Effective Date for Swap Regulation, 42508-42534 [2011-18248]
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(2) At its option, the Commission may
use one or more of the following
methods to determine what sizes of
children’s upper outerwear are
equivalent to sizes 2T to 16:
(i) Garments in girls’ size Large (L)
and boys’ size Large (L) are equivalent
to girls’ or boys’ size 12, respectively.
Garments in girls’ and boys’ sizes
smaller than Large (L), including ExtraSmall (XS), Small (S), and Medium (M),
are equivalent to sizes smaller than size
12. The fact that an item of children’s
upper outerwear with a hood and neck
drawstring is labeled as being larger
than a size Large (L) does not
necessarily mean that the item is not
equivalent to a size in the range of 2T
to 12.
(ii) Garments in girls’ size Extra-Large
(XL) and boys’ size Extra-Large (XL) are
equivalent to size 16. The fact that an
item of children’s upper outerwear with
a waist or bottom drawstring is labeled
as being larger than size Extra-Large
(XL) does not necessarily mean that the
item is not equivalent to a size in the
range of 2T to 16.
(iii) In cases where garment labels
give a range of sizes, if the range
includes any size that is subject to a
requirement in ASTM F 1816–97, the
garment will be considered subject,
even if other sizes in the stated range,
taken alone, would not be subject to the
requirement. For example, a coat sized
12 through 14 remains subject to the
prohibition of hood and neck area
drawstrings, even though this
requirement of ASTM F 1816–97 only
applies to garments up to size 12. A coat
size 13 through 15 would not be
considered within the scope of ASTM F
1816–97’s prohibition of neck and hood
drawstrings, but would be subject to the
requirements for waist or bottom
drawstrings.
(iv) To fall within the scope of
paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (2)(iii) of
this section, a garment need not state
anywhere on it, or on its tags, labels,
package, or any other materials
accompanying it, the term ‘‘girls,’’ the
term ‘‘boys,’’ or whether the garment is
designed or intended for girls or boys.
(v) The Commission may use any
other evidence that would tend to show
that an item of children’s upper
outerwear is a size that is equivalent to
sizes 2T to 16.
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Dated: July 12, 2011.
Todd A. Stevenson,
Secretary, U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
[FR Doc. 2011–17961 Filed 7–18–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355–01–P
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING
COMMISSION
17 CFR Chapter 1
Effective Date for Swap Regulation
AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading
Commission.
ACTION: Final Order.
SUMMARY: On June 17, 2011, the
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission (‘‘CFTC’’ or the
‘‘Commission’’) published for public
comment in the Federal Register a
proposed order that would grant,
pursuant to the Commission’s
exemptive authority pursuant to the
Commodity Exchange Act (‘‘CEA’’),
certain temporary relief from the
provisions of the CEA added or
amended by title VII of the Dodd-Frank
Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act (‘‘Dodd-Frank Act’’) that
reference one or more terms regarding
entities or instruments that title VII
requires be ‘‘further defined,’’ such as
the terms ‘‘swap,’’ ‘‘swap dealer,’’
‘‘major swap participant,’’ or ‘‘eligible
contract participant,’’ to the extent that
requirements or portions of such
provisions specifically relate to such
referenced terms and do not require a
rulemaking. The CFTC also proposed to
grant temporary relief from certain
provisions of the CEA that will or may
apply to certain agreements, contracts,
and transactions in exempt or excluded
commodities as a result of the repeal of
various CEA exemptions and exclusions
as of the general effective date set forth
in section 754 of the Dodd-Frank Act,
July 16, 2011. Upon consideration of the
full record, the Commission has
determined to issue this final exemptive
order (‘‘Final Order’’) essentially as
proposed, with appropriate or necessary
modification or clarification.
DATES: Effective July 14, 2011.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Terry Arbit, Deputy General Counsel,
202–418–5120, tarbit@cftc.gov, or
Harold Hardman, Deputy General
Counsel, 202–418–5120,
hhardman@cftc.gov, Office of the
General Counsel, or Steven Kane,
Consultant, 202–418–5911,
skane@cftc.gov, Office of the Chief
Economist, CFTC, Three Lafayette
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Centre, 1151 21st Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20581.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
On July 21, 2010, President Obama
signed the Dodd-Frank Act.1 Title VII of
the Dodd-Frank Act amends the CEA 2
to establish a comprehensive new
regulatory framework for 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
rulemaking and enforcement authorities
of the Commission with respect to,
among others, all registered entities and
intermediaries subject to the
Commission’s oversight. Title VII also
includes amendments to the federal
securities laws to establish a similar
regulatory framework for security-based
swaps under the authority of the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘SEC’’).
Section 754 of the Dodd-Frank Act
states that, unless otherwise provided,
the provisions of subtitle A of title VII
of the Dodd-Frank Act (‘‘Title VII’’) 3
‘‘shall take effect on the later of 360
days after the date of the enactment of
this subtitle or, to the extent a provision
of this subtitle requires a rulemaking,
not less than 60 days after publication
of the final rule or regulation
implementing such provision of this
subtitle.’’ The date 360 days after the
date of enactment is July 16, 2011.
To implement the Dodd-Frank Act, as
of July 8, 2011, the Commission has
issued 52 advance notices of proposed
rulemaking or notices of proposed
rulemaking, two interim final rules, six
final rules, and one proposed
interpretive order. The regulatory
requirements that have been proposed
by the Commission present a
substantially complete mosaic of the
Commission’s proposed regulatory
framework under Title VII. In light of
1 See Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act, Public Law. 111–203, 124
Stat. 1376 (2010).
2 7 U.S.C. 1 et seq.
3 Subtitle A of Title VII contains two parts. Part
I, entitled ‘‘Regulatory Authority,’’ consists of
sections 711–720; part II, entitled ‘‘Regulation of
Swap Markets,’’ consists of sections 721–754.
Subtitle B of Title VII is entitled ‘‘Regulation of
Security-Based Swap Markets,’’ and consists of
sections 761–774. References to ‘‘Title VII’’ in this
Release shall include only subtitle A of Title VII.
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this substantially complete mosaic, the
Commission reopened or extended the
comment period of many of its proposed
rulemakings in order to provide the
public with an additional opportunity to
comment on the proposed new
regulatory framework for swaps, either
in part or as a whole.4 The extended
comment period closed on June 3, 2011.
The Commission also has solicited
public comments on the phasing of rule
implementation (i.e., identifying which
requirements can be met sooner and
which ones will take more time).5
Section 712(d)(1) of the Dodd-Frank
Act requires the Commission and the
SEC to further define certain terms used
in Title VII, including the terms ‘‘swap,’’
‘‘swap dealer,’’ ‘‘major swap
participant,’’ and ‘‘eligible contract
participant.’’ 6 Section 721(c) requires
the Commission to adopt a rule to
further define the terms ‘‘swap,’’ ‘‘swap
dealer,’’ ‘‘major swap participant,’’ and
‘‘eligible contract participant’’ to
prevent evasion of statutory and
regulatory obligations.7 The
Commission has issued two notices of
proposed rulemaking that address these
further definitions.8
4 See Reopening and Extension of Comment
Periods for Rulemakings Implementing the DoddFrank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act, 76 FR 25274, May 4, 2011.
5 The Commission has noted its ability to phase
in implementation of the new requirements based
on factors such as: The type of swap, including by
asset class; the type of market participants that
engage in such trades; the speed with which market
infrastructures can meet the new requirements; and
whether registered market infrastructures or
participants might be required to have policies and
procedures in place ahead of compliance with such
policies and procedures by non-registrants. See
https://www.cftc.gov/ucm/groups/public/
@newsroom/documents/file/
staffconcepts050211.pdf.
6 Section 712(d)(1) provides: ‘‘Notwithstanding
any other provision of this title and subsections (b)
and (c), the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission and the Securities and Exchange
Commission, in consultation with the Board of
Governors [of the Federal Reserve System], shall
further define the terms ‘swap’, ‘security-based
swap’, ‘swap dealer’, ‘security-based swap dealer’,
‘major swap participant’, ‘major security-based
swap participant’, and ‘security-based swap
agreement’ in section 1a(47)(A)(v) of the
Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1a(47)(A)(v))
and section 3(a)(78) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(78)).’’
7 Section 721(c) provides: ‘‘To include
transactions and entities that have been structured
to evade this subtitle (or an amendment made by
this subtitle), the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission shall adopt a rule to further define the
terms ‘swap’, ‘swap dealer’, ‘major swap
participant’, and ‘eligible contract participant’.’’
8 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 (‘‘Entity Definitions’’) and
Further Definition of ‘‘Swap,’’ ‘‘Security-Based
Swap,’’ and ‘‘Security-Based Swap Agreement’’;
Mixed Swaps; Security-Based Swap Agreement
Recordkeeping, 76 FR 29818, May 23, 2011.
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The Commission’s final rulemakings
further defining the terms in sections
712(d) and 721(c) will not be in place
as of July 16, 2011. Consequently,
concerns have been raised about effects
upon the swaps market and the
applicability of various regulatory
requirements to certain agreements,
contracts, and transactions during the
period between July 16, 2011 and the
date(s) that those rulemakings have been
completed. To address these concerns,
and to ‘‘strive to ensure that current
practices will not be unduly disrupted
during the transition to the new
regulatory regime,’’ 9 the Commission
proposed to exercise its authority under
CEA section 4(c) and section 712(f) of
the Dodd-Frank Act.
Section 4(c) of the CEA, as amended
by the Dodd-Frank Act, provides the
Commission with authority to exempt
certain agreements, contracts, and
transactions (referred to hereafter
collectively as ‘‘transactions’’) that may
otherwise be subject to the CEA from
various provisions of the CEA.10 Section
712(f) of the Dodd-Frank Act states that
‘‘in order to prepare for the effective
dates of the provisions of this Act,’’
including the general effective date set
forth in section 754, the Commission
may ‘‘exempt persons, agreements,
contracts, or transactions from
provisions of this Act, under the terms
contained in this Act.’’ Section 754
specifies that unless otherwise provided
in Title VII, provisions requiring a
rulemaking become effective ‘‘not less
than 60 days after publication of the
final rule’’ (but not before July 16, 2011).
The provisions of Title VII can be
grouped into four major categories: (1)
Provisions that require a rulemaking (for
which relief was not proposed); (2) selfeffectuating provisions that reference
terms that require further definition; (3)
self-effectuating provisions that do not
reference terms that require further
definition and that repeal provisions of
current law; and (4) self-effectuating
provisions for which relief was not
proposed.
Category 1 provisions are not selfeffectuating because they require a
rulemaking. A significant number of the
Title VII provisions fall into this
category. Examples of Category 1
provisions include new CEA section
4s(a) (governing registration of swap
dealers and major swap participants),
new CEA section 4s(e) (governing
capital and margin requirements for
9 See Notice Regarding the Treatment of Petitions
Seeking Grandfather Relief for Trading Activity
Done in Reliance Upon Section 2(h)(1)–(2) of the
Commodity Exchange Act, 75 FR 56512, 56513,
Sept. 16, 2010 (‘‘Grandfather Notice’’).
10 7 U.S.C. 6(c).
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swap dealers and major swap
participants), and new CEA section
4s(h) (external business conduct
standards for swap dealers and major
swap participants).11 Pursuant to
section 754, the rulemakings to
implement these provisions of the CEA
will not become effective, at a
minimum, until 60 days after
publication of a final Commission rule
(and not before July 16, 2011).
Because the Category 1 provisions are
not self-effectuating as of July 16, 2011,
it was not necessary for the Commission
to propose relief with respect to the
same. As noted above, the Category 1
provisions will not go into effect until
at least 60 days after publication of a
final Commission rule in the Federal
Register.12
The Category 4 provisions also fell
outside the scope of the proposed order.
They are self-effectuating and do not
require relief because, in the judgment
of the Commission, compliance with
these requirements upon the effective
date will not cause undue disruption to
affected transactions, markets, or
entities, and a delay of the imposition
of these statutory requirements would
not be in the public interest.
The proposed order, as well as lists of
the Category 1 and Category 4
provisions prepared by Commission
staff, were published on the
Commission’s Web site (https://
www.cftc.gov) on June 14, 2011. A list
of the provisions in each of the four
categories is provided in the Appendix
to this Final Order.
II. The Proposed Order
On June 14, 2011, the Commission
issued a proposed order to provide
temporary exemptive relief in two parts,
each addressing one of the remaining
categories of provisions noted above: (1)
Category 2—provisions that are selfeffectuating (i.e., do not require
rulemaking) and reference terms that
require further definition (i.e., ‘‘swap,’’
‘‘swap dealer,’’ ‘‘major swap
participant,’’ or ‘‘eligible contract
11 To be codified at 7 U.S.C. 6s(a), 6s(e) and 6s(h),
respectively.
12 As stated in footnote 5, supra, the Commission
has discretion to phase-in implementation of new
requirements in Category 1 rulemakings as well as
rulemakings conducted with respect to Category 2
provisions. Accordingly, the Commission
anticipates that it may establish compliance dates
for the substantive requirements established in a
rulemaking implementing Category 1 provisions
that differ from the effective date of the rulemaking.
The effective date and compliance dates for each
rulemaking will be determined in each rulemaking
proceeding. Additionally, as stated in footnote 69,
infra, the Commission has received and has
solicited public comments with respect to the
appropriate phase-in of the Dodd-Frank Act
rulemaking requirements.
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participant’’); and (2) Category 3—
provisions that are self-effectuating (i.e.,
do not require rulemaking) and repeal
provisions of current law, but that do
not reference terms that require further
definition. The Commission’s proposed
order was published in the Federal
Register on June 17, 2011.13
With respect to part one of the
proposed order addressing Category 2
provisions, the Commission proposed to
temporarily exempt persons and entities
from the provisions of the CEA, as
added or amended by the Dodd-Frank
Act, that reference one or more of the
terms regarding entities or instruments
subject to further definition under
sections 712(d) and 721(c) of the DoddFrank Act, including the terms ‘‘swap,’’
‘‘swap dealer,’’ ‘‘major swap
participant,’’ or ‘‘eligible contract
participant.’’ 14 CEA section 4d(f), as
amended by section 724 of the DoddFrank Act, is an example of a Category
2 provision to which the exemption
provided in the proposed order would
extend.15
The Commission made clear that the
proposed exemptive relief from such
provisions would apply only with
respect to those requirements or
portions of such provisions that
specifically relate to such referenced
13 See Effective Date for Swap Regulation, 76 FR
35372, June 17, 2011.
14 76 FR at 35374. In footnote 15 of the proposed
order, the Commission stated: ‘‘The Commission’s
authority to provide exemptive relief under CEA
section 4(c), as amended by section 721(d) of the
Dodd-Frank Act, may not extend to certain Category
2 provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act and the CEA.
These provisions include: new CEA section 4s(l), 7
U.S.C. 6s(l) (providing for swap dealer segregation
requirements with respect to uncleared swaps);
amended CEA section 5b(a), 7 U.S.C. 7a–1(a)
(prohibiting a DCO from performing the functions
of a DCO with respect to swaps unless the DCO is
registered with the Commission); and new CEA
section 4s(k), 7 U.S.C. 6s(k) (providing for the
duties and designation of a chief compliance officer
for swap dealers and major swap participants). As
such, these provisions will take effect on July 16,
2011, and may not be subject to the exemptive relief
noted above granted by the Commission. The
Commission staff has informed the Commission
that it is separately considering whether to issue a
no-action letter in which the staff would state that
it would not recommend that the Commission
commence an enforcement action against markets
or market participants for failure to comply with the
above-referenced provisions over a similar time
period.’’ Subsequently, a draft staff no-action letter
that would provide such relief was posted on the
Commission’s Web site. See https://www.cftc.gov/
ucm/groups/public/@newsroom/documents/file/
noaction061411.pdf.
15 To be codified at 7 U.S.C. 6d(f). Thus, for
example, persons who accept money, securities or
property (or extend credit in lieu thereof) from, for,
or on behalf of a swaps customer to margin,
guarantee, or secure a swap cleared by or through
a derivatives clearing organization would not be
required to register as futures commission
merchants as otherwise required by section 4d(f)(1)
until the expiration of the exemption in part one of
the proposed order.
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terms. Further, the Commission stressed
that the proposed relief ‘‘would not in
any way limit the Commission’s
authority with respect to any person,
entity, or transaction pursuant to CEA
sections 2(a)(1)(B), 4b, 4o, 6(c), 6(d), 6c,
8(a), 9(a)(2), or 13, or the regulations of
the Commission promulgated pursuant
to such authorities, including
regulations pursuant to CEA section
4c(b) proscribing fraud.’’ 16
The Commission also placed other
limitations on the relief in part one of
the proposed order. First, the
Commission stated that the relief would
not apply to any provisions of Title VII
and the CEA that have become effective
prior to July 16, 2011 or to Commission
regulations already issued.17 Further,
the relief would not affect any effective
date set out in any specific Dodd-Frank
Act rulemaking by the Commission.18 In
addition, the proposed order would not
limit the Commission’s authority under
section 712(f) of the Dodd-Frank Act to
issue rules, orders, or exemptions prior
to the effective date of any provision, in
order to prepare for the effective date of
such provision, provided that such rule,
order, or exemption shall not become
effective prior to the effective date of the
provision.19 Finally, the Commission
stated that the proposed order would
not affect the applicability of any
provision of the CEA to futures
contracts or options on futures
contracts.20
16 76 FR at 35374. In footnote 16 of the proposed
order, the Commission stated, ‘‘The Dodd-Frank Act
amended the CEA’s anti-fraud and antimanipulation provisions to cover ‘swaps.’’’
Examples of such provisions include the
amendments to the antifraud provisions in CEA
section 4b, 7 U.S.C. 6b, as well as the amendments
set forth in section 746 of the Dodd-Frank Act,
which enacted certain insider trading prohibitions
that apply to, among other things, futures contracts
and swaps. The Commission stated: ‘‘Although
these provisions therefore would, under the
proposed relief, not apply to ‘swaps’ under the
Dodd-Frank Act because that term is subject to
further definition, nevertheless, they will apply to
all transactions other than ‘swaps’ (including, but
not limited to, futures contracts, options on futures
contracts, transactions with retail customers in
foreign currency or other commodities pursuant to
CEA section 2(c)(2) (7 U.S.C. 2(c)(2)), and
transactions subject to exemptive relief pursuant to
part two of the proposed order).’’
17 76 FR at 35374. In footnote 17 of the proposed
order, the Commission included the following
citation: ‘‘See, e.g., section 737(d) of the DoddFrank Act (amendments regarding position limits
effective on the date of enactment). Similarly, this
relief would not affect the effective date of any
provision that may become effective after July 16,
2011, such as section 716 of the Dodd-Frank Act.’’
18 76 FR at 35374.
19 Id.
20 Id. In footnote 18 of the proposed order, the
Commission stated: ‘‘Accordingly and by way of
non-exclusive example, where a provision
references both swaps and futures, this relief does
not affect in any way the application of the
provision (and any implementing Commission
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The Commission proposed that the
temporary exemptive relief would
expire upon the earlier of: (1) The
effective date of the applicable final rule
further defining the relevant term; or (2)
December 31, 2011.21 In proposing to
limit the relief to no more than a fixed
period (i.e., December 31, 2011), the
Commission provided the following
reasons:
First, the Commission believes it
appropriate and prudent to periodically
review the extent and scope of any relief
provided from the CEA, as amended by the
Dodd-Frank Act. The Commission anticipates
that additional rulemakings to implement the
Dodd-Frank Act will be completed during
this period of transitional relief. During this
period the Commission also will be
considering the appropriate phase-in of the
various regulatory requirements under the
Dodd-Frank rulemakings. Accordingly, the
Commission believes it would be appropriate
to periodically re-examine the scope and
extent of the proposed exemptive relief in
order to ensure that the scope of relief is
appropriately tailored to the schedule of
implementation of the Dodd-Frank Act
requirements.
