Derivatives Clearing Organization General Provisions and Core Principles, 69334-69480 [2011-27536]
Download as PDF
69334
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING
COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 1, 21, 39, and 140
RIN 3038–AC98
Derivatives Clearing Organization
General Provisions and Core
Principles
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Commodity Futures
Trading Commission (Commission) is
adopting final regulations to implement
certain provisions of Title VII and Title
VIII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act
(Dodd-Frank Act) governing derivatives
clearing organization (DCO) activities.
More specifically, the regulations
establish the regulatory standards for
compliance with DCO Core Principles A
(Compliance), B (Financial Resources),
C (Participant and Product Eligibility), D
(Risk Management), E (Settlement
Procedures), F (Treatment of Funds), G
(Default Rules and Procedures), H (Rule
Enforcement), I (System Safeguards), J
(Reporting), K (Recordkeeping), L
(Public Information), M (Information
Sharing), N (Antitrust Considerations),
and R (Legal Risk) set forth in Section
5b of the Commodity Exchange Act
(CEA). The Commission also is updating
and adding related definitions; adopting
implementing rules for DCO chief
compliance officers (CCOs); revising
procedures for DCO applications
including the required use of a new
Form DCO; adopting procedural rules
applicable to the transfer of a DCO
registration; and adding requirements
for approval of DCO rules establishing a
portfolio margining program for
customer accounts carried by a futures
commission merchant (FCM) that is also
registered as a securities broker-dealer
(FCM/BD). In addition, the Commission
is adopting certain technical
amendments to parts 21 and 39, and is
adopting certain delegation provisions
under part 140.
DATES: The rules will become effective
January 9, 2012. DCOs must comply
with §§ 39.11; 39.12; 39.13 (except for
39.13(g)(8)(i)); and 39.14 by May 7,
2012; with §§ 39.10(c); 39.13(g)(8)(i);
39.18; 39.19; and 39.20 by November 8,
2012; and all other provisions of these
rules by January 9, 2012.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Phyllis P. Dietz, Deputy Director, (202)
418–5449, pdietz@cftc.gov; John C.
Lawton, Deputy Director, (202) 418–
5480, jlawton@cftc.gov; Robert B.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
Wasserman, Chief Counsel, (202) 418–
5092, rwasserman@cftc.gov; Eileen A.
Donovan, Associate Director, (202) 418–
5096, edonovan@cftc.gov; Jonathan
Lave, Special Counsel, (202) 418–5983,
jlave@cftc.gov, Division of Clearing and
Risk; and Jacob Preiserowicz, Special
Counsel, (202) 418–5432,
jpreiserowicz@cftc.gov, Division of
Swap Dealer and Intermediary
Oversight, Commodity Futures Trading
Commission, Three Lafayette Centre,
1155 21st Street NW., Washington, DC
20581; and Julie A. Mohr, Deputy
Director, (312) 596–0568,
jmohr@cftc.gov; and Anne C. Polaski,
Special Counsel, (312) 596–0575,
apolaski@cftc.gov, Division of Clearing
and Risk, Commodity Futures Trading
Commission, 525 West Monroe Street,
Chicago, Illinois 60661.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act
B. Title VIII of the Dodd-Frank Act
C. Regulatory Framework for DCOs
II. Part 1 Amendments—Definitions
III. Part 39 Amendments—General Provisions
A. Scope
B. Definitions
C. Procedures for Registration
D. Procedures for Implementing DCO Rules
and Clearing New Products
E. Reorganization of Part 39
F. Technical Amendments
IV. Part 39 Amendments—Core Principles
A. Compliance with Core Principles
B. Financial Resources
C. Participant and Product Eligibility
D. Risk Management
E. Settlement Procedures
F. Treatment of Funds
G. Default Rules and Procedures
H. Rule Enforcement
I. System Safeguards
J. Reporting
K. Recordkeeping
L. Public Information
M. Information Sharing
N. Antitrust Considerations
O. Legal Risk Considerations
P. Special Enforcement Authority for
SIDCOs
V. Part 140 Amendments—Delegations of
Authority
VI. Effective Dates
VII. Section 4(c)
VIII. Consideration of Costs and Benefits
IX. Related Matters
A. Regulatory Flexibility Act
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
I. Background
A. Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act
On July 21, 2010, President Obama
signed the Dodd-Frank Act.1 Title VII of
1 See Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act, Public Law 111–203, 124
Stat. 1376 (2010). The text of the Dodd-Frank Act
PO 00000
Frm 00002
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
the Dodd-Frank Act 2 amended the
CEA 3 to establish a comprehensive
statutory framework 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 rigorous
recordkeeping and real-time reporting
regimes; and (4) enhancing the
Commission’s rulemaking and
enforcement authorities with respect to
all registered entities and intermediaries
subject to the Commission’s oversight.
Section 725(c) of the Dodd-Frank Act
amended Section 5b(c)(2) of the CEA,
which sets forth core principles with
which a DCO must comply in order to
be registered and to maintain
registration as a DCO.
The core principles were added to the
CEA by the Commodity Futures
Modernization Act of 2000 (CFMA).4
The Commission did not adopt
implementing rules and regulations, but
instead promulgated guidance for DCOs
on compliance with the core
principles.5 Under Section 5b(c)(2) of
the CEA, as amended by the Dodd-Frank
Act, Congress expressly confirmed that
the Commission may adopt
implementing rules and regulations
pursuant to its rulemaking authority
under Section 8a(5) of the CEA.6
In light of Congress’s explicit
affirmation of the Commission’s
authority to adopt regulations to
implement the core principles, the
Commission has chosen to adopt
regulations (which have the force of
law) rather than guidance (which does
not have the force of law). By issuing
regulations, the Commission expects to
increase legal certainty for DCOs,
clearing members, and market
participants, and prevent DCOs from
lowering risk management standards for
competitive reasons and taking on more
risk than is prudent. The imposition of
legally enforceable standards provides
may be accessed at https://www.cftc.gov/
LawRegulation/OTCDERIVATIVES/index.htm.
2 Pursuant to Section 701 of the Dodd-Frank Act,
Title VII may be cited as the ‘‘Wall Street
Transparency and Accountability Act of 2010.’’
3 7 U.S.C. 1 et seq.
4 See Commodity Futures Modernization Act of
2000, Public Law 106–554, 114 Stat. 2763 (2000).
5 See 66 FR 45604 (Aug. 29, 2001) (adopting 17
CFR part 39, app. A).
6 Section 8a(5) of the CEA authorizes the
Commission to promulgate such regulations ‘‘as, in
the judgment of the Commission, are reasonably
necessary to effectuate any of the provisions or to
accomplish any of the purposes of [the CEA].’’ 7
U.S.C. 12a(5).
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
assurance to market participants and the
public that DCOs are meeting minimum
risk management standards. This can
serve to increase market confidence
which, in turn, can increase open
interest and free up resources that
market participants might otherwise
hold in order to compensate for weaker
DCO risk management practices.
Regulatory standards also can reduce
search costs that market participants
would otherwise incur in determining
that DCOs are managing risk effectively.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
B. Title VIII of the Dodd-Frank Act
Section 802(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act
states that the purpose of Title VIII is to
mitigate systemic risk in the financial
system and promote financial stability.
Section 804 authorizes the Financial
Stability Oversight Council (FSOC) to
designate entities involved in clearing
and settlement as systemically
important.7
Section 805(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act
allows the Commission to prescribe
regulations for those DCOs that the
Council has determined are systemically
important (SIDCOs). The Commission
proposed heightened requirements for
SIDCO financial resources and system
safeguards for business continuity and
disaster recovery.
Section 807(c) of the Dodd-Frank Act
provides the Commission with special
enforcement authority over SIDCOs,
which the Commission proposed to
codify in its regulations.
C. Regulatory Framework for DCOs
The Commission, now responsible for
regulating swaps markets as well as
futures markets, has undertaken an
unprecedented rulemaking initiative to
implement the Dodd-Frank Act. As part
of this initiative, the Commission has
issued a series of eight proposed
rulemakings that, together, would
establish a comprehensive regulatory
framework for the clearing and
settlement activities of DCOs. Through
these proposed regulations, the
Commission sought to enhance legal
certainty for DCOs, clearing members,
and market participants, to strengthen
the risk management practices of DCOs,
and to promote financial integrity for
swaps and futures markets.
In this notice of final rulemaking, the
Commission is adopting regulations to
implement 15 DCO core principles: A
(Compliance), B (Financial Resources),
C (Participant and Product Eligibility),8
7 See 76 FR 44763 (July 27, 2011) (FSOC authority
to designate financial market utilities as
systemically important; final rule).
8 The Commission is reserving for a future final
rulemaking certain proposed amendments relating
to participant and product eligibility. See 76 FR
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
D (Risk Management), E (Settlement
Procedures), F (Treatment of Funds),
G (Default Rules and Procedures), H
(Rule Enforcement), I (System
Safeguards), J (Reporting), K
(Recordkeeping), L (Public Information),
M (Information Sharing), N (Antitrust
Considerations), and R (Legal Risk).9 In
addition, the Commission is adopting
regulations to implement the CCO
provisions of Section 725 of the DoddFrank Act.10
The final rules adopted herein were
proposed in five separate notices of
proposed rulemaking.11 Each proposed
rulemaking was subject to an initial 60day public comment period and a reopened comment period of 30 days.12
After the second comment period
ended, the Commission informed the
public that it would continue to accept
and consider late comments and did so
until August 25, 2011. The Commission
received a total of approximately 119
comment letters directed specifically at
the proposed rules, in addition to many
other comments applicable to the DoddFrank Act rulemaking initiative more
generally.13 The Chairman and
Commissioners, as well as Commission
staff, participated in numerous meetings
with representatives of DCOs, FCMs,
trade associations, public interest
groups, traders, and other interested
parties. In addition, the Commission has
consulted with other U.S. financial
regulators including the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System and Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC).
The Commission is mindful of the
benefits of harmonizing its regulatory
13101 (Mar. 10, 2011) (requirements for processing,
clearing, and transfer of customer positions
(Straight-Through Processing)); and 76 FR 45730
(Aug. 1, 2011) (customer clearing documentation
and timing of acceptance for clearing (Customer
Clearing)).
9 The Commission is reserving for a future final
rulemaking regulations to implement DCO Core
Principles O (Governance Fitness Standards) and Q
(Composition of Governing Boards) (76 FR 722 (Jan.
6, 2011) (Governance)); and Core Principle P
(Conflicts of Interest) (75 FR 63732 (Oct. 18, 2010)
(Conflicts of Interest)).
10 See Section 5b(i) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C 7a–1(i).
11 See 76 FR 13101 (Mar. 10, 2011) (StraightThrough Processing); 76 FR 3698 (Jan. 20, 2011)
(Core Principles C, D, E, F, G, and I (Risk
Management)); 75 FR 78185 (Dec. 15, 2010) (Core
Principles J, K, L, and M (Information
Management)); 75 FR 77576 (Dec. 13, 2010) (Core
Principles A, H, N, and R (General Regulations));
and 75 FR 63113 (Oct. 14, 2010) (Core Principle B
(Financial Resources)).
12 See 76 FR 25274 (May 4, 2011) (extending or
re-opening comment periods for multiple DoddFrank proposed rulemakings); see also 76 FR 16587
(Mar. 24, 2011) (re-opening 30-day comment period
for reporting requirement with clause omitted in the
notice of proposed rulemaking).
13 Comment files for each proposed rulemaking
can be found on the Commission Web site,
www.cftc.gov.
PO 00000
Frm 00003
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69335
framework with that of its counterparts
in foreign countries. The Commission
has therefore monitored global advisory,
legislative, and regulatory proposals,
and has consulted with foreign
regulators in developing the proposed
and final regulations for DCOs.
The Commission is of the view that
each DCO should be afforded an
appropriate level of discretion in
determining how to operate its business
within the legal framework established
by the CEA, as amended by the DoddFrank Act. At the same time, the
Commission recognizes that specific,
bright-line regulations may be necessary
to facilitate DCO compliance with a
given core principle and, ultimately, to
protect the integrity of the U.S.
derivatives clearing system.
Accordingly, in developing the
proposed regulations and in finalizing
the regulations adopted herein, taking
into consideration public comments and
views expressed by U.S. and foreign
regulators, the Commission has
endeavored to strike an appropriate
balance between establishing general
prudential standards and specific
requirements.
In determining the scope and content
of the final rules, the Commission has
taken into account concerns raised by
commenters regarding the implications
of specific rules for smaller versus larger
DCOs, DCOs that do not clear customer
positions versus those with a traditional
customer model, clearinghouses that are
registered as both a DCO and a
securities clearing agency, and
clearinghouses that operate in foreign
jurisdictions as well as in the United
States. The Commission addresses these
issues in its discussion of specific rule
provisions, below.
The Commission has carefully
considered the costs and benefits
associated with each proposed rule,
with particular attention to public
comments. For the reasons discussed in
this notice of final rulemaking, in the
analyses of specific rule provisions as
well as in the formal cost-benefit
analysis, the Commission has
determined that the final rules
appropriately balance the costs and
benefits associated with oversight and
supervision of DCOs pursuant to the
CEA, as amended by the Dodd-Frank
Act.
The Commission is herein adopting
regulations to implement the core
principles applicable to DCOs, to
implement CCO requirements
established under the Dodd-Frank Act,
and to update the regulatory framework
for DCOs to reflect standards and
practices that have evolved over the past
decade since the enactment of the
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69336
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
CFMA. The Commission is largely
adopting final rules as proposed,
although there are a number of proposed
provisions that, upon further
consideration in light of comments
received, the Commission has
determined to either revise or decline to
adopt. In the discussion below, the
Commission highlights topics of
particular interest to commenters and
discusses comment letters that are
representative of the views expressed on
those topics. The discussion does not
explicitly respond to every comment
submitted; rather, it addresses the most
significant issues raised by the proposed
rulemakings and it analyzes those issues
in the context of specific comments.
The final rules include a number of
technical revisions to the proposed rule
text, intended variously to clarify
certain provisions, standardize
terminology within part 39, conform
terminology to that used in other parts
of the Commission’s rules, and more
precisely state regulatory standards and
requirements. These are non-substantive
changes. For example, the proposed
DCO rules used the terms ‘‘contract’’
and ‘‘product’’ interchangeably, and
some provisions used the statutory
language ‘‘contracts, agreements and
transactions’’ to refer to the products
subject to Commission regulation. In the
final rules adopted herein, the
Commission has revised the
terminology to uniformly refer to
‘‘products,’’ which encompasses
contracts, agreements, and transactions,
except where the language of the rule
codifies statutory language. In those
cases, the rule text is unchanged.
For easy reference and for purposes of
clarification, in this notice of final
rulemaking the Commission is
publishing the complete part 39 as
currently adopted. This means that
certain longstanding rules that are not
being amended (e.g., § 39.8 (formerly
designated as § 39.7, fraud in
connection with the clearing of
transactions of a DCO), and rules
recently adopted (§ 39.5, review of
swaps for Commission determination on
clearing requirement) are being republished along with the newly-adopted
rules. Rules that have been proposed but
not yet adopted in final form are
identified in part 39 as ‘‘reserved.’’
II. Part 1 Amendments—Definitions
The Commission proposed to amend
the definitions of ‘‘clearing member,’’
‘‘clearing organization,’’ and ‘‘customer’’
found in § 1.3 of its regulations to
conform the definitions with the
terminology and substantive provisions
of the CEA, as amended by the DoddFrank Act. The Commission also
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
proposed to add to § 1.3, definitions for
‘‘clearing initial margin,’’ ‘‘customer
initial margin,’’ ‘‘initial margin,’’
‘‘margin call,’’ ‘‘spread margin,’’ and
‘‘variation margin.’’
ISDA commented that the margin
definitions are appropriate for futures
and cleared derivatives, but less readily
applicable in the uncleared OTC
derivatives context. It suggested that the
definitions should expressly provide
that they apply only to cleared
transactions. The Commission notes that
some of the definitions by their terms
already apply only to cleared trades,
e.g., ‘‘clearing initial margin.’’ Other
terms, however, have applicability to
both cleared and uncleared trades, e.g.,
‘‘initial margin.’’ 14
The Commission proposed to define
‘‘spread margin’’ as ‘‘reduced initial
margin that takes into account
correlations between certain related
positions held in a single account.’’
Better Markets commented that the
definition of ‘‘spread margin’’ omits key
characteristics of netting initial margin
which are needed to precisely define
spread margin. Better Markets proposed
to define it as ‘‘initial margin relating to
two positions in a single account that
has been reduced from the aggregate
initial margin otherwise applicable to
the two positions by application of an
algorithm that measures statistical
correlations between the historic price
movements of the two positions.’’ The
Commission is adopting the definition
of ‘‘spread margin’’ as proposed because
it believes that Better Markets’
definition adds unnecessary details that
could have the unintended effect of
imposing substantive margin
methodology requirements in a
definition.
In light of proposed rulemakings
issued after the Commission proposed
the definition of ‘‘customer; commodity
customer; swap customer,’’ the
Commission is making certain technical
modifications.15 First, instead of placing
the definition in § 1.3, which serves as
the general definition section for all of
the Commission’s regulations, this
definition is being moved to § 39.2,
which sets forth definitions applicable
only to regulations found in part 39 or
as otherwise explicitly provided. This
accommodates the need for further
consideration of other proposals before
a global definition is adopted, while
satisfying the need for a definition for
purposes of part 39 as adopted herein.
14 See
Section 4s of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 6s.
76 FR 33818 (June 9, 2011) (Protection of
Cleared Swaps Customer Contracts and Collateral;
Conforming Amendments to the Commodity Broker
Bankruptcy Provisions); 76 FR 33066 (June 7, 2011)
(Adaptation of Regulations to Incorporate Swaps).
15 See
PO 00000
Frm 00004
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Second, the Commission has made
certain technical changes to the rule text
in connection with the definition’s
redesignation in 39.2 and to conform
phraseology when incorporating by
reference definitions that appear in the
CEA and § 1.3. These changes include
limiting the term to ‘‘customer,’’
because the terms ‘‘commodity
customer’’ and ‘‘swap customer’’ are not
used in Part 39.
The Commission is adopting the other
definitions as proposed.
III. Part 39 Amendments—General
Provisions
A. Scope—§ 39.1
As originally proposed, § 39.1
included an updated statement of scope
and definitions applicable to other
provisions in part 39. The Commission
later revised proposed § 39.1 to include
only the statement of scope. The
Commission did not receive any
comments on the statement of scope,
which was updated to include
references to the definition of
‘‘derivatives clearing organization’’ in
newly-renumbered Section 1(a)(15) of
the CEA and § 1.3(d) of the
Commission’s regulations. The
Commission is adopting § 39.1 as
proposed.
B. Definitions—§ 39.2
The Commission proposed definitions
of the terms ‘‘back test,’’ ‘‘compliance
policies and procedures,’’ ‘‘customer
account ’’ or ‘‘customer origin,’’ ‘‘house
account’’ or ‘‘house origin,’’ ‘‘key
personnel,’’ ‘‘stress test,’’ and
‘‘systemically important derivatives
clearing organization.’’ The definitions
set forth in proposed § 39.2 would apply
specifically to provisions contained in
part 39 and such other rules as may
explicitly cross-reference these
definitions. The Commission is
adopting the definitions as proposed,
with the exceptions discussed below.
CME Group, Inc. (CME) commented
that the proposed definition of
‘‘compliance policies and procedures’’
was too broad. That definition was
proposed as an adjunct to the proposed
rules for a DCO’s CCO. The Commission
is not adopting a definition of
‘‘compliance policies and procedures,’’
as it has concluded that a DCO’s
compliance policies and procedures
will likely encompass a limited, selfevident body of documents, and a
regulatory definition could invite more
scrutiny than is necessary or helpful to
the DCO or the Commission.
The Commission proposed to define
‘‘stress test’’ as ‘‘a test that compares the
impact of a potential price move, change
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
in option volatility, or change in other
inputs that affect the value of a position,
to the financial resources of a [DCO],
clearing member, or large trader to
determine the adequacy of such
financial resources.’’ Better Markets,
Inc. (Better Markets) expressed the view
that a stress test can only be useful if it
tests unprecedented circumstances of
illiquidity, and that basing the test on
historic price data would make it
meaningless. In response to this
comment, the Commission is modifying
the definition in one respect. The word
‘‘extreme’’ is being inserted after the
word ‘‘potential’’ to make clear that a
stress test does not include typical
events. The Commission further
addresses Better Markets’ concerns in its
discussion of stress tests in
§ 39.13(h)(3).16
The Commission proposed to define
the term ‘‘systemically important
derivatives clearing organization’’ to
mean ‘‘a financial market utility that is
a derivatives clearing organization
registered under Section 5b of the Act
(7 U.S.C. 7a–1), which has been
designated by the Financial Stability
Oversight Council to be systemically
important.’’ The Options Clearing
Corporation (OCC) submitted a
comment on this definition in
connection with the Commission’s
proposed § 40.10 (special certification
procedures for submission of certain
risk-related rules by SIDCOs).17 OCC
pointed out that, under this proposed
definition, a DCO could be a SIDCO
even if the Commission were not its
Supervisory Agency pursuant to Section
803(8) of the Dodd-Frank Act. The
Commission, recognizing that some
DCOs like OCC may be regulated by
more than one federal agency, is
adopting a revised definition to clarify
that the term ‘‘systemically important
derivatives clearing organization’’
means a ‘‘financial market utility that is
a derivatives clearing organization
registered under Section 5b of the Act,
which has been designated by the
Financial Stability Oversight Council to
be systemically important and for which
the Commission acts as the Supervisory
Agency pursuant to Section 803(8) of
the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act.’’ 18
The Commission also is making a
technical change to the definition of
‘‘customer account or customer origin.’’
The proposed definition would provide,
in part, that ‘‘[a] customer account is
16 See discussion of stress tests in section
IV.D.7.c, below.
17 See 76 FR 44776 at 44783–84 (July 27, 2011)
(Provisions Common to Registered Entities; final
rule).
18 See id. for further discussion of this topic.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
also a futures account, as that term is
defined by Sec. 1.3(vv) of this chapter.’’
The Commission is removing this
reference and defining ‘‘customer
account or customer origin’’ to mean ‘‘a
clearing member account held on behalf
of customers, as that term is defined in
this section, and which is subject to
section 4d(a) or section 4d(f) of the
Act.’’ This clarifies that the term
encompasses both customer futures
accounts and customer cleared swaps
accounts, respectively.
Similarly, the Commission is making
a technical revision to the term ‘‘house
account or house origin’’ to delete the
proposed reference to proprietary
accounts, which are currently defined in
§ 1.3(y) only in terms of futures and
options (not swaps). The term ‘‘house
account or house origin’’ is now defined
as a ‘‘clearing member account which is
not subject to section 4d(a) or 4d(f) of
the Act.’’
In connection with the proposal to
adopt a definitions section designated as
§ 39.2, the Commission proposed to
rescind the existing § 39.2, which
exempted DCOs from all Commission
regulations except those explicitly
enumerated in the exemption. This
action would result in clarifying the
applicability of § 1.49 (denomination of
customer funds and location of
depositories) to DCOs and, insofar as the
rule exempted DCOs from regulations
relating to DCO governance and
conflicts of interest, those regulations
are expected to themselves be replaced
by rules to implement DCO Core
Principles O (Governance Fitness
Standards), P (Conflicts of Interest), and
Q (Composition of Governing Boards).19
The Commission did not receive any
comments on the proposed rescission of
the exemption provided by existing
§ 39.2 and is herein rescinding that
exemption, as proposed.
C. Procedures for Registration as a
DCO—§ 39.3
The Commission proposed several
revisions to its procedures for DCO
registration, including the elimination
of the 90-day expedited review period
and the required use of an application
form, proposed Form DCO. The
Commission is adopting § 39.3 as
proposed, and is adopting the Form
DCO with the revisions discussed
below.
1. Form DCO
The Commission proposed to revise
appendix A to part 39, ‘‘Application
Guidance and Compliance with Core
19 See 76 FR 722 (Jan. 6, 2011) (Governance); and
75 FR 63732 (Oct. 18, 2010) (Conflicts of Interest).
PO 00000
Frm 00005
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69337
Principles,’’ by removing the existing
guidance and substituting the Form
DCO in its place. An application for
DCO registration would consist of the
completed Form DCO, which would
include all applicable exhibits, and any
supplemental information submitted to
the Commission.
CME commented that the proposed
Form DCO would require the applicant
to create and submit to the Commission
a large number of documents. It
questioned why certain documents were
necessary and whether Commission
staff would be able to meaningfully
review all of the materials within the
180-day timeframe contemplated in the
proposed regulations.
The Commission is adopting the Form
DCO as proposed, except for the
modifications discussed below. The
Commission notes that the Form DCO
standardizes and clarifies the
information that the Commission has
required from DCO applicants in the
past and the Form DCO Exhibit
Instructions, in an effort to reduce the
burden on applicants, state that ‘‘If any
Exhibit requires information that is
related to, or may be duplicative of,
information required to be included in
another Exhibit, Applicant may
summarize such information and
provide a cross-reference to the Exhibit
that contains the required information.’’
Based on the Commission’s experience
with the DCO registration process over
the past decade, it believes that its staff
can meaningfully review the required
information within the 180-day time
frame. In addition, the Commission
believes that by standardizing
informational requirements, the Form
DCO will allow the Commission to
process applications more quickly and
efficiently. This will benefit applicants
as well as free Commission staff to
handle other regulatory matters.
CME specifically questioned whether,
as part of the Form DCO cover sheet,
applicants should be required to
identify and list ‘‘all outside service
providers and consultants, including
accountants and legal counsel.’’ This
comment mischaracterizes the
information required by the Form DCO,
which requires contact information for
enumerated outside service providers
(Certified Public Accountant, legal
counsel, records storage or management,
business continuity/disaster recovery)
and ‘‘other’’ outside service providers
‘‘such as consultants, providing services
related to this application.’’ Such
contact information is helpful to the
Commission staff in processing the
application and making a determination
as to whether the applicant has obtained
the services it needs to effectively
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69338
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
operate as a DCO.20 Nonetheless, in
response to CME’s comments and in
order to clarify the scope of requesting
contact information for ‘‘any other
outside service providers,’’ the
Commission has decided to revise
section 12.e. of the Form DCO cover
sheet to provide for contact information
for any ‘‘Professional consultant
providing services related to this
application.’’
CME commented that proposed
exhibit A–1, which would require the
applicant to produce a chart
demonstrating in detail how its rules,
procedures, and policies address each
DCO core principle, is not necessary.
The Commission believes exhibit A–1 is
necessary because it will provide a clear
picture of which rules, procedures, and
policies address each DCO core
principle. The chart will greatly assist
Commission staff in tracking and
evaluating the materials supplied by the
applicant and should reduce the need
for staff to seek follow-up clarifications
from the applicant. Again, this will also
reduce the costs to the applicant.
CME commented that the Commission
has not explained its reasons for
requiring an applicant to supply
‘‘telephone numbers, mobile phone
numbers and email addresses of all
officers, managers, and directors of the
DCO,’’ as provided in proposed exhibit
A–6. The Commission notes that the
exhibit A–6 instructions request contact
and other information for ‘‘current
officers, directors, governors, general
partners, LLC managers, and members
of all standing committees.’’ The exhibit
is not directed at ‘‘all managers’’ or ‘‘all
directors,’’ but rather at those persons
who are in key decision-making
positions (for example, key personnel,
directors serving on a board of directors
and a manager or managing member of
a DCO organized in the form of a limited
liability corporation). The purpose of
obtaining contact information is to
enable the Commission to start building
an emergency contact database.
20 This requirement focuses on outside services
‘‘related to this application.’’ Similarly, if the
applicant intends to use the services of an outside
service provider (including services of its clearing
members or market participants), to enable it to
comply with any of the core principles, the
applicant must submit as exhibit A–10 all
agreements entered into or to be entered into
between the applicant and the outside service
provider, and identify: (1) The services that will be
provided; (2) the staff who will provide the
services; and (3) the core principles addressed by
such arrangement. This exhibit does not require
that the applicant submit information and
documentation related to all outside service
providers. Rather, the requirement is directed at
contractual arrangements related to compliance
with the core principles, i.e., the DCO’s core
business functions.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
CME commented that proposed
exhibit A–7 would require the applicant
to list all jurisdictions where the
applicant and its affiliates are doing
business, and the registration status of
the applicant and its affiliates. CME
questioned the Commission’s need for
such information with respect to
affiliates of the applicant. The
Commission believes that such
information is necessary because it
allows the Commission to develop a
more complete understanding of the
applicant’s entire corporate
organizational structure including
potential financial commitments and
regulatory obligations of the applicant’s
affiliates inclusive of its parent
organization.
