, as evidence of how few
swaps are cleared. Commenters representing agricultural producers and
merchants indicated that virtually all of their swaps would qualify for
the end-user exemption from the mandatory clearing requirement of the
Dodd-Frank Act. Furthermore, most commenters suggested that
agricultural swaps should be individually scrutinized as to their
clearability, rather than subjecting all agricultural swaps to a
clearing requirement. (NCFC, for example, observed that, ``the low
volume, small sizes and odd lots [of many agricultural swaps] would not
be attractive for exchanges or clearing houses to offer those specific
products.'' Thus, ``if all entities are required to clear agricultural
swaps through an exchange or standardize a non-standard transaction
(both in terms of quantity and structure), costs would likely increase
to a point where the use of swaps as a bona fide hedge/risk management
tool would not be available to segments of the agricultural
marketplace.'') IATP, however, supported mandatory clearing for all
agricultural swaps as a means of discouraging producers from
participating directly in this market.
Trading Practices and Issues. Commenters generally were not aware
of any specific problems pertaining to the existing trade in
agricultural swaps and most saw no need for additional requirements for
trading agricultural swaps relative to other types of swaps. Some
commenters did observe that the Commission's existing regulatory
requirements governing agricultural trade options in the enumerated
agricultural commodities (as distinct from other types of physical
commodities) have restricted the development of this market to the
detriment of commercial end users (see, for example, comments by CMC,
Gavilon and DFA).
Additional Protections for Agricultural Swaps Purchasers. Most
commenters did not believe that agricultural swaps participants need
more protection than participants in other types of commodity swaps.
Most commenters also believed that the Dodd-Frank Act requirement,
limiting swap purchasers to ``eligible contract participants''
(``ECPs''), is appropriate to apply to the purchasers of agricultural
commodity swaps. However, several commenters suggested that
transactions within farmer cooperatives (that is,
[[Page 6100]]
between individual farmer members and their local elevator cooperative,
and between affiliated cooperatives at the local, regional or national
levels) should not be subject to the ECP requirement (for example, the
NCFC states that individual members who do not meet the ECP requirement
should be permitted to purchase swaps directly from their producer
cooperatives, and the NMPF argues that transactions between members and
their cooperatives are internal transactions and should be treated as
such, rather than be subject to provisions that govern transactions
between unaffiliated parties). In addition, one commenter favored
making agricultural trade options (but not other types of swaps)
available from registered swap dealers to non-ECPs who enter into them
explicitly for commercial risk management purposes (see Cargill
comment).
Trading on DCMs and SEFs. Commenters generally supported the
listing and trading of agricultural swaps (including options) on DCMs
and SEFs to the same extent as other physical commodity swaps, with the
exception of Dr. Pollin and the IATP.
Trading off of DCMs and SEFs. Commenters generally expressed the
opinion that agricultural swaps (including options) should be permitted
to trade outside of DCMs and SEFs under the same conditions that apply
to other types of physical commodity swaps (again, with the exception
of the IATP and Dr. Pollin). Most commenters did not believe there were
any specific agricultural commodities that would require special or
different protections. IATP expressed the opinion that ``A higher
collateral and capital requirement should be applied to any bilateral
swaps a CFTC rule would allow.'' Dr. Pollin argued that there is no
good reason for offering any exemptions from the blanket prohibition on
agricultural swaps contained in the Dodd-Frank Act.
In addition to comments addressing the five specific topic areas
directly related to the ANPRM, several commenters requested that the
Commission provide clarity on the treatment of certain types of swap
participants and transactions within the overall regulatory scheme for
swaps. In this regard, several commenters requested that the Commission
clarify that agricultural producer cooperatives that enter into swaps
with their own members or third parties in the course of marketing
their members' agricultural products should be considered to be end
users for purposes of the clearing exception, and further that the
Commission should clarify that producer cooperatives are excluded from
the definitions of swap dealer and major swap participant (see, for
example, comments from NGFA, NCFC, NMPF, and DFA). These issues are
beyond the scope of this proposed rulemaking. The Commission has issued
proposed rules regarding: (1) The end-user exception to mandatory
clearing of swaps pursuant to Sec. 723 of the Dodd-Frank Act; \43\ and
(2) further definition of certain terms regarding market participants,
including the terms ``swap dealer'' and ``major swap participant,''
pursuant to Sec. 712(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act.\44\ The Commission
encourages all interested parties to submit comments addressing these
proposed rules, including responses to the requests for comment set
forth therein.