Second, the limitation of this exemptive
relief to no more than a fixed period of time
is consistent with similar limitations on
transitional relief provided by the Congress
elsewhere in Title VII. Section 723(c) of the
Dodd-Frank Act allows persons to submit
petitions to the Commission ‘‘to remain
subject to section 2(h) of the [CEA].’’ In
acting upon such petitions, the Commission
may allow persons to ‘‘continue operating
subject to section 2(h) [of the CEA] for not
longer than a 1-year period.’’ Similarly,
section 734 authorizes the Commission to
grant petitions for persons to remain subject
to the provisions of section 5d of the CEA
governing the operation of exempt boards of
trade (‘‘EBOTs’’) ‘‘for up to 1 year after the
effective date of this subtitle.’’ In light of
these provisions authorizing the Commission
to provide transitional relief for no longer
than a fixed period of time, the Commission
believes it would be appropriate to provide
transitional relief consistent with section
712(f) of the Dodd-Frank Act and CEA
section 4(c) under this proposed order for no
longer than a fixed time period.22
In the proposed order, the
Commission reiterated its intent: (1)
That existing practices should not be
unduly disrupted during any transition
period; and (2) to deliberatively and
efficiently proceed to complete the
rulemakings to implement the DoddFrank Act.23 As to timing, the
Commission proposed that in the event
that a further definitions rulemaking is
completed prior to December 31, 2011,
the Commission will at the time of such
regulations thereunder) insofar as it refers to
futures.’’
21 76 FR at 35374.
22 76 FR at 35375 (footnotes omitted).
23 Id.
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rulemaking address the appropriate
phase-in and implementation dates of
the resulting regulatory requirements.
Alternatively, the Commission stated,
should the proposed order expire at the
end of the fixed time period—December
31, 2011—such expiration will not
affect the Commission’s ability to
provide further relief, as appropriate, to
avoid undue disruption or costs to
market participants.24
With respect to part two of the
proposed order addressing Category 3
provisions, the Commission’s proposed
order identified the existing provisions
of the CEA that currently exclude or
exempt, in whole or in part, certain
transactions from Commission oversight
under the CEA.25 These are as follows:
i. Section 2(d)(1),26 transactions in
excluded commodities 27 between eligible
contract participants and not executed or
traded on a trading facility;
ii. Section 2(d)(2),28 principal-to-principal
transactions in excluded commodities
between certain eligible contract participants
and executed or traded on an electronic
trading facility;
iii. Section 2(g),29 transactions subject to
individual negotiation between eligible
contract participants in commodities other
than agricultural commodities and not
executed or traded on a trading facility;
iv. Sections 2(h)(1)–(2),30 transactions in
exempt commodities 31 between eligible
contract participants and not entered into on
a trading facility;
v. Sections 2(h)(3)–(7),32 principal-toprincipal transactions in exempt
commodities between eligible commercial
entities 33 and executed or traded on an
electronic trading facility (called exempt
commercial markets, or ‘‘ECMs’’);
vi. Section 5d,34 transactions in
commodities, among other things, having a
nearly inexhaustible deliverable supply or no
cash market, between eligible contract
participants and traded on an exempt board
of trade (‘‘EBOT’’); and
vii. Section 2(e),35 which generally
provides that nothing in the CEA governs or
is applicable to an electronic trading facility
24 Id.
25 Id.
26 7
U.S.C. 2(d)(1).
term ‘‘excluded commodity’’ is defined in
CEA section 1a(13), 7 U.S.C. 1a(13), to include,
among other things, financial instruments such as
a currency, interest rate, or exchange rate, or any
economic or commercial index based on prices,
rates, values, or levels that are not within the
control of any party to the transaction.
28 7 U.S.C. 2(d)(2).
29 7 U.S.C. 2(g).
30 7 U.S.C. 2(h)(1)–(2).
31 The term ‘‘exempt commodity’’ is defined in
CEA section 1a(14), 7 U.S.C. 1a(14), as a commodity
other than an excluded or agricultural commodity,
and includes energy and metals commodities.
32 7 U.S.C. 2(h)(3)–(7).
33 The term ‘‘eligible commercial entity’’ is
defined in CEA section 1a(11), 7 U.S.C. 1a(11).
34 7 U.S.C. 7a–3.
35 7 U.S.C. 2(e).
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that limits transactions authorized to be
conducted on its facilities to those satisfying
the requirements of sections 2(d)(2), 2(g) or
2(h)(3).
Under the Dodd-Frank Act, these
provisions will be removed from the
CEA as of July 16, 2011. However, the
Commission noted that part 35 of the
Commission’s regulations,36 and part 32
with respect to options,37 will continue
to be available with respect to
transactions that meet the conditions
therein, until such time as they may be
withdrawn, amended, or replaced by the
Commission.38
As the Commission stated in the
proposed order, part 35 originally was
promulgated in 1993 pursuant to,
among others, the Commission’s general
exemptive authority in CEA section 4(c)
and authority under section 4c(b), and
provides a broad-based exemption from
the CEA for ‘‘swap agreements’’ in any
commodity.39 Specifically, part 35
exempts ‘‘swap agreements,’’ as defined
therein, from most of the provisions of
the CEA if: (1) They are entered into by
‘‘eligible swap participants’’ (‘‘ESPs’’); 40
(2) they are not part of a fungible class
of agreements standardized as to their
material economic terms; 41 (3) the
creditworthiness of any party having an
actual or potential obligation under the
swap agreement would be a material
consideration in entering into or
determining the terms of the swap
agreement, including pricing, cost, or
credit enhancement terms; 42 and (4)
they are not entered into or traded on
a multilateral transaction execution
CFR 35.1 et seq.
CFR 32.1 et seq.
38 76 FR at 35375 and 35376 n.36.
39 The Commission notes, as discussed infra, that
part 35 was originally promulgated in part pursuant
to the Commission’s plenary options authority in
CEA section 4c(b), 7 U.S.C. 6c(b).
40 The parties covered under the ESP definition,
while very broad, are not coextensive with those
covered by the terms ‘‘eligible commercial entity’’
or ‘‘eligible contract participant.’’ Therefore, it is
possible that a small segment of persons or entities
that are currently relying on one or more of the CEA
exclusions or exemptions cited above might not
qualify as an ESP and consequently would not be
eligible for exemptive relief under part 35.
41 This condition was designed so that the
exemption would not establish ‘‘a market in swap
agreements, the terms of which are fixed and are
not subject to negotiation that functions essentially
in the same manner as an exchange but for the
bilateral execution of transactions.’’ See Exemption
for Certain Swap Agreements, 58 FR 5587, 5590,
Jan. 22, 1993.
42 By this condition, the exemption does not
extend to transactions that are subject to a clearing
system where the credit risk of individual members
of the system to each other in a transaction to which
each is a counterparty is effectively eliminated and
replaced by a system of mutualized risk of loss that
binds members generally, whether or not they are
counterparties to the original transaction. Id. at
5591.
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37 17
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42511
facility.43 The Commission stated that
transactions fully meeting the
conditions of part 35 are outside the
scope of the proposed order.44
However, because part 35 covers
essentially non-standardized, noncleared, non-exchange traded
transactions, certain persons or entities
that currently rely on the CEA
exclusions or exemptions cited above
may not qualify for part 35. Therefore,
and in response to requests from market
participants for greater clarity regarding
the applicability of various statutory
and regulatory requirements to certain
transactions following the general
effective date, the Commission,
pursuant to its authority under CEA
section 4(c), proposed to grant relief for
those transactions that satisfy certain
criteria specified below.45
Specifically, the Commission
proposed to temporarily exempt a
transaction in exempt or excluded
commodities (and any person or entity
offering or entering into such
transaction) from the CEA (other than
the anti-fraud and anti-manipulation
enforcement provisions identified
below) following the general effective
date if the transaction otherwise would
comply with part 35, notwithstanding
that: (1) The transaction may be
executed on a multilateral transaction
execution facility; (2) the transaction
may be cleared; (3) persons offering or
entering into the transaction may be
eligible contract participants as defined
in the CEA (prior to July 16, 2011); (4)
the transaction may be part of a fungible
class of agreements that are
standardized as to their material
economic terms; and/or (5) no more
than one of the parties to the transaction
is entering into the transaction in
conjunction with its line of business,
but is neither an eligible contract
participant nor an ESP, and the
transaction was not and is not marketed
to the public (the ‘‘line of business
provision’’).46
43 In this context, a multilateral transaction
execution facility is a physical or electronic facility
in which all market makers and other participants
that are members simultaneously have the ability to
execute transactions and bind both parties by
accepting offers which are made by one member
and open to all members of the facility. Id.
44 76 FR at 35376. In footnote 36, the proposed
order also stated that ‘‘part 32 of the Commission’s
regulations will continue to be available with
respect to commodity option transactions that meet
the conditions therein, until such time as part 32
may be withdrawn, amended, or replaced by the
Commission.’’ See Commodity Options and
Agricultural Swaps, 76 FR 6095, Feb. 3, 2011.
45 76 FR at 35376.
46 Id. In footnote 37, the proposed order stated
that commenters responding to the Commission’s
proposed Entity Definitions have suggested that the
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As the Commission noted, the
proposed temporary exemptive relief
would not affect the availability of
either parts 35 or 32 with respect to
transactions that fully meet the
conditions therein.47 For transactions
that fall outside of existing parts 35 or
32, the Commission made clear that the
proposed relief would only be available
to the extent those transactions (and
persons offering or entering into such
transactions) fall within the scope of
any of the existing CEA sections 2(d),
2(e), 2(g), 2(h), and 5d as in effect prior
to July 16, 2011 or the line of business
provision.48
With respect to any transaction within
the scope of part two of the proposed
order, the Commission stated that the
proposed exemptive relief ‘‘would not
in any way limit the Commission’s
authority with respect to any person,
entity, or transaction pursuant to CEA
sections 2(a)(1)(B), 4b, 4o, 6(c), 6(d), 6c,
8(a), 9(a)(2) or 13, or the regulations of
the Commission promulgated pursuant
to such authorities, including
regulations pursuant to CEA section
4c(b) proscribing fraud.’’ 49
Additionally, the Commission stated
that the proposed relief would not affect
any Dodd-Frank Act implementing
regulations (and any implementation
period contained therein) that the
Commission promulgates and applies to
the subject transactions, market
Commission should exercise its authority to further
define the term ‘‘eligible contract participant’’ to
encompass the ‘‘line of business’’ provision that
was a part of the Commission’s Policy Statement
Concerning Swap Transactions, 54 FR 30694,
30696–30697, July 21, 1989. The staff is evaluating
these comments in the context of the Commission’s
rulemaking to further define the term ‘‘eligible
contract participant.’’
47 76 FR at 35376. In addition, in September 2010,
the Commission published an order in the Federal
Register providing that it would extend grandfather
relief, as provided in sections 723(c) and 734(c) of
the Dodd-Frank Act, to ECMs and EBOTs provided
that certain conditions are met. See Order
Regarding the Treatment of Petitions Seeking
Grandfather Relief for Exempt Commercial Markets
and Exempt Boards of Trade, 75 FR 56513, Sept. 16,
2010 (‘‘grandfather relief orders’’). The Commission
stated that nothing in the proposed order was
intended to impact the availability of the
independent grandfather relief provided in the
grandfather relief orders. Id. at n.38.
48 76 FR at 35376. The Commission stated in
footnote 39 of the proposed order that the
exemptive relief would not be available to an
electronic trading facility that, as of July 15, 2011,
is not already operating as an ECM pursuant to CEA
sections 2(h)(3)–(7), or to an EBOT that, as of July
15, 2011, is not already operating pursuant to CEA
section 5d, or not compliant with the conditions set
forth in such provisions.
49 76 FR at 35376. In so doing, the Commission
noted that ‘‘the addition of the term ‘swap’ to some
of these provisions would not in any way affect the
applicability of these anti-fraud and antimanipulation enforcement provisions to
transactions subject to relief pursuant to part two
of the proposed order.’’ Id. at n.40.
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participants, or markets.50 With respect
to timing, the Commission proposed
that this temporary exemptive relief
would expire upon the earlier of: (1)
December 31, 2011; or (2) the repeal or
replacement of parts 35 or 32, as
applicable.51 The Commission also
specified that the exemptive relief in
part two of the proposed order would
operate for no longer than a fixed period
of time for the same reasons as
described above with respect to part one
of the proposed order.52
III. Comments on the Proposed Relief
and Commission Determinations
A. Comments Generally
The Commission requested comment
on all aspects of the proposed order,
including whether the proposed
temporary exemptions are consistent
with the public interest and other
requirements of CEA section 4(c).53 The
Commission received 19 comment
letters from a variety of interested
parties, including market participants
and trade associations, trading platforms
and clearing organizations, futures and
derivatives committees of bar
associations, a law firm, and a nongovernmental public interest
organization.54
The majority of commenters generally
supported the Commission taking action
to provide clarity and exemptive relief
with respect to the July 16 effective
date. For example, the American Feed
Industry Association (‘‘AFIA’’)
described the proposed order as ‘‘a
prudent move’’ to ‘‘ensure current
practices for bona fide hedgers and endusers of agricultural commodities are
not unduly disrupted during the
transition.’’ 55 Better Markets, Inc.
(‘‘Better Markets’’) described the
proposed relief as ‘‘appropriate and
reasonable,’’ and said that a limited
delay is ‘‘consistent with the DoddFrank Act, informed rulemaking and the
50 76 FR at 35376. The Commission noted that the
proposed order would not affect any Commission
rulemaking authority over agreements, contracts, or
transactions that may not depend on the terms
subject to further definition under sections 712(d)
or 721(c) of the Dodd-Frank Act. This relief also
would not affect any provisions of the Dodd-Frank
Act or the CEA that have become effective prior to
July 16, 2011 or regulations already issued. Id. at
n.41.
51 76 FR at 35376.
52 Id.
53 76 FR at 35377.
54 Comments unrelated to the proposed order will
not be evaluated here, but will inform the
Commission as it proceeds with its Dodd-Frank Act
rulemakings.
55 See letter dated June 28, 2011, from Joel G.
Newman, President and Chief Executive Officer,
AFIA, at p. 1.
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goal of financial reform.’’ 56 The
Alternative Investment Management
Association (‘‘AIMA’’) commented that
the proposed order was ‘‘clear and
provide[s] sufficient guidance for
persons and entities to know which
rules fall within the order and which do
not.’’ 57 The National Grain and Feed
Association (‘‘NGFA’’) commended the
agency ‘‘for taking steps to ensure the
continued availability of important risk
management tools used by hedgers in
the grain, feed and processing
industry.’’ 58
Commenters also suggested various
modifications or clarifications of the
proposed order to address specific
issues related to the scope or basis for
the proposed exemptive relief. These
issues, which are discussed in the
remainder of this section below,
include: (1) The scope of temporary
relief; (2) the expiration date; (3)
coverage of commodity options and
agricultural swaps; (4) coverage of
eligible contract participants; (5) private
rights of action; (6) preemption; (7)
market issues; (8) core principles; (9)
intermediary issues; and (10) the scope
of ‘‘appropriate persons’’ under CEA
section 4(c). After considering the
complete record in this matter, the
Commission has determined that the
requirements of CEA section 4(c) have
been met. For the reasons discussed
below, the Commission deems it in the
public interest to issue this Final Order
substantially as proposed, except for
certain clarifications set forth in the
discussion in this section below, which
the Commission deems appropriate or
necessary upon due consideration of the
comments received.
B. Scope of Temporary Relief
1. Comments
Several commenters expressed
general support for the Commission’s
effort to provide exemptive relief but
urged the Commission to use what they
stated to be the Commission’s broad
authority to grant a more comprehensive
relief. For example, the Committee on
Futures and Derivatives Regulation of
the New York City Bar Association
(‘‘NYCBA’’) stated that the Commission
has ‘‘ample’’ authority, either based
solely on CEA Section 4(c) or as
supplemented by section 754 and
section 712(f) of the Dodd-Frank Act, to
56 See letter dated July 1, 2011, from Dennis M.
Kelleher, President and Chief Executive Officer and
Wallace C. Turbeville, Derivatives Specialist, Better
Markets, at pp. 1, 2.
57 See letter dated July 1, 2011, from Jiri Krol,
Director of Government & Regulatory Affairs,
AIMA, at page 2.
58 See letter dated July 1, 2011, from Matt Bruns,
Chair, Risk Management Committee, NGFA, at p. 1.
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delay the effective date of the DoddFrank Act provisions until the effective
date of the related implementing
regulations.59 Similarly, the Derivatives
and Futures Law Committee of the
Business Law Section of the American
Bar Association (‘‘ABA Derivatives
Committee’’) stated that sections 754
and 712(f), as well as CEA section 4(c),
authorize the Commission to
temporarily grant relief from the DoddFrank Act until all necessary final
rulemakings, including rulemakings as
to definitions, are in place.60 Finally, BG
Americas & Global LNG (‘‘BGA’’)
contends that section 721(f) of the
Dodd-Frank Act authorizes the
Commission to extend exemptive relief
with respect to CEA sections 4s(l)
(collateral segregation requirements for
uncleared swaps) and 4s(k) (duties and
designation of a chief compliance
officer).61
The Commission also received
comments requesting modification or
clarification regarding the categorization
of certain provisions of the Dodd-Frank
Act.62 Specifically, seven trade
associations (collectively, the
‘‘Associations’’) filed a joint comment
letter contending that many provisions
in Categories 1 and 2 are interdependent
with related rulemakings (including
those relating to definitions) and, thus,
should be extended exemptive relief
until all of the mutually-interdependent
rulemakings have been completed.63
59 See letter dated June 30, 2011, from Timothy
P. Selby, Chair, NYCBA, at p. 3. NYCBA asserted
that the requirement in section 712(f)(4) that
exemptions be made ‘‘under the terms of the Act’’
is intended to require that they be made under the
provisions establishing or limiting regulatory
authority under the Dodd-Frank Act as a whole,
rather than referring to the substance of the
exemptive authority available under provisions of
the CEA. Id. at p. 4.
60 See ABA Derivatives Committee at pp. 2–3.
The ABA Derivatives Committee stated that the
Commission’s exemptive authority under the DoddFrank Act is broader than the exemptive authority
specifically conferred by the CEA, especially in
light of the different language of section 712(e) as
compared to section 712(f). Id. at p. 5.
61 See letter dated July 1, 2011, from Lisa Yoho,
Director, Regulatory Affairs and Matt Schatzman,
Senior Vice President, Energy Marketing, BGA, at
pp. 9–10. As discussed in footnote 14, supra, the
Commission believes that its authority to provide
exemptive relief under section 4(c), as amended by
section 721(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act, may not
extend to certain Category 2 provisions, such as
CEA sections 4s(l) and 4s(k), though the
Commission is informed that staff is separately
considering a no-action letter with respect to these
provisions.