CME commented that proposed
exhibit B–3, which would require the
applicant to provide proof that each of
its physical locations meets all building
and fire codes, and that it has running
water and a heating, ventilation and air
conditioning system, and adequate
office technology, is not necessary. The
Commission believes that it is important
for an applicant to demonstrate that it
has a physical presence capable of
supporting clearing and settlement
services and is not a ‘‘shoestring’’
operation. Typically, Commission staff
will conduct a site visit to an applicant’s
headquarters and other facilities, and
one of the purposes of such visits is to
evaluate the suitability of the
applicant’s physical facilities. Site
visits, however, are conducted after a
DCO application is deemed to be
materially complete, and there are
instances when it might not be feasible
to conduct a site visit. Accordingly, at
a minimum, a narrative statement
discussing the applicant’s physical
facilities and office technology must be
submitted to the Commission as part of
the application package so that staff can
complete its initial review for ‘‘adequate
* * * operational resources’’ under
Core Principle B.
In response to CME’s comments, the
Commission has decided to revise
exhibit B–3 to require the following:
(3) A narrative statement demonstrating the
adequacy of Applicant’s physical
infrastructure to carry out business
operations, which includes a principal
executive office (separate from any personal
dwelling) with a U.S. street address (not
merely a post office box number). For its
principal executive office and other facilities
Applicant plans to occupy in carrying out its
DCO functions, a description of the space
(e.g., location and square footage), use of the
space (e.g., executive office, data center), and
the basis for Applicant’s right to occupy the
space (e.g., lease, agreement with parent
company to share leased space).
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
(4) A narrative statement demonstrating the
adequacy of the technological systems
necessary to carry out Applicant’s business
operations, including a description of
Applicant’s information technology and
telecommunications systems and a timetable
for full operability.
CME questioned the value of
proposed exhibits C–1(9) and C–2(5),
which would, respectively, require an
applicant to provide a list of current and
prospective clearing members, and to
forecast expected volumes and open
interest at launch date, six months, and
one year thereafter. The Commission
believes that this information is
important because it would enable the
Commission to understand the nature
and level of the DCO’s expected start-up
activities and to appropriately evaluate
whether the applicant has adequate
resources to manage the expected
volume of business.
CME questioned the benefits of what
it termed the ‘‘incredibly burdensome’’
requirements of proposed exhibit D–
2(b)(3), which would require an
applicant to explain why a particular
margin methodology was chosen over
other potentially suitable
methodologies, and to include a
comparison of margin levels that would
have been generated by using such other
potential methodologies. To address
CME’s comment, the Commission is
revising exhibit D–2(b)(3) to require an
explanation of whether other margining
methodologies were considered and, if
so, explain why they were not chosen.
This information will be sufficient in
the first instance and, when evaluating
an applicant’s proposed margin
methodology, Commission staff can
request additional information if needed
to complete its review for compliance
with Core Principle D and § 39.13 (risk
management).
The Commission proposed to require
use of the Form DCO by a registered
DCO when requesting an amendment to
its DCO registration order. CME and
Minneapolis Grain Exchange, Inc.
(MGEX) suggested that the Form DCO be
modified so that a currently registered
DCO would not have to expend as much
time and resources to complete an
amendment request as a new applicant
for DCO registration, unless there are
extenuating circumstances. In response
to this suggestion, the Commission is
revising the Form DCO General
Instructions to clarify that if the Form
DCO is being filed as an amendment to
a pending application for registration or
for the purpose of amending an existing
registration order, the applicant need
only submit the information and
exhibits relevant to the application
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
amendment or request for an amended
registration order.
CME also noted that a DCO applicant
would be required to represent that its
Form DCO submission is true, correct,
and complete. It suggested that the
Commission modify this language so
that the applicant is required to certify
that, ‘‘to the best of its knowledge,’’ its
Form DCO submission is true, correct,
and complete ‘‘in all material respects.’’
The Commission is revising the
language as suggested by CME, in
recognition of the fact that some of the
information contained in the exhibits
may have been provided by third parties
and there is a limit to the reach of an
applicant’s due diligence with respect to
such information.
In addition to the above changes, the
Commission has made non-substantive
editorial changes to the Form DCO for
purposes of internal consistency and
conformity with the Form SDR for swap
data repositories (SDRs) and proposed
Form DCM and Form SEF for designated
contract markets (DCMs) and swap
execution facilities (SEFs),
respectively.21 The Commission also
has made changes to Form DCO to
remove references to proposed
regulations that remain pending.22
should be published in the Federal
Register for public comment.
The Commission recognizes the value
of public comment, but it has
determined not to formalize the public
comment process through publication in
the Federal Register. This procedure
could unnecessarily delay the review
process and completion of the transfer,
and the Commission believes that
posting the request on its Web site,
which it currently does for DCO
registration applications, will provide
an opportunity for public comment
without potential delay.
2. Request for Transfer of Registration
and Open Interest—§ 39.3(h)
1. Acceptance of Certain New Products
for Clearing—§ 39.4(c)(2)
The Commission proposed a technical
amendment to existing § 39.4(c)(2),
which would require a DCO to certify to
the Commission the terms and
conditions of new over-the-counter
(OTC) products that it intended to clear.
The Commission proposed removing the
reference to new products ‘‘not traded
on a designated contract market or a
registered derivatives transaction
execution facility’’ and inserting a
reference to new products ‘‘not traded
on a designated contract market or a
registered swap execution facility.’’ The
proposed provision would retain the
reference to filing the terms and
conditions of the new product
‘‘pursuant to the procedures of § 40.2 of
this chapter.’’
Since proposing that technical
amendment, the Commission has
adopted a new § 39.5 (review of swaps
for Commission determination on
clearing requirement) 24 and revisions to
§ 40.2 (listing products for trading by
certification).25 As a result, a DCO
seeking to clear new products that are
not traded on a designated contract
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
The Commission proposed § 39.3(h)
to clarify the procedures that a DCO
must follow when requesting the
transfer of its DCO registration and
positions comprising open interest for
clearing and settlement, in anticipation
of a corporation change.23 The
Commission received a comment from
OCC suggesting that a request to transfer
a DCO’s registration and open interest
21 See 76 FR 54538 (Sept. 1, 2011) (SDRs:
Registration Standards, Duties and Core Principles;
final rule); 75 FR 80572 (Dec. 22, 2010) (Core
Principles and Other Requirements for Designated
Contract Markets); 76 FR 1214 (Jan. 7, 2011) (Core
Principles and Other Requirements for Swap
Execution Facilities).
22 For example, the Commission has removed the
specific cross-references located in exhibit P to
Form DCO to the proposed conflicts of interest
rules, 75 FR 63732 (Oct. 18, 2010) (Conflicts of
Interest), and replaced such references with a
description of the required information. When the
Commission finalizes such proposed rules, the
Commission intends to make technical changes to
the Form DCO to include cross-references to such
final rules where, in the opinion of the
Commission, doing so will facilitate compliance
with the Form DCO, the CEA and/or Commission
regulations.
23 As a technical matter, the Commission is
removing proposed § 39.3(g)(1) and adopting
proposed § 39.3(h) as § 39.3(f); proposed § 39.3(g)(1)
was a typographical error which repeats a
delegation of authority already provided by
§ 39.3(b)(2)(i).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
3. Technical Amendments
The Commission proposed a set of
technical amendments to § 39.3 to
update filing procedures, to conform
various provisions to reflect the
elimination of the 90-day expedited
review period for DCO applications, and
to correct terminology in the delegation
provisions of § 39.3(g). The Commission
did not receive any comments on the
proposed technical amendments and the
Commission is adopting the
amendments as proposed.
D. Procedures for Implementing DCO
Rules and Clearing New Products—
§ 39.4
24 See 76 FR 44464, at 44473–44474 (July 26,
2011) (Process for Review of Swaps for Mandatory
Clearing; final rule).
25 See 76 FR 44776 (July 27, 2011) (Provisions
Common to Registered Entities; final rule).
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69339
market or swap execution facility must
submit to the Commission the terms and
conditions of the product pursuant to
the procedures of § 39.5, not § 40.2. The
Commission is therefore adopting a
technical revision to conform
§ 39.4(c)(2) to the current procedural
requirements.
2. Holding Securities in a Futures
Portfolio Margining Account—§ 39.4(e)
The CEA, as amended by Section 713
of the Dodd-Frank Act, permits,
pursuant to an exemption, rule or
regulation, futures and options on
futures to be held in a portfolio
margining account that is carried as a
securities account and approved by the
SEC.26 Reciprocally, the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (SEA), as
amended by Section 713 of the DoddFrank Act, permits, pursuant to an
exemption, rule, or regulation, cash and
securities to be held in a portfolio
margining account that is carried as a
futures account and approved by the
Commission.27 Those provisions of the
CEA and SEA further require
consultation between the Commission
and the SEC in drafting implementing
regulations. As a first step toward
meeting this goal, proposed § 39.4(e)
would establish the procedural
requirements applicable to a DCO
seeking approval for a futures portfolio
margining account program.
OCC, Newedge USA, LLC (Newedge),
New York Portfolio Clearing, LLC
(NYPC), and MetLife Inc. urged the
Commission to propose rules that would
permit portfolio margining, not just
establish procedural requirements. The
Commission agrees that it should
propose substantive portfolio margining
rules, but it must move forward on
proposing substantive rules with the
SEC’s participation.
Accordingly, the Commission is
adopting the procedural requirements as
proposed and anticipates consulting
with the SEC in the future to determine
the substantive requirements it would
impose in approving a futures portfolio
margining program and, additionally, in
granting an exemption under Section
4(c) of the CEA to permit futures and
options on futures to be held in a
securities portfolio margining account.
The Dodd-Frank Act does not set a
deadline for these actions, and the
Commission believes that it is important
to give this matter due consideration,
both in terms of consultation with the
SEC and, more broadly, in obtaining
industry views on the topic before
26 Section
27 Section
4d(h) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 6d(h).
15(c)(3)(C) of the SEA, 15 U.S.C.
78o(c)(3).
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69340
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
proposing substantive regulations or
other guidance.
E. Reorganization of Part 39
With the adoption of regulations
relating to implementation of the core
principles and other provisions of the
Dodd-Frank Act, the Commission is
reorganizing part 39 of its regulations
into two subparts, with a new appendix.
Subpart A, ‘‘General Provisions
Applicable to Derivatives Clearing
Organizations’’ contains §§ 39.1 through
39.8, which are general provisions
including procedural requirements for
DCO applications and other activities
such as transfer of a DCO registration,
clearing of new products, and
submission of swaps for a mandatory
clearing determination. Subpart A also
includes pre-existing provisions
regarding enforceability and fraud in
connection with clearing transactions
on a DCO.28 Subpart B, ‘‘Compliance
with Core Principles,’’ contains §§ 39.9
through 39.27, which are rules that
implement the core principles under
Section 5b of the CEA, as amended by
the Dodd-Frank Act.
As discussed above, the Commission
is replacing appendix A ‘‘Application
Guidance and Compliance with Core
Principles,’’ with a new appendix to
part 39, ‘‘Form DCO Derivatives
Clearing Organization Application for
Registration.’’
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
F. Technical Amendments
With the objective of listing all DCO
reporting requirements in a new § 39.19,
the Commission proposed redesignating
§ 39.5(a) and (b) (information relating to
DCOs) as proposed §§ 39.19(c)(5)(i) and
(ii), respectively, in substantially the
same form. The Commission also
proposed removing § 39.5(c) (large
trader reporting by DCOs), redesignating
§ 39.5(d) (special calls) as § 21.04 (and
current § 21.04 as § 21.05), and adding
§ 21.06, which would delegate authority
under § 21.04 to the Director of the
Division of Clearing and Risk.
The Commission did not receive any
comments on these proposals.
Therefore, the Commission is adopting
these revisions as proposed, except for
non-substantive changes to
§§ 39.19(c)(5)(i) and (c)(5)(ii) to clarify
the language.29
28 As part of the reorganization of Part 39, § 39.6
(Enforceability) is being redesignated as § 39.7 and
§ 39.7 (Fraud in connection with the clearing of
transactions on a derivatives clearing organization)
is being redesignated as § 39.8.
29 After these technical amendments were
proposed, the Commission adopted a final rule
governing the process for review of swaps for
mandatory clearing. That rule was designated as
§ 39.5, and the former § 39.5 was redesignated as
§ 39.8. See 76 FR at 44473 (July 26, 2011) (Process
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
IV. Part 39 Amendments—Compliance
With Core Principles
Proposed § 39.9 would establish the
scope of the rules contained in subpart
B of part 39, stating that all provisions
of subpart B apply to DCOs. The
Commission did not receive any
comments on the statement of scope,
and the Commission is adopting § 39.9
as proposed.
A. Core Principle A—Compliance With
Core Principles—§ 39.10
1. Core Principle A
Core Principle A,30 as amended by the
Dodd-Frank Act, requires a DCO to
comply with each core principle set
forth in Section 5b(c)(2) of the CEA and
any requirement that the Commission
may impose by rule or regulation
pursuant to Section 8a(5) of the CEA.
Core Principle A also provides a DCO
with reasonable discretion to establish
the manner by which it complies with
each core principle. Proposed
§§ 39.10(a) and 39.10(b) would codify
these provisions, respectively. The
Commission received no comments on
these proposed rules and is adopting the
rules as proposed.
2. Designation of a Chief Compliance
Officer—§ 39.10(c)(1)
Section 725(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act
added a new paragraph (i) to Section 5b
of the CEA to require each DCO to
designate an individual as its CCO,
responsible for the DCO’s compliance
with the CEA and Commission
regulations and the filing of an annual
compliance report.31 In proposed
§ 39.10(c), the Commission set forth
implementing requirements that would
largely track the language of Section
5b(i).
Under the introductory provision of
proposed § 39.10(c)(1), each DCO would
be required to appoint a CCO with ‘‘the
full responsibility and authority to
develop and enforce in consultation
with the board of directors or the senior
officer, appropriate compliance policies
and procedures, as defined in § 39.1(b),
to fulfill the duties set forth in the Act
and Commission regulations.’’ As
previously noted, the Commission is not
adopting the definition of ‘‘compliance
policies and procedures’’ included in
proposed § 39.1(b).
for Review of Swaps for Mandatory Clearing; final
rule). In connection with adoption of the technical
amendments described above, the provisions
regarding fraud in connection with the clearing of
transactions on a DCO (former § 39.7) are now
redesignated as § 39.8.
30 Section 5b(c)(2)(A) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 7a–
1(c)(2)(A).
31 See Section 5b(i) of the CEA; 7 U.S.C. 7a–
1(b)(i).
PO 00000
Frm 00008
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
CME commented that the text of the
Dodd-Frank Act does not require a CCO
to ‘‘enforce’’ compliance policies and
procedures and it suggested that § 39.10
should not do so. According to CME, it
is important to separate the functions of
monitoring and advising on compliance
issues from what it considers ‘‘senior
management functions’’ of enforcing
and supervising compliance policies.
The Commission believes that
Congress intended that the CCO have
the full responsibility and authority to
enforce compliance in consultation with
the board of directors or the senior
officer. Given the specified duties of the
CCO set forth in Section 5b(i)(2), the
Commission finds ample support for
this interpretation and is adopting the
rule as proposed.
First, one definition of the term
‘‘enforce’’ is ‘‘to ensure observance of
laws and rules,’’ 32 and among the CCO
duties set forth by the Dodd-Frank Act
is the requirement that the CCO ‘‘ensure
compliance.’’ 33 Second, Section
5b(i)(2)(C) requires a CCO to ‘‘resolve
any conflicts of interest that may arise’’
in consultation with the board of the
DCO or the senior officer of the DCO.
This duty clearly indicates that the CCO
is more than just an advisor to
management and must have the ability
to enforce compliance with the CEA and
Commission regulations. The authority
to resolve conflicts of interest is more an
enforcement function than an audit
function. Finally, Section 5b(i)(2)(D)
requires the CCO to ‘‘be responsible for
administering each policy.’’
While the CEA does not explicitly use
the word ‘‘enforce,’’ the Commission
believes that the use of this word in
§ 39.10(c)(1) is appropriate to capture
the meaning of Section 5b(i)(2)(C), i.e.,
that CCOs must have the authority to
fulfill their statutory and regulatory
obligations. Moreover, it is consistent
with the statutory directive for the CCO
to ensure compliance with the CEA.
These considerations are particularly
important given that the CCO of a DCO
has unique responsibilities in
connection with the DCO’s critical role
in providing financial integrity to
derivatives markets. In particular, a CCO
must have the ability to effectively
address rules and practices that could
compromise compliance with fair and
open access requirements (Core
Principle C), risk management
32 See https://www.websters-online-dictionary.org/
definitions/enforce.
33 See Section 5b(i)(2)(E) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 7a–
1(b)(i)(2)(E), which requires the CCO to ‘‘ensure
compliance with this Act (including regulations)
relating to agreements, contracts, or transactions,
including each rule prescribed by the Commission
under this section.’’
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
requirements (Core Principle D), and
financial resource requirements (Core
Principle B).
The Commission, however, recognizes
that the term ‘‘enforce’’ could imply that
the DCO’s CCO must have direct
supervisory authority over employees
not otherwise in his or her direct chain
of command, or that the CCO has
independent authority to discipline
employees or terminate employment to
facilitate compliance with the CEA and
the Commission’s regulations. To avoid
confusion, the Commission herein
clarifies that the term ‘‘enforce,’’ as used
in § 39.10(c)(1), is not intended to
include the authority to supervise
employees not in the CCO’s direct chain
of command, or the authority to
terminate employment or discipline
employees for conduct that results in
noncompliance. The Commission notes
that a DCO is not precluded from
conferring such authority on its CCO;
however, such action would be at the
DCO’s discretion and is not required by
§ 39.10(c)(1).34
3. Individuals Qualifying To Serve as a
CCO—§ 39.10(c)(1)(i)
Proposed § 39.10(c)(1)(i) would
require a DCO to designate an
individual with the background and
skills appropriate for fulfilling the
responsibilities of the CCO position.
The Commission asked whether
additional qualifications should be
imposed and, in particular, whether the
Commission should restrict the CCO
position from being held by an attorney
who represents the DCO or its board of
directors, such as an in-house or general
counsel. The Commission explained
that the rationale for such a restriction
would be based on concern that the
interests of representing the DCO’s
board of directors or management could
be in conflict with the duties of the
CCO. Related to this, the Commission
specifically sought comment on whether
there is a need for a regulation requiring
the DCO to insulate a CCO from undue
pressure and coercion. It further asked
if it is necessary to adopt rules to
address the potential conflict between
and among compliance interests,
commercial interests, and ownership
interests of a DCO and, if there is no
need for such rules, requested comment
on how such potential conflicts would
be addressed.
CME, OCC, MGEX, and the Kansas
City Board of Trade Clearing
Corporation (KCC) commented that
additional restrictions should not be
imposed. MGEX commented that
34 See
further discussion of a CCO’s duties in
section IV.A.7, below.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
smaller DCOs will need to maximize the
utility of each employee. It also argued
that there is little risk if a CCO serves
as in-house counsel because attorneys
have additional ethical duties which
can complement the duties and
obligations of a CCO. According to
MGEX, if a conflict arose, the attorney
could step out of one or both of the
roles.
Better Markets commented that there
is potential conflict between a CCO and
in-house counsel because in-house
counsel is an advocate for the DCO or
its board of directors regarding any
controversy that may relate to regulatory
compliance, while a CCO’s duty is to
ensure compliance. It suggested that the
Commission prohibit a CCO from
serving as in-house counsel.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.10(c)(1)(i) as proposed. The
Commission has considered prohibiting
a CCO from working in the DCO’s legal
department or serving as general
counsel, consistent with the
Commission’s approach to the CCO of
an SDR.35 However, in response to
public comments and in light of the fact
that all currently registered DCOs have
some form of compliance program
already in place, with one or more staff
members assigned to carry out
compliance officer functions, the
Commission has determined that the
potential costs of hiring additional staff
to satisfy such requirement could result
in imposing an unnecessary burden on
DCOs, particularly smaller ones. The
Commission recognizes, however, that a
conflict of interest could compromise a
CCO’s ability to effectively fulfill his or
her responsibilities as a CCO. The
Commission therefore expects that as
soon as any conflict of interest becomes
apparent, a DCO would immediately
implement a back-up plan for
reassignment or other measures to
address the conflict and ensure that the
CCO’s duties can be performed without
compromise.
MGEX and KCC also recommended
that the Commission should permit the
Chief Regulatory Officer to function as
the CCO. Presumably, the commenters
are referring to circumstances in which
a DCO (which typically would not have
a Chief Regulatory Officer) is also
registered as a DCM (which typically
would have a Chief Regulatory Officer).
The Commission notes that the rule
does not prohibit the person serving as
CCO from also serving as the Chief
Regulatory Officer.
35 See 76 FR 54538 (Sept. 1, 2011) (SDRs:
Registration Standards, Duties and Core Principles;
final rule).
PO 00000
Frm 00009
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69341
4. CCO Reporting Structure—
§ 39.10(c)(1)(ii)
Section 5b(i)(2)(A) of the CEA
requires that a CCO report directly to
the board of directors or the senior
officer of the DCO.36 Proposed
§ 39.10(c)(1)(ii) would codify this
requirement. The proposed rule also
would require the board of directors or
the senior officer to approve the
compensation of the CCO.
In the notice of proposed rulemaking,
the Commission sought comment as to
the degree of flexibility that should be
provided in the reporting structure of
the CCO. Specifically, the Commission
requested comment on: (i) Whether it
would be more appropriate for a CCO to
report to the senior officer or the board
of directors; (ii) as between the senior
officer or board of directors, which
generally is a stronger advocate of
compliance matters within an
organization; and (iii) whether the
proposed rules allow for sufficient
flexibility with regard to a DCO’s
business structure.
CME, MGEX, and KCC commented
that the proposed rules would provide
DCOs with the appropriate degree of
flexibility. CME, however, believes it
would be ‘‘logical’’ for a CCO to report
to the senior officer, and that the board
of directors should oversee
implementation of compliance policies
and ensure that compliance issues are
resolved effectively and expeditiously
by the senior officer with the assistance
of the CCO. MGEX noted that each DCO
may have a different business and
reporting structure and believes that
rigid rules may hinder the effectiveness
and independence of the CCO.
Better Markets observed that, in the
past, businesses have placed financial
interests over other considerations like
risk management and have created a
climate where people were unwilling to
speak out against financial
considerations for fear of being fired.
Better Markets suggested that there
should be a strong reporting and
working relationship between the CCO
and independent directors, and
suggested that independent directors
have sole responsibility to designate or
terminate the CCO and to set
compensation levels for the CCO.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.10(c)(1)(ii) as proposed, declining
to prescribe whether the CCO can only
report to the board of directors or to the
senior officer. The Commission
appreciates Better Markets’ concern that
a CCO who reports to the senior officer
may be swayed by financial
36 7
U.S.C. 7a–1(i)(2)(A).
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69342
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
considerations. However, the DoddFrank Act permits alternative reporting
structures and the Commission has not
been presented with a compelling
reason to conclude that the structure
and operations of a DCO require the
imposition of this limitation on the
ability of a DCO’s board and
management to establish lines of
authority appropriate to the particular
DCO.
CME asked the Commission to clarify
that the term ‘‘senior officer’’ may apply
to the senior officer of a division that is
engaged in clearing activities. The
Commission notes that Section
5b(i)(2)(A) of the CEA requires a CCO to
‘‘report directly to the board or to the
senior officer of the derivatives clearing
organization.’’ If the division engaged in
clearing activities is the registered DCO,
then the senior officer of that division
would be the ‘‘senior officer’’ for
purposes of this provision.
Finally, Better Markets suggested that
compliance should be addressed on an
entire-group basis by a senior CCO.
According to Better Markets, a single
senior CCO should have overall
responsibility for each affiliated and
controlled entity, even if the individual
entities within the group have CCOs.
The final rules do not require a business
organization to have a ‘‘senior’’ CCO as
Better Markets suggested. The
Commission believes this would be
overly prescriptive and that a DCO
should have the flexibility to manage
compliance functions across divisions
or affiliates to accommodate its
particular organizational structure.
5. Annual Compliance Meeting—
§ 39.10(c)(1)(iii)
Proposed § 39.10(c)(1)(iii) would
require a CCO to meet with the board of
directors or the senior officer at least
once a year to discuss the effectiveness
of the DCO’s compliance policies and
procedures, as well as the
administration of those policies and
procedures by the CCO. Better Markets
suggested that a CCO meet with the
board of directors at least quarterly. No
comments were received on the
proposed topics to be discussed at the
annual meeting.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.10(c)(1)(iii) in modified form. The
final rule retains the requirement that
the CCO meet with the board of
directors or senior officer annually, but
eliminates the required topics to be
discussed at the meeting. As the
Commission noted in the notice of
proposed rulemaking, the requirement
for an annual discussion would not
preclude the board of directors or the
senior officer from meeting with the
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
CCO more frequently. While more
frequent communication between the
CCO and the DCO’s board or senior
officer may be desirable, the
Commission has concluded that
adopting requirements to that effect
would be overly prescriptive. Similarly,
upon further consideration, the
Commission has concluded that the
purpose of the meeting should be selfevident (i.e., compliance) and it is not
necessary for the Commission, by
regulation, to prescribe the business that
must be conducted at that meeting.
6. Change in the Designation of the
CCO—§ 39.10(c)(1)(iv)
Proposed § 39.10(c)(1)(iv) would
require that a change in the designation
of the individual serving as the CCO be
reported to the Commission, in
accordance with the requirements of
proposed § 39.19(c)(4)(xi). The
Commission received no comments on
the proposed rule and is adopting the
provision as proposed.37
7. Duties of the CCO—§ 39.10(c)(2)
Section 5b(i)(2) of the CEA, added by
Section 725(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act,
sets forth the duties of a CCO,38 and
proposed § 39.10(c)(2) would codify
those enumerated duties in paragraphs
(c)(2)(i)–(vii).
The Commission received comments
on the CCO’s duties from CME, KCC,
and OCC. In general, the commenters
expressed the view that the proposed
regulations are too broad because they
improperly provide the CCO with what
CME calls ‘‘senior management
functions’’ like enforcing and
supervising compliance policies.
Instead, the commenters believe that the
role of a CCO is only to serve as an
auditor who monitors compliance and
informs senior management of
noncompliance. The Commission has
carefully considered the comments and
is adopting the rule as proposed, except
as discussed below.
CME acknowledged that proposed
§ 39.10(c)(2)(ii) mirrors the language in
the Dodd-Frank Act. However, CME
believes that Congress did not intend to
mean ‘‘resolve’’ in the executive or
managerial sense such that the CCO
alone would examine the facts and
determine and affect the course of
action. CME believes that Congress
intended the CCO to identify, advise,
and escalate, as appropriate, and to
assist senior management in resolving
conflicts of interest.
37 See discussion in section IV.J.5.h. (The
Commission is adopting proposed § 39.19(c)(4)(xi)
as a renumbered § 39.19(c)(4)(ix)).
38 7 U.S.C. 7a–1(i)(2).
PO 00000
Frm 00010
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
KCC also believes that the board of
directors or senior officer should resolve
any conflict of interest in consultation
with the CCO. KCC commented that
compliance policies and procedures
should be administered by DCO staff
and not by the CCO. According to KCC,
a DCO’s staff is most familiar with the
day-to-day operations of the DCO and is
in the best position to manage the
policies and procedures. KCC believes
that a CCO’s role should be that of
oversight of the DCO’s compliance
program and filing an annual report.
The Commission disagrees with
assertions that a CCO should only assist
senior management in resolving
conflicts of interest or that the board or
senior management should resolve
conflicts of interest in consultation with
the CCO. Section 5b(i)(2)(C) of the CEA
states that a CCO shall ‘‘in consultation
with the board of the derivatives
clearing organization, a body performing
a function similar to the board of the
derivatives clearing organization, or the
senior officer of the derivatives clearing
organization, resolve any conflicts of
interest that may arise.’’ Given this
express statutory direction, the
Commission is not revising the
proposed rule.
The Commission points out that a
CCO’s duty to administer compliance
policies and procedures is set forth in
Section 5b(i)(2)(D) of the CEA. It
requires a CCO to ‘‘be responsible for
administering each policy and
procedure that is required to be
established pursuant to this section.’’ By
administering compliance policies and
procedures, a CCO is not required to
perform staff functions that have
compliance implications. Rather, the
CCO is responsible for oversight of such
functions.