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\43\ See: End User Exception to Mandatory Clearing of Swaps, 75
FR 80747, Dec. 23, 2010 (comment period closes February 22, 2011).
\44\ See: Further Definition of ``Swap Dealer,'' ``Security-
Based Swap Dealer,'' ``Major Swap Participant,'' ``Major Security-
Based Swap Participant'' and ``Eligible Contract Participant,'' 75
FR 80174, Dec. 21, 2010 (joint rulemaking with Securities and
Exchange Commission (``SEC''), comment period closes February 22,
2011).
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Some commenters also requested that the Commission clarify that
certain types of transactions (embedded options in forward contracts
\45\ and book-outs \46\) fall within the definition of an excluded
forward contract rather than the definition of a swap. These issues,
too, are beyond the scope of this proposed rulemaking. Commission
staff, jointly with staff of the SEC, is also considering further
definition of terms regarding certain products, including the term
``swap,'' pursuant to Sec. 712(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act. Any comment
addressing the distinction between swaps and forward contracts will be
shared with appropriate staff.
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\45\ See: Characteristics Distinguishing Cash and Forward
Contracts and ``Trade'' Options, Interpretive Statement of the
Commission's General Counsel, 50 FR 39656, Sept. 30, 1985, regarding
the differences between forward contracts and options.
\46\ A book-out is a separate, subsequent agreement whereby two
commercial parties to a forward contract, who find themselves in a
delivery chain or circle at the same delivery point, can agree to
settle (or ``book-out'') their delivery obligations by exchanging a
net payment. See: Statutory Interpretation Regarding Forward
Transactions, 55 FR 39188, Sept. 25, 1990.
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IV. Explanation of the Proposed Rules
A. Introduction
After considering the complete record in this matter, including all
comments on the ANPRM, the Commission is proposing the rulemaking
contained herein. Broadly speaking, the proposed rules would implement
regulations whereby (1) swaps in agricultural commodities, and (2) all
commodity options (including options on both agricultural and non-
agricultural commodities), other than options on futures, may transact
subject to the same rules as all other swaps.
First, the proposal would withdraw existing part 35 of the
Commission's regulations--thus withdrawing the provisions originally
adopted in 1993 to provide legal certainty for the bilateral swaps
market by largely exempting bilateral swaps transactions from CEA
regulation.\47\ Second, pursuant to the exemptive authority in CEA
section 4(c), the proposed rules would adopt a new part 35 to provide
the primary authority for transacting swaps in an agricultural
commodity (``agricultural swaps'') as authorized by Sections 723(c)(3)
and 733 of the Dodd-Frank Act. Third, the proposed rulemaking would
substantially update and revise the existing framework for off-exchange
options in existing part 32. In part pursuant to the exemptive
authority in CEA section 4(c) and in part pursuant to the Commission's
general rulemaking authority set out at CEA section 8a(5) and the
Commission's plenary authority over options, revised part 32 would
affirm that all commodity options (other than options on futures) are
swaps, and as such will be subject to all provisions of the CEA
otherwise applicable to swaps, including any rule, regulation, or order
thereunder. The proposed rulemaking would also withdraw rule 3.13,
which sets out procedures for the registration of agricultural trade
option merchants and their associated persons. Rule 3.13 will become
moot upon the withdrawal of rule 32.13, which includes the underlying
registration requirement. Finally, the proposed rules would revise part
33 to delete references to exchange-traded options on physical
commodities (which will now be regulated as swaps), leaving only
exchange-traded options on futures subject to part 33.