62 See generally letter dated July 1, 2011, from
David M. Perlman, Bracewell & Giuliani LLP, on
behalf of the Coalition of Physical Energy
Companies, at p. 3 (requesting statement that the
Commission intends to preserve the legal status quo
for the swaps market unless and until it
affirmatively and systematically makes changes).
63 See letter dated July 1, 2011, from American
Bankers Association, ABA Securities Association,
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The ABA Derivatives Committee
believes that Category 2 provisions also
are Category 1 provisions because they
require the definitional rulemakings to
be completed.64
Commenters addressing the proposed
relief for Category 3 provisions urged
that the Commission use its broad
authority under CEA section 4(c) and
section 712(f) of the Dodd-Frank Act to
amend part 35 of the Commission’s
regulations to provide blanket
exemptive relief.65 The NYCBA
recommended that the Commission
preserve the current ‘‘safe harbors’’ in
CEA sections 2(d), 2(e), 2(g), 2(h) and 5d
until the effective date of the applicable
final rules with certain clarifications,
and that such ‘‘safe harbors’’ should be
available even if the subject transaction
is cleared.66
2. Commission Determination
As stated in the proposed order, a
significant number of Dodd-Frank Act
provisions are not self-effectuating and,
thus, it is not necessary to provide relief
with respect to such provisions (i.e.,
Category 1). With respect to the
provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act in
Categories 2 or 3, the Commission has
determined to use its authority to issue
this exemptive relief under section
712(f) of the Dodd-Frank Act coextensively with its exemptive authority
under the CEA.67 The exemptive relief
will allow markets and market
participants to continue to operate
under the regulatory regime as in effect
prior to July 16, 2011, but subject to
various implementing regulations that
the Commission promulgates and
applies to the subject transactions,
market participants, or markets.
This temporary relief, in the
Commission’s judgment, is
appropriately tailored to enable the
Futures Industry Association, Institute of
International Bankers, International Swaps and
Derivatives Association, Investment Company
Institute, and Securities Industry and Financial
Markets Association, at p. 4.
64 See ABA Derivatives Committee at p. 3.
65 See, e.g., letter dated July 1, 2011, from R.
Michael Sweeney, Jr., Hunton & Williams, on behalf
of the Working Group of Commercial Energy Firms
(‘‘CEF’’), at pp. 3–4. In the alternative, CEF
recommends that at a minimum, the Commission
use its authority under sections 723(c)(l)–(2) to
provide grandfather relief to all persons who
transact, operate, or otherwise rely on current CEA
section 2(h) as well as all transactions subject to
this provision, for a six-month period commencing
on July 16, 2011. CEF states that the Commission
may rely on section 712(f) as well as sections
723(c)(l)–(2) to exempt persons relying on current
CEA sections 2(h)(l)–(2) in carrying out their
bilateral exempt commodity transactions, for up to
a one year period, following the effective date. CEF
at p. 4.
66 NYCBA at pp. 6–8.
67 See CEA sections 4(c) and 4c(b).
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42513
Commission to continue to implement
the Dodd-Frank Act in an expeditious
manner, while minimizing undue
disruption and uncertainty for the
markets and market participants during
the transition period. In this regard, the
Commission reiterates that, in
considering the appropriate phase-in of
its various Dodd-Frank Act
implementing regulations, it intends to
continue to ‘‘strive to ensure that
current practices will not be unduly
disrupted during the transition to the
new regulatory regime.’’68 While the
sequencing of the final rules is beyond
the scope of this Final Order, the
interdependencies of the various
rulemakings will be a consideration in
determining the implementation date
for each final rule.69
C. Expiration Date
1. Comments
The proposed order included an
outermost, fixed expiration date for
parts one and two of the exemptive
relief. Part one would expire on the
earlier of: (1) The effective date of the
applicable final rule further defining the
relevant term; or (2) December 31, 2011.
Part two of the proposed order would
expire on the earlier of: (1) December
31, 2011; or (2) the repeal or
replacement of part 35 of the
Commission’s regulations. In the
proposed order, the Commission
explained that setting an expiration date
was ‘‘appropriate to periodically reexamine the scope and extent of the
proposed exemptive relief’’ and that
‘‘the limitation of this exemptive relief
to no more than a fixed period of time
is consistent with similar limitations on
transitional relief provided by the
Congress’’ in section 723(c) and section
734 of the Dodd-Frank Act.70
Better Markets generally supported
the expiration date because it believes
that it is extremely important for the
68 See
Grandfather Notice, supra, n.9.
the Dodd-Frank Act rulemaking process
the Commission has received a number of
comments recommending that the Commission
appropriately sequence the effective dates and
compliance dates under the various Dodd-Frank
Act rulemakings. As noted in footnote 5, supra, the
Commission already has held a roundtable and
solicited public comments with respect to the
appropriate phase-in of the Dodd-Frank Act
rulemaking requirements. Prior to the roundtable,
on April 29, 2011, CFTC staff released a document
that set forth concepts that the Commission may
consider with regard to the effective dates of final
rules for swaps under the Dodd-Frank Act. The
Commission therefore anticipates that the
determinations regarding the phase-in of
compliance dates for and within the various
rulemakings will continue to be informed by the
Commission’s further consideration of this issue,
including public comments.
70 76 FR at 35375.
69 During
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Commission to have the ability to assess
conditions related to implementation as
they evolve over the next six months.71
Conversely, the ABA Derivatives
Committee, AIMA, the Associations,
CME Group Inc. (‘‘CME’’), and
MarketAxess Holdings Inc.
(‘‘MarketAxess’’) argued that a
predetermined global expiration date
was not necessary and the Commission
should provide that the temporary relief
will expire for a given rule only upon
the effective date (or compliance date, if
later) of the applicable final rule.72
In the event the Commission decides
to include an expiration date, the
NYCBA and ABA Derivatives
Committee believe that the Commission
should revise the proposed order to
trigger the effectiveness of the relevant
provision only when both the
definitional rulemaking and the
substantive rulemaking for the relevant
provision become effective.73 Similarly,
the Associations and CME urged the
Commission, at a minimum, to extend
the expiration date to July 2012,
consistent with the transitional period
specified in sections 723(c) and 734 of
the Dodd-Frank Act.74 Finally, to
address a perceived ‘‘potential gap
period,’’ the NYCBA and ABA
Derivatives Committee believe that the
order should contain language
specifically addressing situations where
final rules are adopted within 60 days
before December 31, 2011, or where a
final rule otherwise has a prescribed
effective date after December 31, 2011.75
2. Commission Determination
The Commission has determined, for
the reasons discussed in the proposed
order, not to alter the expiration date(s)
contained in the proposed order. An
automatic expiration date of no later
than December 31, 2011, will allow the
Commission to review the extent and
71 See
Better Markets at p. 2.
ABA Derivatives Committee at p. 6; AIMA
at p. 2; Associations at p. 6; letter dated July 1,
2011, from Craig S. Donohue, Chief Executive
Officer, CME, at p. 2; letter dated June 29, 2011,
from Richard McVey, Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer, MarketAxess, at p. 2.
73 See NYCBA at p. 4; ABA Derivatives
Committee at p. 7.
74 See Associations at p. 6, n.11; CME at p. 2.
75 See NYCBA at p. 5; ABA Derivatives
Committee at pp. 7–8. NYCBA and the ABA
Derivatives Committee proposed the following
language: ‘‘This order shall expire on (1) December
31, 2011, with respect to any provision for which
final rules (including final definitional rules) were
not adopted on or before December 31, 2011, or (2)
with respect to any provision for which final rules
(including final definitional rules) were adopted on
or before December 31, 2011, on the later of the
effective date of all final definitional rules used in
the provision and the effective date of the provision
as set forth in the final rules adopting such
provision.’’
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scope of relief provided from the CEA
on a measured basis. Should the
Commission deem it appropriate to
extend any exemptive relief, the
Commission will be in a better position
to tailor any exemption at that time.
Further, as noted in the proposed order,
limiting exemptive relief to a fixed
period is consistent with the approach
to transitional relief provided in
sections 723(c) and 734 of the DoddFrank Act. With regard to any concerns
over a potential ‘‘gap period’’ before or
after the expiration date of December 31,
2011, the Commission notes that it can
address compliance date concerns
within the context of each individual
rulemaking. Once again, the
Commission will be able to act in a
measured manner tailored to the
particular statutory and regulatory
provisions.
D. Commodity Options and Agricultural
Swaps
1. Comments
Several commenters requested that
the Commission clarify that the relief
based on part 35 in part two of the
proposed order, which applies to certain
transactions in exempt and excluded
commodities, covers commodity
options.76 The ABA Derivatives
Committee also requested that the
Commission expand the relief based on
part 35 in part two of the proposed
order to include swaps and options in
agricultural commodities.77 Finally,
commenters including various energy
companies urged the Commission to
rely, in part, upon CEA section 4c(b) as
authority to issue the elements of the
relief related to options, stating that the
Commission retains its plenary
authority to regulate commodity options
under CEA section 4c(b) 78 and that
section 4c(b) was unaltered by the
Dodd-Frank Act.79 The NGFA, though,
noted that the proposed order addressed
concerns it had regarding the
availability of certain option-based
transactions until final rules authorizing
their continued use are published.80
2. Commission Determination
With respect to options, the
Commission is clarifying that the relief
in part two of the Final Order that is
76 See CEF at p. 5; ABA Derivatives Committee at
p. 12; BGA at p. 8.
77 See ABA Derivatives Committee at pp. 9, 11–
13; letter dated June 29, 2011, from Paul J. Pantano,
Jr., and Athena Eastwood, Cadwalader, Wickersham
& Taft LLP, on behalf of the Commodity Options
and Agricultural Swaps Working Group, at p. 2.
78 See CEF at p. 5, n.12.
79 See ABA Derivatives Committee at pp. 10–11;
BGA at p. 8, n.22.
80 See NGFA at p. 1.
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based on part 35 applies to commodity
options on excluded and exempt
commodities to the extent they were
permitted by the applicable statutory
exemptions and exclusions in effect
prior to July 16, 2011. As reflected in
the commenters’ citations to § 35.1 of
the Commission’s regulations, the text
of paragraph (b)(1) of the ‘‘swap
agreement’’ definition in the rule lists
several types of options, including, but
not limited to, currency options, interest
rate options, and rate caps and collars,
and includes the following text: ‘‘any
other similar agreement (including any
option to enter into any of the
foregoing).’’ 81
Under part two of the Final Order,
transactions in exempt or excluded
commodities (and persons offering,
entering into, or rendering advice or
rendering other services with respect to
such transactions) will be temporarily
exempt from the CEA if such
transactions comply with part 35
notwithstanding that: (1) The
transaction may be executed on a
multilateral transaction execution
facility; (2) the transaction may be
cleared; (3) persons offering or entering
into the transaction may be eligible
contract participants as defined in the
CEA (prior to the enactment of the
Dodd-Frank Act); (4) the transaction
may be part of a fungible class of
agreements that are standardized as to
their material economic terms; and/or
(5) no more than one of the parties to
the transaction is entering into the
transaction in conjunction with its line
of business, but is neither an eligible
contract participant nor an ESP, and the
transaction was not and is not marketed
to the public. The options identified in
the swap agreement definition and any
options captured by the concluding
catch-all language, as well as any
options described in paragraphs
(b)(1)(ii) 82 and/or (iii) 83 of § 35.1 of the
81 17 CFR 35.1(b)(1)(i). In addition to the options
specifically identified in the swap agreement
definition, in the part 35 adopting release, the
Commission stated that ‘‘[t]he words ‘any similar
agreement’ in the definition includes any agreement
with a similar structure to those transactions
expressly included in the definition (e.g., a cap,
collar, or floor) without regard to the nature of the
underlying commodity interest involved.’’
Exemption for Certain Swap Agreements, 58 FR
5587, 5589 n.16, Jan. 22, 1993. The Commission
also said that ‘‘[i]n enacting this exemptive rule, the
Commission is also acting under its plenary
authority under section 4c(b) of the Act with
respect to swap agreements that may be regarded as
commodity options.’’ Id. at 5589.
82 Paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of § 35.1 defines ‘‘any
combination of the foregoing [list of identified swap
agreements]’’ as a swap agreement.
83 Paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of § 35.1 defines ‘‘[a]
master agreement for any of the foregoing [list of
identified swap agreements] together with all
supplements thereto’’ as a swap agreement.
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Commission’s regulations, involving
excluded or exempt commodities are,
therefore, within the scope of the Final
Order.84
With respect to agricultural
commodities, part 35 is not currently
available for option transactions on the
agricultural commodities enumerated in
either CEA section 1a(4) 85 or § 32.2 of
the Commission’s regulations 86 (the
‘‘Enumerated Agricultural
Commodities’’). Such option
transactions may occur only pursuant to
the agricultural trade option exemption
in § 32.13 of the Commission’s
regulations.87 As the Commission noted
when it adopted § 32.13 as an interim
final rule, which it later adopted as a
final rule:
[o]ne commenter representing swaps dealers
requested that the Commission clarify that
the part 35 exemption applies to off-exchange
agricultural options rather than this
exemption [17 CFR § 32.13(g)]. The
Commission disagrees. Any off-exchange
option on an enumerated agricultural
commodity must comply with Commission
rule 32.13(g) for exemption from the Act and
Commission rules, and no other exemptive
provision is available.’’ 88
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Accordingly, part 35 may not be
relied upon for options in the
Enumerated Agricultural Commodities.
As the Commission noted in the
proposed order, though, part 32 of the
Commission’s regulations will continue
to be available with respect to
commodity option transactions that
meet the conditions therein, until such
time as part 32 may be withdrawn,
amended, or replaced by the
Commission.89 The Commission further
84 In addition to CEA section 4(c) and section
712(f) of the Dodd-Frank Act, CEA section 4c(b), 7
U.S.C. 6c(b) also provides the Commission with
authority to issue the temporary exemptive Order
with respect to commodity options. Section 4c(b),
which was unaltered by the Dodd-Frank Act,
provides the Commission plenary authority to
regulate commodity options. Parts 32 and 35 were
issued, in part, based on the Commission’s
authority under CEA section 4c(b).
85 7 U.S.C. 1a(4).
86 17 CFR 32.2.
87 17 CFR 32.13. The Commission notes that the
NGFA comment letter generally supported the
Commission’s approach ‘‘to preserve the
availability of certain option-based transactions
such as * * * OTC options until final rules
authorizing their continued use are published.’’ See
NGFA at p. 1.
88 See Trade Options on the Enumerated
Agricultural Commodities, 63 FR 18821, 18829,
Apr. 16, 1998. § 32.13(a) technically also would be
available to persons satisfying its terms. However,
that would require such persons to register as
agricultural trade option merchants (‘‘ATOMs’’) and
comply with the ATOM regulatory regime. Only
one firm has ever registered as an ATOM, and it
later withdrew its registration. Currently, no firm is
registered as an ATOM. The Commission recently
proposed to repeal § 32.13. See Commodity Options
and Agricultural Swaps, 76 FR 6095, Feb. 3, 2011.
89 76 FR at 35376 n.36.
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stated in the proposed order that the
purpose of the proposed relief is to
‘‘strive to ensure that current practices
will not be unduly disrupted during the
transition to the new regulatory
regime.’’ 90 Accordingly, the
Commission is clarifying that part two
of this Final Order does not apply to
options on Enumerated Agricultural
Commodities.
Part 35, however, always has covered
swap agreements (other than options) on
the Enumerated Agricultural
Commodities and swap agreements
(including options) 91 on nonenumerated agricultural commodities
(e.g., coffee, sugar, cocoa). As the
Commission noted in the proposed
order, part 35 will continue to be
available with respect to transactions
that meet the conditions therein, until
such time as it may be withdrawn,
amended, or repealed by the
Commission.92
For certain transactions, part two of
this Final Order provides relief
notwithstanding that the transaction
may not satisfy certain part 35
requirements (e.g., cleared, executed on
a multilateral trade execution facility,
entered into by certain persons that are
not eligible contract participants, etc.).93
This relief is limited to transactions in
exempt and excluded commodities, and
does not extend to transactions in
agricultural commodities (enumerated
or non-enumerated). As stated in the
proposed order, the purpose of part two
of the Final Order is to provide relief
with respect to CEA provisions that will
be repealed as of July 16, 2011—
specifically, current CEA sections 2(d),
2(e), 2(g), 2(h), and 5d. These provisions
apply only to transactions in exempt
and excluded commodities, and do not
encompass agricultural commodities.
Thus, because transactions in
agricultural commodities cannot today
be executed in reliance on one or more
of these provisions to be repealed on
July 16, extending part two of the Final
Order to transactions in agricultural
commodities is not necessary to ‘‘strive
to ensure that current practices will not
be unduly disrupted during the
transition to the new regulatory
regime.’’ 94
90 76 FR at 35373, quoting Grandfather Notice,
supra, n. 9 (emphasis added).
91 Options on non-enumerated agricultural
commodities may be conducted pursuant to part 35,
as the agricultural trade option rules in § 32.13
apply only to options on the Enumerated
Agricultural Commodities.
92 76 FR at 35375.
93 Id. at 35376.
94 See supra, n.9. The Commission has in the past
granted exemptive relief pursuant to CEA section
4(c) from the requirements of part 35 to permit the
clearing of certain agricultural basis and calendar
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In sum, the Commission is clarifying
that the temporary exemptive relief in
part two of the Final Order that is based
on part 35 applies to commodity options
on excluded and exempt commodities
to the extent that these transactions
were permitted by the applicable
statutory exclusions and exemptions in
effect prior to July 16, 2011. It does not
apply, however, with respect to swaps
and commodity options on agricultural
commodities (enumerated or nonenumerated). Market participants may
continue to rely on part 35 with respect
to swaps and commodity options on
non-enumerated agricultural
commodities, as well as swaps (other
than commodity options) on
Enumerated Agricultural Commodities,
to the extent these transactions fully
comply with part 35. Market
participants also may continue to rely
on part 32 for options on Enumerated
Agricultural Commodities to the extent
these transactions are conducted in
accordance with § 32.13(g) of the
Commission’s regulations.
E. Eligible Contract Participants
1. Comments
First, with respect to the amendments
that the Dodd-Frank Act made to the
existing definition of the term ‘‘eligible
contract participant’’ in the CEA, the
NYCBA asked the Commission to
confirm that these changes are subject to
exemptive relief under the Final
Order.95 The ABA Derivatives
Committee believes that because the
term ‘‘eligible contract participant’’
expressly requires rulemaking, the
amendments to the existing CEA
definition would not take effect even in
the absence of exemptive relief; it asked
that the Final Order confirm this.96
Comment letters from various energy
companies supported the request of the
ABA Derivatives Committee in this
regard.97
The Associations requested that the
Commission confirm that amendments
to CEA sections 2(c)(2)(B), 2(c)(2)(C),
and 2(c)(2)(E) regarding off-exchange
foreign currency (‘‘forex’’) transactions
with retail customers will not become
effective until relevant required
swaps. See orders granted to ICE Clear US, Inc., 73
FR 77015, Dec. 18, 2008; Chicago Mercantile
Exchange, 74 FR 12316, Mar. 24, 2009; and Kansas
City Board of Trade, 75 FR 34983, June 21, 2010.