The Commission is revising
§ 39.10(c)(2)(iii) to require a CCO to
have the duty of ‘‘[e]stablishing and
administering written policies and
procedures reasonably designed to
prevent violation of the Act.’’ This does
not change the substance of the
requirement or alter the implementation
of the statutory standard, as it is
consistent with § 39.10(c)(1) which
requires a CCO to ‘‘develop * * *
appropriate policies and procedures
* * * to fulfill the duties set forth in the
Act and Commission regulations.’’ The
Commission believes that the revised
language eliminates the possibility of
ambiguity and prevents too narrow a
reading of the reference to policies and
procedures that are ‘‘required’’ under
the CEA.
CME described as ‘‘impracticable’’ the
proposed standard that a CCO must
’’ensure’’ a DCO’s compliance and
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
suggested that an appropriate and
‘‘achievable’’ standard would be to
require a CCO to put in place measures
‘‘reasonably designed to ensure
compliance’’ with the CEA and
Commission regulations.
The Commission is revising
§ 39.10(c)(2)(iv) in response to CME’s
comment. Although Section 5b(i)(2)(E)
of the CEA requires a CCO to ‘‘ensure’’
compliance, the Commission agrees that
a CCO cannot fully guarantee
compliance because, as a practical
matter, he or she will have to rely to
some extent on information provided by
other DCO employees or representatives
of the DCO’s service providers.
Accordingly, § 39.10(c)(2)(iv) is being
modified to include as a duty of the
CCO, ‘‘[t]aking reasonable steps to
ensure compliance with the Act and
Commission regulations * * * ’’ (added
text in italics). The Commission believes
that this revision addresses CME’s
concern while retaining the emphasis
on the CCO’s actions rather than
focusing on the nature of measures put
in place by the CCO.39
CME recommended that the
Commission revise proposed
§ 39.10(c)(2)(vi) to require a CCO to
‘‘[e]stablish[] appropriate procedures
[for] the handling, management
response, remediation, retesting, and
closing of noncompliance issues,’’ and
to eliminate the requirement that a CCO
‘‘follow[]’’ such procedures. According
to CME, this is a function of senior
management and Congress did not
intend for a CCO to exercise senior
management functions. OCC agrees with
CME.
Specifically, CME suggested that
proposed § 39.10(c)(2)(vi) be modified to
eliminate the requirement that a CCO
‘‘follow’’ appropriate procedures
because following procedures is a
function of senior management.
However, a CCO’s performance of this
‘‘senior management’’ function is
explicitly set forth in Section 5b(i)(2)(G)
of the CEA, which states that ‘‘[t]he
chief compliance officer shall * * *
establish and follow appropriate
procedures for the handling,
management response, remediation,
retesting, and closing of noncompliance
issues.’’ The Commission does not
believe that CME has provided a
persuasive basis for its suggested
modification of § 39.10(c)(2)(vi), and the
Commission is adopting the provision
as proposed.
39 See also 76 FR at 54584 (Sept. 1, 2011) (SDRs:
Registration Standards, Duties and Core Principles;
final rule) (adopting § 49.22(d)(4), which applies
this standard to the CCO of an SDR).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
Finally, the Commission, on its own
initiative, is revising § 39.10(c)(2)(vii) to
eliminate the requirement that a CCO
establish a compliance manual. While
having a compliance manual is a good
practice, incorporating this requirement
into a regulation may be overly
prescriptive and the Commission has
concluded that a DCO should have
discretion as to the vehicles through
which it will carry out its compliance
program.
8. Annual Report—§ 39.10(c)(3)
Section 5b(i)(3) of the CEA, added by
Section 725(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act,
requires a CCO to prepare an annual
report that describes the DCO’s
compliance with the CEA, regulations
promulgated under the CEA, and each
policy and procedure of the DCO,
including the code of ethics and
conflicts of interest policies.40
Implementation of these statutory
requirements was addressed at proposed
§ 39.10(c)(3)(i), (c)(3)(ii)(A), and (c)(3)(v)
and (v).
With respect to proposed
§ 39.10(c)(3)(i), CME suggested that the
Commission eliminate it and KCC
commented that the requirement for a
DCO to show compliance with respect
to the CEA and Commission regulations
is ambiguous and overreaching. KCC
also suggested that the scope of the
annual report should not go beyond
reviewing the DCO core principles and
identifying the compliance policies and
procedures that are in place to satisfy
the core principles.
Although paragraph (i) mirrors the
language and requirements set forth in
Section 5b(i)(3)(A)(i) of the CEA, to
address CME’s and KCC’s comments,
the Commission has decided to revise
the language of §§ 39.10(c)(3)(i) and (ii)
to avoid submission of duplicative
information and to clarify the scope of
the annual report content requirements
without altering the nature of the
information that must be included in
the report pursuant to the CEA. Final
§ 39.10 (c)(3)(i) requires that the annual
report ‘‘[c]ontain a description of the
derivatives clearing organization’s
written policies and procedures,
including the code of ethics and conflict
of interest policies.’’ Final § 39.10
(c)(3)(ii) requires that the report ’’
[r]eview each core principle and
applicable Commission regulations, and
with respect to each: (A) Identify the
compliance policies and procedures that
are designed to ensure compliance with
the core principle.’’ The Commission
notes that by specifying ‘‘written’’
policies and procedures, the rule more
40 7
PO 00000
U.S.C. 7a–1(i)(3).
Frm 00011
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69343
precisely establishes the scope of
§ 39.10(c)(3)(i).
Proposed §§ 39.10(c)(3)(iii) and
(c)(3)(iv) would require that the annual
report list any material changes to
compliance policies and procedures
since the last annual report and describe
the DCO’s financial, managerial, and
operational resources for compliance
with the Act and Commission
regulations, respectively. The
Commission did not receive any
comments on these provisions and is
adopting §§ 39.10(c)(3)(iii) and (c)(3)(iv)
as proposed.
Proposed § 39.10(c)(3)(v) would
require that the annual report
‘‘[d]escribe any material compliance
matters, including incidents of
noncompliance, since the date of the
last annual report and describe the
corresponding action taken.’’ CME
suggested that the provision be revised
to require that the annual report identify
only material compliance issues that
were not properly addressed by the
DCO.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.10(c)(3)(v) as proposed because
receiving such information will enable
the Commission to assess whether the
DCO is addressing compliance matters
effectively. It also will enable the
Commission to become aware of
possible future compliance issues across
DCOs and to proactively identify best
practices. An annual report that
identifies only material compliance
issues would not provide sufficient
information.
Finally, the Commission on its own
initiative is not adopting proposed
§ 39.10(c)(3)(vi) because information of
this nature is not essential to the
Commission’s evaluation of the DCO’s
compliance program and, if it is relevant
to a material compliance matter, it will
be provided to the Commission
pursuant to § 39.10(c)(3)(v).
9. Submission of Annual Report to the
Commission—§ 39.10(c)(4)
Proposed § 39.10(c)(4) would set forth
the requirements for submitting an
annual report to the Commission.
Except as noted below, the Commission
is adopting the rule as proposed.
Better Markets suggested that the
Commission change proposed
§ 39.10(c)(4)(i) to require a CCO to
present the finalized annual report to
the board of directors and executive
management prior to its submission to
the Commission. Better Markets also
suggested that the independent directors
as well as the entire board should be
required to review and approve the
report in its entirety and to detail any
disagreement with any portion. In
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69344
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
addition, Better Markets commented
that a CCO should be required to file the
report with the Commission, either as
approved or with statements of
disagreement.
The Commission is not revising
proposed § 39.10(c)(4)(i) per Better
Markets’ suggestion. The Commission
believes that a DCO should have the
flexibility to determine whether the
annual report will be provided to the
board of directors, the senior officer, or
both. The Commission also is not
requiring the board of directors to
approve or submit comments on the
report given that the board of directors
might not have sufficient information to
approve or disagree with the report. In
addition, there is a risk that the board
might try to influence the CCO to
change the report if it were required to
express approval. The Commission
notes that the rules do not prohibit the
board, any of its members, or the senior
officer from approving or disagreeing
with aspects of the annual report.
Proposed § 39.10(c)(4)(ii) would
require that the annual report include a
certification by the CCO that, to the best
of his or her knowledge and reasonable
belief, and under penalty of law, the
annual report is accurate and complete.
CME commented that the Commission
should require the DCO’s senior officer,
and not the CCO, to make the necessary
certification in the annual compliance
report. According to CME, ‘‘the best way
to achieve the goal of a robust effective
compliance program, and to close the
loop on creating a culture of
compliance, is to require the registrant’s
senior officer—and not the CCO—to
complete the required certification.’’
KCC commented that a CCO should
not have to certify ‘‘under penalty of
law’’ that the annual report is accurate
and complete, and a CCO should certify
instead that to the best of his or her
knowledge and belief the annual report
is accurate and complete.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.10(c)(4)(ii) as proposed. The CEA
requires (1) the CCO to sign the annual
report and (2) that the annual report
contain a certification that, under
penalty of law, the compliance report is
accurate and complete.41 Accordingly,
the Commission believes the regulation
accurately reflects Congressional intent.
specifically exempt item in part 145 of
the Commission’s regulations. The
Commission has not proposed and is
not adopting CME’s proposal, which
would provide blanket confidentiality to
all annual reports submitted by CCOs of
DCOs, even though the Commission
may determine that there is information
contained in a report that should be
public. Accordingly, a DCO must
petition for confidential treatment of its
annual report under § 145.9 if it wants
the Commission to determine that a
particular annual report should be
subject to confidentiality.
11. Insulating the CCO From Undue
Influence
The notice of proposed rulemaking
solicited comments as to whether the
Commission should adopt regulations
that require a DCO to insulate its CCO
from undue pressure and coercion. CME
commented that the current regulations
are sufficient to protect a CCO from
undue influence and it does not believe
additional regulations are necessary.
The Commission agrees with CME and
is not adopting such regulations.
12. Recordkeeping—§ 39.10(c)(5)
Proposed § 39.10(c)(5) would require
a DCO to maintain: (i) A copy of the
policies and procedures adopted in
furtherance of compliance with the CEA
and Commission regulations; (ii) copies
of materials, including written reports
provided to the board of directors or the
senior officer in connection with review
of the annual report; and (iii) any
records relevant to the DCO’s annual
report, including work papers and
financial data. The DCO would be
required to maintain these records in
accordance with § 1.31 and proposed
§ 39.20. The Commission did not
receive any comment letters discussing
proposed § 39.10(c)(5). The Commission
has adopted § 39.10(c)(5) as proposed,
except that the Commission has
modified § 39.10(c)(5)(A) to refer to ‘‘all
compliance policies and procedures’’
rather than ‘‘the compliance policies
and procedures, as defined in § 39.1(b)’’
in light of the Commission’s decision
not to adopt a definition of compliance
policies and procedures, as discussed in
section III.B, above.
10. Annual Report Confidentiality
CME suggested that Commission
regulations should expressly state that
annual reports are confidential
documents that are not subject to public
disclosure by listing annual reports as a
B. Core Principle B—Financial
Resources—§ 39.11
Core Principle B,42 as amended by the
Dodd-Frank Act, requires a DCO to
possess financial resources that, at a
minimum, exceed the total amount that
would enable the DCO to meet its
41 See Section 5b(i)(3)(B)(ii) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C.
7a–1(i)(3)(B)(ii).
42 Section 5b(c)(2)(B) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 7a–
1(c)(2)(B).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00012
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
financial obligations to its clearing
members notwithstanding a default by
the clearing member creating the largest
financial exposure for the DCO in
extreme but plausible market conditions
and to cover its operating costs for a
period one year, as calculated on a
rolling basis. Proposed § 39.11 would
codify these requirements. The
Commission received a total of 18
comments on the proposed regulations.
The Commission considered each of
these comments in formulating the final
regulations discussed below.
1. Amount of Financial Resources
Required—§§ 39.11(a) and 39.11(b)(3)
Proposed § 39.11(a)(1) would require
a DCO to maintain sufficient financial
resources to meet its financial
obligations to its clearing members
notwithstanding a default by the
clearing member creating the largest
financial exposure for the DCO in
extreme but plausible market
conditions, and proposed § 39.11(a)(2)
would require a DCO to maintain
sufficient financial resources to cover its
operating costs for at least one year,
calculated on a rolling basis. Proposed
§ 39.11(b)(3) would allow a DCO to
allocate a financial resource, in whole or
in part, to satisfy the requirements of
either proposed § 39.11(a)(1) or
proposed § 39.11(a)(2), but not both, and
only to the extent that use of that
financial resource is not otherwise
limited by the CEA, Commission
regulations, the DCO’s rules, or any
contractual arrangements to which the
DCO is a party.
The Futures Industry Association
(FIA) recommended that all DCOs be
required to maintain resources sufficient
to withstand the default of the two
clearing members representing the
largest financial exposure to the DCO,
but that the Commission give DCOs
reasonable time to come into
compliance with the enhanced
requirement.
The International Swaps and
Derivatives Association (ISDA) also
suggested that, in the clearing of certain
OTC derivatives such as eligible credit
default swaps and interest rate swaps, a
DCO should have sufficient financial
resources that, at a minimum, enable it
to withstand a potential default by two
of its largest clearing members, as
measured by the two clearing members
with the largest obligations to the DCO
in extreme but plausible market
conditions. ISDA further suggested,
however, that this heightened financial
resource level may not be appropriate
for all other OTC or other derivatives
products, and offered to work with the
Commission to determine the
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
appropriate standard for derivatives in
other asset classes.
Similarly, Mr. Chris Barnard
recommended that consideration be
given to differentiating risk, and
therefore resource requirements by
broad derivative/product class, or at
least by exchange-traded and OTC
derivative types.
Better Markets suggested that the
default rate used in the stress test for
DCOs should be the larger of (1) the
member representing the largest
exposure to the DCO, and (2) the
members constituting at least 25 percent
of the exposures in aggregate to the
DCO. Americans for Financial Reform
(AFR) stated that the calculation in
proposed § 39.11(a)(1) should be based
on risk exposure as well as number of
defaults.
LCH.Clearnet Group Limited (LCH)
concurred with all the provisions set
forth by the Commission under
proposed § 39.11(a). NYPC also
expressed support for proposed
§§ 39.11(a)(1) and 39.11(a)(2).
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.11(a) as proposed. Section 39.11(a)
is consistent with Core Principle B as
amended by the Dodd-Frank Act. As the
Commission noted in its notice of
proposed rulemaking, § 39.11(a)(1) is
also consistent with the Bank for
International Settlements’ Committee on
Payment and Settlement Systems and
the Technical Committee of the
International Organization of Securities
Commissions (CPSS–IOSCO)
Recommendations for Central
Counterparties (CCPs), issued in 2004
(2004 CPSS–IOSCO
Recommendations).43 The Commission
recognizes that those recommendations
eventually will be replaced by the
Principles for Financial Market
Infrastructures (FMIs), which are
currently being developed by CPSS and
IOSCO and are expected to be finalized
in 2012.44 For financial resources
requirements for CCPs, CPSS and
IOSCO are considering three
alternatives: (1) A ‘‘cover one’’
minimum requirement for all CCPs; (2)
a ‘‘cover two’’ minimum requirement for
43 See Bank for International Settlements’
Committee on Payment and Settlement Systems and
Technical Committee of the International
Organization of Securities Commissions,
‘‘Recommendations for Central Counterparties,’’
CPSS Publ’n No. 64 (November 2004), available at
https://www.bis.org/publ/cpss64.pdf.
44 See Bank for International Settlements’
Committee on Payment and Settlement Systems and
Technical Committee of the International
Organization of Securities Commissions,
‘‘Principles for financial market infrastructures:
Consultative report,’’ CPSS Publ’n No. 94 (March
2011), available at https://www.bis.org/publ/
cpss94.pdf (CPSS–IOSCO Consultative Report).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
all CCPs; and (3) either a ‘‘cover one’’
or a ‘‘cover two’’ minimum requirement
for a particular CCP, depending upon
the risk and other characteristics of the
particular products it clears, the markets
it serves, and the number and type of
participants it has.45 The Commission
may reconsider § 39.11(a)(1) once CPSS
and IOSCO have finished their work.
MGEX noted that proposed
§ 39.11(b)(3) would prohibit a DCO from
using a financial resource for both
default and operating cost purposes.
While MGEX agreed this seems a logical
approach to take to avoid counting an
asset’s value for two different purposes,
MGEX stated that there are practical
implications to consider. As a DCM and
DCO, MGEX keeps one basic set of
financial records that are compliant
with various accounting standards.
MGEX recommended that the
Commission’s proposal should not be
interpreted to require a DCO to formally
divide some assets and accounts. The
Commission confirms that § 39.11(b)(3)
does not require a DCO to formally
divide its assets or accounts. The
Commission is adopting § 39.11(b)(3) as
proposed.
2. Treatment of Affiliated Clearing
Members—§ 39.11(a)(1)
Proposed § 39.11(a) would state, in
part: ‘‘A [DCO] shall maintain financial
resources sufficient to cover its
exposures with a high degree of
confidence and to enable it to perform
its functions in compliance with the
core principles set out in Section 5b of
the [CEA] * * * Financial resources
shall be considered sufficient if their
value, at a minimum, exceeds the total
amount that would: (1) Enable the
[DCO] to meet its financial obligations
to its clearing members notwithstanding
a default by the clearing member
creating the largest financial exposure
for the [DCO] in extreme but plausible
market conditions; Provided that if a
clearing member controls another
clearing member or is under common
control with another clearing member,
the affiliated clearing members shall be
deemed to be a single clearing member
for purposes of this provision * * * ’’
In the notice of proposed rulemaking,
the Commission stated: ‘‘There may be
some instances in which one clearing
member controls another clearing
member or in which a clearing member
is under common control with another
clearing member. The Commission
proposes to treat such affiliated clearing
members as a single entity for purposes
of determining the largest financial
45 CPSS–IOSCO Consultative Report, Principle 4:
Credit Risk, at 30.
PO 00000
Frm 00013
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69345
exposure because the default of one
affiliate could have an impact on the
ability of the other to meet its financial
obligations to the DCO. However, to the
extent that each affiliated clearing
member is treated as a separate entity by
the DCO, with separate capital
requirements, separate guaranty fund
obligations, and separate potential
assessment liability, the Commission
requests comment on whether a
different approach might be warranted.’’
CME noted that it treats affiliated
clearing members as separate entities,
with separate capital requirements,
separate guaranty fund obligations, and
separate potential assessment liability.
While CME acknowledged that the
default of one affiliate may impact the
ability of another affiliated clearing
member to meet its financial obligations
to the DCO, CME suggested that
circumstances may exist in which a
clearing member is sufficiently
independent to continue operating
notwithstanding a default by an affiliate.
CME rules allow, but do not require,
emergency action to be taken against a
clearing member based upon the
financial or operational condition of an
affiliate (whether or not that affiliate is
also a clearing member). CME urged the
Commission to take a similar approach
by revising the language of proposed
§ 39.11(a) to state that ‘‘if a clearing
member controls another clearing
member or is under common control
with another clearing member, the
affiliated clearing members may be
deemed to be a single clearing member
* * *.’’
LCH agreed with the Commission’s
proposed requirement that the DCO
must treat any clearing member, either
controlled by another clearing member
or under common control with another
clearing member, as a single clearing
member for the purposes of
§ 39.11(a)(1).
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.11(a)(1) as proposed. The
Commission believes this treatment
appropriately addresses the potential
risks of affiliates. The Commission notes
that aggregating the potential losses of
affiliated clearing members for purposes
of this calculation would provide more
coverage in the event of a default.
3. Operating Costs—§ 39.11(a)(2)
Proposed § 39.11(a)(2) would require
a DCO to maintain sufficient financial
resources to cover its operating costs for
at least one year, calculated on a rolling
basis.
OCC commented that while the
statutory requirement that a DCO have
one year of operating costs, based on a
rolling period, may be a reasonable
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69346
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
standard to ensure that a DCO is not
forced out of business while there is still
open interest in the contracts it clears,
the requirement should be calculated
based on essential operating expenses
for the rolling period. According to
OCC, an appropriate wind-down budget
would include projected revenues
during the wind-down and would not
include expenses associated with
activities having value only to a DCO
that intends to remain in business (e.g.,
product development, technological
enhancements, lobbying activities,
investor education, etc.).
ISDA stated that it is appropriate that
a DCO hold equity capital sufficient to
cover its operating costs and likely exit
costs during any liquidation and this
capital should be separate from any
DCO equity contribution to the required
default resources.
Eurex Clearing AG (Eurex) agreed that
having a requirement for operating
resources is reasonable, especially in
view of the flexibility implied in the
Commission’s proposed rules for types
of financial resources, but cautioned
that the one-year time frame may be
unnecessarily long.
FIA supported this aspect of the
Commission’s proposal, including the
requirement that a DCO not be
permitted to ‘‘double-count’’ its
resources to cover both this and the
default resources requirement.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.11(a)(2) as proposed. The
Commission notes that the language in
§ 39.11(a)(2) is virtually identical to that
of Core Principle B.
4. Types of Financial Resources—
§ 39.11(b)
Proposed § 39.11(b)(1) lists the types
of financial resources that would be
available to a DCO to satisfy the
requirements of proposed § 39.11(a)(1):
(1) The margin of the defaulting clearing
member; (2) The DCO’s own capital; (3)
the guaranty fund deposits of the
defaulting clearing member and nondefaulting clearing members; (4) default
insurance; (5) if permitted by the DCO’s
rules, potential assessments for
additional guaranty fund contributions
on non-defaulting clearing members;
and (6) any other financial resource
deemed acceptable by the Commission.
Proposed § 39.11(b)(2) lists the types of
financial resources that would be
available to a DCO to satisfy the
requirements of proposed § 39.11(a)(2):
(1) The DCO’s own capital and (2) any
other financial resource deemed
acceptable by the Commission.
In the notice of proposed rulemaking,
the Commission noted that a DCO
would be able to request an informal
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
interpretation from Commission staff on
whether or not a particular financial
resource may be acceptable to the
Commission. The Commission also
invited commenters to recommend
particular financial resources for
inclusion in the final regulation.
ISDA encouraged the Commission to
give prudent consideration to the use of
standby letters of credit as an additional
financial resource, given that many
letter-of-credit issuing banks will be an
affiliate of a clearing member.
Natural Gas Exchange Inc. (NGX)
requested that the Commission consider
the acceptability of letters of credit as an
asset of the guaranty fund and clarify in
the final rule that letters of credit are
acceptable as an asset of the guaranty
fund if subject to certain safeguards.
NGX also requested that the
Commission make clear in the final
regulation that it will interpret proposed
§§ 39.11(b)(1)(vi) and 39.11(b)(2)(ii)
broadly so as to permit a demonstration,
on a case-by-case basis, that a DCO
meets the overall policies of the
regulation through a specific mix of
financial resources.
Mr. Barnard recommended splitting
the types of financial resources
permitted under proposed § 39.11(b)(1)
into two classes: Class A would consist
of the financial resources listed in
paragraphs (b)(i) through (b)(iii), and
would be required to make up the
significant part of the total financial
resources, and class B would consist of
the financial resources listed in
paragraphs (b)(iv) through (b)(vi), on
which larger prudential haircuts would
be required. MGEX suggested that
proposed § 39.11(b)(2) should retain the
ability for a DCO to provide its
explanation and methodology for
including a particular financial
resource. MGEX further suggested that
the list of potential financial resources
should be broad and not pruned too
quickly, particularly by initial
regulation.
Eurex commented that the
Commission’s proposed list of financial
resources in proposed § 39.11(b)(1) is
appropriate.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.11(b) as proposed, except for a
technical amendment to clarify the
scope of the use of margin as a financial
resource to cover a default. As
proposed, the Commission is not
including letters of credit as an
acceptable financial resource because
they are only a promise by a bank to pay
and not an asset that can be sold.46
46 The Commission recognizes that assessment
powers are also a promise to pay, but as the
Commission noted in the notice of proposed
PO 00000
Frm 00014
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
However, both § 39.11(b)(1) and
§ 39.11(b)(2) permit ‘‘any other financial
resource deemed acceptable by the
Commission,’’ which means that the
Commission could evaluate the use of
letters of credit on a case-by-case
basis.47
The Commission also received
inquiries from a few DCOs as to whether
the Commission would deem projected
revenue an acceptable financial resource
to satisfy the requirements of
§ 39.11(a)(2). The Commission expects
that projected revenue generally would
be deemed acceptable for established
DCOs that can demonstrate a historical
record of revenue, but not for DCO
applicants or relatively new DCOs with
no such record.
With respect to any financial resource
that is not enumerated in § 39.11(b) and
for which a DCO seeks a determination
as to its acceptability based on the
DCO’s particular circumstances, DCO
staff should contact Commission staff
prior to submitting the DCO’s quarterly
financial resources report.
The Commission is modifying
§ 39.11(b)(1)(i) to more precisely reflect
the fact that the use of margin as a
financial resource available to satisfy
the requirements of paragraph (a)(1) is
subject to limitations imposed by the
Commission and a DCO, e.g., relating to
the use of customer margin to cover a
default. As proposed, § 39.11(b)(1)(i)
would permit the use of ‘‘[m]argin of a
defaulting clearing member.’’ The
provision now refers to ‘‘[m]argin to the
extent permitted under parts 1, 22, and
190 of this chapter and under the rules
of the derivatives clearing
organization.’’
5. Capital Requirement
Proposed §§ 39.11(b)(1) and (b)(2) list
the DCO’s own capital as a type of
financial resource that would be
available to a DCO to satisfy the
requirements of proposed §§ 39.11(a)(1)
and (a)(2), respectively. In the notice of
proposed rulemaking, the Commission
noted that Commission regulations do
not prescribe capital requirements for
DCOs. The Commission invited
rulemaking, a clearing member may have a strong
financial incentive to pay an assessment. If a
clearing member failed to pay its assessment
obligation, that failure would be treated as a default
and the clearing member would be subject to
liquidation of its positions and forfeiture of the
margin in its house account. Thus, in addition to
a potential general interest in maintaining the
viability of the DCO going forward, a non-defaulting
clearing member may have a specific incentive to
pay an assessment, depending on the size and
profitability of its positions and the margin on
deposit relative to the size of the assessment.
47 See discussion of the prohibition on accepting
letters of credit as initial margin in section IV.F.5,
below.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
comment on whether it should consider
adopting such requirements and if so,
what those requirements should be.
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. (J.P. Morgan)
commented that if a DCO enumerates its
own capital as part of its waterfall, that
DCO should be required to provide
sufficient assurances that the capital
will be available to meet those
obligations and will not be reallocated
to serve other purposes at the DCO’s
discretion. In a separate comment letter
on the proposed risk management
requirements for DCOs, J.P. Morgan
offered its support for regulations that
would require a DCO to retain in a
segregated deposit account, on a rolling
basis, 50 percent of its earnings from the
previous 4 years. In addition, J.P.
Morgan stated that it would be
appropriate for at least 50 percent of the
retained earnings to have a first loss
position. J.P. Morgan also recommended
that the DCO contribution be subject to
a minimum floor of $50 million.
Mr. Michael Greenberger
recommended that the Commission
require DCOs to set aside a reasonable
amount of capital, equal to an average
size of one contract for that DCO, so that
a DCO would have sufficient financial
resources to absorb a default. In
addition, Mr. Greenberger suggested that
capital requirements for DCOs must
require that the DCOs’ capital be highly
liquid so that a DCO can cure a default
in a timely manner.
Eurex noted that clearing
organizations exhibit a variety of
organizational and capital structures
and suggested the Commission should
allow DCOs to determine their own
mixes of protective measures, which
might include the DCO’s own capital.
Nevertheless, Eurex expressed support
for an initial capital requirement of $25
million for DCOs.
OCC commented that an equity
capital requirement for DCOs is not
appropriate because DCOs rely
primarily on member-supplied
resources, such as clearing fund
deposits and margin, to meet their
obligations. According to OCC, most, if
not all, DCOs have little capital in
relation to their obligations. OCC
suggested that the critical question from
a safeness and soundness standpoint is
whether DCOs have adequate financial
resources, not the form in which such
resources are held.
CME stated that the financial
resources requirements contained in
Core Principle B are better suited to
achieve the goal of ensuring adequate
capitalization of DCOs, and that further
capital requirements would be
unnecessary and essentially duplicative.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
KCC commented that, with proposed
§ 39.11(a)(1) requiring a DCO to
maintain sufficient financial resources
to meets its financial obligations, a
separate capital requirement would be
redundant. KCC also stated that onerous
capital requirements placed on DCOs
could have an anti-competitive effect.