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\47\ ``[Part 35 * * *] exempt[s] swap agreements (as defined
herein) meeting specified criteria from regulation under the
Commodity Exchange Act (the ``Act''). This rule was proposed
pursuant to authority recently granted the Commission, a purpose of
which is to give the Commission a means of improving the legal
certainty of the market for swaps agreements.'' 58 FR 5587, Jan. 22,
1993.
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B. Withdrawal of Current Part 35
In enacting the Futures Trading Practices Act of 1992 (the ``1992
Act''),\48\ Congress added section 4(c) to the CEA and authorized the
Commission, by rule, regulation, or order, to exempt any agreement,
contract or transaction, or class thereof, from the exchange-trading
[[Page 6101]]
requirement of CEA section 4(a), or (with minor exceptions not relevant
here) from any other provision of the Act.\49\ Pursuant to its new
authority in section 4(c), the Commission proposed in 1992 \50\ and
adopted in 1993 \51\ part 35 of the Commission's regulations, generally
exempting certain swap agreements from the CEA. As explained above,
part 35 originally applied to all commodities. However, certain
amendments to the CEA made by the CFMA had the effect of making part 35
relevant only for swaps in agricultural commodities.
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\48\ Public Law 102-546 (Oct. 28, 1992).
\49\ While section 4(c) was amended by the Dodd-Frank Act, for
the purposes of this rulemaking its function and effect have not
changed. See 4(c) discussion, below.
\50\ See the original proposal at 57 FR 53627, Nov. 12, 1992.
See also 57 FR 58423, Dec. 28, 1992, extending the comment period
for an additional fourteen days.
\51\ 58 FR 5587, Jan. 22, 1993.
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The Dodd-Frank Act amends, repeals, or replaces many CEA sections
added by the CFMA (including the statutory exemptions for swaps in
excluded and exempt commodities at current CEA sections 2(d), 2(g), and
2(h)). To avoid any uncertainty as to whether the Commission will allow
bilateral swaps in non-agricultural commodities to revert to reliance
on existing part 35 for exemption from the CEA and the Dodd-Frank
amendments, the Commission is proposing to revoke current part 35 in
its entirety. Once part 35 is revoked, the only swaps authorized under
the CEA or the Commission's rules will be those swaps that comport with
the requirements of the CEA, as amended by the Dodd-Frank Act.\52\
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\52\ Section 723(c)(3)(B) of the Dodd-Frank Act grandfathers
existing 4(c) orders that relate to agricultural swaps unless
superseded by subsequent Commission order. This notice of proposed
rulemaking is not taking any action to alter the continued
effectiveness of the orders identified in footnote 24 above. See
also, 76 FR [ ---------- ] n. 38Jan. 20, 2011.
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C. Proposed New Part 35
The provisions of proposed new part 35 would generally provide that
agricultural swaps may be transacted subject to all provisions of the
CEA, and any Commission rule, regulation or order thereunder, that is
otherwise applicable to swaps. New part 35 would also clarify that by
issuing a rule allowing agricultural swaps to transact subject to the
laws and rules applicable to all other swaps, the Commission is
allowing agricultural swaps to transact on DCMs, SEFs, or otherwise to
the same extent that all other swaps are allowed to trade on DCMs,
SEFs, or otherwise.
D. Revisions to Part 32
Because commodity options (other than options on futures) clearly
fall within the Dodd-Frank Act definition of swap,\53\ the Commission
is proposing to substantially update and revise the now duplicative
off-exchange commodity option regulations set forth in current part 32.
Revised part 32, authorized by the Commission's plenary options
authority, will provide legal certainty for the commodity options
market by making it clear that commodity options (other than options on
futures) are authorized to continue subject to all provisions of the
CEA, and any rule, regulation, or order thereunder, that is otherwise
applicable to swaps.
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\53\ See footnote 6 above.