Part two of this Final Order does not apply;
however, parties may continue to rely on these
prior orders to the extent their transactions fully
comply with them.
95 See NYCBA at p. 5.
96 See ABA Derivatives Committee at p. 8.
97 See CEF at p. 8; BGA at p. 6.
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rulemakings have been completed.98
The Associations requested that the
Commission confirm that,
notwithstanding its general
classification of the Dodd-Frank Act’s
retail forex amendments as Category 4
provisions, it will regard the specific
provisions that relate to the definition of
the term ‘‘eligible contract participant’’
as Category 1 provisions.99 The
Associations believe that CEA Section
2(c)(2)(E) also should be treated as a
Category 1 provision because it
explicitly requires rulemakings by other
financial regulatory agencies.
Alternatively, the Associations stated,
these provisions fall in Category 2
because they depend on the definition
of the term ‘‘eligible contract
participant,’’ and thus should be subject
to section 4(c) exemptive relief.100 The
Associations requested, if the
Commission declines to adopt either of
these categorizations, a nonenforcement position until the rule
further defining the term ‘‘eligible
contract participant’’ and the federal
regulatory agency rules applicable to
retail forex transactions have been
finalized, along with a corresponding
section 4(c) order exempting affected
persons from private rights of action.101
2. Commission Determination
With respect to the first issue, the
term ‘‘eligible contract participant’’ is
currently defined in the CEA.102 The
Dodd-Frank Act amended the existing
CEA definition by, among other things,
raising the monetary thresholds for
certain persons and entities to qualify as
eligible contract participants. As noted,
the term ‘‘eligible contract participant’’
is one of the terms that Congress, in
sections 712(d) and 721(c), required the
Commission (jointly with the SEC, and
in consultation with the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System) to further define. Sections
712(d) and 721(c) are included in the
list of Category 1 provisions in the
Appendix. Accordingly, the
Commission confirms that pending the
effective date of the required rulemaking
to further define the term ‘‘eligible
contract participant,’’ that term shall
continue to mean an eligible contract
participant as defined by the CEA prior
to the enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act.
With respect to the second issue,
sections 741 and 742 of the Dodd-Frank
Act enacted various amendments to
CEA sections 2(c)(2)(B) and (C), which
98 See
Associations at p. 3.
at p. 16.
100 Id.
101 See Associations at p. 16, n.38.
102 See CEA section 1a(12), 7 U.S.C. 1a(12).
99 Id.
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address certain types of forex
transactions with retail customers.
These amendments do not themselves
require a rulemaking, nor do they
reference the term ‘‘eligible contract
participant’’ or any other term requiring
further definition. Therefore, they are
appropriately placed in Category 4,
outside the scope of the Final Order
granting temporary exemptive relief
from the July 16 effective date.
To be sure, both of these provisions,
in text that was not amended by the
Dodd-Frank Act, define the ‘‘retail’’
customers to which they apply as
persons that are not eligible contract
participants. Yet, the amendments in
sections 741 and 742 of the Dodd-Frank
Act contain important protections for
non-eligible contract participants
engaging in off-exchange forex
transactions, which represent an area
that historically has been fraught with
customer fraud and other abusive sales
practices. As one example, they clarify
that an account or pooled investment
vehicle that is offered for the purpose of
trading, or that trades, a covered offexchange forex transaction with a noneligible contract participant—in
addition to the transaction itself—is
subject to the Commission’s
jurisdiction, including its anti-fraud
authority.
Unlike new statutory terms required
to be further defined (e.g., ‘‘swap,’’
‘‘swap dealer,’’ and ‘‘major swap
participant’’), the CEA prior to
enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act
already contains a definition of the term
‘‘eligible contract participant’’ that has
been in place for over a decade.103 The
Commission does not believe that it is
necessary or appropriate to delay the
effective date of the important customer
protections in amended CEA sections
2(c)(2)(B) and (C) until such time as it
issues the final joint rulemaking further
defining the term ‘‘eligible contract
participant’’ for purposes of the new
swap regulatory regime.104 Accordingly,
the Commission, as proposed, considers
the amendments to CEA sections
2(c)(2)(B) and (C) to be Category 4
provisions in their entirety and is not
providing exemptive relief from the July
103 The amendments to the definition of the term
‘‘eligible contract participant’’ in the Dodd-Frank
Act were motivated largely by concerns regarding
the marketing of over-the-counter derivatives that
the Dodd-Frank Act defines as ‘‘swaps.’’ See
generally Department of the Treasury, Financial
Regulatory Reform: A New Foundation; Rebuilding
Financial Supervision and Regulation, at pp. 45–46,
June 17, 2009.
104 Even if these provisions were placed in
Category 2, section 742 of the Dodd-Frank Act is
listed in section 721(d), which places limits on the
Commission’s exemptive authority under CEA
section 4(c).
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16 effective date of these provisions. As
discussed above, though, pending the
effective date of the required rulemaking
to further define the term ‘‘eligible
contract participant,’’ for purposes of
CEA sections 2(c)(2)(B) and (C) that term
shall continue to mean an eligible
contract participant as defined by the
CEA prior to the enactment of the DoddFrank Act.
With respect to new CEA section
2(c)(2)(E) enacted as part of section 742
of the Dodd-Frank Act,105 it generally
prohibits a financial institution for
which there is a Federal regulatory
agency 106 from entering into certain offexchange forex transactions 107 with
retail customers (i.e., non-eligible
contract participants) except pursuant to
a rule or regulation of the Federal
regulatory agency allowing the
transaction under such terms and
conditions as the Federal regulatory
agency shall prescribe. The Commission
does not agree that CEA section
2(c)(2)(E) should be treated as a
Category 1 provision on the basis that it
requires rulemakings by other financial
regulatory agencies.108 Although section
2(c)(2)(E) prohibits a financial
institution from entering into certain
forex transactions with non-eligible
contract participants unless its Federal
regulatory agency adopts rules allowing
such transactions, it does not require
Federal regulatory agencies to adopt
such rules.
Granting relief from the July 16
effective date with respect to section
2(c)(2)(E) would treat this provision
differently from the Commission’s
treatment of the similar provisions in
sections 2(c)(2)(B) and (C) as Category 4
provisions, as discussed above.109 In
light of the important customer
protection interests served by section
2(c)(2)(E), the Commission does not
believe that such different treatment is
necessary or appropriate. Accordingly,
the Commission, as proposed, considers
new CEA section 2(c)(2)(E) to be a
Category 4 provision and is not
105 To
be codified at 7 U.S.C. 2(c)(2)(E).
2(c)(2)(E) defines a ‘‘Federal regulatory
agency’’ to include the Commission, the SEC, the
National Credit Union Administration, the Farm
Credit Administration, and an ‘‘appropriate Federal
banking agency.’’ Section 721(a)(2) of the DoddFrank Act, in turn, adds a new definition of the
term ‘‘appropriate Federal banking agency’’ in CEA
section 1a(2), to be codified at 7 U.S.C. 1a(2), that
includes the Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency, the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, and the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System.
107 The prohibition applies to forex transactions
of the type described in CEA section 2(c)(2)(B), as
well as all forex transactions ‘‘that are functionally
or economically similar’’ to such transactions.
108 See Associations at p. 16.
109 See also supra, n.104.
106 Section
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providing exemptive relief from the July
16 effective date of this provision.110 As
discussed above, though, pending the
effective date of the required rulemaking
to further define the term ‘‘eligible
contract participant,’’ for purposes of
CEA section 2(c)(2)(E) that term shall
mean an eligible contract participant as
defined by the CEA prior to the
enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act.111
F. Private Right of Action
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1. Comments
Section 749 of the Dodd-Frank Act
amends CEA section 22(a)(1)(B) 112 to
apply the CEA’s private right of action
to violations involving swaps. The
Associations requested that the
Commission confirm that it is granting
a temporary exemption pursuant to CEA
section 4(c) with respect to the DoddFrank Act’s expansion of the private
right of action to violations involving
swaps, and to provide a specific section
4(c) exemption with respect to the
application of CEA section 22(a)(1)(B) to
any provision that is the subject of a
Commission or staff no-action
position.113 The Associations noted that
‘‘under the Commission’s proposed
categorization, it is clear that section
749’s amendment to CEA Section
22(a)(1)(B) should logically fall under
Category 2, and accordingly be the
subject of a temporary exemption under
CEA Section 4(c).’’ 114
110 Although none of the comment letters
discussed new CEA section 2(c)(2)(D) enacted in
section 742 of the Dodd-Frank Act, to be codified
at 7 U.S.C. 2(c)(2)(D), it provides protections to
retail customers, which it defines as persons that
are not eligible contract participants, in transactions
in commodities other than foreign currency. Thus,
it raises similar issues. Fraud and abusive practices
also have been a frequent problem in off-exchange
transactions with retail customers in commodities
such as precious metals. In light of these important
customer protection concerns, and the fact that the
CEA prior to enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act
already contains a settled definition of the term
‘‘eligible contract participant,’’ the Commission is
clarifying that new CEA section 2(c)(2)(D) similarly
is a Category 4 provision for which no relief from
the July 16 effective date is being provided. Pending
the effective date of the required rulemaking to
further define the term ‘‘eligible contract
participant,’’ for purposes of CEA section 2(c)(2)(D)
that term shall mean an eligible contract participant
as defined by the CEA prior to the enactment of the
Dodd-Frank Act.
111 AIMA submitted a comment letter that
expressed ‘‘support [for] exemptive relief from any
rule that relies on the amended definition’’ of the
term ‘‘eligible contract participant.’’ See AIMA at p.
2. The exemptive relief being issued by the
Commission applies to various provisions of the
Dodd-Frank Act and the CEA that otherwise would
become effective on July 16, 2011. The Commission
will consider the appropriate effective date and
compliance date of the rules implementing the
Dodd-Frank Act in its final rulemakings adopting
such rules.
112 7 U.S.C. 25(a)(1)(B).
113 See Associations at p. 12.
114 Id. at 11.
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2. Commission Determination
As noted in the proposed order,
amended CEA section 22(a) (private
right of action with respect to swaps) is
a provision that amends the CEA and
that references a term that requires
further definition, but nevertheless, the
Commission does not believe that it is
appropriate to include the provision
within the scope of the exemptive
relief.115 To the extent that the Final
Order provides exemptive relief under
CEA section 4(c) with respect to
Category 2 and Category 3 provisions,
such exemptive relief would, in effect,
preclude a person from succeeding in a
private right of action under CEA
section 22(a) for violation of such
provisions. Accordingly, the
Commission believes that the requested
relief is not necessary to achieve the
purposes of the Final Order.116
Nevertheless, the staff’s Category 4 list
that was posted on the CFTC Web site
identified only CEA sections 22(a)(4)
and (5)—not section 22(a)(1), which is
the provision that provides for a private
right of action for violation of the swap
provisions. To address this inadvertent
omission, the Category 4 list in the
appendix to this Final Order includes
CEA section 22(a)(1)(B).117
FR at 35374, n.13.
Commission also declines to provide a
section 4(c) exemption with respect to the
application of CEA section 22(a)(1)(B) to any
provision that is the subject of a no-action letter, as
such relief would be the functional equivalent of
exemptive relief which may be restricted under the
limitations on CEA section 4(c) set forth in section
721(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act. In the absence of
clear authority to provide such relief in this
manner, the Commission does not believe that
granting such relief in this Final Order would
provide the requested legal clarity.
117 In addition, the lists of Category 1 and
Category 4 provisions set forth in the Appendix
include other changes as compared to the staff lists
that were posted on the Commission’s Web site on
June 14, 2011. Specifically with respect to Category
1: (i) section 711 of the Dodd-Frank Act has been
added to the ‘‘Required Rulemaking’’ column for
Teams II and XXI; (ii) section 741(b)(10) of the
Dodd-Frank Act has been added to the ‘‘Required
Rulemaking’’ column for Team II; (iii) the reference
to ‘‘section 2(h)(7)’’ of the CEA for Team XI has
been modified to read ‘‘section 2(h)(7)(A)–(D);’’ and
(iv) the separate rows with respect to swap data
recordkeeping and reporting requirements have
been combined. And with respect to Category 4: (i)
sections 722(a) and (c) of the Dodd-Frank Act have
been added; (ii) new CEA section 5b(h), to be
codified at 7 U.S.C. 7a–1(h), has been added; (iii)
section 741(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act has been
added; (iv) the reference to ‘‘section 741(b)’’ of the
Dodd-Frank Act has been modified to read ‘‘section
741(b)(8)–(9);’’ (v) wording changes to the
‘‘Summary Description’’ of sections 742(a) and (c)
of the Dodd-Frank Act have been made; (vi) new
CEA sections 23(g) and (m), to be codified at 7
U.S.C. 26(g) and (m), have been added with respect
to section 748 of the Dodd-Frank Act; and (vii) a
technical correction in the reference to CEA section
6(b) has been made with respect to section 749 of
the Dodd-Frank Act.
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116 The
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NYCBA requested the Commission to
‘‘explicitly provide that section
22(a)(4)(B) of the CEA as amended by
the Dodd-Frank Act will become
effective July 16, 2011.’’ 118 The
Commission notes that the Category 4
list in the Appendix includes amended
sections 22(a)(4)–(5) under the DoddFrank Act section 739 provisions
governing legal certainty for swaps. As
such, sections 22(a)(4)–(5) become
effective on July 16, 2011.
G. Preemption
1. Comments
The Commission also received
comments addressing questions of the
preemption of state gaming and bucket
shop laws. NYCBA requested that the
Final Order clarify that any agreement,
contract or transaction subject to the
Final Order ‘‘will benefit from the
preemption of any state or local laws
provided by Section 12(e)(2) of the CEA
because the relief is granted under
Section 4(c) of the CEA.’’ 119
The Associations noted that because
the Dodd-Frank Act repealed the
application of CEA section
12(e)(2)(B) 120 to certain previously
exempted swap transactions, ‘‘market
participants are concerned that
transactions conducted in accordance
with the federal statutory provisions
and rules applicable to swaps could
potentially be subject to challenges for
invalidity under state law prohibitions
against gaming and bucket shops that in
many cases pre-date even federal
regulation of futures contracts.’’ 121 To
address these concerns, the Associations
suggested the adoption of a permanent
exemption under section 4(c) for such
transactions. They noted that ‘‘[i]f the
Commission extends permanent
exemptive relief to such transactions,
this risk would be eliminated, since
CEA section 12(e)(2)(B) explicitly states
that the CEA supersedes state gaming
and bucket shop laws in the case of ‘an
agreement, contract or transaction * * *
118 See
NYCBA at p. 8.
119 Id.
120 CEA section 12(e)(2)(B), as amended by
section 749 of the Dodd-Frank Act, provides that:
(2) This Act shall supersede and preempt the
application of any State or local law that prohibits
or regulates gaming or the operation of bucket shops
(other than antifraud provisions of general
applicability) in the case of—
* * *
(B) An agreement, contract, or transaction that is
excluded from this Act under section 2(c) or 2(f) of
this Act * * * or exempted under section 4(c) of
this Act (regardless of whether any such agreement,
contract, or transaction is otherwise subject to this
Act.)
121 See Associations at p. 14.
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exempted under section 4(c) of [the
CEA] * * *’ ’’ 122
2. Commission Determination
The Commission notes that the Final
Order does not affect the applicability of
CEA section 12(e)(2)(B) to any
exemptive relief under section 4(c) that
is provided by the Final Order. CEA
section 12(e)(2)(B) as amended by
section 749 of the Dodd-Frank Act
provides that the CEA supersedes state
gaming and bucket shop laws in the
case of ‘‘an agreement, contract or
transaction * * * exempted under
section 4(c)’’ of the CEA. To the extent
that the Final Order provides temporary
exemptive relief under CEA section 4(c),
CEA section 12(e)(2)(B) will apply to
such transactions that are within the
scope of such exemptive relief.
As the Commission explained in its
proposed order, the purpose of the relief
is to address concerns that were raised
about the effects upon the swaps market
during the period between July 16, 2011
and the date(s) that the definitional
rulemakings have been completed.123
Indeed, the Commission reaffirmed in
its proposed order that it intends to
‘‘strive to ensure that current practices
will not be unduly disrupted during the
transition to the new regulatory
regime.’’ 124 Insofar as these comments
seek a permanent exemption under
section 4(c), the requested relief is
outside the scope of the Final Order.
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H. Market Issues
1. Comments
State Street Corporation (‘‘State
Street’’) expressed concern that
‘‘limiting exemptive relief under the
Commission’s Order and grandfather
relief under the [swap execution
facility] rules to the small number of
firms that are already operating an
electronic trading platform or system for
the trading of exempt commodities (in
the case of ECMs) or the trading of
futures contracts on excluded
commodities (in the case of EBOTs)
would have the effect of making it
impossible for new entrants—who
would have to wait for the [swap
execution facility] rules to be adopted
and their applications to be approved’’
to enter the swaps market and
compete.125 State Street also requested
that the Commission clarify that
electronic trading facilities that operate,
122 Id.; see also ABA Derivatives Committee at
p. 13.
123 76 FR at 35373.
124 See n.9, supra.
125 See letter dated June 28, 2011, from David C.
Phelan, Executive Vice President and General
Counsel, State Street, at p. 3.
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either currently or at any point during
the relief period, under CEA sections
2(d)(2) and 2(e), as in effect prior to July
16, 2011, will be permitted to conduct
business operations on a temporary
basis during the relief period, without
regard to whether the electronic trading
facility is currently operating or instead
commences operations at some point
during the relief period.126
CME requested that the Commission
confirm that exemptive relief is not
needed for a designated contract market
(‘‘DCM’’) to list swaps for trading on or
after July 16, so long as those products
are regulated as futures products and
market participants trading those
products are regulated as futures market
participants. Alternatively, if the
Commission views it differently, CME
asks the Commission to issue such
exemptive relief.127
2. Commission Determination
In response to the comments, the
Commission would like to clarify the
conditions that apply to the grandfather
relief orders for ECMs and EBOTs that
were issued by the Commission in
September 2010.128 Both of those orders
have three basic conditions. First, the
ECM or EBOT must file an appropriate
and timely petition with the
Commission. In the case of ECMs, the
filing deadline was September 20, 2010
and for EBOTs, the deadline is July 15,
2011. Second, the ECM or EBOT must
file a DCM or swap execution facility
(‘‘SEF’’) application with the
Commission within 60 days of the
effective date of final regulations
regarding the DCM or SEF provisions.
Third, the ECM’s or EBOT’s DCM or
SEF application must remain pending
before the Commission.
The Commission is clarifying the
second and third conditions, in that the
Commission has not yet issued any final
DCM or SEF rulemakings since
enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act. The
Commission notes that the list of
conditions for the ECM and EBOT
grandfather relief orders are premised
on the ECM or EBOT ‘‘meet[ing] all of
the following applicable conditions.’’ 129
Given that the Commission has not yet
adopted either final DCM or final SEF
regulations, the ECM and EBOT
grandfather relief order conditions
premised on DCM or SEF applications
are not yet applicable. Accordingly, at
this point in time, all that an ECM or
EBOT must do to receive relief pursuant
to the grandfather relief orders is to have
PO 00000
126 Id.
at pp. 2–3.
CME at pp. 4–5.
128 See supra, n.47.
129 Id. at 56515.
127 See
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satisfied the orders’ petition condition
in a timely manner.