NYPC cautioned that mandating that
DCOs hold specific forms or amounts of
capital could have a chilling effect on
competition, at odds with the principles
of the CEA by potentially shutting out
various forms of organizational
structures for DCOs. NYPC noted that
Core Principle B requires that DCOs
maintain sufficient financial resources
to perform their functions as central
counterparties in compliance with the
CEA. NYPC suggested that whether such
financial resources are derived from a
DCO’s own capital or other financial
resources deemed acceptable to the
Commission should be inconsequential
to the extent such statutorily prescribed
functions are fulfilled.
MGEX stated that it does not support
adopting specific capital requirements
for DCOs. MGEX noted that the
proposed regulation already requires a
DCO to be able to withstand the default
of its largest clearing member in extreme
but plausible market conditions. MGEX
further noted that a DCO’s capital is
only one element of the financial
resources necessary to cover that risk,
and suggested that a DCO should be able
to determine how it best needs to
allocate that risk among its various
financial resources.
The Commission is not adopting a
capital requirement for DCOs at this
time. The Commission believes that it is
appropriate to provide flexibility to
DCOs in designing their financial
resources structure so long as the
aggregate amount is sufficient. The
Commission notes, however, that one of
the principles in the CPSS–IOSCO
Consultative Report would require an
FMI to ‘‘hold sufficiently liquid net
assets funded by equity to cover
potential general business losses so that
it can continue providing services as a
going concern.’’ 48 CPSS and IOSCO are
considering, and requesting comment
on, the establishment of a specific
minimum quantitative requirement for
liquid net assets funded by equity. If
such a requirement is established, the
Commission may consider a similar
requirement for DCOs at that time.
48 See CPSS–IOSCO Consultative Report,
Principle 15: General Business Risk, at 70.
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69347
6. Assessments—§§ 39.11(b)(1)(v) and
39.11(d)(2)
Proposed § 39.11(b)(1)(v) would list
‘‘potential assessments for additional
guaranty fund contributions, if
permitted by the [DCO]’s rules’’ as a
type of financial resource that would be
available to a DCO to satisfy the
requirements of proposed § 39.11(a)(1).
Proposed § 39.11(d)(2) would require a
DCO: (i) To have rules requiring that its
clearing members have the ability to
meet an assessment within the time
frame of a normal variation settlement
cycle; (ii) to monitor, on a continual
basis, the financial and operational
capacity of its clearing members to meet
potential assessments; (iii) to apply a 30
percent haircut to the value of potential
assessments; and (iv) to only count the
value of assessments, after the haircut,
to meet up to 20 percent of its default
resources requirement. The Commission
requested comment on whether these
limits and requirements are appropriate
and, more generally, whether
assessment powers should be
considered to be a financial resource
available to satisfy the requirements of
proposed § 39.11(a)(1).
With regard to proposed
§§ 39.11(d)(2)(i) and (ii), OCC
commented that the requirement that
clearing members be able to meet an
assessment within the time frame of a
normal variation settlement cycle is an
aggressive but appropriate standard that
its clearing members would be able to
meet in most circumstances, but that
DCOs should have discretion to extend
this deadline on a case-by-case basis
where appropriate to avoid severe
strains on clearing member liquidity in
unusual circumstances. OCC objected to
the requirement that DCOs must
monitor ‘‘on a continual basis’’ a
clearing member’s ability to meet
potential assessments, which OCC
claimed is overly burdensome and
difficult to administer. OCC suggested
that a monthly review is reasonable and
adequate.
NYPC requested that the Commission
clarify how the requirement of proposed
§ 39.11(d)(2)(i) would be imposed on
DCOs that conduct both end-of-day and
intraday settlements each business day.
In order to ensure that a uniform
standard is applied across clearing
members of all DCOs, whether the DCO
conducts one or two settlements per
business day, NYPC recommended that
the Commission clarify that a DCO’s
rules should require clearing members
to have the ability to meet an
assessment within one business day.
With regard to proposed
§ 39.11(d)(2)(ii), NYPC requested that
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69348
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
the Commission provide guidance as to
how it expects DCOs to determine
whether a clearing member has the
capacity to meet a potential assessment.
In addition, NYPC expressed concern
that the ‘‘continual’’ monitoring of
clearing members’ ability to meet
potential assessments, which NYPC
believes implies daily or even real-time
monitoring, would be extremely
difficult, if not impossible, to
administer. NYPC suggested that it
would be reasonable and more
practicable for the Commission to
require that monitoring of clearing
members’ ability to meet potential
assessments be included as a mandatory
component of the periodic financial
reviews of clearing members that DCOs
already conduct in the ordinary course
of business.
In response to these comments, the
Commission is revising § 39.11(d)(2)(i)
to read as follows (added text in italics):
‘‘The derivatives clearing organization
shall have rules requiring that its
clearing members have the ability to
meet an assessment within the time
frame of a normal end-of-day variation
settlement cycle.’’ In response to OCC’s
comment, the Commission notes that
§ 39.11(d)(2)(i) requires a DCO to have
rules requiring that its clearing members
have the ability to meet an assessment
within the time frame of a normal endof-day variation settlement cycle, but
would permit a DCO, in its discretion,
to provide some flexibility to clearing
members as to timing.
In addition, the requirement in
§ 39.11(d)(2)(ii) that a DCO must
monitor the financial and operational
capacity of its clearing members to meet
potential assessments ‘‘on a continual
basis’’ was intended to mean only that
the DCO must perform such monitoring
often enough to enable it to become
aware of any potential problems in a
timely manner. To eliminate possible
ambiguity, the Commission is revising
the final rule by removing the phrase
‘‘on a continual basis.’’ Thus,
§ 39.11(d)(2)(ii) establishes a standard
whereby a DCO must monitor its
clearing members, but the DCO can
meet the standard through the exercise
of its judgment in response to particular
circumstances, e.g., a DCO might have
reason to evaluate certain clearing
members on a daily basis and evaluate
others only as part of routine, periodic
financial reviews.
With regard to proposed
§§ 39.11(d)(2)(iii), FIA commented that
the 30 percent haircut and 20 percent
cap are reasonable and prudent
safeguards, sufficient to ensure that a
DCO does not unduly rely on its
assessment power. J.P. Morgan
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
supported the proposal and also
recommended that regulators adopt a
risk-based analysis to determine the
likelihood that a clearing member will
be able to meet its assessment
obligations across all DCOs. Mr.
Greenberger, citing J.P. Morgan’s
comments, agreed that it is absolutely
critical that the Commission promulgate
rules that would determine a clearing
member’s risk of default and its
availability of financial resources across
all clearinghouses. Similarly, ISDA
suggested that the Commission evaluate
the potential impact of multiple
assessments from different DCOs on the
same clearing member or affiliate group
in a short time-frame.
CME suggested that a DCO should be
required to completely exclude the
potential defaulting firm’s assessment
liability in calculating its available
assessment resources. CME also
commented that, in light of the
requirements of proposed
§§ 39.11(d)(2)(i) and (ii), and the fact
that a clearing member that failed to pay
an assessment would itself be in default
to the DCO, it does not believe that a
further haircut on assessments is
necessary, and it is aware of no valid
reason to cap the use of assessments at
20 percent as proposed.
KCC noted that the inclusion of
assessment powers as financial
resources is necessary for it to meet its
obligations in the unlikely event of a
default. KCC agreed that a reasonable
haircut on the value of a DCO’s
assessment power may be a prudent
measure, but stated that the proposed
limits are unreasonable and excessive
and seem arbitrary. KCC suggested that
a better approach would be for the DCO
to be allowed the latitude to determine
clearing member assessment haircuts on
an individual basis, based on each
clearing member’s financial capabilities.
MGEX recommended that the
Commission allow each DCO to provide
its methodology and support for why
any assessment might be considered a
financial resource and how much.
MGEX stated that the 30 percent haircut
and 20 percent cap seem arbitrary and
prescriptive. MGEX stated that the DCO
should have the discretion to determine
an appropriate haircut based on the
clearing member’s liquidity.
Better Markets commented that the
proposed haircuts for assessments are
inadequate. According to Better
Markets, it would be far more prudent
to require funding of risk that can be
anticipated in stress tests and rely on
assessments as a financial resource only
for conditions that are not anticipated in
stress tests.
PO 00000
Frm 00016
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
LCH recommended that potential
assessments not be allowed to satisfy
the requirements of proposed
§ 39.11(a)(1) because, in LCH’s view, it
is of the utmost importance that a DCO’s
resources following a clearing member
default be immediately and
unconditionally available. LCH
suggested that assessments should be
allowed as part of the DCO’s ‘‘waterfall’’
of protections, but should not be taken
into account to meet the specific test
outlined under proposed § 39.11(a)(1).
AFR urged the Commission to
prohibit DCOs from including
assessment powers in their calculation
of financial resources because it is
unclear, in a time of broad market
distress, whether a DCO’s members
would be willing and able to pay their
assessments.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.11(d)(2)(iii) as proposed. In view of
the wide range of comments on this
issue, the Commission believes the rule
strikes an appropriate balance. The 30
percent haircut recognizes that the
defaulting firm, which by definition will
not be paying an assessment, might
represent a significant segment of the
DCO’s total risk. The 20 percent cap
recognizes that given the contingent
nature of assessments, they should only
be relied upon as a last resort. In
response to ISDA’s comment, the
Commission expects that as part of the
evaluation of a clearing member’s risk
profile, a DCO would take into
consideration the potential exposure of
the clearing member at other DCOs, to
the extent that it is able to obtain such
information, including the possibility of
assessments. The Commission notes, in
response to MGEX’s and KCC’s
comments, that a DCO may determine
clearing member assessment haircuts on
an individual basis because
§ 39.11(d)(2)(iii) only requires a 30
percent haircut on an aggregate basis.
7. Computation of the Financial
Resources Requirement—§ 39.11(c)(1)
Proposed § 39.11(c)(1) would require
a DCO to perform stress testing on a
monthly basis in order to make a
reasonable calculation of the financial
resources it needs to meet the
requirements of proposed § 39.11(a)(1).
The DCO would have reasonable
discretion in determining the
methodology used to make the
calculation, but would be required to
take into account both historical data
and hypothetical situations. In the
notice of proposed rulemaking, the
Commission requested comment on
whether monthly tests are appropriate.
MGEX commented that monthly
reporting seems reasonable as it already
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
performs stress tests on a routine basis.
MGEX further commented that allowing
DCOs discretion in selecting stress test
scenarios is appropriate.
CME suggested that annual stress
testing would suffice for operating costs
because operating costs are generally
static. With regard to default coverage,
CME suggested that stress testing should
be done no less than monthly.
LCH expressed concern over the
requirement that the DCO perform stress
testing only on a monthly basis. In
LCH’s view, stress testing should be
carried out by the DCO on at least a
daily basis, and LCH strongly urged the
Commission to amend its proposal
accordingly. LCH suggested that
monthly stress testing is inadequate, as
experience has shown that market
conditions and member positions can
change rapidly during periods of market
turmoil.
ISDA suggested that reverse stress
tests 49 should be required for
determining the size of the financial
resources package and that there should
be public disclosure of the stress tests
and their results.
Mr. Barnard agreed that stress testing
should be carried out at least monthly,
and suggested that back testing should
be carried out daily. Mr. Barnard also
suggested that the Commission
specifically refer to reverse stress testing
in proposed § 39.11(c)(1) because, in his
view, it is a useful tool for managing
expectations and for helping the DCO to
anticipate financial resources
requirements in extreme conditions.
FIA recommended that the
Commission make clear its expectation
that the DCOs will, at a minimum: (1)
Conduct a range of stress tests that
reflect the DCO’s product mix; (2)
include the most volatile periods that
have been experienced by the markets
for which the DCO provides clearing
services; (3) take into account the
distribution of cleared positions
between clearing members and their
customers; and (4) test for unanticipated
levels of volatility and for breakdowns
in correlations within and across
product classes.
Mr. Greenberger recommended that
historical market data that led up to the
passage of the Dodd-Frank Act be taken
49 Reverse stress tests are stress tests that require
a firm to assess scenarios and circumstances that
would render its business model unviable, thereby
identifying potential business vulnerabilities.
Reverse stress testing starts from an outcome of
business failure and identifies circumstances where
this might occur. This is different from general
stress testing, which tests for outcomes arising from
changes in circumstances. See https://
www.fsa.gov.uk/pages/About/What/International/
stress_testing/firm_s/reverse_stress_testing/
index.shtml.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
into account in determining market
conditions that could be defined as
extreme but plausible.
Better Markets commented that the
passive role of the Commission in
measuring the financial requirements
for a DCO is inappropriate in light of the
importance of this function. Better
Markets proposed that the methodology,
the historical data set, and the
hypothetical scenarios be: (1) Jointly
developed by the DCO and the
Commission and (2) reviewed whenever
ordered by the Commission, but no less
frequently than quarterly. Better
Markets also recommended that the
Commission explicitly recognize the
importance of illiquidity in developing
hypothetical scenarios.
AFR stated that it is critical that the
Commission play a central role in
establishing the standards by which
DCOs will measure their exposure to
future risks. AFR urged the Commission
to define minimal standards that will
ensure that DCO stress tests are
stringent and incorporate realistic
metrics of worst-case scenarios that
DCOs may experience.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.11(c)(1) as proposed. The
Commission believes it is appropriate to
allow the DCO discretion in designing
stress tests because stress testing is an
exercise that inherently entails the
exercise of judgment at various stages.
Furthermore, § 39.11(c)(1) allows the
Commission to evaluate the testing and
require changes as appropriate. In
response to the LCH comment, the
Commission notes that there is a
distinction between the type of stress
testing carried out under this rule for
the purpose of sizing the overall
financial resource package and the type
of stress testing carried out under
§ 39.13(h)(3) for the purpose of
ascertaining the risks that may be posed
to the DCO by individual traders and
clearing members. The former is a
comprehensive test across all clearing
members and all products with the goal
of identifying the firms posing the
greatest risk to the DCO and quantifying
that risk. The regulations would require
such testing to be completed monthly.
The latter is targeted testing addressing
the specific risks of specific positions at
specific firms. The regulations would
require such testing to be completed on
either a daily or weekly basis, as
described in § 39.13(h)(3).50
50 See discussion of § 39.13(h)(3) in section
IV.D.7.c, below.
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69349
8. Valuation of Financial Resources—
§ 39.11(d)(1)
Proposed § 39.11(d)(1) would require
a DCO, no less frequently than monthly,
to calculate the current market value of
each financial resource used to meet its
obligations under proposed § 39.11(a).
When valuing a financial resource, a
DCO would be required to reduce the
value, as appropriate, to reflect any
market or credit risk specific to that
particular resource, i.e., apply a haircut.
The Commission would permit each
DCO to exercise its discretion in
determining the applicable haircuts.
However, the haircuts would have to be
evaluated on a monthly basis, would be
subject to Commission review, and
would have to be acceptable to the
Commission.
OCC suggested that the proposed
regulations should be modified or
interpreted to accommodate the use of
a true portfolio margining model that
values collateral based on its
relationship to an overall portfolio in
lieu of applying fixed haircuts on
margin collateral.
ISDA stated that it would support an
appropriate haircut for default
insurance, potential assessments, and
possibly other financial resources
deemed acceptable by the Commission,
as determined by the Commission upon
review of the relevant DCO.
FIA expressed reservations about the
ability of a DCO to be paid promptly
under the terms of a default insurance
policy. FIA therefore recommended that
default insurance coverage be subjected
to a 30 percent haircut and a 20 percent
cap, similar to the policies that the
Commission has proposed to apply to a
DCO’s assessment power.
In discussions with Commission staff,
Federal Reserve and Federal Reserve
Bank of New York staff suggested that
the liquidity of a financial resource
should be an additional factor in
determining an appropriate haircut.
Considerations should include whether
it is easy to value the financial resource
(e.g., whether the pricing is transparent)
and whether the financial resource
could be divested in a short time period
under normal market conditions. The
Commission agrees that liquidity is an
important factor in valuing financial
resources.
Accordingly, the Commission is
revising § 39.11(d)(1) to read as follows
(added text in italics): ‘‘At appropriate
intervals, but not less than monthly, a
derivatives clearing organization shall
compute the current market value of
each financial resource used to meet its
obligations under paragraph (a) of this
section. Reductions in value to reflect
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69350
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
credit, market, and liquidity risks
(haircuts) shall be applied as
appropriate and evaluated on a monthly
basis.’’ In response to OCC’s comments,
the Commission notes that § 39.11(d)(1)
does not prohibit the valuation method
described by OCC in its comment letter.
The Commission believes
§ 39.11(d)(1) takes a balanced approach
by permitting a DCO to exercise its
discretion in determining applicable
haircuts for each of its financial
resources but making those haircuts
subject to Commission review and
approval. Section 39.11(d)(1) requires a
DCO to perform such valuations no less
frequently than monthly, which means
the Commission would expect a DCO to
perform such valuations more
frequently when appropriate, such as
during periods of market volatility.
9. Liquidity of Financial Resources—
§ 39.11(e)
Proposed § 39.11(e)(1) would require
a DCO to have financial resources
sufficiently liquid to enable the DCO to
fulfill its obligations as a central
counterparty during a one-day
settlement cycle, including sufficient
capital in the form of cash to meet the
average daily settlement variation pay
per clearing member over the last fiscal
quarter. The DCO would be permitted to
take into account a committed line of
credit or similar facility for the purpose
of meeting the remainder of the
liquidity requirement. In the notice of
proposed rulemaking, the Commission
requested comment on whether the
liquidity requirement should cover
more than a one-day cycle. The
Commission also requested comment on
what standards might be applicable to
lines of credit—e.g., should the
Commission require that there be a
diversified set of providers, or that a
line of credit have same-day drawing
rights?
Proposed § 39.11(e)(2) would require
a DCO to maintain unencumbered
liquid financial assets in the form of
cash or highly liquid securities, equal to
six months’ operating costs. The DCO
would be permitted to take into account
a committed line of credit or similar
facility to satisfy this requirement.
Proposed § 39.11(e)(3) would require
that: (i) Assets in a guaranty fund have
minimal credit, market, and liquidity
risks and be readily accessible on a
same-day basis, (ii) cash balances be
invested or placed in safekeeping in a
manner that bears little or no principal
risk, and (iii) letters of credit not be a
permissible asset for a guaranty fund.
OCC recommended that the proposed
regulations be modified or interpreted to
provide DCOs some flexibility in
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
determining the means of managing
their ‘‘cash’’ liquidity needs by allowing
DCOs to use secured credit facilities and
tri-party repo facilities in addition to
cash held in demand deposit accounts
to satisfy the cash requirement. OCC
observed that permitting these
alternatives would allow a DCO to hold
a significant portion of its financial
resources in the form of U.S. Treasuries,
with the ability to convert the
Treasuries to cash as needed. According
to OCC, cash must generally be held at
banks, which presents a credit risk.
NGX suggested that immediately
accessible bank lines of credit should be
acceptable to cover the cash
requirement where the underlying
commodity is itself traded in a liquid
market.
CME suggested the phrase ‘‘average
daily settlement variation pay per
clearing member over the last fiscal
quarter’’ in proposed § 39.11(e)(1) is
somewhat ambiguous. CME assumed
that the Commission intended to refer to
the average daily variation pay for a
single clearing member, not the average
daily settlement variation pay for all
clearing members.
CME also commented that the
Commission’s approach is not
warranted given the potential amount of
cash at issue and the reliability of
liquidity facilities for short-term cash
needs. CME suggested that the
Commission revise the last sentence of
proposed § 39.11(e)(1) to read as
follows: ‘‘If any portion of such
financial resources is not sufficiently
liquid, the derivatives clearing
organization may take into account a
committed line of credit or similar
facility for purposes of meeting these
requirements.’’
In response to the Commission’s
request for comment on what standards
might be applicable to a liquidity
facility, CME stated that reviews and
evaluations by Commission staff during
regular DCO audits are a sufficient
check on the adequacy and soundness
of a committed line of credit, and that
the Commission should not attempt to
prescribe the terms and conditions of a
DCO’s liquidity facility.
KCC found the language in proposed
§ 39.11(e) to be ambiguous. KCC
interpreted the average daily settlement
variation pay per clearing member over
the last fiscal quarter to mean the
cumulative average of the pay-ins per
each clearing member divided by the
number of clearing members. In KCC’s
view, a line of credit with same-day
drawing rights should be considered as
liquid as cash and therefore should be
allowed to be used by the DCO to fulfill
its financial obligations during a one-
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
day settlement cycle. KCC commented
that the liquidity requirement should
cover no more than one day of market
price movement.
LCH was unclear on what the
Commission intends to mean in
proposed § 39.11(e)(1) by requiring that
the DCO should allocate financial
resources to meet the requirements of
§ 39.11(a)(1) and fulfill its arising
obligations during a ‘‘one-day
settlement cycle.’’ LCH suggested that
the requirement instead should be that
the DCO is obliged to fulfill its arising
obligations ‘‘as they fall due.’’
Additionally, LCH suggested that the
requirement that the DCO must have
‘‘sufficient capital in the form of cash to
meet the average daily settlement
variation pay per clearing member over
the last fiscal quarter’’ is insufficient.
LCH recommended that this
requirement be replaced by a test that
the DCO can meet its liquidity
requirements ‘‘following the default of
the clearing member(s) creating the
largest liquidity requirement under
stressed market conditions over the
quarter.’’
Mr. Greenberger suggested that the
standards for a committed line of credit
or similar facility must be narrowly and
strictly defined, so that the party can
easily use such highly liquid line of
credit or similar facility. Mr.
Greenberger further suggested that
greater participation by clearing
members in a committed line of credit
or a similar instrument at times of
market distress would not provide
necessary liquidity but rather would
increase systemic risk.
Eurex noted that proposed § 39.11(e)
requires DCOs to monitor the liquidity
of assets and agreed that low-credit risk,
highly liquid assets should comprise
guaranty funds and that this rule would
serve important purposes.
FIA recommended that the
Commission clarify that the cash
requirement is intended to measure the
average (and not the aggregate) clearing
member variation margin requirement.
FIA further recommended that the
Commission permit a DCO to satisfy this
requirement through the use of cash or
cash equivalents, including U.S.
government securities and repurchase
agreements involving highly liquid
securities if such repurchase agreement
matures within one business day or is
reversible upon demand. FIA
additionally recommended that this
aspect of the Commission’s proposal be
modified to clarify that DCOs are
permitted to satisfy the liquidity
requirement through the establishment
of committed repo facilities. FIA
supported allowing a DCO to obtain a
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
committed line of credit or similar
credit facility to cover the remainder of
its default resources requirement, but
recommended that this proposal be
strengthened by the diversification of
credit providers, with concentration
limits of 25 percent per provider.
MGEX commented that proposed
§ 39.11(e)(1) requires some clarity.
MGEX interpreted it to mean that a DCO
must have cash that will cover the
average of all the clearing members’
average daily settlement variation pays,
which to MGEX would seem a logical
and practical application. Rather than
adopting multiple liquidity
requirements (i.e., cash, clearing
member default coverage, six months’
worth of operating expenses), MGEX
suggested the process could be
simplified to address the most relevant,
which appeared to MGEX to be the
clearing member default coverage. In
addition, MGEX recommended that
proposed § 39.11(e) should permit
combining and then totaling its liquidity
of financial resources as a single-entity
DCO/DCM.
AFR stated that DCOs should be
required to have sufficient cash to fulfill
their obligations for 10 business days
and that lines of credit should not count
toward liquidity requirements.
NYPC commented that, to the extent
the proposed requirement is intended to
exclude cash equivalents, such as U.S.
Treasury securities, the standard is
inappropriate. NYPC recommended that
the Commission allow DCOs to satisfy
their liquidity needs through the use of
any combination of cash held in
demand deposit accounts, bank
accounts meeting the requirements of
CFTC Interpretative Letter 03–31,51 and
secured credit facilities and repurchase
agreements that allow DCOs to convert
U.S. Treasury securities and other high
quality collateral into cash on a sameday basis.
In response to the comments, the
Commission is revising § 39.11(e)(1) to
provide greater clarity. In addition, the
Commission is modifying the ‘‘cash’’
requirement to include ‘‘U.S. Treasury
obligations and high quality, liquid,
general obligations of a sovereign
51 CFTC Interpretative Letter 03–31 concerned a
bank that requested an interpretation that a trust
deposit account product it developed would be
acceptable for the deposit of customer segregated
funds in accordance with Commission Regulation
1.20. Based on an analysis of the account, staff of
the Commission’s Division of Clearing and
Intermediary Oversight issued an interpretation that
the account would be acceptable as a deposit
location because the account would be properly
titled and covered by appropriate
acknowledgements by the bank, and the funds in
the account would at all times be immediately
available for withdrawal on demand.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
nation.’’ This conforms the requirement
to existing liquidity practices and, in
particular, it accommodates acceptable
practices of foreign-based DCOs.
However, the Commission is not
including bank lines of credit as an
acceptable financial resource for
meeting the ‘‘cash’’ requirement because
they are only a promise by the bank to
pay and not an asset that can be sold.
The Commission is revising § 39.11(e)(1)
by deleting the following language:
‘‘The derivatives clearing organization
shall have sufficient capital in the form
of cash to meet the average daily
settlement pay per clearing member
over the last fiscal quarter. If any
portion of the remainder of the financial
resources is not sufficiently liquid, the
derivatives clearing organization may
take into account a committed line of
credit or similar facility for the purpose
of meeting this requirement.’’
The Commission is replacing the
deleted language with the following:
‘‘[(ii)] The derivatives clearing
organization shall maintain cash, U.S.
Treasury obligations, or high quality,
liquid, general obligations of a sovereign
nation, in an amount greater than or
equal to an amount calculated as
follows: (A) Calculate the average daily
settlement pay for each clearing member
over the last fiscal quarter; (B) Calculate
the sum of those average daily
settlement pays; and (C) Using that sum,
calculate the average of its clearing
members’ average pays. (iii) The
derivatives clearing organization may
take into account a committed line of
credit or similar facility for the purpose
of meeting the remainder of the
requirement under paragraph (e)(1)(ii) of
this section.’’
The Commission notes that, in the
CPSS–IOSCO Consultative Report, CPSS
and IOSCO are considering a minimum
liquidity requirement for CCPs that
would be either: (1) A ‘‘cover one’’
minimum requirement for all CCPs; (2)
a ‘‘cover two’’ minimum requirement for
all CCPs; or (3) a ‘‘cover one’’ or ‘‘cover
two’’ minimum requirement for an
individual CCP, depending on the
particular risk and other characteristics
of the particular products that it clears,
the markets it serves, and the number
and type of participants it has.52 The
Commission might revisit the issue after
CPSS and IOSCO determine what
standard they will adopt.
10. Reporting Requirements—§ 39.11(f)
Proposed § 39.11(f) would require a
DCO to report to the Commission, at the
end of each fiscal quarter or at any time
52 See CPSS–IOSCO Consultative Report,
Principle 7: Liquidity Risk, at 46.
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69351
upon Commission request: (i) The
amount of financial resources necessary
to meet the requirements set forth in the
regulation; and (ii) the value of each
financial resource available to meet
those requirements. The DCO would be
required to include with its report a
financial statement (including the
balance sheet, income statement, and
statement of cash flows) of the DCO or
its parent company. A DCO would have
17 business days from the end of the
fiscal quarter to file its report, but would
also be able to request an extension of
time from the Commission.
NYPC suggested that, in light of the
scope of information required to be
submitted in the quarterly report (i.e.,
information regarding default risk
financial resources and operating
financial resources), the Commission
should require that such reports be filed
not later than 30 calendar days, rather
than 17 business days, following the
end of the DCO’s fiscal quarter.
ISDA suggested that a DCO seeking an
extension of the 17-day reporting
deadline should be required to request
the extension at least seven business
days before the deadline.
KCC noted that it does not prepare a
statement of cash flows on a monthly
basis, only on an annual basis as part of
its audited financial statements. KCC
commented that a monthly profit/loss
statement is sufficient for determining
its financial operating needs.
MGEX suggested the Commission
should consider a DCO’s privacy
concerns when permitting reasonable
discretion in the data the DCO provides
in the monthly reports required by the
proposed regulations. MGEX stated that
some detail as to projected revenue and
expenses must remain proprietary if it
involves potential business
opportunities or other strategic business
decisions, and that DCOs have a
legitimate concern that confidential
financial information could be subject to
Freedom of Information Act requests.
The Commission is adopting § 39.11(f)
as proposed. The Commission notes that
the 17-business-day filing deadline is
consistent with the deadline imposed
on FCMs for the filing of monthly
financial reports under § 1.10(b).