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In order to support the revisions to part 32, including the
withdrawal of several sections in their entirety, the Commission
reviewed and analyzed each provision of existing part 32, including the
corresponding history of the Commission's development of commodity
options regulation. Based on its review, the Commission has determined
that there would be little practical effect and no detrimental
consequences in adopting the proposed revisions to the existing
commodity options regime in part 32.
i. 1978 Suspension of Commodity Options (Sec. 32.11)
From a historical perspective, the Commission adopted its first
broad anti-fraud rule applicable to commodity options transactions on
June 24, 1975.\54\ After an unsuccessful effort to generally permit
off-exchange commodity options subject to certain rules and regulations
(that is, original part 32),\55\ the Commission issued a general
suspension of commodity options transactions in 1978.\56\ The
suspension was adopted by the Commission on April 17, 1978 and was
added to the original part 32 as Sec. 32.11.\57\ Upon its adoption in
1978, Sec. 32.11 suspended all commodity option transactions (except
for those trade options authorized by Sec. 32.4) \58\ that had been
otherwise authorized by original part 32. Aside from later amendments
that authorized commodity options conducted on or subject to the rules
of a contract market \59\ or a foreign board of trade,\60\ current
Sec. 32.11 remains in the same form as when originally adopted in
1978. Accordingly, the bulk of original part 32, as discussed below,
has been obsolete and/or irrelevant since the adoption of Sec. 32.11
in 1978. This includes the registration requirements in Sec. 32.3, the
disclosure requirements in Sec. 32.5, the segregation requirements in
Sec. 32.6, and the books and recordkeeping requirements in Sec. 32.7.
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\54\ 40 FR 26504, June 24, 1975. Originally designated as 17 CFR
30.01, the provision was re-designated as Sec. 32.9 and
incorporated into the original part 32 regulations adopted on
November 24, 1976.
\55\ See discussion and review of original part 32 below.
\56\ Exchange-traded options on futures were not affected since
they were not available at the time and only later became available
when the Commission initiated a pilot program to allow exchange-
traded options on futures in 1981. See 46 FR 54500, Nov. 3, 1981.
\57\ See 43 FR 16153, Apr. 17, 1978.
\58\ Dealer options, which were also being traded at the time,
were also subsequently exempted from the general options ban. See 43
FR 23704, June 1, 1978. Dealer options are discussed below in
connection with the withdrawal of rule 32.12.
\59\ See 47 FR at 57016, Dec. 22, 1982.
\60\ See 52 FR at 29003, Aug. 5, 1987.
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ii. Original Part 32 (Sec. Sec. 32.1-32.10)
Original part 32 was adopted by the Commission on November 24,
1976, and included substantially the same provisions as they exist in
current Sec. Sec. 32.1-32.10.\61\
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\61\ See 43 FR 51808, Nov. 24, 1976.
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a. 32.1
The definitions section, Sec. 32.1, has been substantively
modified only once \62\ since its adoption in 1976. That revision added
a scope provision as Sec. 32.1(a). The purpose of adding the scope
provision was to make clear that part 32 applied only to off-exchange
bilateral options, and that it would not apply to commodity options
conducted on or subject to the rules of a contract market. The Sec.
32.1(a) scope provision was amended once in 1987 to also exclude from
part 32 commodity options conducted on or subject to the rules of a
foreign board of trade.\63\ Beyond that, Sec. 32.1 has not been
substantively amended since its adoption in 1976.
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\62\ See 47 FR at 57016, Dec. 22, 1982.
\63\ See 52 FR at 29003, Aug. 5, 1987.