The Commission also is clarifying the
relationship between the grandfather
relief orders and this Final Order. For
ECMs that filed their petitions with the
Commission by September 20, 2010, the
grandfather relief order operates
independently and those ECMs may rely
on either the grandfather relief order or
this Final Order, or both. For those
ECMs that did not file a petition for
grandfather relief by September 20,
2010, they may qualify for relief under
this temporary Final Order if they
satisfy the requisite terms and
conditions herein.130 Similarly, for
EBOTs that file or have filed their
petitions for grandfather relief by July
15, 2011, that grandfather relief operates
independently and those EBOTs may
rely on either the grandfather relief
order or this Final Order, or both.
Likewise, for those EBOTs that have not
filed their petitions for grandfather relief
by July 15, 2011, they may qualify for
relief under this Final Order if they, too,
satisfy the requisite terms and
conditions herein.
The Commission stated in footnote 39
of the proposed order that the proposed
exemptive relief would not be available
to an electronic trading facility that, as
of July 15, 2011, was not already
operating as an ECM pursuant to CEA
sections 2(h)(3)–(7), or to an EBOT that,
as of July 15, 2011, was not already
operating pursuant to CEA section 5d,
or not compliant with the conditions set
forth in such provisions. The
Commission, however, has determined
not to limit the Final Order herein to
those ECMs and EBOTs that already are
operating as of July 15, 2011. Further,
the Commission also clarifies that the
relief under this Final Order is available
to an electronic trading facility that
currently operates or commences
operations during the pendency of this
relief pursuant to CEA sections 2(d)(2)
and 2(e), as in effect prior to July 16,
2011.
The Commission also confirms that a
DCM may list and trade swaps on or
after July 16 under the DCM’s rules
related to futures contracts, without
exemptive relief.131
130 EBOTs and ECMs that rely on this exemptive
relief also must comply with part 36 of the
Commission’s regulations and, in particular, its
various reporting requirements.
131 The Commission notes that if a DCM intends
to trade swaps pursuant to the rules, processes, and
procedures currently regulating trading on its DCM,
the DCM may need to amend or otherwise update
applicable rules, processes, and procedures, in
order to address the trading of swaps, depending
upon the composition of the DCM’s rules.
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 138 / Tuesday, July 19, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
I. Core Principles
1. Comments
The Commission received a number
of comments on the application of the
Proposed Order to the DCM and
derivatives clearing organization
(‘‘DCO’’) core principles. On the one
hand, CME agreed that the core
principles for DCMs and DCOs are
appropriately categorized as Category 4
provisions for which the Commission is
not issuing exemptive relief.132
On the other hand, some commenters
believe that the core principles for
DCMs and DCOs in CEA sections 5(d)
and 5b(c)(2), respectively,133 should be
treated as either Category 1 or 2
provisions. The Minneapolis Grain
Exchange, Inc. (‘‘MGEX’’) stated that the
Commission should grant temporary
relief from the new core principles of
the Dodd-Frank Act for DCOs and
DCMs.134 The Natural Gas Exchange
(‘‘NGX’’) expressed concern that DCOs
will have to make modifications to come
into compliance with amended core
principles by July 16, 2011, and then
may be required to again make
modifications when final rules are
issued. NGX requested that the
Commission or its staff adopt a nonenforcement policy against any DCO or
DCO member or participant with respect
to compliance with the DCO core
principles until the implementation of
final Commission rules governing the
operation of DCOs or, alternatively, that
the Commission provide at least a 60day period following July 16, 2011,
before it takes any enforcement
action.135
Nodal Exchange cautioned that
placing the DCM core principles in
section 735 of the Dodd-Frank Act into
Category 4, while the core principles for
SEFs in section 733 are in Category 1,
may lead to their respective regulations
being issued and finalized at different
times.136 Nodal Exchange recommended
that the Commission issue final rules
regarding the DCM and SEF core
principles simultaneously.137
2. Commission Determination
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The Commission has considered these
comments and believes that the DCO
and DCM core principles are properly
132 CME
at p. 4.
U.S.C. 7(d) and 7a–1(c)(2).
134 See letter dated July 1, 2011, from Layne G.
Carlson, Corporate Secretary, MGEX, at pp. 1–2.
135 See letter dated June 30, 2011, from Peter
Krenkel, President and Chief Executive Officer,
NGX, at pp. 2–3.
136 See letter dated June 30, 2011, from Paul
Cusenza, Chief Executive Officer, Nodal Exchange,
at pp. 1, 4.
137 Id. at p. 4.
133 7
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treated as Category 4 provisions outside
the scope of relief of this Final Order.
These amended core principles apply to
the trading and clearing of instruments
on DCMs and DCOs, regardless of
whether the instrument is a futures
contract or a swap. The Commission
sees no need to delay the application of
these amended core principles to DCMs
that trade futures contracts or to DCOs
that clear futures, a term which does not
require further definition under the
Dodd-Frank Act. Moreover, the
amended core principles provide that,
absent a rule or regulation prescribed by
the Commission, DCMs and DCOs shall
have reasonable discretion in
developing their rules and programs to
comply with the core principles.138
To the extent that the Commission has
issued proposed rulemakings with
regard to these core principles, any
requirements or guidance in such
rulemakings will not become effective
until the effective or compliance date of
a final rulemaking. The Commission, in
its discretion, will, where appropriate,
establish separate compliance dates to
address issues arising from the impact
of compliance with any new
requirements.
J. Intermediary Issues
1. Comments
The Commission received a comment
on part two of its proposed order
relating to whether the exemption
provided under part 35 applies to
agency transactions. Specifically, State
Street requested that the Commission
‘‘make clear that eligible swap
participants and eligible contract
participants may continue to rely on the
Part 35 exemption to effect transactions
in excluded or exempt commodities,
either directly or through brokers and
other agents, as currently permitted by
Part 35.’’ 139
The Commission also received a
comment on part two of the Proposed
Order relating to registration
requirements for futures commission
merchants (‘‘FCMs’’), introducing
brokers (‘‘IBs’’), and commodity trading
advisors (‘‘CTAs’’). The law firm of
Covington & Burling noted that many
participants exclusively in the ‘‘OTC’’
swaps market are not currently
registered with the Commission in any
capacity, but may have to register with
the Commission as FCMs, IBs or CTAs
after the Commission’s Dodd-Frank Act
rules are made effective. The commenter
requested that the Commission clarify
138 See, e.g., CEA section 5(d)(1)(B) and section
5b(c)(2)(A)(ii), 7 U.S.C. 7(d)(1)(B) and 7a–
1(c)(2)(A)(ii).
139 See State Street at p. 4.
PO 00000
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42519
that these entities will not be required
to register in those capacities based
solely on their swaps activity until after
the last adopted final product definition
rules become effective.140
2. Commission Determination
The purpose of this exemptive relief
is to maintain the status quo during the
implementation process for the DoddFrank Act. As noted in the proposed
order, the temporary exemptive relief
would not affect the availability of part
35 with respect to transactions that fully
meet the requirements of part 35.141
Thus, the Commission confirms that to
the extent that agency transactions are
permitted under part 35, that relief is
unaffected by the temporary exemptive
relief provided herein.142 However, for
transactions that exclusively qualify for
the temporary exemptive relief in part
two of this Final Order (i.e., do not
comply fully with the requirements of
part 35), such agency transactions
would only be permitted to the extent
they were permitted by the applicable
statutory exclusions and exemptions in
effect prior to July 16, 2011 (i.e., current
CEA sections 2(d), 2(e), 2(g), 2(h), and
5d).
The Dodd-Frank Act amended various
intermediary definitions to cover swaps
activity as well as futures
transactions.143 The Commission
confirms that if an entity is exclusively
participating in the swaps market, it
would not have to register as an FCM,
IB or CTA prior to the completion of the
rulemaking further defining the term
‘‘swap.’’ In sum, the Commission will
not require registration in an
intermediary capacity in this situation
until the further definition of the term
‘‘swap’’ becomes effective.
IV. Section 4(c) of the Commodity
Exchange Act
Section 4(c)(1) of the CEA 144
authorizes the CFTC to exempt any
140 See letter dated July 1, 2011 from Bruce C.
Bennett, Covington & Burling LLP, at p. 5.
141 76 FR at 35376.
142 See Exemption for Bilateral Transactions, 65
FR 78030, 78033, Dec. 13, 2000.
143 See, e.g., 76 FR at 35374 n.16.
144 CEA section 4(c)(1), 7 U.S.C. 6(c)(1), 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
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19JYR1
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transaction or class of transactions
(including any person or class of
persons offering, entering into,
rendering advice or rendering other
services with respect to, the transaction)
from any of the provisions of the CEA
(subject to certain exceptions). Pursuant
to CEA section 4(c)(2), the Commission
must determine that: (1) The exemption
is appropriate for the transaction and
consistent with the public interest; (2)
the exemption is consistent with the
purposes of the CEA; (3) the transaction
will be entered into solely between
‘‘appropriate persons;’’ 145 and (4) the
exemption will not have a material
adverse effect on the ability of the
Commission or any contract market to
discharge its regulatory or selfregulatory responsibilities under the
CEA.146
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. Further,
the Commission may grant such an
exemption either conditionally or
unconditionally, or for stated periods
within the Commission’s discretion.
Finally, section 712(f) of the DoddFrank Act authorizes the Commission to
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 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
Commission determines that the exemption would
be consistent with the public interest.
145 CEA section 4(c)(3), 7 U.S.C. 6(c)(3), includes
within the term ‘‘appropriate person’’ a number of
specified categories of persons deemed appropriate
under the CEA for entering into transactions
exempted by the Commission under section 4(c).
This includes persons the Commission determines
to be appropriate in light of their financial or other
qualifications, or the applicability of appropriate
regulatory protections. See CEA section 4(c)(3)(K),
7 U.S.C 6(c)(3)(K).
146 CEA Section 4(c)(2), 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) 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.
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‘‘exempt persons, agreements, contracts,
or transactions from provisions of the
Act, under the terms contained in’’ the
Act, in order to prepare for the effective
dates of the provisions of Title VII.
A. The Proposed Order
In enacting section 4(c), Congress
noted that the goal of the 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.’’ 147 In
proposing the temporary relief, the
Commission stated its intention to
provide clarity and stability to the
markets and market participants
concerning the applicability of the
provisions of the CEA, as added or
amended by the Dodd-Frank Act (in part
one), and the current provisions of the
CEA as repealed by the Dodd-Frank Act
(in part two), upon the general effective
date of Title VII, thereby avoiding or
minimizing undue and unwarranted
disruptions to the markets.148
The Commission also noted the
limited duration of the proposed order
and that it reserved the Commission’s
anti-fraud and anti-manipulation
enforcement authority.149 As such, the
Commission stated its belief that the
proposed order would be consistent
with the public interest and purposes of
the CEA.150 The Commission proposed
to limit the relief to appropriate persons,
including persons in current registration
categories for which the Dodd-Frank Act
expanded the definition to include
activities relating to swaps (e.g., IBs,
commodity pool operators (‘‘CPOs’’),
CTAs, and associated persons
thereof).151 The Commission stated its
belief that the proposed order 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.152
B. Comments
The ABA Derivatives Committee
commented that the Commission should
exercise its authority under CEA section
4(c)(3)(K) to make it clear that the
147 House Conf. Report No. 102–978, 1992
U.S.C.C.A.N. 3179, 3213.
148 76 FR at 35377.
149 Id.
150 Id.
151 76 FR at 35377 n.46, citing CEA section
4(c)(3)(K), 7 U.S.C. 6(c)(3)(K) (appropriate persons
may include such ‘‘other persons that the
Commission determines to be appropriate in light
of their financial or other qualifications, or the
applicability of appropriate regulatory
protections’’).
152 76 FR at 35377.
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‘‘appropriate persons’’ who qualify for
relief under its exemptive order include
individuals whose total assets exceed
$10 million and ‘‘persons relying on the
‘line of business’ exemption to engage in
swaps without ECP status.’’ 153
C. Commission Determination
For the purpose of making the
requisite findings under section 4(c) for
part two of the Final Order, the
Commission confirms that individuals
whose total assets exceed $10 million
are appropriate persons. Likewise, for
purposes of part two of this Final Order,
persons relying on the ‘‘line of
business’’ exemption as described in the
proposed order are appropriate persons.
It should be noted that the explicit
reference in the proposed order to IBs,
CPOs, and CTAs (and associated
persons thereof) as appropriate persons
was not intended to restrict the scope of
appropriate persons to only those
persons. The Commission confirms that
for the purpose of this temporary Final
Order, the Commission has found the
various persons and entities subject to
this temporary relief to be appropriate
persons.
For the reasons provided in the
proposed order and mentioned above,
the Commission has determined that: (1)
The exemption provided by this Final
Order is appropriate for the subject
transactions and consistent with the
public interest; (2) the exemption is
consistent with the purposes of the
CEA; (3) the transactions will be entered
into solely between appropriate persons;
and (4) the exemption will not have a
material adverse effect on the ability of
the Commission or any contract market
to discharge its regulatory or selfregulatory responsibilities under the
CEA.
V. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act
(‘‘PRA’’) 154 imposes certain
requirements on federal agencies
(including the Commission) in
connection with conducting or
sponsoring any collection of
information as defined by the PRA. This
Final Order does not require a new
collection of information from any
persons or entities that would be subject
to the Final Order.
153 See ABA Derivatives Committee at p. 9. See
also CEF at p. 7 n.21. The ‘‘line of business’’
provision was a part of the Commission’s Policy
Statement Concerning Swap Transactions, 54 FR
30694, 30696–30697, July 21, 1989.
154 44 U.S.C. 3507(d).
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 138 / Tuesday, July 19, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
VI. Cost-Benefit Considerations
requires
Section 15(a) of the
the Commission to consider the costs
and benefits of its action before issuing
an order under the CEA. CEA section
15(a) further specifies that costs and
benefits shall be evaluated in light of
five broad areas of market and public
concern: (1) Protection of market
participants and the public; (2)
efficiency, competitiveness, and
financial integrity of futures markets; (3)
price discovery; (4) sound risk
management practices; and (5) other
public interest considerations. The
Commission may in its discretion give
greater weight to any one of the five
enumerated areas and could in its
discretion determine that,
notwithstanding its costs, a particular
order is necessary or appropriate to
protect the public interest or to
effectuate any of the provisions or to
accomplish any of the purposes of the
CEA.
The Commission has decided to issue,
pursuant to its authority under CEA
sections 4(c) and 4c(b), certain
temporary relief from the provisions of
the CEA added or amended by Title VII
of the Dodd-Frank Act that reference
one or more terms regarding entities or
instruments that Title VII requires be
‘‘further defined,’’ such as the terms
‘‘swap,’’ ‘‘swap dealer,’’ ‘‘major swap
participant,’’ or ‘‘eligible contract
participant,’’ to the extent that
requirements or portions of such
provisions specifically relate to such
referenced terms and do not require a
rulemaking. The Commission also is
granting temporary relief from certain
provisions of the CEA that will or may
apply to certain agreements, contracts,
and transactions as a result of the repeal
of various CEA exemptions and
exclusions as of the general effective
date of Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act
set forth in section 754—July 16, 2011.
The Commission received no
comments on the cost and benefit
considerations section of the proposed
order. Nevertheless, the Commission
did receive two specific comments
requesting additional exemptive relief
due to potential costs.
NGX is concerned that DCOs will
have to make modifications to come into
compliance with amended core
principles by July 16, 2011, and then
may be required to again make
modifications when final rules are
issued by the Commission.156 Similarly,
MGEX states that the Commission
should grant temporary relief from the
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CEA 155
155 7
new core principles of the Dodd-Frank
Act for DCOs and DCMs in sections 725
and 735.157
The Commission has decided not to
grant more relief to DCOs and DCMs.
The Commission recognizes that DCOs
and DCMs have discretion in how to
comply with the core principles unless
and until the CFTC issues rules in this
area.
An analysis of the specific areas of
concern identified in section 15(a) is set
out immediately below:
1. Protection of Market Participants and
the Public
As discussed above, the scope of this
temporary exemptive relief is limited to
persons who are ‘‘appropriate persons’’
as set forth in section 4(c) of the CEA
and in this Final Order. Further, this
Final Order does not affect the
Commission’s existing and future antifraud and anti-manipulation authorities,
including CEA sections 2(a)(1)(B), 4b,
4o, 6(c), 6(d), 6c, 8(a), 9(a)(2), or 13, or
the regulations of the Commission
promulgated pursuant to such
authorities, including regulations
pursuant to CEA section 4c(b)
proscribing fraud. The Commission
believes that market participants and
the public will benefit from the clarity
offered by the temporary exemptive
relief, while maintaining the
Commission’s authorities regarding the
prevention and deterrence of fraud and
manipulation. With respect to costs, the
Commission believes that the exemptive
relief imposes no affirmative duties or
obligations on market participants and
the public. The temporary exemptive
relief does not contain any requirement
to create, retain, submit, or disclose any
information. Furthermore, the
exemptive relief imposes no
recordkeeping or related data retention
or disclosure requirements on any
person, including small businesses.
Consequently, the Commission finds it
unlikely that the exemptive relief will
impose any additional costs beyond the
existing costs associated with ongoing
operations, including those that ensure
that behavior and statements are not
fraudulent or manipulative.
2. Efficiency, Competition, and
Financial Integrity
Although the Dodd-Frank Act
establishes a comprehensive new
regulatory framework for swaps, the
Commission’s work to implement that
framework will not be complete as of
July 16, 2011. Accordingly, this relief
offers the benefit of greater clarity in the
swaps market that is in the interest of
U.S.C. 19(a).
NGX at p. 2.
156 See
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PO 00000
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42521
both the markets and the public. The
Commission believes that this
temporary exemptive relief is an
appropriate measure to facilitate a
transition to the comprehensive new
regulatory framework for swaps set out
in Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act. Such
an orderly transition will promote
market efficiency, competition, and
financial integrity.
3. Price Discovery
As stated above, the temporary relief
provided here is designed to maintain
the functioning of the markets until
such time as the comprehensive new
regulatory framework for swaps set forth
in the Dodd-Frank Act is in place. With
the clarity offered by the exemptive
relief, markets will function better as
venues for price discovery.
4. Sound Risk Management Practices
Appropriate persons covered by this
exemptive relief will be subject to the
Commission’s full array of existing antifraud and anti-manipulation provisions
and certain new authorities provided
under the Dodd-Frank Act. Market
participants and the public will benefit
substantially from the continuing
protection through the prevention and
deterrence of fraud and manipulation.
Markets protected from fraud and
manipulation function better as venues
for price discovery and risk
management.
5. Other Public Interest Considerations
This Final Order is temporary and
limited. It will not affect the
applicability of any provision of the
CEA to futures contracts, options on
futures contracts, or transactions with
retail customers in foreign currency or
other commodities pursuant to CEA
section 2(c)(2). Further, it will expire at
an appropriate date, as discussed above.
The expiration provision will permit the
Commission to ensure that the scope
and extent of exemptive relief is
appropriately tailored to the schedule of
implementation of the Dodd-Frank Act
requirements.
After considering the costs and
benefits, the Commission has
determined to issue this Final Order.