Moreover, a DCO may request an
extension if it is unable to meet the
deadline. The Commission does not
believe it is appropriate to require a
DCO to request an extension at least
seven business days before the deadline,
because a DCO may not know that far
in advance that it will be unable to meet
the deadline. With regard to the
confidentiality of the information
contained in the reports, the
Commission notes that Core Principle L
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69352
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
and § 39.21(c)(4) require a DCO to
publicly disclose the size and
composition of the financial resources
package available in the event of a
clearing member default. A DCO may
request confidential treatment under
§ 145.9 for other information submitted
to the Commission under these
regulations.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
11. SIDCOs—§ 39.29
Proposed § 39.29(a) would require a
SIDCO to maintain sufficient financial
resources to meet its financial
obligations to its clearing members
notwithstanding a default by the two
clearing members creating the largest
combined financial exposure for the
SIDCO in extreme but plausible market
conditions. Proposed § 39.29(b) would
require that a SIDCO not count the value
of assessments to meet the obligations
arising from a default by the clearing
member creating the single largest
financial exposure and only count the
value of assessments, after a 30 percent
haircut, to meet up to 20 percent of the
obligations arising from a default by the
clearing member creating the second
largest financial exposure. The
Commission believes that it would be
premature to take action regarding
§ 39.29 at this time. The FSOC has not
yet designated any DCOs as systemically
important. As previously noted, the
CPSS–IOSCO Principles for Financial
Market Infrastructures, which are
expected to be finalized in 2012, will
address minimum financial resources
requirements for CCPs. Similarly,
certain foreign regulators, including the
European Union, are also considering
requirements in this area for the CCPs
they regulate. The Commission is
concerned that SIDCOs would be put at
a competitive disadvantage if they are
forced to comply with these
requirements before non-U.S. CCPs are
subject to comparable standards. The
Commission is closely monitoring
developments on this issue and is
prepared to revisit the issue if the
European Union or other foreign
regulators move closer to
implementation. Moreover, because it
may be some time before any DCO is
designated a SIDCO, the Commission
believes it would be prudent to
reconsider the regulation of SIDCOs in
light of developments that may occur in
the interim. The Commission expects to
consider all the proposed rules relating
to SIDCOs together.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
C. Core Principle C—Participant and
Product Eligibility—§ 39.12
1. Participant Eligibility
Core Principle C,53 as amended by the
Dodd-Frank Act, requires each DCO to
establish appropriate admission and
continuing eligibility standards for
members of, and participants in, the
DCO,54 including sufficient financial
resources and operational capacity to
meet the obligations arising from
participation. Core Principle C further
requires that such participation and
membership requirements be objective,
be publicly disclosed, and permit fair
and open access. Core Principle C also
requires that each DCO establish and
implement procedures to verify
compliance with each participation and
membership requirement, on an ongoing
basis. Proposed § 39.12(a) would codify
these requirements and establish the
minimum requirements that a DCO
would have to meet in order to comply
with Core Principle C.
Although there is potential tension
between the goals of ‘‘fair and open
access’’ and ‘‘sufficient financial
resources and operational capacity to
meet obligations arising from
participation in the derivatives clearing
organization,’’ the Commission believes
the rules that it is adopting herein strike
an appropriate balance. The
Commission has crafted the provisions
of § 39.12 and related rules, e.g., the risk
management requirements, to establish
a regulatory framework that it believes
can ensure that a DCO’s participation
requirements do not unreasonably
restrict any entity from becoming a
clearing member while, at the same
time, limiting risk to the DCO and its
clearing members. The Commission
expects that more widespread
participation will reduce the
concentration of clearing member
portfolios, thereby diversifying risk,
increasing market liquidity, and
increasing competition among clearing
members.
53 Section 5b(c)(2)(C) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 7a–
1(c)(2)(C).
54 Core Principle C, as well as the other core
principles that are discussed herein, refer to
‘‘members of, and participants in’’ a DCO. The
Commission interprets this phrase to mean persons
with clearing privileges, and has used the term
‘‘clearing member’’ in describing the requirements
of each core principle and in the text of the
proposed regulations described herein. The
Commission is also amending the definition of
‘‘clearing member’’ in § 1.3(c), adopted herein, to
mean ‘‘any person that has clearing privileges such
that it can process, clear and settle trades through
a derivatives clearing organization on behalf of
itself or others. The derivatives clearing
organization need not be organized as a
membership organization.’’
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
a. Fair and Open Access—§ 39.12(a)(1)
Proposed § 39.12(a) would require a
DCO to establish appropriate admission
and continuing participation
requirements for clearing members of
the DCO, which are objective, publicly
disclosed, and risk-based. Proposed
§ 39.12(a)(1) would require a DCO to
have participation requirements that
permit fair and open access, setting
forth specific standards.
The Managed Funds Association
(MFA), BlackRock, Inc. (BlackRock),
State Street Corporation (State Street),
and the Committee on Capital Markets
Regulation (CCMR) supported the
proposed rules. J.P. Morgan, ISDA, and
FIA expressed support for the fair and
open access provisions as long as there
is prudent risk management.
According to MFA, more inclusive
DCO participation requirements would
benefit DCOs and the markets by: (1)
Reducing DCO concentration risk; (2)
increasing diversity of market
participants involved in DCO
governance; (3) enhancing competition
in the provision of clearing services; and
(4) lowering overall costs for nonclearing members. State Street agreed
that more widespread participation
could increase competition by allowing
more entities to become clearing
members. Blackrock commented that
the proposed rule would allow a diverse
group of entities to become clearing
members, which would increase
competition, promote more inclusive
DCO participation requirements, and
lower costs to customers of clearing
members.
Each of the provisions of § 39.12(a)(1)
are discussed below.
b. Less Restrictive Standards—
§ 39.12(a)(1)(i)
To achieve fair and open access,
proposed § 39.12(a)(1)(i) would prohibit
a DCO from adopting a particular
restrictive participation requirement if it
could adopt a less restrictive
requirement that would not materially
increase risk to the DCO or its clearing
members. BlackRock, the Swaps &
Derivatives Market Association (SDMA),
CME, LCH, Citadel, and CCMR
supported the proposed rule. CCMR
commented that the proposed rule
would help to encourage an open
marketplace.
KCC, ICE, and MGEX did not support
the proposed rule. According to KCC,
the test is highly subjective and would
be difficult to implement in practice.
ICE commented that the proposal would
require a DCO to dilute current prudent
risk management practices. MGEX
commented that the proposed rule
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
would require DCOs to consider only
objective, hard number risk factors,
which would force DCOs to bear other
risks such as financial fraud
convictions. MGEX suggested that the
Commission should provide DCOs with
latitude when determining the risks to
which it will expose itself.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.12(a)(1)(i) as proposed, except for
the addition of clarifying language to
provide that a DCO shall not adopt
restrictive clearing member standards if
less restrictive requirements ‘‘that
achieve the same objective and’’ that
would not materially increase risk to the
derivatives clearing organization or
clearing members could be adopted. The
rule balances the dual Congressional
mandate to provide for fair and open
access while ensuring that such
increased access does not materially
increase risk. Because the rule does not
require a DCO to provide access that
materially increases risk to the DCO or
clearing members, the Commission does
not agree with ICE that the rule will
subject a DCO to increased risk.
The Commission does not agree with
KCC that the rule will be highly
subjective or difficult to implement in
practice. The rule provides a DCO with
discretion to balance restrictions on
participation with legitimate risk
management concerns and, in this
regard, a DCO is in the best position in
the first instance to determine the
optimal balance. Only in circumstances
where there is a question as to the
impact of the rule would the
Commission ask a DCO to justify the
balance that the DCO has struck.
In response to MGEX’s comment, the
Commission notes that the rule does not
require a DCO to rely solely on
objective, hard number risk factors. The
rule permits a DCO to rely on both
qualitative and quantitative analyses,
providing each DCO with latitude to
determine how it can facilitate open
access while determining the risks to
which it will expose itself.
Except for certain bright-line
participation requirements (e.g., capital
requirements for clearing members), the
Commission has not provided more
specific guidance as to what participant
eligibility requirements are permissible
under Core Principle C. Such a
clarification would only serve to limit a
DCO’s flexibility to formulate
participation requirements.
The Commission encourages each
DCO to conduct a self-assessment to
make sure that it can provide reasoned
support to justify a conclusion that its
rules do not violate the ‘‘less restrictive’’
standard contained in § 39.12(a)(1)(i).
Such an analysis should take into
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
consideration the interaction of this
provision with the other provisions of
§ 39.12(a).
c. Clearing Member Qualification—
§ 39.12(a)(1)(ii)
Proposed § 39.12(a)(1)(ii) would
require a DCO to permit a market
participant to become a clearing
member if it meets the DCO’s
participation requirements. SDMA,
LCH, and CCMR supported the
proposed rule. According to CCMR, the
proposed rule would help to encourage
an open marketplace.
KCC commented that the proposed
rule is not workable because a DCO may
not have the operational capacity to
admit all applicants that satisfy the
DCO’s membership requirements. KCC
proposed that the regulation clarify that
a DCO may set limits on the number of
market participants that may be
admitted in light of the DCO’s own
operational constraints.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.12(a)(1)(ii) as proposed. The
Commission is concerned that
permitting a DCO to set a limit on the
number of market participants that may
become clearing members could enable
a DCO to evade the open access
requirement imposed by Core Principle
C. If a DCO were able to demonstrate
that operational constraints prevented it
from admitting additional clearing
members, the DCO could petition the
Commission for an exemption.
d. Non-Discriminatory Treatment—
§ 39.12(a)(1)(iii)
Proposed § 39.12(a)(1)(iii) would
prohibit participation requirements that
have the effect of excluding or limiting
clearing membership of certain types of
market participants unless the DCO can
demonstrate that the restriction is
necessary to address credit risk or
deficiencies in the participants’
operational capabilities that would
prevent them from fulfilling their
obligations as clearing members. LCH
and SDMA supported the proposed rule.
CME commented that in addition to
credit risk and deficiencies in
operational capabilities, legal risk
should be included in the text of this
regulation as a basis upon which a DCO
may exclude or limit clearing
membership of certain types of
participants.
KCC did not support the proposed
rule, commenting that a DCO’s right to
exclude or place limitation on certain
clearing members should not be subject
to ex-post determinations as to the
necessity of such restrictions, as the
DCO itself is in the best position to
monitor the risks posed by the activities
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69353
of its clearing members. According to
KCC, the proposed rule would limit the
risk management capabilities of a DCO,
and DCOs should be accorded flexibility
in their assessments of the operational
capabilities of potential clearing
members.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.12(a)(1)(iii) as proposed. CME’s
concerns regarding heightened legal
risk, such as the inability to attach
property of a foreign clearing member
under foreign law, are encompassed
within the ‘‘credit risk’’ consideration.
The Commission expects that most, if
not all, bases for membership exclusion
or limitation will fall within either
financial or operational considerations.
In addition, the Commission does not
believe the rule would limit a DCO’s
risk management capabilities as KCC
suggested because it would not prevent
a DCO from excluding or limiting
certain types of market participants
from clearing if such participation
would introduce genuine risk that
cannot be adequately managed by the
DCO. The Commission expects that
DCOs will review their existing
participation requirements for
compliance with this rule.
e. Prohibition of Swap Dealer
Requirement—§ 39.12(a)(1)(iv)
Proposed § 39.12(a)(1)(iv) would
prohibit a DCO from requiring that
clearing members be swap dealers. LCH
commented that, in the event of default,
it relies on non-defaulting clearing
members to hedge the defaulting
member’s swap portfolio; to provide
liquidity for such hedging; to bid on
hedged portfolios; and, in extreme
circumstances, to accept a forced
allocation of swaps, which could be a
risky, unhedged swaps portfolio. LCH
commented that a clearing member who
is not a swap dealer may not be able to
participate in a DCO’s default
management process.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.12(a)(1)(iv) as proposed. It is
important to note that the regulation
would not preclude participation by
swap dealers (on which LCH currently
relies). It simply requires that a DCO
provide clearing access to other entities
that could also participate in a DCO’s
default management process, even if to
a lesser extent. Broader access is
supported by other Commission
regulations, e.g., § 39.12(a)(3), which
mandates that a DCO require its clearing
members to have adequate operational
capacity to participate in default
management activities; § 39.12(b)(5),
which requires a DCO to select contract
units for clearing purposes that
maximize liquidity, facilitate
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69354
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
transparency in pricing, promote open
access, and allow for effective risk
management; and § 39.16(c)(2)(iii),
which permits a DCO to require its
clearing members to accept an
allocation, provided that any allocation
must be proportional to the size of the
clearing member’s positions at the DCO.
Thus, a DCO should be able to establish
participation requirements that allow it
to rely on non-defaulting clearing
members to hedge a defaulting
member’s swap portfolio, to provide
liquidity for such hedging, to bid on
hedged portfolios, and to accept a forced
allocation of swaps.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
f. Prohibition of Swap Portfolio or Swap
Transaction Volume Requirements—
§ 39.12(a)(1)(v)
Proposed § 39.12(a)(1)(v) would
prohibit a DCO from requiring clearing
members to maintain a swap portfolio of
any particular size, or that clearing
members meet a swap transaction
volume threshold.
According to State Street, such
requirements are intended to
systematically favor membership for
financial institutions that are also
substantial dealers in swaps. They do
not take into account the risk
management capabilities of many DCO
members such as State Street, which are
able to closely monitor risk exposures
and effectively liquidate exposures
through networks of interdealer
relationships. The Commission believes
that such requirements would have the
effect of permitting only large swap
dealers to provide clearing services.
This would be inconsistent with Core
Principle C. Accordingly, the
Commission is adopting § 39.12(a)(1)(v)
as proposed.
g. Financial Resources—§ 39.12(a)(2)(i)
Core Principle C mandates that each
DCO must ensure that its clearing
members have ‘‘sufficient financial
resources and operational capacity to
meet obligations arising from
participation in the [DCO].’’ 55 Proposed
§ 39.12(a)(2)(i) would require a DCO to
establish participation requirements that
require clearing members to have access
to sufficient financial resources to meet
obligations arising from participation in
the DCO in extreme but plausible
market conditions. The financial
resources could include a clearing
member’s capital, a guarantee from a
clearing member’s parent, or a credit
facility funding arrangement.
CME commented that it supports the
inclusion of parent guarantees and
55 Section 5b(c)(2)(C)(i)(I) of the CEA; 7 U.S.C. 7a–
1(c)(2)(C)(i)(I).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
credit facility funding arrangements as
acceptable financial resources for
clearing members, provided that each
DCO retains the flexibility to determine
the particular terms and conditions of
such arrangements. LCH, however,
commented that credit facilities or
funding arrangements should not be
allowed for the purposes of fulfilling
financial participation requirements.
According to LCH, all clearing members’
resources should be immediately and
unconditionally available. ISDA also
commented that a credit facility funding
arrangement from an unaffiliated entity
should not be available to satisfy
clearing member financial resource
requirements. ISDA did not believe that
such funding would be reliable.
MGEX commented that testing for
extreme but plausible market conditions
would have minimal value because the
test would be based on historical
records or it would be based on future
assumptions that are based on static
conditions. MGEX believes that the
proposed rule would require a DCO to
devise tests for clearing members to use
and would require a DCO to conduct the
tests and provide the results to clearing
members. MGEX commented that this
specific rule seems unnecessary because
DCOs have other methods to address
risk, like increasing and decreasing
margin. It noted further that it already
requires clearing members to be in good
financial standing, which includes
minimum capital requirements and a
requirement to provide a parent
guarantee in certain circumstances.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.12(a)(2)(i) with the modification
described below. Per CME’s comment,
the rule provides a DCO with the
flexibility to determine what constitutes
sufficient financial resources to meet
obligations arising from participation in
the DCO in extreme but plausible
market conditions, and to determine
what financial resources are available to
a clearing member to satisfy this
requirement.
Regarding the comments of LCH and
ISDA, the rule does not require a DCO
to allow clearing members to use a
credit facility funding arrangement to
meet financial resource requirements.
Because such arrangements can serve as
an important source of liquidity for
clearing members, the Commission has
not prohibited their possible use to
satisfy clearing member financial
resource requirements. The Commission
is modifying § 39.12(a)(2)(i) to clarify a
DCO’s discretion, by rephrasing the
second sentence to read as follows: ‘‘A
derivatives clearing organization may
permit such financial resources to
include, without limitation, a clearing
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
member’s capital, a guarantee from the
clearing member’s parent, or a credit
facility funding arrangement.’’ To
address concerns about reliability, a
DCO can consider requiring that a credit
facility funding arrangement be
supported by multiple lenders.
Finally, the Commission does not
believe that MGEX’s comment provides
a basis for revising the proposed rule.
As an initial matter, Core Principle C
requires each DCO to establish
participation standards that require a
clearing member to have sufficient
financial resources to meet obligations
arising from participation in the DCO.
Core Principle B requires a DCO to
maintain financial resources that would
enable it to meet its financial obligations
in ‘‘extreme but plausible’’ market
conditions. The Commission believes
that it is appropriate for a DCO to
subject its clearing members to a
comparable financial standard to
support its own compliance with
statutory requirements. A DCO would
have discretion in setting the terms of
any tests to determine whether clearing
members’ financial resources are
sufficient to meet their obligations in
extreme but plausible market
conditions.
h. Capital Requirements Must Match
Capital to Risk—§ 39.12(a)(2)(ii)
Proposed § 39.12(a)(2)(ii) would
require a DCO to establish capital
requirements that are based on
objective, transparent, and commonly
accepted standards, which
appropriately match capital to risk. The
capital requirements also would have to
be scalable so that they are proportional
to the risks posed by clearing members.
J.P. Morgan, MFA, ISDA, State Street,
SDMA, Citadel LLC (Citadel), Better
Markets, and FIA supported the
proposed rule. According to Better
Markets, the proposed rule is an
important change of practices that will
open DCO membership to more market
participants while protecting the risk
management system. FIA commented
that a DCO, when it sets capital
requirements, should take into account
a clearing member’s risk-derived
exposures and its potential assessment
obligations at each clearing organization
of which it is a member. FIA
recommended that a DCO should allow
an FCM to clear positions in proportion
to its capital net of those other riskderived exposures and assessment
obligations.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.12(a)(2)(ii) as proposed, with one
modification. In response to a comment
from staff of the Federal Reserve and the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Commission is deleting the phrase ‘‘so
that they are proportional’’ from the
rule. This is to make clear that a DCO
should take into account nonlinear risk.
In response to FIA’s comment, the
Commission notes that in setting
scalable requirements, a DCO should
take into consideration risks that a
clearing member carries as a result of
positions cleared at other DCOs, to the
extent that it is able to obtain such
information.
i. Minimum Capital Requirement—
§ 39.12(a)(2)(iii)
Proposed § 39.12(a)(2)(iii) would
prohibit a DCO from setting a minimum
capital requirement of more than $50
million for any person that seeks to
become a clearing member in order to
clear swaps. Pierpont Securities LLC
(Pierpont), Better Markets, SDMA,
Newedge, MFA, Citadel, and Jefferies &
Company (Jefferies) supported the
proposed rule.
Jefferies commented that the proposed
rule would allow it to participate more
actively in the swap market. Jefferies
believes that taken together, the
provisions of proposed § 39.12(a)
provide a DCO with more than
sufficient authority to assure the
financial integrity and efficient
operation of its swaps clearing
activities.
Newedge commented that the
proposed rule should not increase risk
to a DCO because a DCO can mitigate
risk by, among other things, imposing
position limits, stricter margin
requirements, or stricter default deposit
requirements on lesser capitalized
clearing members. Newedge proposed
that the Commission prohibit DCOs
from imposing a requirement that
clearing members have an internal
trading desk capable of liquidating or
hedging a defaulting clearing member’s
positions. It said that there is no need
for such a requirement because a nondefaulting member can handle a default
event in a variety of ways, including
having a contingent default manager.
Newedge noted that under proposed
§ 39.16(c)(2)(iii), any obligation of a
clearing member to participate in an
auction, or to accept the allocation of a
defaulting clearing member’s positions,
would be proportionate to the size of the
clearing member’s own position at the
DCO. Thus, a clearing member should
be able to hedge an allocated position
and carry the position over time without
having to take a substantial charge to its
capital.
MFA commented that the threshold
should not impose additional risk on a
DCO because a DCO could ensure the
safety of itself and clearing members by
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
scaling each clearing member’s net
capital obligation in proportion to that
clearing member’s risk exposure. MFA
expressed concern that a DCO could
comply with the $50 million net capital
requirement but impose a non-riskbased and excessive threshold guaranty
fund contribution requirement that
would unnecessarily exclude clearing
members. MFA proposed that the
regulations require that such scaling be
determined by objective, risk-based
methodologies that are based on
reasonable stress and default scenarios,
and the tests be consistently applied to
all clearing members, without use of
‘‘tiers’’ that could have discriminatory
or anti-competitive effects.
J.P. Morgan, the U.K. Financial
Services Authority (FSA), CME, KCC,
ISDA, IntercontinentalExchange, Inc.
(ICE), State Street, Federal Home Loan
Banks (FHLBanks), the Securities
Industry and Financial Markets
Association (SIFMA), and LCH
expressed the view that the proposed
rule could increase risk and the
probability of default, and require DCOs
to accept members who might not be
able to participate in the default
management process. FSA, KCC, and
CME commented that a DCO must have
reasonable discretion to determine the
appropriate capital requirements for its
clearing members based upon the DCO’s
analysis of the particular characteristics
of the swaps that it clears.
J.P. Morgan, however, commented
that a cap on a member’s minimum
capital requirement would not impact
the systemic stability of a DCO as long
as: (1) Clearing members clear house
and client business in proportion to
their available capital; (2) DCOs employ
real-time risk management processes to
ensure compliance with this principle;
(3) DCOs hold a sufficient amount of
margin and funded default guarantee
funds; and (4) the Commission monitors
clearing members to ensure that they are
able to meet their financial obligations
with respect to all DCOs of which they
are members.
LCH and ISDA commented that the
lower threshold could increase risk
because a $50 million threshold would
allow a clearing member to meet the
eligibility requirements of multiple
DCOs.
LCH, CME, and FSA commented that
the smaller firms may be unable to
participate in the default management
process. LCH and ISDA also commented
that members should not be able to
outsource default management to third
parties because they may not be
sufficiently reliable in times of stress.
In addition, according to ISDA, there
could be conflict-of-interest issues
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69355
because the unaffiliated third party
would not have ‘‘skin in the game.’’ As
a result, through the actions of the
unaffiliated third party, a clearing
member could be assigned an unsuitable
part of a defaulting clearing member’s
proprietary portfolio and/or at a suboptimal valuation and/or wrongly
accept customer positions from the
defaulting clearing member. This
conflict-of-interest concern is
exacerbated where the entity to whom
the default management obligations are
outsourced is a ‘‘competing’’ clearing
member in the same DCO.
State Street and SDMA, however,
commented that clearing members
should be permitted to enter into
committed arrangements with nonaffiliated firms to perform default
management functions. According to
SDMA, there is no evidence to suggest
that a legal arrangement with a thirdparty dealer somehow lessens the
integrity to the system. Assuming the
legal and financial arrangements
between such firms are sufficiently
strong to ensure performance when
needed, State Street commented that
there is no appreciable difference
between the default management
capacity of the traditional dealeraffiliated clearing member and a nondealer clearing member outsourcing
certain functions to a non-affiliate.
Finally, SIFMA commented that the
appropriate minimum capital
requirement would be $300 million,
while ISDA commented that if the
Commission cannot monitor risk across
all DCOs, a $1 billion capital
requirement would be appropriate.
After carefully considering the
comments, the Commission is adopting
§ 39.12(a)(2)(iii) as proposed. The
Commission believes, as noted in
numerous comments, that the rule will
increase the number of firms clearing
swaps, which will make markets more
competitive, increase liquidity, reduce
concentration, and reduce systemic risk.
The Commission also believes that, as
explained below, the $50 million
threshold will not significantly increase
risk or lead to admission of clearing
members who are unable to
meaningfully and responsibly
participate in the clearing process.
As an initial matter, the Commission
emphasizes that the $50 million
threshold is not arbitrary. That number
was arrived at by reviewing the capital
of registered FCMs.56 This amount
56 See transcript of December 16, 2010
Commission meeting at 77–81 available at
www.cftc.gov (discussing $50 million threshold;
Commission staff stating that of 126 FCMs, 63
currently have capital above $50 million and most
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
Continued
08NOR2
69356
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
units for more diversified allocation in
the event of a clearing member default).
The Commission considered whether
to increase the capital threshold to
$300 million as proposed by SIFMA or
$1 billion as proposed by ISDA. The
Commission analyzed the reduction in
the number of firms that would be
eligible to clear at CME, ICE Clear US,
KCC, MGEX, and OCC using these
thresholds. As set forth in the table
below, depending on the basis used to
measure capital, a capital threshold of
$300 million would reduce the number
of firms able to clear by 38–51 percent.
A capital threshold of $1 billion would
reduce the number of firms able to clear
by 62–65 percent. The Commission
believes that this reduction in
participation would be contrary to the
Congressional mandate for open access
to clearing.57
The Commission does not believe that
the rule will increase risk. Section
39.12(a)(2)(ii) requires DCOs to impose
capital requirements that are scalable to
the risks posed by clearing members.
Accordingly, a small clearing member
should not be able to expose a DCO to
significant risk even if it is able to clear
at multiple DCOs because its exposure
at each DCO would be limited. DCOs
that participate in the Shared Market
Information System (SHAMIS) will be
able to see a clearing member’s pays and
collects across participating DCOs, and
a DCO also could on its own initiative
require clearing members to directly
report their clearing activity at other
DCOs. The Commission also will be able
to monitor clearing member exposure by
means of DCO end-of-day reporting
under the reporting requirements of
§ 39.19(c)(1)(i), which the Commission
is adopting herein. It will also be able
to monitor the financial strength of
clearing members that are registrants
pursuant to financial reporting
requirements.
In addition, the Commission is
adopting other rules that will reinforce
a DCO’s oversight of its clearing
members. In this regard, § 39.12(a)(4)
requires a DCO to verify, on an ongoing
basis, the compliance of each clearing
member with each participation
requirement; § 39.12(a)(5) requires a
DCO to require all clearing members to
file periodic financial statements and
timely information that concerns any
financial or business developments that
may materially affect the clearing
members’ ability to continue to comply
with participation requirements; and
§ 39.13(h)(5) further requires a DCO to
adopt rules that require clearing
members to maintain current risk
management policies and procedures
and requires a DCO to review such
policies and procedures on a periodic
basis. The Commission also has
proposed requirements for clearing
member risk management.58
The Commission does not believe that
the $50 million threshold would lead to
a DCO having to admit clearing
members that are unable to participate
in the default management process. As
discussed above, the regulation does not
preclude highly-capitalized entities
(such as swap dealers) from
participating in a DCO as clearing
members. Thus, the addition of smaller
clearing members does not eliminate the
role that larger clearing members can
play in default management—it merely
spreads the risk.
The Commission wishes to emphasize
that it will review DCO membership
rules as a package in light of all of the
provisions of § 39.12(a). Thus, a DCO
may not circumvent § 39.12(a)(2)(iii) by
enacting some additional financial
requirement that effectively renders the
$50 million threshold meaningless for
some potential clearing members. Such
an arrangement would violate
§ 39.12(a)(1)(i) (less restrictive
alternatives), or § 39.12(a)(1)(iii)
(exclusion of certain types of firms).
As discussed below, under
§ 39.12(a)(3), a DCO’s participation
requirements must include provisions
for adequate operational capacity. This
requirement should be read in
conjunction with § 39.12(a)(1)(i), which
prohibits restrictive clearing member
standards if less restrictive standards
could be adopted; § 39.12(a)(1)(iii),
which prohibits DCOs from excluding
certain types of market participants
from clearing membership if they can
fulfill the obligations of clearing
membership; and § 39.16(c)(2)(iii),
which permits a DCO to require a
clearing member to participate in an
auction or to accept allocations of a
defaulting clearing member’s customer
or house positions, provided the
allocated positions are proportional to
the size of the clearing member’s
positions at the DCO and are permitted
to be outsourced to a qualified third
party subject to safeguards imposed by
the DCO.
Several commenters discussed the use
of outsourcing to satisfy default
management obligations. The
Commission believes that open access to
clearing and effective risk management
need not be viewed as conflicting goals.
Subject to appropriate safeguards,
outsourcing of certain obligations can be
an effective means of harmonizing these
goals. For example, a small clearing
member might have less ability to
contribute meaningfully to a DCO’s
FCMs with capital below that amount are not
clearing members).
57 Clearing FCM and non-clearing FCM data for
adjusted net capital and excess net capital was
provided by FCM registrants and is available on the
Commission Web site. The other data is non-public.
Ownership equity data was provided by FCM
registrants through the monthly financial
statements that are submitted to the Commission.