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Because commodity options (other than options on futures) are now
swaps and will be authorized to transact subject to the swaps rules,
the scope provision in Sec. 32.1 has been updated and retained in
revised part 32 as appropriate. The proposal would delete the
definitions in current Sec. 32.1 as duplicative--the terms therein are
already defined elsewhere, either in other Commission regulations or in
the CEA, and there is no need for their repetition in part 32.
b. 32.2
As originally adopted, Sec. 32.2(a) prohibited commodity options
transactions on a list of enumerated
[[Page 6102]]
agricultural commodities and Sec. 32.2(b) prohibited commodity options
involving any contract of sale of any commodity for future delivery
traded on or subject to the rules of any contract market or involving
the prices of such contracts, unless done pursuant to a subsequent
Commission rulemaking. Section 32.2 was amended once in 1992 to remove
Sec. 32.2(b),\64\ and Sec. 32.2 was amended again in 1998 to
reference the Commission's newly adopted Agricultural Trade Option
rules in Sec. 32.13. Because this proposal would treat agricultural
swaps the same as swaps in any other commodity, and because all
commodity options (other than options on futures) are now swaps, it is
no longer necessary to distinguish between agricultural and non-
agricultural commodities for the purposes of the Commission's options
regulations, and thus the Commission is proposing to withdraw Sec.
32.2.
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\64\ See 57 FR 27925, June 23, 1992. At that time, original
Sec. 32.2(a) was re-designated as simply Sec. 32.2.
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c. 32.3, 32.5, 32.6, and 32.7
As adopted in 1976, Sec. 32.3 provided that only firms registered
as futures commission merchants, or registered associated persons of
such firms, could offer or sell commodity options under part 32.
Section 32.5 imposed certain disclosure requirements for options
sellers, Sec. 32.6 addressed segregation of funds, and Sec. 32.7 set
forth the books and recordkeeping requirements. Because the 1978
suspension of commodity options in Sec. 32.11 remains in effect, the
requirements in Sec. Sec. 32.3, 32.5, 32.6, and 32.7 (the ``abandoned
sections'') are of no practical effect--there are no authorized
transactions subject to these abandoned sections. The commodity options
that are allowed to transact outside of the Sec. 32.11 suspension
(e.g., Sec. 32.4 trade options, Sec. 32.12 dealer options, Sec.
32.13 agricultural trade options, and commodity option transactions
conducted on or subject to the rules of a contract market or a foreign
board of trade) are each exempted from the requirements of the
abandoned sections. Accordingly, the proposal would withdraw Sec. Sec.
32.3, 32.5, 32.6, and 32.7.
d. 32.4
From its adoption, part 32 has included, in Sec. 32.4, an
exemption for commodity options used by commercial entities entering
into the commodity option transactions solely for purposes related to
their business.\65\ The so-called ``trade option exemption'' has
remained unchanged since 1976 and has provided legal certainty for that
segment of the commodity options market available to commercial end
users. This notice proposes revising the trade option exemption to
provide that commodity options may transact subject to the same laws,
rules, regulations, and orders otherwise applicable to all swaps. The
rationale for the revision is that the swaps rules already allow for
the equivalent of a trade option--the Dodd-Frank amendments permit
bilateral swaps, where both parties are ECPs,\66\ to remain uncleared
at the election of a commercial end user. The primary substantive
change to this market will be that, while current Sec. 32.4 imposes no
minimum net worth requirement on participants, both purchasers and
sellers of commodity options under revised Sec. 32.4 will have to
qualify as ECPs, just as swaps (other than swaps on a DCM) may only be
entered into by ECPs. The Commission is specifically requesting comment
as to whether this distinction will significantly affect hedging
opportunities available to currently active market participants.
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\65\ Sec. 32.4(a) exempts a commodity option when it is offered
to ``a producer, processor, or commercial user of, or a merchant
handling, the commodity which is the subject of the commodity option
transaction, or the products or by-products thereof, and that such
producer, processor, commercial user or merchant is offered or
enters into the commodity option transaction solely for purposes
related to its business as such.'' See Sec. 32.4(a).
\66\ See footnote 26, above.
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e. 32.8 and 32.9
Sections 32.8 and 32.9 address unlawful representations and fraud
in connection with commodity option transactions. These two consumer
protection provisions are important to both the Commission and the
commodity options markets. Even though commodity options are now swaps,
subject to the swaps rules and any anti-fraud or other customer
protection rules otherwise applicable to swaps, the Commission views
Sec. Sec. 32.8 and 32.9 as important protections for commodity options
participants. With the exception