VII. Order
The Commission, to provide for the
orderly implementation of the
requirements of Title VII of the DoddFrank Act, pursuant to sections 4(c) and
4c(b) of the CEA and section 712(f) of
the Dodd-Frank Act, hereby issues this
Order essentially as proposed,
consistent with the determinations set
forth above, which are incorporated in
this Final Order by reference, and:
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(1) Exempts, subject to the conditions
set forth in paragraph (3), all
agreements, contracts, and transactions,
and any person or entity offering,
entering into, or rendering advice or
rendering other services with respect to,
any such agreement, contract, or
transaction, from the provisions of the
CEA, as added or amended by the DoddFrank Act, that reference one or more of
the terms regarding entities or
instruments subject to further definition
under sections 712(d) and 721(c) of the
Dodd-Frank Act, which provisions are
listed in Category 2 of the Appendix to
this Order; provided, however, that the
foregoing exemption:
a. Applies only with respect to those
requirements or portions of such
provisions that specifically relate to
such referenced terms; and
b. Shall expire upon the earlier of: (i)
the effective date of the applicable final
rule further defining the relevant term
referenced in the provision; or (ii)
December 31, 2011;
(2) Exempts, subject to the conditions
set forth in paragraph (3), all
agreements, contracts, and transactions
in exempt and excluded (but not
agricultural) commodities, and any
person or entity offering, entering into,
or rendering advice or rendering other
services with respect to, any such
agreement, contract, or transaction, from
the provisions of the CEA, if the
agreement, contract, or transaction
complies with part 35 of the
Commission’s regulations,
notwithstanding that:
a. The agreement, contract, or
transaction may be executed on a
multilateral transaction execution
facility;
b. The agreement, contract, or
transaction may be cleared;
c. Persons offering or entering into the
agreement, contract or transaction may
not be eligible swap participants,
provided that all parties are eligible
contract participants as defined in the
CEA prior to the date of enactment of
the Dodd-Frank Act;
d. The agreement, contract, or
transaction may be part of a fungible
class of agreements that are
standardized as to their material
economic terms; and/or
e. No more than one of the parties to
the agreement, contract, or transaction is
entering into the agreement, contract, or
transaction in conjunction with its line
of business, but is neither an eligible
contract participant nor an eligible swap
participant, and the agreement, contract,
or transaction was not and is not
marketed to the public;
Provided, however, that: (i) such
agreements, contracts, and transactions
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(and persons offering, entering into, or
rendering advice or rendering other
services with respect to, any such
agreement, contract, or transaction) fall
within the scope of any of the existing
CEA sections 2(d), 2(e), 2(g), 2(h), and
5d provisions or the line of business
provision as in effect prior to July 16,
2011; and (ii) the foregoing exemption
shall expire upon the earlier of: (I) the
repeal, withdrawal or replacement of
part 35 of the Commission’s regulations;
or (II) December 31, 2011;
(3) Provides that the foregoing
exemptions in paragraphs (1) and (2)
above shall not:
a. Limit in any way the Commission’s
authority with respect to any person,
entity, or transaction pursuant to CEA
sections 2(a)(1)(B), 4b, 4o, 6(c), 6(d), 6c,
8(a), 9(a)(2), or 13, or the regulations of
the Commission promulgated pursuant
to such authorities, including
regulations pursuant to CEA section
4c(b) proscribing fraud;
b. Apply to any provision of the
Dodd-Frank Act or the CEA that has
become effective prior to July 16, 2011;
c. Affect any effective or compliance
date set forth in any rulemaking issued
by the Commission to implement
provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act;
d. Limit in any way the Commission’s
authority under section 712(f) of the
Dodd-Frank Act to issue rules, orders, or
exemptions prior to the effective date of
any provision of the Dodd-Frank Act
and the CEA, in order to prepare for the
effective date of such provision,
provided that such rule, order, or
exemption shall not become effective
prior to the effective date of the
provision; and
e. Affect the applicability of any
provision of the CEA to futures
contracts or options on futures
contracts, or to cash markets.
In its discretion, the Commission may
condition, suspend, terminate, or
otherwise modify this Order, as
appropriate, on its own motion. This
Final Order shall be effective
immediately.
Issued in Washington, DC, on July 14, 2011
by the Commission.
David A. Stawick,
Secretary of the Commission.
Note: The following Commissioner’s
statement will not appear in the Code of
Federal Regulations.
Concurrence of Commissioner Scott D.
O’Malia on the Order Regarding the
Effective Date for Swap Regulation
I concur with the Commission’s
decision to use its exemptive authority
under section 4(c) of the Commodity
Exchange Act (CEA) to provide
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temporary relief from certain provisions
of the Dodd-Frank Act. This order will
provide much needed legal certainty to
the market, at least until December 31,
2011, while the Commission continues
its efforts to adopt final rules under the
Dodd-Frank Act. Whereas I support the
Commission in providing legal
certainty, albeit limited, I am
disappointed in the lack of
harmonization between our order and
the exemptive relief that the Securities
and Exchange Commission (SEC)
provided. I am also disappointed that
the final order ignored a number of
comments from market participants,
those that have most at stake in each of
the Commission’s decisions. I hope that
this order does not foreshadow the
direction of final rulemakings to come.
Lack of Harmonization
In general, the SEC’s order provides
exemptive relief until the relevant final
rulemaking is implemented. The
Commission’s order provides such relief
only until December 31, 2011. I
proposed an amendment that would
have conformed the two orders that the
Commission rejected. The SEC is a full
partner in many of our rulemakings; it
only makes sense to develop identical
relief policies. The CFTC’s sunset
provision is based on an arbitrary date
and cuts short the very legal certainty
that this order purports to provide.
Moreover, participants from every
aspect of our market—including
investor advocates, a designated
contract market and derivatives clearing
organization, a potential swap execution
facility, and multiple trade associations
representing intermediaries—
commented that the December 31, 2011,
expiration date is unnecessary. In
contrast, only one commenter supported
the expiration date.
Comments From Market Participants
In addition to not heeding market
participants with respect to the
expiration date, the Commission has
also not addressed the public’s requests
for an implementation plan. I have
repeatedly asked the Commission to set
forth an implementation plan for public
notice and comment. SEC Chairman
Shapiro indicated, in her prepared
remarks before the House Financial
Services Committee, that the SEC is
working on an implementation plan that
will include opportunity for public
comment. This Commission has already
begun voting on final rules, but we have
yet to see a proposed implementation
plan.
Market participants bear the burden of
implementing the multitude of reforms
that the Commission is proposing. We
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cannot pretend that Dodd-Frank has any
chance of meeting its goals if we do not
work with the public to implement the
regulatory requirements.
The Commission is currently
planning to meet on August 4th to
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consider several final rules. I strongly
urge the Commission to put forward an
implementation plan for public
comment during the month of August.
This provides a perfect opportunity to
receive comment on rule order and
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42523
implementation, without delaying the
Commission schedule this fall. If we
wait until September, we will only have
ourselves to blame.
BILLING CODE 6351–01–P
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BILLING CODE 6351–01–C
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
18 CFR Part 40
[Docket Nos. RM10–15–001 and RM10–16–
001; Order Nos. 748–A and 749–A]
Mandatory Reliability Standards for
Interconnection Reliability Operating
Limits; System Restoration Reliability
Standards
wwoods2 on DSK1DXX6B1PROD with RULES_PART 1
AGENCY: Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission.
ACTION: Order on Clarification.
SUMMARY: On March 17, 2011, the
Commission issued Order Nos. 748 and
749, which approved new and revised
Reliability Standards, including IRO–
004–2 and EOP–001. In this order, we
grant the North American Electric
Reliability Corporation’s (NERC) request
for clarification of certain aspects of
Order No. 748 including: The proper
effective date language for Reliability
Standard IRO–004–2; the correct version
identification for the approval of EOP–
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001 intended by the Commission; and
the proper effective date for Reliability
Standard EOP–001–2. The Commission
also grants NERC’s request for
clarification of Order No. 749 with
respect to the version EOP–001 the
Commission intended to approve and its
effective date.
DATES: Effective Date: This order on
rehearing and clarification will become
effective July 19, 2011.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Darrell Piatt (Technical Information),
Office of Electric Reliability, Division
of Reliability Standards, Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission, 888
First Street, NE., Washington, DC
20426, Telephone: (202) 502–6687.
David O’Connor (Technical
Information), Office of Electric
Reliability, Division of Reliability
Standards, Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, 888 First Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20426, (202) 502–
6695.
William Edwards (Legal Information),
Office of the General Counsel, Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission, 888
First Street, NE., Washington, DC
20426, Telephone: (202) 502–6669.
Terence Burke (Legal Information),
Office of the General Counsel, Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission, 888
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First Street, NE., Washington, DC
20426, (202) 502–6498.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Before Commissioners: Jon Wellinghoff,
Chairman; Marc Spitzer, Philip D. Moeller,
John R. Norris, and Cheryl A. LaFleur.
Order on Clarification
Issued July 13, 2011
1. On March 17, 2011, the
Commission issued Order Nos. 748 and
749, which approved new and revised
Reliability Standards, including IRO–
004–2 and EOP–001. In this order, we
grant the North American Electric
Reliability Corporation’s (NERC) request
for clarification of certain aspects of
Order No. 748 including: (1) The proper
effective date language for Reliability
Standard IRO–004–2; (2) the correct
version identification for the approval of
EOP–001 intended by the Commission;
and (3) the proper effective date for
Reliability Standard EOP–001–2. The
Commission also grants NERC’s request
for clarification of Order No. 749 with
respect to the version EOP–001 the
Commission intended to approve and its
effective date.
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[FR Doc. 2011–18248 Filed 7–18–11; 8:45 am]
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 138 (Tuesday, July 19, 2011)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 42508-42534]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-18248]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
17 CFR Chapter 1
Effective Date for Swap Regulation
AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
ACTION: Final Order.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: On June 17, 2011, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission
(``CFTC'' or the ``Commission'') published for public comment in the
Federal Register a proposed order that would grant, pursuant to the
Commission's exemptive authority pursuant to the Commodity Exchange Act
(``CEA''), certain temporary relief from the provisions of the CEA
added or amended by title VII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act (``Dodd-Frank Act'') that reference one or more
terms regarding entities or instruments that title VII requires be
``further defined,'' such as the terms ``swap,'' ``swap dealer,''
``major swap participant,'' or ``eligible contract participant,'' to
the extent that requirements or portions of such provisions
specifically relate to such referenced terms and do not require a
rulemaking. The CFTC also proposed to grant temporary relief from
certain provisions of the CEA that will or may apply to certain
agreements, contracts, and transactions in exempt or excluded
commodities as a result of the repeal of various CEA exemptions and
exclusions as of the general effective date set forth in section 754 of
the Dodd-Frank Act, July 16, 2011. Upon consideration of the full
record, the Commission has determined to issue this final exemptive
order (``Final Order'') essentially as proposed, with appropriate or
necessary modification or clarification.
DATES: Effective July 14, 2011.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Terry Arbit, Deputy General Counsel,
202-418-5120, tarbit@cftc.gov, or Harold Hardman, Deputy General
Counsel, 202-418-5120, hhardman@cftc.gov, Office of the General
Counsel, or Steven Kane, Consultant, 202-418-5911, skane@cftc.gov,
Office of the Chief Economist, CFTC, Three Lafayette Centre, 1151 21st
Street, NW., Washington, DC 20581.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
On July 21, 2010, President Obama signed the Dodd-Frank Act.\1\
Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act amends the CEA \2\ to establish a
comprehensive new regulatory framework for 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 rulemaking and enforcement authorities of the Commission
with respect to, among others, all registered entities and
intermediaries subject to the Commission's oversight. Title VII also
includes amendments to the federal securities laws to establish a
similar regulatory framework for security-based swaps under the
authority of the Securities and Exchange Commission (``SEC'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act, Public Law. 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010).
\2\ 7 U.S.C. 1 et seq.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 754 of the Dodd-Frank Act states that, unless otherwise
provided, the provisions of subtitle A of title VII of the Dodd-Frank
Act (``Title VII'') \3\ ``shall take effect on the later of 360 days
after the date of the enactment of this subtitle or, to the extent a
provision of this subtitle requires a rulemaking, not less than 60 days
after publication of the final rule or regulation implementing such
provision of this subtitle.'' The date 360 days after the date of
enactment is July 16, 2011.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Subtitle A of Title VII contains two parts. Part I, entitled
``Regulatory Authority,'' consists of sections 711-720; part II,
entitled ``Regulation of Swap Markets,'' consists of sections 721-
754. Subtitle B of Title VII is entitled ``Regulation of Security-
Based Swap Markets,'' and consists of sections 761-774. References
to ``Title VII'' in this Release shall include only subtitle A of
Title VII.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To implement the Dodd-Frank Act, as of July 8, 2011, the Commission
has issued 52 advance notices of proposed rulemaking or notices of
proposed rulemaking, two interim final rules, six final rules, and one
proposed interpretive order. The regulatory requirements that have been
proposed by the Commission present a substantially complete mosaic of
the Commission's proposed regulatory framework under Title VII. In
light of
[[Page 42509]]
this substantially complete mosaic, the Commission reopened or extended
the comment period of many of its proposed rulemakings in order to
provide the public with an additional opportunity to comment on the
proposed new regulatory framework for swaps, either in part or as a
whole.\4\ The extended comment period closed on June 3, 2011. The
Commission also has solicited public comments on the phasing of rule
implementation (i.e., identifying which requirements can be met sooner
and which ones will take more time).\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See Reopening and Extension of Comment Periods for
Rulemakings Implementing the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act, 76 FR 25274, May 4, 2011.
\5\ The Commission has noted its ability to phase in
implementation of the new requirements based on factors such as: The
type of swap, including by asset class; the type of market
participants that engage in such trades; the speed with which market
infrastructures can meet the new requirements; and whether
registered market infrastructures or participants might be required
to have policies and procedures in place ahead of compliance with
such policies and procedures by non-registrants. See https://www.cftc.gov/ucm/groups/public/@newsroom/documents/file/staffconcepts050211.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 712(d)(1) of the Dodd-Frank Act requires the Commission and
the SEC to further define certain terms used in Title VII, including
the terms ``swap,'' ``swap dealer,'' ``major swap participant,'' and
``eligible contract participant.'' \6\ Section 721(c) requires the
Commission to adopt a rule to further define the terms ``swap,'' ``swap
dealer,'' ``major swap participant,'' and ``eligible contract
participant'' to prevent evasion of statutory and regulatory
obligations.\7\ The Commission has issued two notices of proposed
rulemaking that address these further definitions.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Section 712(d)(1) provides: ``Notwithstanding any other
provision of this title and subsections (b) and (c), the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission and the Securities and Exchange
Commission, in consultation with the Board of Governors [of the
Federal Reserve System], shall further define the terms `swap',
`security-based swap', `swap dealer', `security-based swap dealer',
`major swap participant', `major security-based swap participant',
and `security-based swap agreement' in section 1a(47)(A)(v) of the
Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1a(47)(A)(v)) and section 3(a)(78)
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(78)).''
\7\ Section 721(c) provides: ``To include transactions and
entities that have been structured to evade this subtitle (or an
amendment made by this subtitle), the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission shall adopt a rule to further define the terms `swap',
`swap dealer', `major swap participant', and `eligible contract
participant'.''
\8\ 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 (``Entity Definitions'') and Further Definition
of ``Swap,'' ``Security-Based Swap,'' and ``Security-Based Swap
Agreement''; Mixed Swaps; Security-Based Swap Agreement
Recordkeeping, 76 FR 29818, May 23, 2011.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission's final rulemakings further defining the terms in
sections 712(d) and 721(c) will not be in place as of July 16, 2011.
Consequently, concerns have been raised about effects upon the swaps
market and the applicability of various regulatory requirements to
certain agreements, contracts, and transactions during the period
between July 16, 2011 and the date(s) that those rulemakings have been
completed. To address these concerns, and to ``strive to ensure that
current practices will not be unduly disrupted during the transition to
the new regulatory regime,'' \9\ the Commission proposed to exercise
its authority under CEA section 4(c) and section 712(f) of the Dodd-
Frank Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ See Notice Regarding the Treatment of Petitions Seeking
Grandfather Relief for Trading Activity Done in Reliance Upon
Section 2(h)(1)-(2) of the Commodity Exchange Act, 75 FR 56512,
56513, Sept. 16, 2010 (``Grandfather Notice'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 4(c) of the CEA, as amended by the Dodd-Frank Act, provides
the Commission with authority to exempt certain agreements, contracts,
and transactions (referred to hereafter collectively as
``transactions'') that may otherwise be subject to the CEA from various
provisions of the CEA.\10\ Section 712(f) of the Dodd-Frank Act states
that ``in order to prepare for the effective dates of the provisions of
this Act,'' including the general effective date set forth in section
754, the Commission may ``exempt persons, agreements, contracts, or
transactions from provisions of this Act, under the terms contained in
this Act.'' Section 754 specifies that unless otherwise provided in
Title VII, provisions requiring a rulemaking become effective ``not
less than 60 days after publication of the final rule'' (but not before
July 16, 2011).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ 7 U.S.C. 6(c).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The provisions of Title VII can be grouped into four major
categories: (1) Provisions that require a rulemaking (for which relief
was not proposed); (2) self-effectuating provisions that reference
terms that require further definition; (3) self-effectuating provisions
that do not reference terms that require further definition and that
repeal provisions of current law; and (4) self-effectuating provisions
for which relief was not proposed.
Category 1 provisions are not self-effectuating because they
require a rulemaking. A significant number of the Title VII provisions
fall into this category. Examples of Category 1 provisions include new
CEA section 4s(a) (governing registration of swap dealers and major
swap participants), new CEA section 4s(e) (governing capital and margin
requirements for swap dealers and major swap participants), and new CEA
section 4s(h) (external business conduct standards for swap dealers and
major swap participants).\11\ Pursuant to section 754, the rulemakings
to implement these provisions of the CEA will not become effective, at
a minimum, until 60 days after publication of a final Commission rule
(and not before July 16, 2011).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ To be codified at 7 U.S.C. 6s(a), 6s(e) and 6s(h),
respectively.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Because the Category 1 provisions are not self-effectuating as of
July 16, 2011, it was not necessary for the Commission to propose
relief with respect to the same. As noted above, the Category 1
provisions will not go into effect until at least 60 days after
publication of a final Commission rule in the Federal Register.\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ As stated in footnote 5, supra, the Commission has
discretion to phase-in implementation of new requirements in
Category 1 rulemakings as well as rulemakings conducted with respect
to Category 2 provisions. Accordingly, the Commission anticipates
that it may establish compliance dates for the substantive
requirements established in a rulemaking implementing Category 1
provisions that differ from the effective date of the rulemaking.
The effective date and compliance dates for each rulemaking will be
determined in each rulemaking proceeding. Additionally, as stated in
footnote 69, infra, the Commission has received and has solicited
public comments with respect to the appropriate phase-in of the
Dodd-Frank Act rulemaking requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Category 4 provisions also fell outside the scope of the
proposed order. They are self-effectuating and do not require relief
because, in the judgment of the Commission, compliance with these
requirements upon the effective date will not cause undue disruption to
affected transactions, markets, or entities, and a delay of the
imposition of these statutory requirements would not be in the public
interest.
The proposed order, as well as lists of the Category 1 and Category
4 provisions prepared by Commission staff, were published on the
Commission's Web site (https://www.cftc.gov) on June 14, 2011. A list of
the provisions in each of the four categories is provided in the
Appendix to this Final Order.