The data from the monthly financial statements
reside in the Commission’s RSR Express system,
and all data for clearing non-FCMs was provided by
the DCOs to the Commission’s Risk Surveillance
Group during the course of its routine oversight
activities.
58 See 76 FR 45724 (Aug. 1, 2011) (Clearing
Member Risk Management).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
ER08NO11.000
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
captures firms that the Commission
believes have the financial, operational,
and staffing resources to participate in
clearing swaps without posing an
unacceptable level of risk to a DCO.
This capital threshold is considered to
be appropriate, particularly in light of
other proposed rules (such as scaling
capital and risk exposure and breaking
down large swap positions into smaller
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
j. Operational Requirements—
§ 39.12(a)(3)
Proposed § 39.12(a)(3) would require
a DCO to require its clearing members
to have adequate operational capacity to
meet their obligations arising from
participation in the DCO. The
requirements would include, but not be
limited to: The ability to process
expected volumes and values of
transactions cleared by a clearing
member within required time frames,
including at peak times and on peak
days; the ability to fulfill collateral,
payment, and delivery obligations
imposed by the DCO; and the ability to
participate in default management
activities under the rules of the DCO
and in accordance with proposed
§ 39.16.
LCH, FIA, Jefferies, and SDMA
commented that the Commission has
correctly identified the operational
requirements. Jefferies commented that
demonstrating sufficient operational
capacity is more important than capital
considerations. According to SDMA,
these operational requirements are
directly related to the core business of
the clearing member and provide the
services needed and relied upon by the
DCO to clear trades. SDMA also believes
that DCOs should be prohibited from
imposing operational requirements that
are not part of a clearing member’s core
business because they create
discriminatory barriers to clearing, and
it points to the following as examples of
discriminatory operational eligibility
requirements: Clearing members must
(1) Have both execution and clearing
capabilities; (2) provide end-of-day
prices to mark its positions; and (3) have
extensive experience in clearing swaps
or ‘‘sophistication.’’
J.P. Morgan and FIA commented that
a DCO must ensure that each member
has risk management resources to assist
the DCO in its risk management process,
and FIA suggested that the final rules
add appropriate risk management
requirements as a participant eligibility
criterion, or make clear that nothing in
the proposed rules is intended to
prevent a DCO from adopting such
requirements.
ISDA commented that the ability to
bid for portfolios of other clearing
members of the DCO is critically
important. According to ISDA, an
appropriate risk management framework
for a clearing member may be broadly
categorized as follows: (1) Board and
senior management oversight; (2)
organizational structure; and (3) strong
systems and procedures for controlling,
monitoring and reporting risk.
Finally, State Street commented that a
clearing member must be able to
demonstrate it can carry out its
obligations to a DCO under a default
scenario. That demonstration could
include having the capacity to trade
swaps using experienced swap traders,
and the ability to execute transactions in
the market by having appropriate
trading relationships. A clearing
member must also demonstrate an
ability to monitor positions, calculate
potential losses and market risk,
perform stress tests, and maintain
liquidity, among numerous other
requirements.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.12(a)(3) as proposed. The
Commission believes that the rule
correctly identifies the necessary
operational requirements and is
concerned that the heightened
operational requirements suggested by
some commenters could allow a DCO to
evade the open access to DCO clearing
intended by the Dodd-Frank Act. The
Commission emphasizes that under the
rule, any operational requirements must
be necessary to meet clearing
obligations. In addition, the
Commission is adopting § 39.13(h)(5)
herein, which requires a DCO to adopt
rules requiring clearing members to
maintain current written risk
management policies and procedures.60
59 See discussion of revised § 39.16(c)(2)(iii) in
section IV.G.4, below.
60 See discussion of § 39.13(h)(5) in section
IV.D.7.e, below.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
auction process acting on its own than
if an entity with greater expertise in the
relevant markets acted in its place.
Therefore, the Commission believes
that it would be inconsistent with
§ 39.12(a)(1)(i) and § 39.12(a)(1)(iii) for a
DCO to prohibit outsourcing.
Accordingly, as discussed below, the
Commission is adopting revised default
procedure rules to require a DCO to
permit outsourcing to qualified third
parties of obligations to participate in
auctions or in allocations, subject to
appropriate safeguards imposed by the
DCO.59
Finally, the Commission has
determined that it will not permit a
DCO to require members to post a
minimum amount of liquid margin or
default guarantee contributions, or to
participate in a liquidity facility per J.P.
Morgan’s suggestion. The Commission
believes that the rules are sufficient to
ensure that each member has adequate
resources to withstand another
member’s default and such
requirements could be used by a DCO to
evade the open access to clearing
intended by the Dodd-Frank Act.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00025
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69357
The Commission has also proposed
rules requiring clearing members that
are FCMs (proposed § 1.73) and swap
dealers and major swap participants
(proposed § 23.609) to engage in specific
risk management activities.61
k. Monitoring, Reporting, and
Enforcement—§ 39.12(a)(4)
Core Principle C requires each DCO to
‘‘establish and implement procedures to
verify, on an ongoing basis, the
compliance of each clearing member
with each participation requirement of
the derivatives clearing organization.’’ 62
Proposed § 39.12(a)(4) would codify
these requirements.
OCC supported the proposed rule ‘‘if
interpreted reasonably.’’ J.P. Morgan
commented that a clearing member may
have committed to additional unfunded
assessments at more than one
clearinghouse and proposes that the
Commission and DCOs monitor clearing
members to ensure that they have
sufficient liquid resources to support
the business they clear at each DCO.
According to J.P. Morgan, a DCO should
monitor exposures against risk-based
position limits on a real-time basis.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.12(a)(4) as proposed. In response to
J.P. Morgan’s comments, the
Commission notes that in monitoring
firms, a DCO should take into
consideration risks that the firm faces
outside of that DCO. The Commission
further notes that it is not prescribing
the means by which DCOs should
monitor compliance.
l. Reporting Requirements—§ 39.12(a)(5)
Proposed § 39.12(a)(5)(i) would
mandate that a DCO require all clearing
members, including those that are not
FCMs, to file with the DCO periodic
financial reports containing any
financial information that the DCO
determines is necessary to assess
whether participation requirements are
met on an ongoing basis. The proposed
rule also would mandate that a DCO
require clearing members that are FCMs
to file the financial reports that are
specified in § 1.10 of the Commission’s
regulations with the DCO, and would
require the DCO to review all such
financial reports for risk management
purposes. Proposed § 39.12(a)(5)(i)
would also require a DCO to require its
clearing members that are not FCMs to
make the periodic financial reports that
they file with the DCO available to the
Commission upon the Commission’s
61 See 76 FR at 45729–45730 (Aug. 1, 2011)
(Clearing Member Risk Management).
62 See Section 5b(c)(2)(C)(ii) of the CEA; 7 U.S.C.
7a–1(c)(2)(C)(ii).
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69358
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
request. Proposed § 39.12(a)(5)(ii) would
mandate that a DCO adopt rules that
require clearing members to provide to
the DCO, in a timely manner,
information that concerns any financial
or business developments that may
materially affect the clearing members’
ability to continue to comply with
participation requirements.
LCH commented that a DCO based
outside the U.S. may have clearing
members that are not subject to the
Commission’s jurisdiction and would be
regulated in their home jurisdiction.
LCH proposed this provision be revised
such that only FCMs and U.S.-based
members that are not FCMs are required
to provide this information to the
Commission upon request. According to
LCH, all other members should be
required to submit the information to
the DCO only or to their equivalent local
regulator.
LCH and MGEX commented that
proposed § 39.12(a)(5)(ii) would be more
appropriately imposed on clearing
members themselves, rather than on the
DCO. KCC suggested that the
Commission should evaluate its
statutory authority to enact the
proposed rule. MGEX commented that
the proposed rules appear to require
clearing members to report to each DCO
with which they clear, which would
create an additional, duplicative burden
on clearing members. MGEX suggested
that the Commission regulate the
clearing members directly. As an
alternative, MGEX proposed a new
industry group similar to the Joint Audit
Committee (JAC) in which each DCO
would be represented and participate in
developing an overall risk management
program that would be used in fulfilling
the new proposed requirements.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.12(a)(5) with modifications to (1)
provide that the financial information
provided by non-FCM clearing members
may be submitted by the clearing
members to the Commission pursuant to
DCO rules or may be submitted to the
Commission by the DCO, in either case,
upon the Commission’s request; and (2)
eliminate the proposed requirement that
the DCO must review clearing members’
financial reports for risk management
purposes.
The rule is intended to address
circumstances where the Commission
must obtain information in the
possession of a clearing member. The
Commission anticipates such requests
will be few in number. However, when
those occasions arise, the Commission
must be able to obtain the information
as expeditiously as possible. The rule
addresses this need by allowing the
Commission to obtain the information
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
directly from the source and to
minimize the burden on DCOs. In
response to the comments, the
Commission is revising the rule to
provide that a DCO may either provide
the requested information directly to the
Commission or require clearing
members to provide the information to
the Commission.
The Commission is eliminating the
requirement that the DCO must review
clearing members’ financial reports for
risk management purposes. Upon
further consideration, the Commission
has concluded that although a DCO may
review such financial reports for several
reasons, including risk management and
to ensure that clearing members
continue to meet participation
requirements, it is not necessary to be
prescriptive in this regard.
In response to MGEX suggestion of a
new industry group, Commission staff is
considering such a step.
The Commission is making certain
technical revisions to § 39.12(a)(5) in
connection with these changes.
discriminatory clearing, Citadel and
MFA recommended the Commission
make explicit that a DCO must provide
highly standardized mechanisms and
procedures for establishing connectivity
with SEFs and any other permitted
trading venue. According to Citadel,
these mechanisms and procedures must
be objective, commercially reasonable,
publicly available, and treat all
applicant execution facilities in an
unbiased manner. Citadel and MFA also
proposed that the rules mandate that a
DCO keep the clearing acceptance
process anonymous (i.e., without the
customer’s clearing member knowing
the identity of the customer’s executing
counterparty).
The Commission agrees that a DCO
must provide mechanisms for
establishing connectivity with SEFs and
DCMs, which would provide executing
counterparties with fair and open
access. The Commission has proposed
rules addressing this issue.64 The
Commission also has proposed rules
that address the anonymity issue.65
m. Enforcement of Participation
Requirements—§ 39.12(a)(6)
Proposed § 39.12(a)(6) would require
a DCO to enforce compliance with its
participation requirements and establish
procedures for the suspension and
orderly removal of clearing members
that no longer meet the requirements.
MGEX commented that the proposed
rule goes beyond the language of the
Dodd-Frank Act.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.12(a)(6) as proposed. A DCO must
have the ability to enforce compliance
with its participation requirements or its
clearing members may not satisfy these
requirements. A DCO also must have
procedures for the suspension and
orderly removal of clearing members
that no longer meet the requirements.
Otherwise, the enforcement process may
not be orderly and could introduce
additional risk to the DCO. This
requirement complements § 39.17,
adopted herein, which implements Core
Principle H (Rule Enforcement).63
b. Products Eligible for Clearing—
§ 39.12(b)(1)
2. Product Eligibility
Core Principle C requires that each
DCO establish appropriate standards for
determining the eligibility of
agreements, contracts, or transactions
submitted to the DCO for clearing.
Proposed § 39.12(b) would codify these
requirements.
a. General Comments
Citadel and MFA supported the
proposed rules. To ensure non63 See discussion of § 39.17 in section IV.H,
below.
PO 00000
Frm 00026
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Proposed § 39.12(b)(1) would require
a DCO to establish appropriate
requirements for determining the
eligibility of agreements, contracts, or
transactions submitted to the DCO for
clearing, taking into account the DCO’s
ability to manage the risks associated
with such agreements, contracts, or
transactions. Factors to be considered in
determining product eligibility would
include but would not be limited to: (1)
Trading volume; (2) liquidity; (3)
availability of reliable prices; (4) ability
of market participants to use portfolio
compression with respect to a particular
swap product; (5) ability of the DCO and
clearing members to gain access to the
relevant market for purposes of creating
and liquidating positions; (6) ability of
the DCO to measure risk for purposes of
setting margin requirements; and (7)
operational capacity of the DCO and
clearing members to address any unique
risk characteristics of a product.66
OCC noted that the factors to be
considered are already among the
factors that a DCO would naturally
consider and that OCC in fact considers,
and it suggested that the application of
64 See 76 FR 13101 (Mar. 10, 2011) (StraightThrough Processing).
65 See 76 FR 45730 (Aug. 1, 2011) (Customer
Clearing).
66 As proposed, § 39.12(b)(1)(vii) referred to
addressing any ‘‘unique’’ risk characteristics of a
product. The Commission is revising this provision
in the final rule to refer to any ‘‘unusual’’ risk
characteristics to clarify that such characteristics
are not limited to those that are one of a kind.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
this new rule be limited to swaps. OCC
also noted that the trading volume of
new products is often unknown and
unpredictable and suggested that factor
not be a barrier to accepting a product
for clearing.
MGEX commented that the proposed
rule considers legitimate factors, but
mandating that a DCO establish
eligibility requirements is not necessary,
other than requirements for the contract
size of swaps. Like OCC, MGEX noted
that DCOs already use these factors as
part of their sound business judgment in
making these types of decisions. MGEX
recommended that the Commission
issue suggested guidelines or core
principles and, on an as-needed basis,
request that a DCO file with the
Commission the rationale supporting its
conclusion that a contract qualifies for
clearing.
LCH expressed concerns with
proposed § 39.12(b)(1)(iv) and
commented that compression services
have been developed only when swap
markets are relatively large and wellestablished, and the introduction of
cleared facilities has largely pre-dated
the introduction of compression
services. According to LCH, making
swap clearing contingent on swap
portfolio compression may have the
effect of permitting fewer swaps to be
cleared. LCH proposed that the
Commission encourage the use of
compression services where suitable
and available, but not constrain the
ability of a DCO to clear a given swap
based on the availability of such
services.
LCH also commented that it is
imperative that a DCO have the ability
to ‘‘transfer,’’ ‘‘auction,’’ or ‘‘allocate’’
cleared swaps. LCH proposed that the
factor listed in proposed § 39.12(b)(1)(v),
the ‘‘[a]bility of the [DCO] and clearing
members to gain access to the relevant
market for purposes of creating and
liquidating positions’’ be modified to
reflect these additional actions.
The Commission agrees with LCH that
a DCO must have the ability to
‘‘transfer,’’ ‘‘auction,’’ or ‘‘allocate’’
cleared swaps and it is revising
§ 39.12(b)(1)(v) to incorporate LCH’s
suggestion.67 The Commission is
otherwise adopting Section 39.12(b)(1)
as proposed. The Commission believes
that setting forth the minimum factors
67 This is also consistent with § 39.16(c)(2)(ii),
adopted herein and discussed in section IV.G.4,
below, which requires a DCO to adopt rules that set
forth the actions that a DCO may take in the event
of a default, which must include the prompt
transfer, liquidation, or hedging of the defaulting
clearing member’s positions, and which may
include the auctioning or allocation of such
positions to other clearing members.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
that all DCOs must consider when
determining contract eligibility is
necessary to prevent a DCO from
seeking to clear transactions that present
an unacceptable level of risk. The
Commission also believes that OCC’s
and LCH’s concerns are unfounded. The
rule provides factors to be considered
and does not prohibit a DCO from
accepting a product for clearing if it
does not satisfy one of the factors.
Finally, the Commission is declining to
limit the rule to swaps because it
believes the eligibility factors are
applicable to all products cleared by a
DCO. The Commission is also declining
to issue suggested guidelines or core
principles, or to request that a DCO file
with the Commission the rationale for
why a contract qualifies for clearing.
The Commission believes that
§ 39.12(b)(1) is not burdensome because,
as MGEX and OCC commented, these
factors are already considered by DCOs.
In contrast, filing rationales on an asneeded basis could be burdensome to
the DCO and the Commission, and
would not serve to mitigate risk more
effectively.
c. Economic Equivalence—§ 39.12(b)(2)
Proposed § 39.12(b)(2) would require
a DCO to adopt rules providing that all
swaps with the same terms and
conditions (as defined by templates
established under DCO rules) submitted
to the DCO for clearing are economically
equivalent within the DCO and may be
offset with each other within the DCO.
ISDA, CME, and FIA commented that
the term ‘‘template’’ is inappropriate.
According to ISDA, ‘‘template’’ has no
clear meaning, and it assumes that the
term refers to the contract specifications
currently used by a variety of futures
facilities. ISDA noted that the
development of specific templates for
swap transactions is a mixed business/
technological project that requires
significant discussion involving each
DCO and its market participants. It
suggested that the Commission’s
regulations guide the meaning of
‘‘template’’ to achieve as much
individual transactional variability as
possible within the transaction or range
of transactions that a template may
cover.
CME commented that references to
‘‘templates’’ are confusing because swap
dealers generally maintain standard
templates for documenting their trading
relationships, and their counterparties
frequently negotiate changes to those
templates. According to CME, a DCO
does not define the templates used by
OTC participants, and DCO rules do not
function as templates from which
counterparties may negotiate. Rather, a
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69359
DCO sets forth in its rulebook the
product specifications of each contract
it accepts for clearing, including swaps.
CME suggested that the Commission
revise § 39.12(b)(2) to state as follows
(change in italics): ‘‘A [DCO] shall adopt
rules providing that all swaps with the
same terms and conditions, as defined
by product specifications established
under [DCO] rules, submitted to the
[DCO] for clearing are economically
equivalent within the [DCO] and may be
offset with each other within the
[DCO].’’
FIA requested that Commission
confirm that economically equivalent
swaps must have the same cash flows,
values, and liquidation dates. FIA also
suggested that terms and conditions of
such templates—for example, events of
default—should also be consistent with
market practice.
Finally, KCC commented that the
proposed rule is redundant because
Chapter 21 of the KCC rulebook already
defines the terms and conditions for
swaps that KCC will clear.
The Commission is revising
§ 39.12(b)(2) as suggested by CME to
substitute the phrase ‘‘product
specifications’’ for the word
‘‘templates.’’ As noted above, some
commenters found the use of the word
‘‘templates’’ confusing. The
Commission’s intent was to ensure that
a DCO sets the specifications for cleared
products. The Commission is otherwise
adopting the rule as proposed.
In response to FIA, the Commission
confirms that it regards cash flows,
values, and liquidation dates as terms
and conditions encompassed by this
rule. The Commission, however,
declines to require that terms and
conditions be consistent with market
practice. The Commission believes that
a DCO should have the flexibility to
determine whether to conform terms
and conditions to market practice.
d. Non-Discriminatory Treatment of
Swaps—§ 39.12(b)(3)
Proposed § 39.12(b)(3) would require
a DCO to provide for non-discriminatory
clearing of a swap executed bilaterally
or on or subject to the rules of an
unaffiliated SEF or DCM. FIA and MFA
commented in support of the proposed
rule.
OCC suggested that it should not be
deemed a violation of § 39.12(b)(3) for a
DCO to require a SEF or DCM desiring
to transmit swaps to the DCO for
clearing to enter into a non-exclusive
clearing agreement on nondiscriminatory terms similar to those
offered by the DCO to other SEFs or
DCMs for clearing of similar products.
OCC believes that such agreements are
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69360
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
necessary and appropriate for purposes
of addressing matters between the
parties such as information sharing and
furnishing price data by the exchange to
the DCO.
LCH suggested that the Commission
clarify that ‘‘non-discriminatory’’
includes costs, technology, and other
related considerations. LCH also
suggested that the Commission impose
the reverse requirements on execution
venues such as DCMs and SEFs, so that
those venues are also required to
provide trade feeds to DCOs on a nondiscriminatory basis.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.12(b)(3) as proposed. In response to
OCC, the Commission notes that the
rule does not prohibit a DCO from
requiring a SEF or DCM desiring to
transmit swaps to the DCO for clearing
to enter into a non-exclusive clearing
agreement on non-discriminatory terms
similar to those offered by the DCO to
other SEFs or DCMs for clearing of
similar products. The Commission
agrees that such agreements are
necessary and appropriate for purposes
of addressing matters between the
parties such as information sharing and
furnishing price data by the exchange to
the DCO. The Commission notes that it
expects DCOs to review clearing
agreements for compliance with
§ 39.12(b)(3), the open access
requirements of Core Principle C, and
any relevant requirements of other core
principles.
In response to LCH’s comment, the
Commission notes that the requirement
applies to the factors LCH enumerated.
The Commission also notes that LCH’s
suggestion regarding trading venues is
outside the scope of this rulemaking
e. Prohibition on Requirement That
Executing Party Is a Clearing Member—
§ 39.12(b)(4)
Proposed § 39.12(b)(4) would prohibit
a DCO from requiring one of the original
executing parties to be a clearing
member in order for a contract,
agreement, or transaction to be eligible
for clearing.
CME concurred with the
Commission’s analysis and fully
supported the proposed regulation. FIA,
Citadel, and MFA also supported the
proposed regulation.
MFA suggested strengthening the
proposed rule. According to MFA, when
a non-clearing member trades with
another non-clearing member, the
clearing process should be identical and
as prompt as when one of the parties is
a clearing member, so long as the
transaction satisfies the relevant DCO’s
rules, requirements, and standards
otherwise applicable to such trades.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
MFA believes that providing this parity
would allow new liquidity providers to
efficiently and effectively enter into and
compete within the market.
MFA also suggested that the
Commission revise the proposed rule to
prohibit a DCO from adopting rules or
engaging in conduct that is prejudicial
to non-clearing members as compared to
clearing members with respect to
eligibility or the timing of clearing or
processing of trades generally. The
Commission has addressed this issue in
the recently proposed rules on clearing
documentation.68
ISDA commented that rules barring
trades that don’t involve a clearing
member as a party are inappropriate in
established DCOs, but new DCOs may
need to roll out products and
procedures in a contained way.
According to ISDA, ‘‘initial decisions on
which market constituencies should
have access to clearing must be the
subject of legitimate, reasoned decisionmaking by each DCO with regard to its
ability to properly serve each
constituency and each constituency’s
readiness to participate in a cleared
market.’’
Finally, NGX commented that if the
proposed rule were applied to a nonintermediated DCO such as NGX, the
rule would require a fundamental
restructuring of the manner in which
the DCO admits members, guarantees
trades, and provides risk management.
DCOs like NGX require all participants
to become clearing participants at the
DCO, and they do not clear contracts
that involve non-clearing participants.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.12(b)(4) as proposed. In response to
the comments of ISDA and NGX, the
Commission notes that some DCOs
currently have only direct participants,
i.e., participants that do not offer client
clearing. NGX, for example, provides
direct access to commercial end users
who clear for themselves. The
Commission notes that, consistent with
principles of open access, a DCO must
have rules in place to offer client
clearing promptly if an FCM or a
customer requests access. However,
from a cost-benefit perspective, the
Commission would expect that any DCO
investment in building systems would
be proportionate to evidence of demand
for the service.
Finally, in a separate rulemaking, the
Commission has proposed rules that
address MFA’s suggestion that trades
between indirect clearing members
68 See 76 FR 45730 (Aug. 1, 2011) (Customer
Clearing).
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
should have parity with trades between
clearing members.69
f. Product Standardization—
§ 39.12(b)(5)
Proposed § 39.12(b)(5) would require
a DCO to select contract unit sizes and
other product terms and conditions that
maximize liquidity, facilitate
transparency in pricing, promote open
access, and allow for effective risk
management.70 To the extent
appropriate to further these objectives, a
DCO would be required to select
contract units for clearing purposes that
were smaller than the contract units in
which trades submitted for clearing
were executed. 71
ISDA supported the goals identified
by the Commission; however, it
commented that ‘‘unit size’’ is not a
meaningful concept in swap
transactions because contract size is not
standardized. According to ISDA, the
only meaningful size limit is the
smallest unit of relevant currency or
relevant underlying. ISDA suggested
that the Commission avoid focusing on
‘‘unit size’’ and instead articulate its
ultimate objectives, as it has, leaving
DCOs with the discretion to set suitable
terms and conditions to further those
objectives.
FIA did not support the requirement
that a DCO select contract unit sizes
because FIA does not believe that the
swap market has evolved to the point
where DCOs can do this. FIA also does
not believe the market is at a point
where it would be appropriate for a
DCO to establish templates regarding
the terms and conditions of
standardized swaps eligible for clearing.
FIA believes that requiring swaps to fit
within artificial, prescribed templates
would be disruptive to the market and
would not benefit customers. FIA,
however, would support a requirement
that DCOs study this matter and submit
a report to the Commission on the
feasibility of establishing templates
regarding the terms and conditions of
standardized swaps as soon as
practicable.
Finally, LCH commented that it is not
appropriate to require a DCO to select
contract units for clearing purposes that
are smaller than the contract units in
which trades submitted for clearing
were executed. According to LCH, a
DCO clearing swaps should be able to
accept such swaps in any size, and
swaps submitted for clearing should not
69 See 76 FR 45730 (Aug. 1, 2011) (Customer
Clearing).
70 See 76 FR 13101 (Mar. 10, 2011) (StraightThrough Processing).
71 Id.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
be broken down into sub-units. LCH
suggested that the Commission strike
§ 39.12(b)(5) and that any rules
addressing average size of exposure
traded in the swap markets be addressed
in rules pertaining to trading and
execution venues.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.12(b)(5) as proposed. The
Commission believes that standardizing
products, including swaps, by requiring
a DCO to determine product terms and
conditions, including product size, will
increase liquidity, lower prices, and
increase participation. In addition,
standardized products should make it
easier for members to accept a forced
allocation in the event of bankruptcy.
The Commission recognizes that
standardized products may create basis
risk for some hedge positions. However,
this circumstance has long existed in
the futures markets. The Commission
believes that the benefits of
standardization, such as competitive
pricing, liquid markets, and open
access, outweigh the costs of imperfect
hedging.
In response to LCH, the Commission
notes that the product unit size of a
particular swap executed bilaterally
may reflect the immediate
circumstances of the two parties to the
transaction. Once submitted for
clearing, it may be possible to split the
trade into smaller units without
compromising the interests of the two
original parties. Smaller units can
promote liquidity by permitting more
parties to trade the product, facilitate
open access by permitting more clearing
members to clear the product, and aid
risk management by enabling a DCO, in
the event of a default, to have more
potential counterparties for liquidation.
The Commission notes that under the
rule, DCOs retain some discretion in
determining how best to promote
liquidity, facilitate open access, and aid
risk management.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
g. Novation—§ 39.12(b)(6)
Proposed § 39.12(b)(6) would require
a DCO that clears swaps to have rules
providing that upon acceptance of a
swap: (i) The original swap is
extinguished; (ii) the original swap is
replaced by equal and opposite swaps
between clearing members and the DCO;
(iii) the terms of the cleared swaps
conform to templates established under
DCO rules; and (iv) if a swap is cleared
by a clearing member on behalf of a
customer, all terms of the swap, as
carried in the customer account on the
books of the clearing member, must
conform to the terms of the cleared
swap established under the DCO’s rules.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
Newedge supported this rule, in
particular, the requirement for
standardization.
CME, FIA, and ICE commented that
the proposed rule appears to presume
the use of a ‘‘principal’’ model for all
cleared swaps, even those swaps cleared
on behalf of customers. CME noted that
at CME, an FCM clearing customer
business acts as an agent for
undisclosed principals (i.e., the FCM’s
customers) vis-a-vis CME and
guarantees its customers’ performance
to CME. CME suggested that in order to
preserve the agency model for customercleared swaps, the Commission should
adopt a revised § 39.12(b)(6)(ii) to
provide that, upon acceptance of a swap
for clearing, ‘‘the original swap is
replaced by equal and opposite swaps
with the DCO.’’ As previously noted,
CME also commented that the use of the
term ‘‘template’’ is confusing. It
suggested that the Commission revise
§ 39.12(b)(6)(iii) to state: ‘‘All terms of
the cleared swaps must conform to
product specifications established under
[DCO] rules.’’
FIA commented that the proposed
rule would conflict with the FCMs’
position that, with respect to customer
positions, FCMs are acting as agent, and
not as principal, for customers in
executing and clearing swaps (and
futures) on behalf of customers. FIA
suggested that the proposed rule be
revised to confirm that, in clearing
swaps on behalf of customers, a clearing
member shall be deemed a guarantor
and agent of a cleared swap and not a
principal.
ICE noted that U.S. futures markets
may clear on an open offer basis, which
allows straight-through processing. ICE
commented that the Commission should
not preclude open offer clearing of
swaps by requiring the underlying swap
to be novated.