II. The Proposed Order
On June 14, 2011, the Commission issued a proposed order to provide
temporary exemptive relief in two parts, each addressing one of the
remaining categories of provisions noted above: (1) Category 2--
provisions that are self-effectuating (i.e., do not require rulemaking)
and reference terms that require further definition (i.e., ``swap,''
``swap dealer,'' ``major swap participant,'' or ``eligible contract
[[Page 42510]]
participant''); and (2) Category 3--provisions that are self-
effectuating (i.e., do not require rulemaking) and repeal provisions of
current law, but that do not reference terms that require further
definition. The Commission's proposed order was published in the
Federal Register on June 17, 2011.\13\
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\13\ See Effective Date for Swap Regulation, 76 FR 35372, June
17, 2011.
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With respect to part one of the proposed order addressing Category
2 provisions, the Commission proposed to temporarily exempt persons and
entities from the provisions of the CEA, as added or amended by the
Dodd-Frank Act, that reference one or more of the terms regarding
entities or instruments subject to further definition under sections
712(d) and 721(c) of the Dodd-Frank Act, including the terms ``swap,''
``swap dealer,'' ``major swap participant,'' or ``eligible contract
participant.'' \14\ CEA section 4d(f), as amended by section 724 of the
Dodd-Frank Act, is an example of a Category 2 provision to which the
exemption provided in the proposed order would extend.\15\
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\14\ 76 FR at 35374. In footnote 15 of the proposed order, the
Commission stated: ``The Commission's authority to provide exemptive
relief under CEA section 4(c), as amended by section 721(d) of the
Dodd-Frank Act, may not extend to certain Category 2 provisions of
the Dodd-Frank Act and the CEA. These provisions include: new CEA
section 4s(l), 7 U.S.C. 6s(l) (providing for swap dealer segregation
requirements with respect to uncleared swaps); amended CEA section
5b(a), 7 U.S.C. 7a-1(a) (prohibiting a DCO from performing the
functions of a DCO with respect to swaps unless the DCO is
registered with the Commission); and new CEA section 4s(k), 7 U.S.C.
6s(k) (providing for the duties and designation of a chief
compliance officer for swap dealers and major swap participants). As
such, these provisions will take effect on July 16, 2011, and may
not be subject to the exemptive relief noted above granted by the
Commission. The Commission staff has informed the Commission that it
is separately considering whether to issue a no-action letter in
which the staff would state that it would not recommend that the
Commission commence an enforcement action against markets or market
participants for failure to comply with the above-referenced
provisions over a similar time period.'' Subsequently, a draft staff
no-action letter that would provide such relief was posted on the
Commission's Web site. See https://www.cftc.gov/ucm/groups/public/@newsroom/documents/file/noaction061411.pdf.
\15\ To be codified at 7 U.S.C. 6d(f). Thus, for example,
persons who accept money, securities or property (or extend credit
in lieu thereof) from, for, or on behalf of a swaps customer to
margin, guarantee, or secure a swap cleared by or through a
derivatives clearing organization would not be required to register
as futures commission merchants as otherwise required by section
4d(f)(1) until the expiration of the exemption in part one of the
proposed order.
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The Commission made clear that the proposed exemptive relief from
such provisions would apply only with respect to those requirements or
portions of such provisions that specifically relate to such referenced
terms. Further, the Commission stressed that the proposed relief
``would not in any way limit the Commission's authority with respect to
any person, entity, or transaction pursuant to CEA sections 2(a)(1)(B),
4b, 4o, 6(c), 6(d), 6c, 8(a), 9(a)(2), or 13, or the regulations of the
Commission promulgated pursuant to such authorities, including
regulations pursuant to CEA section 4c(b) proscribing fraud.'' \16\
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\16\ 76 FR at 35374. In footnote 16 of the proposed order, the
Commission stated, ``The Dodd-Frank Act amended the CEA's anti-fraud
and anti-manipulation provisions to cover `swaps.''' Examples of
such provisions include the amendments to the antifraud provisions
in CEA section 4b, 7 U.S.C. 6b, as well as the amendments set forth
in section 746 of the Dodd-Frank Act, which enacted certain insider
trading prohibitions that apply to, among other things, futures
contracts and swaps. The Commission stated: ``Although these
provisions therefore would, under the proposed relief, not apply to
`swaps' under the Dodd-Frank Act because that term is subject to
further definition, nevertheless, they will apply to all
transactions other than `swaps' (including, but not limited to,
futures contracts, options on futures contracts, transactions with
retail customers in foreign currency or other commodities pursuant
to CEA section 2(c)(2) (7 U.S.C. 2(c)(2)), and transactions subject
to exemptive relief pursuant to part two of the proposed order).''
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The Commission also placed other limitations on the relief in part
one of the proposed order. First, the Commission stated that the relief
would not apply to any provisions of Title VII and the CEA that have
become effective prior to July 16, 2011 or to Commission regulations
already issued.\17\ Further, the relief would not affect any effective
date set out in any specific Dodd-Frank Act rulemaking by the
Commission.\18\ In addition, the proposed order would not limit the
Commission's authority under section 712(f) of the Dodd-Frank Act to
issue rules, orders, or exemptions prior to the effective date of any
provision, in order to prepare for the effective date of such
provision, provided that such rule, order, or exemption shall not
become effective prior to the effective date of the provision.\19\
Finally, the Commission stated that the proposed order would not affect
the applicability of any provision of the CEA to futures contracts or
options on futures contracts.\20\
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\17\ 76 FR at 35374. In footnote 17 of the proposed order, the
Commission included the following citation: ``See, e.g., section
737(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act (amendments regarding position limits
effective on the date of enactment). Similarly, this relief would
not affect the effective date of any provision that may become
effective after July 16, 2011, such as section 716 of the Dodd-Frank
Act.''
\18\ 76 FR at 35374.
\19\ Id.
\20\ Id. In footnote 18 of the proposed order, the Commission
stated: ``Accordingly and by way of non-exclusive example, where a
provision references both swaps and futures, this relief does not
affect in any way the application of the provision (and any
implementing Commission regulations thereunder) insofar as it refers
to futures.''
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The Commission proposed that the temporary exemptive relief would
expire upon the earlier of: (1) The effective date of the applicable
final rule further defining the relevant term; or (2) December 31,
2011.\21\ In proposing to limit the relief to no more than a fixed
period (i.e., December 31, 2011), the Commission provided the following
reasons:
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\21\ 76 FR at 35374.
First, the Commission believes it appropriate and prudent to
periodically review the extent and scope of any relief provided from
the CEA, as amended by the Dodd-Frank Act. The Commission
anticipates that additional rulemakings to implement the Dodd-Frank
Act will be completed during this period of transitional relief.
During this period the Commission also will be considering the
appropriate phase-in of the various regulatory requirements under
the Dodd-Frank rulemakings. Accordingly, the Commission believes it
would be appropriate to periodically re-examine the scope and extent
of the proposed exemptive relief in order to ensure that the scope
of relief is appropriately tailored to the schedule of
implementation of the Dodd-Frank Act requirements.
Second, the limitation of this exemptive relief to no more than
a fixed period of time is consistent with similar limitations on
transitional relief provided by the Congress elsewhere in Title VII.
Section 723(c) of the Dodd-Frank Act allows persons to submit
petitions to the Commission ``to remain subject to section 2(h) of
the [CEA].'' In acting upon such petitions, the Commission may allow
persons to ``continue operating subject to section 2(h) [of the CEA]
for not longer than a 1-year period.'' Similarly, section 734
authorizes the Commission to grant petitions for persons to remain
subject to the provisions of section 5d of the CEA governing the
operation of exempt boards of trade (``EBOTs'') ``for up to 1 year
after the effective date of this subtitle.'' In light of these
provisions authorizing the Commission to provide transitional relief
for no longer than a fixed period of time, the Commission believes
it would be appropriate to provide transitional relief consistent
with section 712(f) of the Dodd-Frank Act and CEA section 4(c) under
this proposed order for no longer than a fixed time period.\22\
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\22\ 76 FR at 35375 (footnotes omitted).
In the proposed order, the Commission reiterated its intent: (1)
That existing practices should not be unduly disrupted during any
transition period; and (2) to deliberatively and efficiently proceed to
complete the rulemakings to implement the Dodd-Frank Act.\23\ As to
timing, the Commission proposed that in the event that a further
definitions rulemaking is completed prior to December 31, 2011, the
Commission will at the time of such
[[Page 42511]]
rulemaking address the appropriate phase-in and implementation dates of
the resulting regulatory requirements. Alternatively, the Commission
stated, should the proposed order expire at the end of the fixed time
period--December 31, 2011--such expiration will not affect the
Commission's ability to provide further relief, as appropriate, to
avoid undue disruption or costs to market participants.\24\
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\23\ Id.
\24\ Id.
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With respect to part two of the proposed order addressing Category
3 provisions, the Commission's proposed order identified the existing
provisions of the CEA that currently exclude or exempt, in whole or in
part, certain transactions from Commission oversight under the CEA.\25\
These are as follows:
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\25\ Id.
i. Section 2(d)(1),\26\ transactions in excluded commodities
\27\ between eligible contract participants and not executed or
traded on a trading facility;
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\26\ 7 U.S.C. 2(d)(1).
\27\ The term ``excluded commodity'' is defined in CEA section
1a(13), 7 U.S.C. 1a(13), to include, among other things, financial
instruments such as a currency, interest rate, or exchange rate, or
any economic or commercial index based on prices, rates, values, or
levels that are not within the control of any party to the
transaction.
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ii. Section 2(d)(2),\28\ principal-to-principal transactions in
excluded commodities between certain eligible contract participants
and executed or traded on an electronic trading facility;
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\28\ 7 U.S.C. 2(d)(2).
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iii. Section 2(g),\29\ transactions subject to individual
negotiation between eligible contract participants in commodities
other than agricultural commodities and not executed or traded on a
trading facility;
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\29\ 7 U.S.C. 2(g).
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iv. Sections 2(h)(1)-(2),\30\ transactions in exempt commodities
\31\ between eligible contract participants and not entered into on
a trading facility;
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\30\ 7 U.S.C. 2(h)(1)-(2).
\31\ The term ``exempt commodity'' is defined in CEA section
1a(14), 7 U.S.C. 1a(14), as a commodity other than an excluded or
agricultural commodity, and includes energy and metals commodities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
v. Sections 2(h)(3)-(7),\32\ principal-to-principal transactions
in exempt commodities between eligible commercial entities \33\ and
executed or traded on an electronic trading facility (called exempt
commercial markets, or ``ECMs'');
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\32\ 7 U.S.C. 2(h)(3)-(7).
\33\ The term ``eligible commercial entity'' is defined in CEA
section 1a(11), 7 U.S.C. 1a(11).
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vi. Section 5d,\34\ transactions in commodities, among other
things, having a nearly inexhaustible deliverable supply or no cash
market, between eligible contract participants and traded on an
exempt board of trade (``EBOT''); and
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\34\ 7 U.S.C. 7a-3.
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vii. Section 2(e),\35\ which generally provides that nothing in
the CEA governs or is applicable to an electronic trading facility
that limits transactions authorized to be conducted on its
facilities to those satisfying the requirements of sections 2(d)(2),
2(g) or 2(h)(3).
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\35\ 7 U.S.C. 2(e).
Under the Dodd-Frank Act, these provisions will be removed from the
CEA as of July 16, 2011. However, the Commission noted that part 35 of
the Commission's regulations,\36\ and part 32 with respect to
options,\37\ will continue to be available with respect to transactions
that meet the conditions therein, until such time as they may be
withdrawn, amended, or replaced by the Commission.\38\
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\36\ 17 CFR 35.1 et seq.
\37\ 17 CFR 32.1 et seq.
\38\ 76 FR at 35375 and 35376 n.36.
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As the Commission stated in the proposed order, part 35 originally
was promulgated in 1993 pursuant to, among others, the Commission's
general exemptive authority in CEA section 4(c) and authority under
section 4c(b), and provides a broad-based exemption from the CEA for
``swap agreements'' in any commodity.\39\ Specifically, part 35 exempts
``swap agreements,'' as defined therein, from most of the provisions of
the CEA if: (1) They are entered into by ``eligible swap participants''
(``ESPs''); \40\ (2) they are not part of a fungible class of
agreements standardized as to their material economic terms; \41\ (3)
the creditworthiness of any party having an actual or potential
obligation under the swap agreement would be a material consideration
in entering into or determining the terms of the swap agreement,
including pricing, cost, or credit enhancement terms; \42\ and (4) they
are not entered into or traded on a multilateral transaction execution
facility.\43\ The Commission stated that transactions fully meeting the
conditions of part 35 are outside the scope of the proposed order.\44\
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\39\ The Commission notes, as discussed infra, that part 35 was
originally promulgated in part pursuant to the Commission's plenary
options authority in CEA section 4c(b), 7 U.S.C. 6c(b).
\40\ The parties covered under the ESP definition, while very
broad, are not coextensive with those covered by the terms
``eligible commercial entity'' or ``eligible contract participant.''
Therefore, it is possible that a small segment of persons or
entities that are currently relying on one or more of the CEA
exclusions or exemptions cited above might not qualify as an ESP and
consequently would not be eligible for exemptive relief under part
35.
\41\ This condition was designed so that the exemption would not
establish ``a market in swap agreements, the terms of which are
fixed and are not subject to negotiation that functions essentially
in the same manner as an exchange but for the bilateral execution of
transactions.'' See Exemption for Certain Swap Agreements, 58 FR
5587, 5590, Jan. 22, 1993.
\42\ By this condition, the exemption does not extend to
transactions that are subject to a clearing system where the credit
risk of individual members of the system to each other in a
transaction to which each is a counterparty is effectively
eliminated and replaced by a system of mutualized risk of loss that
binds members generally, whether or not they are counterparties to
the original transaction. Id. at 5591.
\43\ In this context, a multilateral transaction execution
facility is a physical or electronic facility in which all market
makers and other participants that are members simultaneously have
the ability to execute transactions and bind both parties by
accepting offers which are made by one member and open to all
members of the facility. Id.
\44\ 76 FR at 35376. In footnote 36, the proposed order also
stated that ``part 32 of the Commission's regulations will continue
to be available with respect to commodity option transactions that
meet the conditions therein, until such time as part 32 may be
withdrawn, amended, or replaced by the Commission.'' See Commodity
Options and Agricultural Swaps, 76 FR 6095, Feb. 3, 2011.
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However, because part 35 covers essentially non-standardized, non-
cleared, non-exchange traded transactions, certain persons or entities
that currently rely on the CEA exclusions or exemptions cited above may
not qualify for part 35. Therefore, and in response to requests from
market participants for greater clarity regarding the applicability of
various statutory and regulatory requirements to certain transactions
following the general effective date, the Commission, pursuant to its
authority under CEA section 4(c), proposed to grant relief for those
transactions that satisfy certain criteria specified below.\45\
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\45\ 76 FR at 35376.
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Specifically, the Commission proposed to temporarily exempt a
transaction in exempt or excluded commodities (and any person or entity
offering or entering into such transaction) from the CEA (other than
the anti-fraud and anti-manipulation enforcement provisions identified
below) following the general effective date if the transaction
otherwise would comply with part 35, notwithstanding that: (1) The
transaction may be executed on a multilateral transaction execution
facility; (2) the transaction may be cleared; (3) persons offering or
entering into the transaction may be eligible contract participants as
defined in the CEA (prior to July 16, 2011); (4) the transaction may be
part of a fungible class of agreements that are standardized as to
their material economic terms; and/or (5) no more than one of the
parties to the transaction is entering into the transaction in
conjunction with its line of business, but is neither an eligible
contract participant nor an ESP, and the transaction was not and is not
marketed to the public (the ``line of business provision'').\46\
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\46\ Id. In footnote 37, the proposed order stated that
commenters responding to the Commission's proposed Entity
Definitions have suggested that the Commission should exercise its
authority to further define the term ``eligible contract
participant'' to encompass the ``line of business'' provision that
was a part of the Commission's Policy Statement Concerning Swap
Transactions, 54 FR 30694, 30696-30697, July 21, 1989. The staff is
evaluating these comments in the context of the Commission's
rulemaking to further define the term ``eligible contract
participant.''
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[[Page 42512]]
As the Commission noted, the proposed temporary exemptive relief
would not affect the availability of either parts 35 or 32 with respect
to transactions that fully meet the conditions therein.\47\ For
transactions that fall outside of existing parts 35 or 32, the
Commission made clear that the proposed relief would only be available
to the extent those transactions (and persons offering or entering into
such transactions) fall within the scope of any of the existing CEA
sections 2(d), 2(e), 2(g), 2(h), and 5d as in effect prior to July 16,
2011 or the line of business provision.\48\
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\47\ 76 FR at 35376. In addition, in September 2010, the
Commission published an order in the Federal Register providing that
it would extend grandfather relief, as provided in sections 723(c)
and 734(c) of the Dodd-Frank Act, to ECMs and EBOTs provided that
certain conditions are met. See Order Regarding the Treatment of
Petitions Seeking Grandfather Relief for Exempt Commercial Markets
and Exempt Boards of Trade, 75 FR 56513, Sept. 16, 2010
(``grandfather relief orders''). The Commission stated that nothing
in the proposed order was intended to impact the availability of the
independent grandfather relief provided in the grandfather relief
orders. Id. at n.38.
\48\ 76 FR at 35376. The Commission stated in footnote 39 of the
proposed order that the exemptive relief would not be available to
an electronic trading facility that, as of July 15, 2011, is not
already operating as an ECM pursuant to CEA sections 2(h)(3)-(7), or
to an EBOT that, as of July 15, 2011, is not already operating
pursuant to CEA section 5d, or not compliant with the conditions set
forth in such provisions.
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With respect to any transaction within the scope of part two of the
proposed order, the Commission stated that the proposed exemptive
relief ``would not in any way limit the Commission's authority with
respect to any person, entity, or transaction pursuant to CEA sections
2(a)(1)(B), 4b, 4o, 6(c), 6(d), 6c, 8(a), 9(a)(2) or 13, or the
regulations of the Commission promulgated pursuant to such authorities,
including regulations pursuant to CEA section 4c(b) proscribing
fraud.'' \49\ Additionally, the Commission stated that the proposed
relief would not affect any Dodd-Frank Act implementing regulations
(and any implementation period contained therein) that the Commission
promulgates and applies to the subject transactions, market
participants, or markets.\50\ With respect to timing, the Commission
proposed that this temporary exemptive relief would expire upon the
earlier of: (1) December 31, 2011; or (2) the repeal or replacement of
parts 35 or 32, as applicable.\51\ The Commission also specified that
the exemptive relief in part two of the proposed order would operate
for no longer than a fixed period of time for the same reasons as
described above with respect to part one of the proposed order.\52\
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\49\ 76 FR at 35376. In so doing, the Commission noted that
``the addition of the term `swap' to some of these provisions would
not in any way affect the applicability of these anti-fraud and
anti-manipulation enforcement provisions to transactions subject to
relief pursuant to part two of the proposed order.'' Id. at n.40.
\50\ 76 FR at 35376. The Commission noted that the proposed
order would not affect any Commission rulemaking authority over
agreements, contracts, or transactions that may not depend on the
terms subject to further definition under sections 712(d) or 721(c)
of the Dodd-Frank Act. This relief also would not affect any
provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act or the CEA that have become
effective prior to July 16, 2011 or regulations already issued. Id.
at n.41.
\51\ 76 FR at 35376.
\52\ Id.
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III. Comments on the Proposed Relief and Commission Determinations
A. Comments Generally
The Commission requested comment on all aspects of the proposed
order, including whether the proposed temporary exemptions are
consistent with the public interest and other requirements of CEA
section 4(c).\53\ The Commission received 19 comment letters from a
variety of interested parties, including market participants and trade
associations, trading platforms and clearing organizations, futures and
derivatives committees of bar associations, a law firm, and a non-
governmental public interest organization.\54\
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\53\ 76 FR at 35377.
\54\ Comments unrelated to the proposed order will not be
evaluated here, but will inform the Commission as it proceeds with
its Dodd-Frank Act rulemakings.
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The majority of commenters generally supported the Commission
taking action to provide clarity and exemptive relief with respect to
the July 16 effective date. For example, the American Feed Industry
Association (``AFIA'') described the proposed order as ``a prudent
move'' to ``ensure current practices for bona fide hedgers and end-
users of agricultural commodities are not unduly disrupted during the
transition.'' \55\ Better Markets, Inc. (``Better Markets'') described
the proposed relief as ``appropriate and reasonable,'' and said that a
limited delay is ``consistent with the Dodd-Frank Act, informed
rulemaking and the goal of financial reform.'' \56\ The Alternative
Investment Management Association (``AIMA'') commented that the
proposed order was ``clear and provide[s] sufficient guidance for
persons and entities to know which rules fall within the order and
which do not.'' \57\ The National Grain and Feed Association (``NGFA'')
commended the agency ``for taking steps to ensure the continued
availability of important risk management tools used by hedgers in the
grain, feed and processing industry.'' \58\
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\55\ See letter dated June 28, 2011, from Joel G. Newman,
President and Chief Executive Officer, AFIA, at p. 1.
\56\ See letter dated July 1, 2011, from Dennis M. Kelleher,
President and Chief Executive Officer and Wallace C. Turbeville,
Derivatives Specialist, Better Markets, at pp. 1, 2.
\57\ See letter dated July 1, 2011, from Jiri Krol, Director of
Government & Regulatory Affairs, AIMA, at page 2.
\58\ See letter dated July 1, 2011, from Matt Bruns, Chair, Risk
Management Committee, NGFA, at p. 1.
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Commenters also suggested various modifications or clarifications
of the proposed order to address specific issues related to the scope
or basis for the proposed exemptive relief. These issues, which are
discussed in the remainder of this section below, include: (1) The
scope of temporary relief; (2) the expiration date; (3) coverage of
commodity options and agricultural swaps; (4) coverage of eligible
contract participants; (5) private rights of action; (6) preemption;
(7) market issues; (8) core principles; (9) intermediary issues; and
(10) the scope of ``appropriate persons'' under CEA section 4(c). After
considering the complete record in this matter, the Commission has
determined that the requirements of CEA section 4(c) have been met. For
the reasons discussed below, the Commission deems it in the public
interest to issue this Final Order substantially as proposed, except
for certain clarifications set forth in the discussion in this section
below, which the Commission deems appropriate or necessary upon due
consideration of the comments received.
B. Scope of Temporary Relief
1. Comments
Several commenters expressed general support for the Commission's
effort to provide exemptive relief but urged the Commission to use what
they stated to be the Commission's broad authority to grant a more
comprehensive relief. For example, the Committee on Futures and
Derivatives Regulation of the New York City Bar Association (``NYCBA'')
stated that the Commission has ``ample'' authority, either based solely
on CEA Section 4(c) or as supplemented by section 754 and section
712(f) of the Dodd-Frank Act, to
[[Page 42513]]
delay the effective date of the Dodd-Frank Act provisions until the
effective date of the related implementing regulations.\59\ Similarly,
the Derivatives and Futures Law Committee of the Business Law Section
of the American Bar Association (``ABA Derivatives Committee'') stated
that sections 754 and 712(f), as well as CEA section 4(c), authorize
the Commission to temporarily grant relief from the Dodd-Frank Act
until all necessary final rulemakings, including rulemakings as to
definitions, are in place.\60\ Finally, BG Americas & Global LNG
(``BGA'') contends that section 721(f) of the Dodd-Frank Act authorizes
the Commission to extend exemptive relief with respect to CEA sections
4s(l) (collateral segregation requirements for uncleared swaps) and
4s(k) (duties and designation of a chief compliance officer).\61\
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\59\ See letter dated June 30, 2011, from Timothy P. Selby,
Chair, NYCBA, at p. 3. NYCBA asserted that the requirement in
section 712(f)(4) that exemptions be made ``under the terms of the
Act'' is intended to require that they be made under the provisions
establishing or limiting regulatory authority under the Dodd-Frank
Act as a whole, rather than referring to the substance of the
exemptive authority available under provisions of the CEA. Id. at p.
4.
\60\ See ABA Derivatives Committee at pp. 2-3. The ABA
Derivatives Committee stated that the Commission's exemptive
authority under the Dodd-Frank Act is broader than the exemptive
authority specifically conferred by the CEA, especially in light of
the different language of section 712(e) as compared to section
712(f). Id. at p. 5.
\61\ See letter dated July 1, 2011, from Lisa Yoho, Director,
Regulatory Affairs and Matt Schatzman, Senior Vice President, Energy
Marketing, BGA, at pp. 9-10. As discussed in footnote 14, supra, the
Commission believes that its authority to provide exemptive relief
under section 4(c), as amended by section 721(d) of the Dodd-Frank
Act, may not extend to certain Category 2 provisions, such as CEA
sections 4s(l) and 4s(k), though the Commission is informed that
staff is separately considering a no-action letter with respect to
these provisions.
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The Commission also received comments requesting modification or
clarification regarding the categorization of certain provisions of the
Dodd-Frank Act.\62\ Specifically, seven trade associations
(collectively, the ``Associations'') filed a joint comment letter
contending that many provisions in Categories 1 and 2 are
interdependent with related rulemakings (including those relating to
definitions) and, thus, should be extended exemptive relief until all
of the mutually-interdependent rulemakings have been completed.\63\ The
ABA Derivatives Committee believes that Category 2 provisions also are
Category 1 provisions because they require the definitional rulemakings
to be completed.\64\
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\62\ See generally letter dated July 1, 2011, from David M.
Perlman, Bracewell & Giuliani LLP, on behalf of the Coalition of
Physical Energy Companies, at p. 3 (requesting statement that the
Commission intends to preserve the legal status quo for the swaps
market unless and until it affirmatively and systematically makes
changes).
\63\ See letter dated July 1, 2011, from American Bankers
Association, ABA Securities Association, Futures Industry
Association, Institute of International Bankers, International Swaps
and Derivatives Association, Investment Company Institute, and
Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, at p. 4.
\64\ See ABA Derivatives Committee at p. 3.
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Commenters addressing the proposed relief for Category 3 provisions
urged that the Commission use its broad authority under CEA section
4(c) and section 712(f) of the Dodd-Frank Act to amend part 35 of the
Commission's regulations to provide blanket exemptive relief.\65\ The
NYCBA recommended that the Commission preserve the current ``safe
harbors'' in CEA sections 2(d), 2(e), 2(g), 2(h) and 5d until the
effective date of the applicable final rules with certain
clarifications, and that such ``safe harbors'' should be available even
if the subject transaction is cleared.\66\
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\65\ See, e.g., letter dated July 1, 2011, from R. Michael
Sweeney, Jr., Hunton & Williams, on behalf of the Working Group of
Commercial Energy Firms (``CEF''), at pp. 3-4. In the alternative,
CEF recommends that at a minimum, the Commission use its authority
under sections 723(c)(l)-(2) to provide grandfather relief to all
persons who transact, operate, or otherwise rely on current CEA
section 2(h) as well as all transactions subject to this provision,
for a six-month period commencing on July 16, 2011. CEF states that
the Commission may rely on section 712(f) as well as sections
723(c)(l)-(2) to exempt persons relying on current CEA sections
2(h)(l)-(2) in carrying out their bilateral exempt commodity
transactions, for up to a one year period, following the effective
date. CEF at p. 4.
\66\ NYCBA at pp. 6-8.
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2. Commission Determination
As stated in the proposed order, a significant number of Dodd-Frank
Act provisions are not self-effectuating and, thus, it is not necessary
to provide relief with respect to such provisions (i.e., Category 1).
With respect to the provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act in Categories 2 or
3, the Commission has determined to use its authority to issue this
exemptive relief under section 712(f) of the Dodd-Frank Act co-
extensively with its exemptive authority under the CEA.\67\ The
exemptive relief will allow markets and market participants to continue
to operate under the regulatory regime as in effect prior to July 16,
2011, but subject to various implementing regulations that the
Commission promulgates and applies to the subject transactions, market
participants, or markets.
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\67\ See CEA sections 4(c) and 4c(b).
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This temporary relief, in the Commission's judgment, is
appropriately tailored to enable the Commission to continue to
implement the Dodd-Frank Act in an expeditious manner, while minimizing
undue disruption and uncertainty for the markets and market
participants during the transition period. In this regard, the
Commission reiterates that, in considering the appropriate phase-in of
its various Dodd-Frank Act implementing regulations, it intends to
continue to ``strive to ensure that current practices will not be
unduly disrupted during the transition to the new regulatory
regime.''\68\ While the sequencing of the final rules is beyond the
scope of this Final Order, the interdependencies of the various
rulemakings will be a consideration in determining the implementation
date for each final rule.\69\
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\68\ See Grandfather Notice, supra, n.9.
\69\ During the Dodd-Frank Act rulemaking process the Commission
has received a number of comments recommending that the Commission
appropriately sequence the effective dates and compliance dates
under the various Dodd-Frank Act rulemakings. As noted in footnote
5, supra, the Commission already has held a roundtable and solicited
public comments with respect to the appropriate phase-in of the
Dodd-Frank Act rulemaking requirements. Prior to the roundtable, on
April 29, 2011, CFTC staff released a document that set forth
concepts that the Commission may consider with regard to the
effective dates of final rules for swaps under the Dodd-Frank Act.
The Commission therefore anticipates that the determinations
regarding the phase-in of compliance dates for and within the
various rulemakings will continue to be informed by the Commission's
further consideration of this issue, including public comments.
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C. Expiration Date
1. Comments
The proposed order included an outermost, fixed expiration date for
parts one and two of the exemptive relief. Part one would expire on the
earlier of: (1) The effective date of the applicable final rule further
defining the relevant term; or (2) December 31, 2011. Part two of the
proposed order would expire on the earlier of: (1) December 31, 2011;
or (2) the repeal or replacement of part 35 of the Commission's
regulations. In the proposed order, the Commission explained that
setting an expiration date was ``appropriate to periodically re-examine
the scope and extent of the proposed exemptive relief'' and that ``the
limitation of this exemptive relief to no more than a fixed period of
time is consistent with similar limitations on transitional relief
provided by the Congress'' in section 723(c) and section 734 of the
Dodd-Frank Act.\70\
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\70\ 76 FR at 35375.
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Better Markets generally supported the expiration date because it
believes that it is extremely important for the
[[Page 42514]]
Commission to have the ability to assess conditions related to
implementation as they evolve over the next six months.\71\ Conversely,
the ABA Derivatives Committee, AIMA, the Associations, CME Group Inc.
(``CME''), and MarketAxess Holdings Inc. (``MarketAxess'') argued that
a predetermined global expiration date was not necessary and the
Commission should provide that the temporary relief will expire for a
given rule only upon the effective date (or compliance date, if later)
of the applicable final rule.\72\
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\71\ See Better Markets at p. 2.
\72\ See ABA Derivatives Committee at p. 6; AIMA at p. 2;
Associations at p. 6; letter dated July 1, 2011, from Craig S.
Donohue, Chief Executive Officer, CME, at p. 2; letter dated June
29, 2011, from Richard McVey, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer,
MarketAxess, at p. 2.
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In the event the Commission decides to include an expiration date,
the NYCBA and ABA Derivatives Committee believe that the Commission
should revise the proposed order to trigger the effectiveness of the
relevant provision only when both the definitional rulemaking and the
substantive rulemaking for the relevant provision become effective.\73\
Similarly, the Associations and CME urged the Commission, at a minimum,
to extend the expiration date to July 2012, consistent with the
transitional period specified in sections 723(c) and 734 of the Dodd-
Frank Act.\74\ Finally, to address a perceived ``potential gap
period,'' the NYCBA and ABA Derivatives Committee believe that the
order should contain language specifically addressing situations where
final rules are adopted within 60 days before December 31, 2011, or
where a final rule otherwise has a prescribed effective date after
December 31, 2011.\75\
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\73\ See NYCBA at p. 4; ABA Derivatives Committee at p. 7.
\74\ See Associations at p. 6, n.11; CME at p. 2.
\75\ See NYCBA at p. 5; ABA Derivatives Committee at pp. 7-8.
NYCBA and the ABA Derivatives Committee proposed the following
language: ``This order shall expire on (1) December 31, 2011, with
respect to any provision for which final rules (including final
definitional rules) were not adopted on or before December 31, 2011,
or (2) with respect to any provision for which final rules
(including final definitional rules) were adopted on or before
December 31, 2011, on the later of the effective date of all final
definitional rules used in the provision and the effective date of
the provision as set forth in the final rules adopting such
provision.''
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2. Commission Determination
The Commission has determined, for the reasons discussed in the
proposed order, not to alter the expiration date(s) contained in the
proposed order. An automatic expiration date of no later than December
31, 2011, will allow the Commission to review the extent and scope of
relief provided from the CEA on a measured basis. Should the Commission
deem it appropriate to extend any exemptive relief, the Commission will
be in a better position to tailor any exemption at that time. Further,
as noted in the proposed order, limiting exemptive relief to a fixed
period is consistent with the approach to transitional relief provided
in sections 723(c) and 734 of the Dodd-Frank Act. With regard to any
concerns over a potential ``gap period'' before or after the expiration
date of December 31, 2011, the Commission notes that it can address
compliance date concerns within the context of each individual
rulemaking. Once again, the Commission will be able to act in a
measured manner tailored to the particular statutory and regulatory
provisions.
D. Commodity Options and Agricultural Swaps
1. Comments
Several commenters requested that the Commission clarify that the
relief based on part 35 in part two of the proposed order, which
applies to certain transactions in exempt and excluded commodities,
covers commodity options.\76\ The ABA Derivatives Committee also
requested that the Commission expand the relief based on part 35 in
part two of the proposed order to include swaps and options in
agricultural commodities.\77\ Finally, commenters including various
energy companies urged the Commission to rely, in part, upon CEA
section 4c(b) as authority to issue the elements of the relief related
to options, stating that the Commission retains its plenary authority
to regulate commodity options under CEA section 4c(b) \78\ and that
section 4c(b) was unaltered by the Dodd-Frank Act.\79\ The NGFA,
though, noted that the proposed order addressed concerns it had
regarding the availability of certain option-based transactions until
final rules authorizing their continued use are published.\80\
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\76\ See CEF at p. 5; ABA Derivatives Committee at p. 12; BGA at
p. 8.
\77\ See ABA Derivatives Committee at pp. 9, 11-13; letter dated
June 29, 2011, from Paul J. Pantano, Jr., and Athena Eastwood,
Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft LLP, on behalf of the Commodity
Options and Agricultural Swaps Working Group, at p. 2.
\78\ See CEF at p. 5, n.12.
\79\ See ABA Derivatives Committee at pp. 10-11; BGA at p. 8,
n.22.
\80\ See NGFA at p. 1.
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2. Commission Determination
With respect to options, the Commission is clarifying that the
relief in part two of the Final Order that is based on part 35 applies
to commodity options on excluded and exempt commodities to the extent
they were permitted by the applicable statutory exemptions and
exclusions in effect prior to July 16, 2011. As reflected in the
commenters' citations to Sec. 35.1 of the Commission's regulations,
the text of paragraph (b)(1) of the ``swap agreement'' definition in
the rule lists several types of options, including, but not limited to,
currency options, interest rate options, and rate caps and collars, and
includes the following text: ``any other similar agreement (including
any option to enter into any of the foregoing).'' \81\
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\81\ 17 CFR 35.1(b)(1)(i). In addition to the options
specifically identified in the swap agreement definition, in the
part 35 adopting release, the Commission stated that ``[t]he words
`any similar agreement' in the definition includes any agreement
with a similar structure to those transactions expressly included in
the definition (e.g., a cap, collar, or floor) without regard to the
nature of the underlying commodity interest involved.'' Exemption
for Certain Swap Agreements, 58 FR 5587, 5589 n.16, Jan. 22, 1993.
The Commission also said that ``[i]n enacting this exemptive rule,
the Commission is also acting under its plenary authority under
section 4c(b) of the Act with respect to swap agreements that may be
regarded as commodity options.'' Id. at 5589.
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Under part two of the Final Order, transactions in exempt or
excluded commodities (and persons offering, entering into, or rendering
advice or rendering other services with respect to such transactions)
will be temporarily exempt from the CEA if such transactions comply
with part 35 notwithstanding that: (1) The transaction may be executed
on a multilateral transaction execution facility; (2) the transaction
may be cleared; (3) persons offering or entering into the transaction
may be eligible contract participants as defined in the CEA (prior to
the enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act); (4) the transaction may be part
of a fungible class of agreements that are standardized as to their
material economic terms; and/or (5) no more than one of the parties to
the transaction is entering into the transaction in conjunction with
its line of business, but is neither an eligible contract participant
nor an ESP, and the transaction was not and is not marketed to the
public. The options identified in the swap agreement definition and any
options captured by the concluding catch-all language, as well as any
options described in paragraphs (b)(1)(ii) \82\ and/or (iii) \83\ of
Sec. 35.1 of the
[[Page 42515]]
Commission's regulations, involving excluded or exempt commodities are,
therefore, within the scope of the Final Order.\84\
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\82\ Paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of Sec. 35.1 defines ``any
combination of the foregoing [list of identified swap agreements]''
as a swap agreement.
\83\ Paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of Sec. 35.1 defines ``[a] master
agreement for any of the foregoing [list of identified swap
agreements] together with all supplements thereto'' as a swap
agreement.
\84\ In addition to CEA section 4(c) and section 712(f) of the
Dodd-Frank Act, CEA section 4c(b), 7 U.S.C. 6c(b) also provides the
Commission with authority to issue the temporary exemptive Order
with respect to commodity options. Section 4c(b), which was
unaltered by the Dodd-Frank Act, provides the Commission plenary
authority to regulate commodity options. Parts 32 and 35 were
issued, in part, based on the Commission's authority under CEA
section 4c(b).
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With respect to agricultural commodities, part 35 is not currently
available for option transactions on the agricultural commodities
enumerated in either CEA section 1a(4) \85\ or Sec. 32.2 of the
Commission's regulations \86\ (the ``Enumerated Agricultural
Commodities''). Such option transactions may occur only pursuant to the
agricultural trade option exemption in Sec. 32.13 of the Commission's
regulations.\87\ As the Commission noted when it adopted Sec. 32.13 as
an interim final rule, which it later adopted as a final rule:
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\85\ 7 U.S.C. 1a(4).
\86\ 17 CFR 32.2.
\87\ 17 CFR 32.13. The Commission notes that the NGFA comment
letter generally supported the Commission's approach ``to preserve
th