Finally, LCH suggested that the
Commission revise the rule so that the
obligation would fall on the clearing
member rather than the DCO because
the provisions relate to the clearing
member’s books and records, not the
DCO’s.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.12(b)(6) with modifications to
clarify its intended meaning. In
response to the comments from CME,
FIA, and ICE, the Commission is
revising § 39.12(b)(6)(ii) to provide that
a DCO that clears swaps must have rules
providing that, upon acceptance of a
swap by the DCO for clearing, ‘‘[t]he
original swap is replaced by an equal
and opposite swap between the
derivatives clearing organization and
each clearing member acting as
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69361
principal for a house trade or acting as
agent for a customer trade.’’
In response to the comment from
CME, the Commission is revising
§ 39.12(b)(6)(iii) to substitute the phrase
‘‘product specifications’’ for the word
‘‘templates.’’ This is consistent with the
change to § 39.12(b)(2), discussed above.
In response to the comment by ICE,
the Commission notes that ‘‘open offer’’
systems are acceptable under the rule.
Effectively, under an open offer system
there is no ‘‘original’’ swap between
executing parties that needs to be
novated; the swap that is created upon
execution is between the DCO and the
clearing member, acting either as
principal or agent.
Finally, with regard to LCH’s
comment, the Commission believes that
it is proper for the requirement to fall on
the DCO. The DCO is the central
counterparty and is responsible for the
transaction going forward.
h. Confirmation of Terms—§ 39.12(b)(8)
Proposed § 39.12(b)(8) would require
a DCO to have rules that provide that all
swaps submitted to the DCO for clearing
must include written documentation
that memorializes all of the terms of the
transaction and legally supersedes any
previous agreement.72 The confirmation
of all terms of the transaction would be
required to take place at the same time
as the swap is accepted for clearing.
CME suggested that the Commission
revise the proposed regulation to require
a DCO to ‘‘provide each clearing
member carrying a cleared swap with a
definitive record of the terms of the
agreement, which will serve as a
confirmation of the swap.’’
ISDA commented that it is not clear
what efficiencies the proposed rule
would achieve for the parties to the
swap in confirming through a DCO. It
suggested that the Commission be less
prescriptive and recognize that the act
of clearing a swap transaction through a
DCO in and of itself should produce a
definitive written record, tailored to the
particular category of swap transaction
by the DCO and its market constituency,
which fulfills the Commission’s
objective of facilitating the timely
processing and confirmation of swaps
not executed on a SEF or a DCM.
FIA requested that the Commission
clarify the obligations of the parties
under this proposed rule. According to
FIA, the rule appears to place
72 This provision was originally designated as
§ 39.12(b)(7)(v) in 76 FR 13101 (Mar. 10, 2011)
(Straight-Through Processing). It was later proposed
to be renumbered as § 39.12(b)(8) in 76 FR 45730
(Aug. 1, 2011) (Customer Clearing). Section
39.12(b)(7), as currently proposed (76 FR at 13110),
will be addressed in a separate final rulemaking.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69362
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
responsibility on the parties to the swap
to submit a written confirmation of the
terms of the transaction to the DCO,
which, upon acceptance by the DCO,
will supersede any prior documents and
serve as the confirmation of the trade.
However, the notice of proposed
rulemaking places responsibility on the
DCO, explaining that the proposed rule
‘‘would require that DCOs accepting a
swap for clearing provide the
counterparties with a definitive written
record of the terms of their agreement,
which will serve as a confirmation of
the swap.’’ Further, the proposed rule
appears to apply to all swaps submitted
for clearing, but the notice of proposed
rulemaking appears to limit the
requirement to swaps not executed on a
SEF or DCM, noting that swaps
executed on a SEF or DCM are
confirmed upon execution.73
OCC commented that the terms and
conditions applicable to a cleared swap
would already be specified in the DCO
rules or product specifications, and it
does not think it is necessary for a DCO
to provide a confirmation that is similar
in form to detailed trade documentation
such as an ISDA Master Agreement.
OCC believes that the term ‘‘written
documentation’’ should be interpreted
broadly to mean any documentation that
sufficiently memorialized the agreement
of the counterparties with respect to the
terms of a swap, which may consist of
a confirmation (electronic or otherwise)
that confirms the values agreed upon for
terms that can be varied by the parties.
MarkitSERV noted that the proposed
rule would require a confirmation of all
terms of the transaction at the time the
swap is accepted for clearing, and
commented that the rule is unclear as to
whether, when a swap is to be
submitted for clearing, confirmation
would ever be required of the preclearing initial transaction between the
original counterparties. In contrast, the
Commission has elsewhere stated that it
expects a DCO to require pre-clearing
transactions to be confirmed before
clearing.74 MarkitSERV also noted that
when a transaction is not rapidly
accepted for clearing the parties will
73 The notice of proposed rulemaking states:
‘‘Proposed § 39.12(b)(7)(v) would require that DCOs
accepting a swap for clearing provide the
counterparties with a definitive written record of
the terms of their agreement, which will serve as
a confirmation of the swap.’’ 76 FR at 13105–13106
(Mar. 10, 2011) (Straight-Through Processing).
74 See 75 FR 81519, at 81521 (Dec. 28, 2010)
(Confirmation, Portfolio Reconciliation, and
Portfolio Compression Requirements for Swap
Dealers and Major Swap Participants) (‘‘if a swap
is executed bilaterally, but subsequently submitted
to a DCO for clearing, the DCO will require a
definitive written record of all terms to the
counterparties’ agreement prior to novation by the
DCO’’).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
still be responsible for confirming the
transaction under Commission
regulations. It recommended that the
Commission clarify that when a
transaction is not accepted for clearing
within the time frame established for
mandatory confirmation the parties
should be permitted to satisfy their
confirmation obligations by confirming
the transaction prior to clearing.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.12(b)(8) in modified form to read as
set forth in the regulatory text of this
final rule.
The change to the heading is
responsive to the comment by FIA that
it was unclear whether the rule applied
to all cleared swaps or only to those that
are executed bilaterally. Regardless of
the execution venue, confirmation of a
cleared swap is ultimately provided by
the DCO. In the case of a trading facility
with a central limit order book,
execution and acceptance for clearing
are simultaneous and confirmation
occurs at that time. In all other cases,
there is an interim time between
execution and acceptance, or rejection,
for clearing.
The Commission notes that applicable
confirmation requirements may depend
on the length of time between execution
and acceptance or rejection for clearing.
For example, if a trade executed on a
SEF is accepted for clearing within
seconds, the DCO notification would
serve as the single confirmation. But, if
a trade is executed bilaterally and later
submitted for clearing, there may need
to be an initial bilateral confirmation
that is later superseded by the clearing
confirmation.
The changes to the text are responsive
to the comments of FIA, CME, ISDA,
OCC, and MarkitSERV. As FIA pointed
out, the proposed rule text seems to
place the confirmation obligation on the
submitting parties, while the discussion
in the notice of proposed rulemaking
places it on the DCO. Consistent with
the language in the discussion and the
recommendations of FIA, CME, and
ISDA, the revised rule clarifies that
DCOs provide confirmations of cleared
trades. This interpretation was implicit
in the proposal given that the second
sentence of the rule provides that
confirmation takes place when the trade
‘‘is accepted’’ for clearing.
D. Core Principle D—Risk
Management—§ 39.13
Core Principle D, 75 as amended by
the Dodd-Frank Act, requires each DCO
to ensure that it possesses the ability to
manage the risks associated with
75 Section 5b(c)(2)(D) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 7a–
1(c)(2)(D).
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
discharging the responsibilities of the
DCO through the use of appropriate
tools and procedures. It further requires
each DCO to measure its credit
exposures to each clearing member not
less than once during each business day
and to monitor each such exposure
periodically during the business day.
Core Principle D also requires each DCO
to limit its exposure to potential losses
from defaults by clearing members,
through margin requirements and other
risk control mechanisms, to ensure that
its operations would not be disrupted
and that non-defaulting clearing
members would not be exposed to
losses that non-defaulting clearing
members cannot anticipate or control.
Finally, Core Principle D provides that
a DCO must require margin from each
clearing member sufficient to cover
potential exposures in normal market
conditions and that each model and
parameter used in setting such margin
requirements must be risk-based and
reviewed on a regular basis. The
Commission proposed to adopt § 39.13
to establish requirements that a DCO
would have to meet in order to comply
with Core Principle D.
1. General—§ 39.13(a)
Proposed § 39.13(a) would require a
DCO to ensure that it possesses the
ability to manage the risks associated
with discharging its responsibilities
through the use of appropriate tools and
procedures. The Commission did not
receive any comments on proposed
§ 39.13(a) and is adopting § 39.13(a) as
proposed.
2. Risk Management Framework—
§ 39.13(b)
Proposed § 39.13(b) would require a
DCO to establish and maintain written
policies, procedures, and controls,
approved by its board of directors,
which establish an appropriate risk
management framework that, at a
minimum, clearly identifies and
documents the range of risks to which
the DCO is exposed, addresses the
monitoring and management of the
entirety of those risks, and provides a
mechanism for internal audit. In
addition, proposed § 39.13(b) would
require a DCO to regularly review its
risk management framework and update
it as necessary.
Mr. Barnard recommended that the
Commission comprehensively and
explicitly address all elements that
make up a risk management framework,
including organizational structure,
governance, risk functions, internal
controls, compliance, internal audit,
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
and legal functions.76 In particular, with
respect to organizational structure, Mr.
Barnard noted that reporting lines and
the allocation of responsibilities and
authority within a DCO should be clear,
complete, well-defined and enforced.
The Commission believes that a DCO
should adopt a comprehensive and
documented risk management
framework that addresses all of the
various types of risks to which it is
exposed and the manner in which they
may relate to each other. The
Commission believes that a written risk
policy is important because it will help
to ensure the DCO has carefully
considered its risk management
framework, and it will provide guidance
to DCO management, staff, and market
participants. It will also allow the
Commission to assess the DCO’s risk
management framework more
efficiently. The risks to be addressed
may include, but are not limited to,
legal risk, credit risk, liquidity risk,
custody and investment risk,
concentration risk, default risk,
operational risk, market risk, and
business risk. However, the Commission
does not believe that it is necessary to
explicitly list such risks in the final
rule.
MGEX commented that the
documentary and procedural
requirements of proposed § 39.13(b)
would impose heavy costs and turn the
goal of practical risk management into
one of paperwork compliance, and that
while having a framework containing all
the various policies can be beneficial for
DCOs, the development and
implementation of such policies must
be flexible and left to each DCO. The
Commission notes that DCOs generally
already have certain written risk
management policies, procedures and
controls, although the substance, level
of detail, and integration of each DCO’s
documentation of such policies,
procedures and controls may vary. The
Commission believes that § 39.13(b)
provides DCOs with the appropriate
amount of flexibility with regard to the
documentation of their risk management
frameworks, without imposing
significant additional costs upon DCOs.
OCC noted that its risk management
policies are highly complex and are
embodied in multiple separate written
documents, and much of its day-to-day
76 Mr. Barnard also recommended that the
Commission focus more on operational risk and the
role of reporting and public disclosures. With
respect to operational risk, the Commission notes
that it is adopting § 39.18 herein, which addresses
system safeguards, and which is discussed in
section I, below. Reporting and public information
are addressed in §§ 39.19 and 39.21, respectively,
also adopted herein, which are discussed in
sections J and L, respectively, below.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
operations are related to risk
management. OCC stated that the
Commission should make it clear that
the proposal would not require the
board to approve every document
related to risk management, as it would
be burdensome and would
inappropriately require the board to
micro-manage the day-to-day functions
of a DCO. OCC indicated that it does not
believe that the function of the
committee that is responsible for the
oversight of its risk management
activities would be enhanced by the
creation of additional written policies,
procedures, and controls.
The Commission recognizes that
many of the day-to-day functions of a
DCO are related to risk management,
and § 39.13(b) is not intended to require
that a DCO’s board must approve every
document at a DCO that addresses risk
management issues nor is it intended to
require that a DCO’s board must
approve every day-to-day decision
regarding the implementation of the
DCO’s risk management framework.
CME and ICE took the position that a
DCO’s Risk Management Committee
should have the authority to approve
the written policies, procedures, and
controls that establish a DCO’s risk
management framework, noting that this
would be consistent with proposed
§ 39.13(c), which would require a DCO’s
Chief Risk Officer to make appropriate
recommendations to the DCO’s Risk
Management Committee or board of
directors, as applicable, regarding the
DCO’s risk management function.
The Commission believes that a
DCO’s risk management framework
should be subject to the approval of its
board of directors. The Commission
recognizes that a DCO’s Risk
Management Committee may play a
crucial role in the development of the
risk management policies of a DCO.
However, the board has the ultimate
responsibility for the management of the
DCO’s risks. Requiring board approval
of a DCO’s risk management framework
is also consistent with proposed
international standards.77
In addition, a requirement that a
DCO’s board approve its risk
management framework is consistent
with § 39.13(c), which permits a DCO’s
Chief Risk Officer to make appropriate
recommendations to the DCO’s Risk
Management Committee regarding the
DCO’s risk management functions.
Although the board would approve the
framework, it could delegate defined
decision-making authority to the Risk
Management Committee in connection
77 See CPSS–IOSCO Consultative Report,
Principle 2: Governance, Key Consideration 5, at 23.
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69363
with the implementation of the
framework. The Commission is adopting
§ 39.13(b) as proposed.
3. Chief Risk Officer—§ 39.13(c)
Proposed § 39.13(c) would require a
DCO to have a Chief Risk Officer (CRO)
who would be responsible for the
implementation of the risk management
framework and for making appropriate
recommendations regarding the DCO’s
risk management functions to the DCO’s
Risk Management Committee or board
of directors, as applicable. In a separate
rulemaking, the Commission has
proposed to adopt § 39.13(d) to require
DCOs to have a Risk Management
Committee with defined composition
requirements and specified minimum
functions.78
Better Markets commented that the
proposal should provide substantive
parameters for a CRO and that the CRO
rules applicable to FCMs should be
applied to DCOs. Mr. Greenberger
indicated that the CRO of a DCO should
be subject to the same rules regarding
reporting and independence as the
CROs of other registered entities.
The Commission does not believe that
it is necessary to further define the
responsibilities of a DCO’s CRO in the
final rule. The Commission notes that it
has not proposed any rules regarding a
CRO for FCMs or any other registered
entities, as suggested by Better Markets
and Mr. Greenberger.79
As noted in the notice of proposed
rulemaking, given the importance of the
risk management function and the
comprehensive nature of the
responsibilities of a DCO’s CCO, which
are governed by § 39.10, as adopted in
this rulemaking, the Commission
expects that a DCO’s CRO and its CCO
would be two different individuals. The
Commission is adopting § 39.13(c) as
proposed.
4. Measurement of Credit Exposure—
§ 39.13(e)
Proposed § 39.13(e) would require a
DCO to: (1) Measure its credit exposure
to each clearing member and mark to
market such clearing member’s open
positions at least once each business
78 See 75 FR at 63750 (Oct. 18, 2010) (Conflicts
of Interest). In that proposed rulemaking, the
provisions relating to the Risk Management
Committee were designated as § 39.13(g). In the
final rulemaking with respect to that proposal,
those provisions will be redesignated as § 39.13(d).
79 However, the Commission has proposed rules
regarding a CCO for futures commission merchants,
swap dealers, and major swap participants, at 75 FR
70881 (Nov. 19, 2010) (Designation of a Chief
Compliance Officer; Required Compliance Policies;
and Annual Report of a Futures Commission
Merchant, Swap Dealer, or Major Swap Participant),
with respect to which Better Markets filed a
comment letter.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69364
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
day; and (2) monitor its credit exposure
to each clearing member periodically
during each business day. Proposed
§ 39.13(e) was a prerequisite for
proposed § 39.14(b), which would
address daily settlements based on a
DCO’s measurement of its credit
exposures to its clearing members.
LCH commented that a DCO should
be required to measure its credit
exposures ‘‘several times each business
day’’ and that a DCO should be obliged
to recalculate initial and variation
margin requirements more than once
each business day. By contrast, OCC
requested that the Commission clarify
that the proposed requirement that a
DCO monitor its credit exposure to each
clearing member periodically during
each business day would not require a
DCO to update clearing member
positions on an intra-day basis for
purposes of monitoring risk, which
would not be practical, and that intraday monitoring of credit exposures
based on periodic revaluation of
beginning-of-day positions would be
sufficient to comply with the proposed
rule.
The Commission does not believe that
a DCO should be required to mark each
clearing member’s open positions to
market and recalculate initial and
variation margin requirements more
than once each business day, and notes
that the requirement that a DCO monitor
its credit exposure to each clearing
member periodically during each
business day could be satisfied through
intra-day monitoring of credit exposures
based on periodic revaluation of
beginning-of-day positions as suggested
by OCC.
However, as discussed in section
IV.E.2, below, § 39.14(b) requires a DCO
to effect a settlement with each clearing
member at least once each business day,
and to have the authority and
operational capacity to effect a
settlement with each clearing member,
on an intraday basis, either routinely,
when thresholds specified by the DCO
are breached, or in times of extreme
market volatility. Therefore, in order to
comply with § 39.14(b), a DCO would be
required to have the authority and
operational capacity to mark each
clearing member’s open positions to
market and recalculate initial and
variation margin requirements, on an
intraday basis, under the circumstances
defined in § 39.14(b).
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.13(e) as proposed, except that the
Commission is making a technical
revision by replacing the phrase ‘‘such
clearing member’s open positions’’ with
the phrase ‘‘such clearing member’s
open house and customer positions’’ to
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
eliminate possible ambiguity and to
clarify the Commission’s intent to
reflect current industry practice and
include both house and customer
positions, not just house positions. The
Commission notes that § 39.13(e) is
consistent with international
recommendations.80
5. Limitation of Exposure to Potential
Losses From Defaults—§ 39.13(f)
Proposed § 39.13(f) would require a
DCO, through margin requirements and
other risk control mechanisms, to limit
its exposure to potential losses from
defaults by its clearing members to
ensure that: (1) Its operations would not
be disrupted; and (2) non-defaulting
clearing members would not be exposed
to losses that nondefaulting clearing
members cannot anticipate or control.
The language of proposed § 39.13(f) is
virtually identical to the language in
Section 5b(c)(2)(D)(iii) of the CEA, as
amended by the Dodd-Frank Act.
FIA supported the proposal and
MGEX stated that it appeared reasonable
if applied appropriately. FIA
acknowledged that clearing members
understand and accept that they are
subject to losses in the event of a default
of another clearing member but noted
that these potential losses must be
measurable and subject to a reasonable
cap over a period of simultaneous or
multiple defaults. MGEX suggested that
the Commission adopt an interpretation
that each clearing member, by becoming
a clearing member, can reasonably
anticipate that another clearing member
may potentially default and that a DCO
can apply its rules accordingly.
The Commission believes that every
clearing member is aware that another
clearing member may default. The
Commission also notes that the
potential losses resulting from such a
default will be mitigated to the extent
that a DCO is bound to comply with the
CEA, Commission regulations, and its
own rules, particularly with regard to
financial resources and default rules
and procedures.
KCC commented that there would
appear to be little cost/benefit
justification for duplicating the statutory
language of the core principle in the
form of a rule.81 The Commission
believes that codifying provisions of the
CEA does not impose an additional cost
on a DCO because a DCO must satisfy
such requirements to comply with the
law. At the same time, the Commission
believes that codifying this statutory
80 See CPSS–IOSCO Consultative Report,
Principle 6: Margin, Key Consideration 4, at 40.
81 See Section 5b(c)(2)(D)(iii) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C.
7a–1(c)(2)(D)(iii).
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
provision provides a DCO with a single
location in which to identify the
minimum standards necessary to fulfill
the requirements of Core Principle D.
The Commission is adopting § 39.13(f)
as proposed.
6. Margin Requirements—§ 39.13(g)
a. General
Several commenters made general
comments about margin requirements
that did not address specific provisions
of proposed § 39.13(g). The Commission
has summarized those comments, and
responded to those comments, below.
KCC expressed its belief that the
Commission’s detailed proposed margin
requirements are not consistent with the
Dodd-Frank Act’s changes to the CEA,
which simply require that a DCO’s
margin models and parameters must be
‘‘risk-based.’’ The Commission notes
that Section 5b(c)(2) of the CEA, as
amended by the Dodd-Frank Act,
requires a DCO to comply with the
statutory core principles ‘‘and any
requirement that the Commission may
impose by rule or regulation pursuant to
section 8a(5).’’ As noted in section I.A,
above, legally enforceable standards set
forth in regulations serve to increase
legal certainty, prevent DCOs from
lowering risk management standards for
competitive reasons, and increase
market confidence. These goals are
especially important with respect to
margin, which is one of the key tools
used by DCOs in managing risk.
Therefore, the Commission believes it is
appropriate to impose more detailed
margin requirements than those
contained in the statutory language of
Core Principle D.
ISDA urged the Commission to adopt
rules requiring DCOs to adopt risk
methodologies that would reduce the
impact that customer account risk has
on the size of default fund
contributions. ISDA noted that this
would enable DCOs to better guaranty
the portability of client portfolios, but
would increase risk to the DCO;
however, ISDA stated that this increased
risk could be addressed by increasing
the risk margin of the customer account.
The Commission has not proposed and
is not adopting such rules. The
Commission believes that a DCO should
have reasonable discretion to determine
how it will calculate the amounts of any
default fund contributions that it may
require from its clearing members, and
the extent to which customer risk will
be a factor in such calculations.
MFA and Citadel stated that it is
important that a DCO’s process for
setting initial margin be transparent in
order to give all market participants
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
certainty as to the margin they can
expect the DCO to assess. Therefore,
MFA and Citadel urged the Commission
to adopt final rules that would require
a DCO to make available to all market
participants, at no cost, a margin
calculation utility, so that they would be
able to replicate the calculation of the
margin that the DCO would assess.
The Commission notes that it is
adopting §§ 39.21(c)(3) and (d) herein,
which require a DCO to disclose
information concerning its marginsetting methodology on its Web site.
However, the Commission is not
requiring a DCO to provide a margin
calculation utility to market participants
free of cost, although the Commission
notes that some DCOs have chosen to do
so.82 The Commission believes that
whether a DCO will provide a margin
calculation utility to market
participants, and whether and how
much it might charge for such a utility,
is a business decision that should be left
to the discretion of a DCO.
The FHLBanks indicated that it may
be appropriate, in some circumstances,
for a DCO to waive its initial margin
requirements with respect to certain
highly creditworthy customers of a
clearing member. Therefore, the
FHLBanks urged the Commission to
grant DCOs discretion to waive initial
margin requirements when doing so
would not pose risk to the DCO or its
clearing members. In light of the fact
that the Dodd-Frank Act requires the
removal of reliance on credit ratings, the
FHLBanks recommended that the
Commission adopt alternative criteria
by which a DCO could exercise such
discretionary waivers, or alternatively
grant DCOs discretion to establish their
own criteria, subject to Commission
approval, or to guidelines established by
the Commission in the final rule.
The Commission has not proposed a
rule that would permit it to grant DCOs
the discretion to waive initial margin
requirements and it is not adopting such
a rule, as requested by the FHLBanks.
Even if there were an objective way to
define highly creditworthy customers,
the Commission does not believe that
permitting such waivers would
constitute prudent risk management.
b. Amount of Initial Margin Required—
§ 39.13(g)(1)
Proposed § 39.13(g)(1) would require
that the initial margin 83 that a DCO
82 See e.g., https://www.cmegroup.com/clearing/
cme-core-cme-clearing-online-risk-engine.html and
https://www.theice.com/publicdocs/ice_trust/
ICE_Margin_
Simulation_Calculator_Training_Presentation.pdf.
83 The term ‘‘initial margin’’ is now defined in
§ 1.3(lll), adopted herein.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
requires from each clearing member
must be sufficient to cover potential
exposures in normal market conditions
and that each model and parameter used
in setting initial margin requirements
must be risk-based and reviewed on a
regular basis. The Commission invited
comment regarding whether a definition
of ‘‘normal market conditions’’ should
be included in the proposed regulation
and, if so, how normal market
conditions should be defined.
MFA, BlackRock, and Citadel
expressed their support for the proposal.
CME and OCC commented that the
Commission should not define normal
market conditions, while ISDA stated
that the Commission should define
normal market conditions. The
Commission noted in the notice of
proposed rulemaking that the 2004
CPSS–IOSCO Recommendations
defined ‘‘normal market conditions’’ as
‘‘price movements that produce changes
in exposures that are expected to breach
margin requirements or other risk
control mechanisms only 1 percent of
the time, that is, on average on only one
trading day out of 100.’’ 84 The CPSS–
IOSCO Consultative Report was
published subsequent to the issuance of
proposed § 39.13(g)(1). The CPSS–
IOSCO Consultative Report replaced the
concept of ‘‘normal market conditions’’
with a proposed requirement that
‘‘[i]nitial margin should meet an
established single-tailed confidence
level of at least 99 percent for each
product that is margined on a product
basis, each spread within or between
products for which portfolio margining
is permitted, and for each clearing
member’s portfolio losses.’’ 85 The
Commission had also proposed similar
requirements for a 99 percent
confidence level in proposed
§ 39.13(g)(2)(iii), discussed below.
Therefore, in adopting § 39.13(g)(1), the
Commission is declining to adopt the
proposed explicit requirement that
initial margin must be sufficient to
cover potential exposures in normal
market conditions, in order to avoid any
ambiguity over the meaning of ‘‘normal
market conditions.’’
FIA recommended that parameters
used in setting initial margin
requirements should be reviewed
monthly and models should be
reviewed annually and on an ad hoc
basis if substantive changes are made,
whereas OCC took the position that the
Commission should permit a DCO to
use its reasonable discretion in
84 See
2004 CPSS–IOSCO Recommendations at
21.
85 See CPSS–IOSCO Consultative Report,
Principle 6: Margin, Key Consideration 3, at 40.
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69365
determining what constitutes a ‘‘regular
basis’’ for reviewing margin models and
parameters. The Commission has
determined not to specify the
appropriate frequency of review, as it
may differ based on the characteristics
of particular products and markets, and
the nature of the margin models and
parameters that apply to those products
and markets. However, although
§ 39.13(g)(1) would permit a DCO to
exercise its discretion in determining
how often it should review its margin
models and parameters, the Commission
would apply a reasonableness standard
in determining whether the frequency of
reviews conducted by a particular DCO
was appropriate.
Moreover, as discussed in section
IV.D.6.d, below, § 39.13(g)(3) requires
that a DCO’s systems for generating
initial margin requirements, including
the DCO’s theoretical models, must be
reviewed and validated by a qualified
and independent party, on a regular
basis. As the Commission noted in the
notice of proposed rulemaking, the
Commission would expect a DCO to
obtain an independent validation prior
to implementation of a new margin
model and when making any significant
change to a model that is in use by the
DCO. This express expectation would
address FIA’s suggestion that a DCO
should be required to review its margin
models on an ad hoc basis if substantive
changes are made. For the reasons
discussed, the Commission is adopting
§ 39.13(g)(1) with the modification
described above.
c. Methodology and Coverage
(1) General—§ 39.13(g)(2)(i)
Proposed § 39.13(g)(2)(i) would
require a DCO to establish initial margin
requirements that are commensurate
with the risks of each product and
portfolio, including any unique
characteristics of, or risks associated
with, particular products or portfolios.86
In particular, proposed § 39.13(g)(2)(i)
would require a DCO that clears credit
default swaps (CDS) to appropriately
address jump-to-default risk in setting
initial margins.87 The Commission
86 As proposed, § 39.13(g)(2)(i) referred to
addressing any ‘‘unique’’ characteristics of, or risks
associated with, particular products or portfolios.
The Commission is revising this provision in the
final rule to refer to any ‘‘unusual’’ characteristics
of, or risks associated with, particular products or
portfolios to clarify that such characteristics or risks
are not limited to those that are one of a kind. See
also n. 66, above.
87 In the notice of proposed rulemaking, the
Commission defined jump-to-default risk as
referring to the possibility that a CDS portfolio with
large net sales of protection on an underlying
reference entity could experience significant losses
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
Continued
08NOR2
69366
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
invited comment regarding whether
there are specific risks that should be
identified and addressed in the
proposed regulation in addition to
jump-to-default risk.
CME and Nadex, Inc. (Nadex)
expressed the opinion that it would not
be beneficial to attempt to identify
additional specific risks that a DCO
must address in determining initial
margins and LCH commented that the
reference to jump-to-default risk should
either be removed or amended to cover
all other products that are subject to
jump-to-default risk. The Commission
agrees with CME and Nadex that it is
not necessary to identify additional
specific risks in the regulation, and also
agrees with LCH that the reference to
jump-to-default risk should generally
apply to any product that may be
subject to such risk. Therefore, the
Commission is adopting a revised
§ 39.13(g)(2)(i) that eliminates the
specific reference to CDS. The
Commission has also added the phrase
‘‘or similar jump risk.’’ This is intended
to address the possibility of a large
payment obligation in a product
accumulating in a very short period of
time following an extreme market event.
(2) Liquidation Time—§ 39.13(g)(2)(ii)
Proposed § 39.13(g)(2)(ii) would
require a DCO to use margin models that
generate initial margin requirements
sufficient to cover the DCO’s potential
future exposures to clearing members
based on price movements in the
interval between the last collection of
variation margin 88 and the time within
which the DCO estimates that it would
be able to liquidate a defaulting clearing
member’s positions (liquidation time).
As proposed, a DCO would have to use
a liquidation time that is a minimum of
five business days for cleared swaps that
were not executed on a DCM, and a
liquidation time that is a minimum of
one business day for all other products
that it clears, although it would be
required to use longer liquidation times,
if appropriate, based on the unique
characteristics of particular products or
portfolios. The Commission invited
comment regarding whether the
minimum liquidation times specified in
proposed § 39.13(g)(2)(ii) were
appropriate, or whether there were
minimum liquidation times that were
more appropriate.
LCH suggested that ‘‘or transfer’’
should be inserted after ‘‘liquidate’’ in
the proposed rule and that an
over a very short period of time following an
unexpected event of default by the reference entity.
88 The term ‘‘variation margin’’ is now defined in
§ 1.3(ooo), adopted herein.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
appropriate liquidation period should
be a period that would be sufficient to
enable a DCO to adequately hedge or
close out a defaulting member’s risk.
The Commission does not believe that it
is appropriate to add ‘‘or transfer,’’ or to
interpret the liquidation period to
include the time that would be
sufficient to hedge a defaulting clearing
member’s positions. In a worst-case
scenario, a DCO would need to liquidate
a defaulting clearing member’s
positions, and the time it would take to
do so should be the relevant
consideration in setting initial margin
requirements.
ISDA commented that a DCO should
continually monitor the risk associated
with concentration in participants’
positions, and if a DCO determines that
a participant’s cleared portfolio is so
large that it could not be liquidated
within the liquidation period assumed
in the DCO’s default management plan,
the DCO should have the discretion to
include an extra charge for
concentration risk in the initial margin
requirements of that participant. FIA
made similar comments but suggested
that prudent risk management should
require the imposition of concentration
margin in appropriate circumstances.
FIA further noted that when a DCO
imposes concentration margin on a
clearing member, the additional margin
should be included in the DCO’s
minimum margin calculations for any
customers of the clearing member that
generate the increased risk.
Although the regulations adopted by
the Commission herein do not
specifically address concentration
margin as described by ISDA and FIA,
they do not limit a DCO’s discretion to
impose extra charges on its clearing
members for concentration risk. It
should also be noted that § 39.13(h)(6),
adopted herein,89 requires a DCO to take
additional actions with respect to
particular clearing members, when
appropriate, based on the application of
objective and prudent risk management
standards, which actions may include
imposing enhanced margin
requirements.
Numerous commenters objected to the
proposed difference in requirements
that would subject swaps that were
either executed bilaterally or executed
on a SEF to a minimum five-day
liquidation time, while permitting
equivalent swaps that were executed on
a DCM to be subject to a minimum oneday liquidation time. Commenters
variously argued that the proposed oneday/five-day distinction for swap
89 See discussion of § 39.13(h)(6)(ii) in section
IV.D.7.f, below.
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
transactions depending on the venue of
execution would: (1) Be inconsistent
with the open access provisions of
Section 2(h)(1)(B) of the CEA 90 and/or
proposed § 39.12(b)(2) 91 (GFI Group
Inc. (GFI), VMAC, LCC (VMAC),
BlackRock, Wholesale Markets Brokers’
Association, Americas (WMBAA), and
FX Alliance Inc. (FXall)); (2) be
inconsistent with Congressional intent,
expressed in Section 731 of the DoddFrank Act,92 which recognizes a
difference in risk between cleared and
uncleared swaps that could be
addressed by differential margin
requirements, but does not differentiate
between the risk of swaps executed on
a DCM and those executed on a SEF
(Asset Management Group of the
Securities Industry and Financial
Markets Association (AMG)); (3)
discriminate against trades not executed
on DCMs by requiring DCOs to impose
higher margin requirements for swaps
that are executed on SEFs than for
swaps that are executed on DCMs (GFI,
VMAC, MarketAxess Corporation
(MarketAxess), WMBAA, Tradeweb
Markets LLC (Tradeweb), Nodal
Exchange, LLC (Nodal), and FXall); (4)
raise the cost of clearing for swaps
traded on a SEF (National Energy
Marketers Association (NEM), NGX, and
BlackRock); 93 (5) put SEFs at a
competitive disadvantage to DCMs (GFI,
MarketAxess, and BlackRock); (6)
artificially restrict the ability of market
participants, including asset managers,
to select the best means of execution for
their swap transactions (BlackRock); (7)
penalize market participants that desire
to effect swap transactions on a SEF
rather than a DCM (WMBAA and
Tradeweb); (8) undermine the goal of
the Dodd-Frank Act to promote trading
of swaps on SEFs (Tradeweb and FXall);
(9) potentially create detrimental
arbitrage between standardized swaps
traded on a SEF and futures contracts
with the same terms and conditions
traded on a DCM (Nodal); (10) impose
onerous and unnecessary administrative
costs on DCOs, which would likely be
passed on to clearing members and their
customers (VMAC and BlackRock); (11)
create a disincentive for DCOs to
practice appropriate default
management ‘‘drills’’ to reduce the
90 See Section 2(h)(1)(B) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C.
2(h)(1)(B).
91 See discussion of § 39.12(b)(2) in section
IV.C.2.c, above.
92 Section 731 of the Dodd-Frank Act amended
the CEA to insert Section 4s. See Section
4s(e)(3)(A)(ii) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 6s(e)(3)(A)(ii).
93 NGX estimated that the impact of transitioning
from its current two-day requirement to a five-day
requirement for all of the energy products that it
clears would lead to an approximate 60 percent
increase in initial margins.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
liquidation time of portfolios of swaps
(ISDA); (12) remove the incentive for
DCOs to detail, practice and leverage
clearing member expertise in default
management (FIA); (13) discourage
voluntary clearing (NGX); and (14)
require DCOs and clearing members to
manage margin calls and netting based
on the execution platform for the
relevant swaps (VMAC and BlackRock).
In addition, a number of commenters
argued that there was no basis for
concluding that swaps executed on a
SEF would be less liquid than swaps
executed on a DCM (GFI, WMBAA,
NGX, MarketAxess, AMG, and FXall).
BlackRock recommended that the
Commission require a DCO to use a
consistent liquidation time for cleared
swaps that are executed on SEFs and
DCMs.
Commenters variously contended that
a liquidation time of five business days
may be excessive for some swaps (CME
and Citadel 94), a one-day liquidation
period is too short (LCH), a one-day
liquidation period is appropriate for
swaps executed on a DCM or a SEF
(AMG), and a two-day liquidation
period is appropriate for cleared swaps
(NGX).
Various commenters encouraged the
Commission to permit a DCO to
determine the appropriate liquidation
time for all products that it clears based
on the unique characteristics and
liquidity of each relevant product or
portfolio (CME, MFA, ISDA, LCH,
NYPC, NGX, FIA,95 Nadex, Citadel, and
FXall) or to grant DCOs such discretion
subject to a one-day minimum for all
products, including cleared swaps (GFI,
VMAC, MarketAxess, Nodal, WMBAA,
and Tradeweb).
FIA and ISDA commented that the
appropriate liquidation time should be
derived from a DCO’s default
management plan and the results of its
periodic testing of such plan. FIA
further stated that a DCO should adjust
its minimum margin requirements if its
periodic testing of its default
management plan demonstrates that a
defaulting clearing member’s positions
could be resolved in a shorter period of
time. Similarly, NGX stated that the
Commission should permit a DCO to
demonstrate through back testing and
stress testing that a particular type of
cleared transaction should be subject to
a shorter liquidation time.
MFA and Citadel recommended that
if the Commission were to mandate
minimum liquidation times in the final
rules, it should allow DCOs to apply for
exemptions for specific groups of swaps
if market conditions prove that such
minimum liquidation times are
excessive. Citadel further recommended
that the Commission make it explicit
that the Commission may re-evaluate
and, if necessary, re-calibrate such
minimum liquidation times as markets
evolve.
The Commission is persuaded by the
views expressed by numerous
commenters that requiring different
minimum liquidation times for cleared
swaps that are executed on a DCM and
equivalent cleared swaps that are
executed on a SEF could have negative
consequences. Therefore, after further
consideration, the Commission has
determined not to mandate different
minimum liquidation times for cleared
swaps based on their venue of
execution, and has further determined
that the same minimum liquidation time
should be used with respect to cleared
swaps that are executed bilaterally. This
approach is consistent with the open
access requirements of Section
2(h)(1)(B) of the CEA and § 39.12(b)(2),
adopted herein.
The Commission also acknowledges
the concerns expressed by commenters
that a five-day liquidation period may
be excessive for some swaps. For
example, for a number of years, CME
and ICE have successfully cleared swaps
based on physical commodities using a
one-day liquidation time.96 By contrast,
as noted in the notice of proposed
rulemaking, several DCOs currently use
a five-day liquidation time in
determining margin requirements for
certain swaps based on financial
instruments.97 These differences reflect
differences in the risk characteristics of
the products.
The Commission has carefully
considered whether it should prescribe
any liquidation time or, alternatively,
permit each DCO to exercise its
discretion in applying liquidation times
based on the risk profile of particular
products or portfolios. In this regard, the
Commission notes that even without a
specified minimum liquidation time,
under Sections 5b(c)(2)(D) and 8a(7)(D)
of the CEA, the Commission can require
a DCO to adjust its margin methodology
94 Citadel further commented that excessive
margin requirements relative to risk exposure could
adversely affect market liquidity and deter clearing.
95 FIA also commented that liquidation times
should be set at times appropriate to manage the
liquidation of the vast majority of the portfolios
carried by a DCO’s clearing members, and not
necessarily that of the largest clearing member.
96 NYMEX, now CME, has cleared OTC swaps
generally with a one day liquidation time since
2002. CME currently offers more than 1,000
products for clearing through its ClearPort system.
97 In particular, ICE Clear Credit LLC and CME
use a five-day liquidation time for credit default
swaps and LCH and CME use a five-day liquidation
time for interest rate swaps.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00035
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69367
if it determines that the current margin
levels for a product or portfolio are
inadequate based on back testing or
current market volatility.
Weighing the advantages and
drawbacks of the alternatives, the
Commission believes that a bright-line
requirement, with a provision for
making exceptions, will best serve the
public interest. While a DCO will still
have considerable latitude in setting
risk-based margin levels, the
Commission has determined that
establishing a minimum liquidation
time will provide legal certainty for an
evolving marketplace, will offer a
practical means for assuring that the
thousands of different swaps that are
going to be cleared subject to the
Commission’s oversight will have
prudent minimum margin requirements,
and will prevent a potential ‘‘race to the
bottom’’ by competing DCOs. Moreover,
given the large number of swaps already
cleared, this alleviates the need for the
Commission, with its limited staff
resources, to evaluate immediately the
liquidation time for each swap that is
cleared.98
Taking into account these
considerations, and in response to the
comments, the Commission is adopting
§ 39.13(g)(2)(ii) with a number of
modifications. First, the final rule
requires a DCO to use the same
liquidation time for a product whether
it is executed on a DCM, a SEF, or
bilaterally. This addresses the
competitive concerns raised by
numerous commenters and recognizes
that once a swap is cleared, its risk
profile is not affected by the method by
which it was executed.99
Second, the final rule provides that
the minimum liquidation time for swaps
based on certain physical commodities,
i.e., agricultural commodities,100 energy,
and metals, is one day. For all other
swaps, the minimum liquidation time is
five days. This distinction is based on
the differing risk characteristics of these
product groups and is consistent with
existing requirements that reflect the
risk assessments DCOs have made over
the course of their experience clearing
these types of swaps. The longer
liquidation time, currently five days for
credit default swaps at ICE Clear Credit,
LLC, and CME, and for interest rate
98 E.g., the 950,000 trades in LCH’s SwapClear
have an aggregate notional principal amount of over
$295 trillion. Source: https://www.lch.com/swaps/
swapclear_for_clearing_members/.
99 See Section 2(h)(1)(B) of the CEA and
§ 39.12(b)(2), adopted herein (swaps submitted to a
DCO with the same terms and conditions are
economically equivalent within the DCO and may
be offset with each other within the DCO).
100 See 76 FR 41048 (July 13, 2011) (Agricultural
Commodity Definition; final rule).
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69368
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
swaps at LCH and CME, is based on
their assessment of the higher risk
associated with these products.101
Contributing factors include a
concentration of positions among
clearing members, the number and
variety of products listed, the
complexity of the portfolios, the longdated expiration time for many swaps,
and the challenges of the liquidation
process in the event of a default.102
Third, to provide further flexibility,
the Commission is adding a provision
specifying that, by order, the
Commission may provide for a different
minimum liquidation time for particular
products or portfolios. As markets
evolve, it may become appropriate to
ease the requirement for certain swaps
subject to the five-day minimum.
Conversely, analysis may reveal that for
other products or portfolios the five-day
or one-day minimum is insufficient. The
Commission believes that in light of the
novelty, complexity, and potential
magnitude of the risk posed by financial
swaps, prudential considerations dictate
that this type of fine-tuning should be
used in appropriate circumstances.
Such an order could be granted upon
the Commission’s initiative or in
response to a petition from a DCO.
In this regard, the Commission
emphasizes that it is retaining the
proposed requirement that a DCO must
use longer liquidation times, if
appropriate, based on the specific
characteristics of particular products or
portfolios.103 Such longer liquidation
times may be based on a DCO’s testing
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
101 See
e.g., Cleared OTC Interest Rate Swaps at
7 (Aug. 2011), available at https://
www.cmegroup.com/clearing/cme-core-cmeclearing-online-risk-engine.html; ICE Clear Credit
Clearing Rules, Schedule 401 (Jul. 16, 2011)
available at https://www.theice.com/publicdocs/
clear_credit/ICE_Clear_Credit_Rules.pdf.
102 The liquidation of the Lehman interest rate
swap portfolio in the fall of 2008 demonstrates that
the actual liquidation time for a swap portfolio
could be longer than 5 days. Between September 15,
2008 (the day Lehman Bros. Holdings declared
bankruptcy) and October 3, 2008, LCH and
‘‘OTCDerivnet,’’ an interest rate derivatives forum
of major market dealers, wound down the cleared
OTC interest rate swap positions of Lehman Bros.
Special Financing Inc. (LBSFI). This portfolio had
a notional value of $9 trillion and consisted of
66,390 trades across 5 major currencies. LCH and
OTCDerivnet competitively auctioned off LBSFI’s
five hedge currency portfolios to their members
between September 24 and October 3, 2008. The
margin held by LCH proved sufficient to cover the
costs incurred. Source: LCH Press Release of
October 8, 2008, available at: https://
www.lchclearnet.com/Images/2008-1008%20SwapClear%20default_tcm6–46506.pdf.
103 As proposed, § 39.13(g)(2)(ii) referred to the
‘‘unique’’ characteristics of particular products or
portfolios. The Commission is revising this phrase
in the final rule to refer to the ‘‘specific’’
characteristics of a particular product or portfolio
to clarify that such characteristics are not limited
to those that are one of a kind.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
of its default management plan. If a DCO
determines that a longer liquidation
time is appropriate for a particular
swap, the Commission would expect
that the DCO would use the same longer
liquidation time for the equivalent
swaps that it clears, whether the swaps
are executed on a DCM, a SEF, or
bilaterally. Among the factors that DCOs
should consider in establishing
minimum liquidation times are: (i)
Average daily trading volume in a
product; (ii) average daily open interest
in a product; (iii) concentration of open
interest; (iv) availability of a predictable
basis relationship with a highly liquid
product; and (v) availability of multiple
market participants in related markets to
take on positions in the market in
question. The Commission would also
consider these factors in determining
whether a particular liquidation time
was appropriate.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.13(g)(2)(ii) revised to read as set
forth in the regulatory text of this final
rule.104
(3) Confidence Level—§ 39.13(g)(2)(iii)
Proposed § 39.13(g)(2)(iii) would
require that the actual coverage of the
initial margin requirements produced by
a DCO’s margin models, along with
projected measures of the models’
performance, would have to meet a
confidence level of at least 99 percent,
based on data from an appropriate
historic time period with respect to: (A)
each product that is margined on a
product basis; (B) each spread within or
between products for which there is a
defined spread margin rate, as described
in proposed § 39.13(g)(3); (C) each
account held by a clearing member at
the DCO, by customer origin and house
origin,105 and (D) each swap portfolio,
by beneficial owner. The Commission
invited comment regarding whether a
confidence level of 99 percent is
appropriate with respect to all
applicable products, spreads, accounts,
and swap portfolios.
Alice Corporation supported the
proposed 99 percent confidence level,
especially for new swaps and swaps
with non-linear characteristics. ISDA
commented that the proposed 99
percent confidence level is appropriate
given current levels of mutualization in
a DCO default fund and mutualization
104 In a technical revision, the Commission has
eliminated the phrase, ‘‘whether the swaps are
carried in a customer account subject to Section
4d(a) or 4d(f) of the Act, or carried in a house
account,’’ because it is superfluous.
105 The terms ‘‘customer account or customer
origin’’ and ‘‘house account or house origin’’ are
now defined in § 39.2, adopted herein.
PO 00000
Frm 00036
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
in omnibus client accounts.106 MGEX
stated that it did not oppose the
proposed 99 percent confidence level
for each account held by a clearing
member at a DCO, by customer origin
and house origin.107
FIA opposed the proposed 99 percent
requirement because it sets an artificial
floor that may remove the incentive for
DCOs to conduct the rigorous analysis
necessary to establish an appropriate
confidence level. FIA further stated that
if a different regulatory scheme than
loss mutualization for the protection of
customer funds were to be adopted for
cleared swaps, a much higher level of
confidence may be required.
CME, Nadex, KCC,108 and Citadel
took the position that the Commission
should not prescribe a specific
confidence level, but should instead
continue to give each DCO the
discretion to determine the appropriate
confidence levels. CME and Nadex
noted that one or more of the following
factors could be considered by a DCO in
determining the appropriate confidence
levels: the particular characteristics of
the products and portfolios it clears, the
depth of the underlying markets, the
existence of multiple venues trading
similar products on which a defaulting
clearing member’s portfolio could be
liquidated or hedged, the duration of the
products, the size of the DCO and its
systemic importance, its customer base,
or its other risk management tools.
The Commission does not agree such
discretion is appropriate and has
106 ISDA contended that if there were a
requirement to have individualized client accounts,
the appropriate confidence level should be higher
than 99 percent because the funds available to a
DCO to manage a client account default would be
reduced.
107 MGEX requested that the Commission clarify
that this proposed requirement applies to the net
account of each clearing member and not the
underlying accounts at each clearing member. The
Commission did not intend proposed
§ 39.13(g)(2)(iii)(C), which would refer to ‘‘[e]ach
account held by a clearing member at the DCO, by
customer origin and house origin * * *, ’’ to apply
to individual customer accounts by beneficial
owner. However, the Commission notes that
§ 39.13(g)(2)(iii)(D), as proposed and as adopted
herein, applies the 99 percent confidence level
requirement to ‘‘[e]ach swap portfolio, by beneficial
owner.’’
108 KCC also expressed its belief that ultra-high
confidence level modeling does not protect against
risk as well as direct margin intervention by the
DCO in the case of significant market movements,
such as retaining the right to review recent price
movements to re-establish margins at a higher level
and retaining the right to demand special margin
from certain clearing members. The Commission
believes that a DCO should retain the right to take
such actions in addition to, rather than instead of,
using a 99 percent confidence level, as required by
§ 39.13(g)(2)(iii). For example, § 39.13(h)(6)(ii),
discussed below, requires a DCO to take additional
actions with respect to particular clearing members,
when appropriate, including imposing enhanced
margin requirements.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
determined to establish a minimum
confidence level. The Commission
believes that a minimum confidence
level will provide legal certainty for an
evolving marketplace, will offer a
practical means for assuring market
participants that the thousands of
different products that are going to be
cleared subject to the Commission’s
oversight will have prudent minimum
margin requirements, and will prevent a
potential ‘‘race to the bottom’’ by
competing DCOs. Moreover, given the
large number of products already
cleared, this alleviates the need for the
Commission, with its limited staff
resources, to evaluate immediately the
confidence level requirements for each
product that is cleared.
The Commission is adopting the
proposed minimum 99 percent
confidence level. This is consistent with
proposed international standards.109
Moreover, given the potential costs of
default, the Commission agrees with
those commenters who stated that a 99
percent level is appropriate. An
individual DCO may determine to set a
higher confidence level, in its
discretion.
NASDAQ OMX Commodities Clearing
Company (NOCC) supported an
approach that would allow DCOs to set
margin requirements for new and lowvolume products at a lower coverage
level if the potential losses resulting
from such products are minimal.
According to NOCC, this would allow
DCOs to include more products and
market participants by attracting them at
an early stage without materially
increasing the risk of the DCO.
VMAC suggested that the Commission
add to the requirement that initial
margin levels must be based upon ‘‘an
established confidence level of at least
99 percent,’’ language that states ‘‘or,
subject to specific authorization from
the CFTC, a lower confidence level.’’ In
particular, VMAC commented that
although a DCO should be required to
109 See CPSS–IOSCO Consultative Report,
Principle 6: Margin, Key Consideration 3, at 40. In
addition, on September 15, 2010, the European
Commission (EC) proposed the European Market
Infrastructure Regulation (EMIR), available at https://
ec.europa.eu/internal_market/financial-markets/
docs/derivatives/20100915_proposal_en.pdf, ‘‘to
ensure implementation of the G20 commitments to
clear standardized derivatives [which can be
accessed at https://www.g20.org/Documents/
pittsburgh_summit_leaders_statement_250909.pdf,
and that Central Counterparties (CCPs) comply with
high prudential standards * * *,’’ among other
things, and expressed its intent to be consistent
with the Dodd-Frank Act. (EMIR, at 2–3). The EMIR
requires that margins ‘‘* * * shall be sufficient to
cover losses that result from at least 99 per cent of
the exposures movements over an appropriate time
horizon * * *.’’ (EMIR, Article 39, paragraph 1, at
46).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
demonstrate that the given confidence
level results in an initial margin amount
which is sufficient to allow the DCO to
fully discharge its obligations upon a
clearing member default, a DCO should
not be required to collect margin
substantially in excess of its obligations
to clearing members in a default
scenario.
The Commission is not modifying the
language of § 39.13(g)(2)(iii) in a manner
that would permit DCOs to set margin
requirements at a lower coverage level
for new and low-volume products, as
recommended by NOCC, or provide for
a lower confidence level subject to
specific Commission authorization, as
suggested by VMAC. In the notice of
proposed rulemaking, the Commission
noted that the 2004 CPSS–IOSCO
Recommendations stated that ‘‘[m]argin
requirements for new and low-volume
products might be set at a lower
coverage level [than the major products
cleared by a CCP] if the potential losses
resulting from such products are
minimal.’’ 110 However, the CPSS–
IOSCO Consultative Report, which was
issued subsequent to the Commission’s
proposed rules, does not contain similar
language. The Commission believes that
it is prudent to apply the same standard
to all products.
OCC and NYPC encouraged the
Commission to modify its proposal to
make clear that, when swaps are
commingled in either a Section 4d(a)
futures account or a Section 4d(f)
cleared swaps account, pursuant to
§ 39.15(b)(2),111 the 99 percent test need
not be separately applied to the swaps
positions alone. The Commission agrees
with OCC and NYPC that if swaps and
futures are held in the same customer
account pursuant to rules approved by
the Commission or a 4d order issued by
the Commission, as specified in
§ 39.15(b)(2), the 99 percent test would
apply to the entire commingled account,
and not just the swap positions, under
§ 39.13(g)(2)(iii)(D). Therefore, the
Commission is modifying
§ 39.13(g)(2)(iii)(D) to add ‘‘including
any portfolio containing futures and/or
options and held in a commingled
account pursuant to § 39.15(b)(2) of this
part,’’ after ‘‘[e]ach swap portfolio.’’ The
Commission is making similar
modifications in § 39.13(g)(7) with
respect to back testing requirements,
which are discussed in section IV.D.6.g,
below.
OCC also requested that the
Commission clarify that, in the case of
110 See
2004 CPSS–IOSCO Recommendations at
23.
111 See discussion of § 39.15(b)(2), adopted
herein, in section IV.F.3, below.
PO 00000
Frm 00037
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69369
a margin system that calculates margin
for all positions in an account on the
basis of the net risk of those positions
based upon historical price correlations
rather than on a product or a predefined spread basis, the 99 percent
confidence level would be applied only
on an account-by-account basis, and not
to individual products, product groups,
or specified spread positions. NYPC
made a similar request, stating that its
historical Value at Risk (VaR)-based
margin model calculates initial margin
requirements at the portfolio level,
rather than on a product or spread basis.
The Commission notes that, as
proposed, § 39.13(g)(2)(iii)(A) would
require the application of the 99 percent
confidence level to ‘‘[e]ach product (that
is margined on a product basis)’’ and
§ 39.13(g)(2)(iii)(B) would require the
application of the 99 percent confidence
level to ‘‘[e]ach spread within or
between products for which there is a
defined spread margin rate * * *.’’ The
Commission’s intent was that
§§ 39.13(g)(2)(iii)(A) and (B) would
apply to products and pre-defined
spreads under margin models that
calculate initial margin requirements on
a product and pre-defined spread basis,
respectively. Further, with respect to
margin models that do not calculate
margin on a product or pre-defined
spread basis, the 99 percent requirement
would apply with respect to each
account held by a clearing member at
the DCO by house origin and by each
customer origin, and to each swap
portfolio, by beneficial owner, pursuant
to §§ 39.13(g)(2)(iii)(C) and (D),
respectively.112
In order to clarify the Commission’s
intent, the Commission is adopting
§ 39.13(g)(2)(iii)(A) to read as follows:
‘‘[e]ach product for which the
derivatives clearing organization uses a
product-based margin methodology,’’
while striking ‘‘(that is margined on a
product basis).’’ In addition, the
Commission is adopting
§ 39.13(g)(2)(iii)(B) to read as follows:
‘‘[e]ach spread within or between
products for which there is a defined
spread margin rate,’’ while striking ‘‘as
described in paragraph (g)(4) of this
section.’’
LCH commented that the
Commission’s approach to setting
margin based on products and spreads,
while appropriate for futures, is not
112 For purposes of clarification, certain
references to customer origin in §§ 39.13 and 39.19
have been replaced with references to ‘‘each
customer origin’’ to clarify the distinction between
customer positions in futures and options
segregated pursuant to Section 4d(a) of the CEA,
and customer positions in swaps segregated
pursuant to Section 4d(f) of the CEA.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69370
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
suitable or sufficient for swaps. LCH
proposed that the key requirement for
swaps should be for the DCO to ensure
that it has enough margin and guarantee
funds to cover its exposures, and for the
DCO to prove this on an individual
client and clearing member basis. The
Commission did not intend to suggest
that swaps should be margined pursuant
to a product-based margin methodology,
nor that they should be subject to
defined spread margin rates. The
Commission recognizes that swaps are
often margined on a portfolio basis and
specifically addressed swap portfolios
in § 39.13(g)(2)(iii)(D). The Commission
would also like to clarify that a 99
percent confidence level, as applied to
swap portfolios, means that each
portfolio is covered 99 percent of the
time, and not that a collection of
portfolios is covered 99 percent of the
time on an aggregate basis.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.13(g)(2)(iii) with the modifications
described above.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
(4) Appropriate Historic Time Period—
§ 39.13(g)(2)(iv)
Proposed § 39.13(g)(2)(iv) would
require each DCO to determine the
appropriate historic time period of data
that it would use for establishing the 99
percent confidence level based on the
characteristics, including volatility
patterns, as applicable, of each product,
spread, account, or portfolio.
LCH recommended that the
Commission define the ‘‘historic time
period’’ as a minimum of one calendar
year in order to provide for adequate
historical observations. The
Commission believes that a DCO should
be permitted to exercise its discretion
with respect to the appropriate time
periods that should be used, based on
the characteristics, including volatility
patterns, as applicable, of the relevant
products, spreads, accounts, or
portfolios. The Commission also notes
that proposed international standards
do not specify a historic time period
that would be appropriate in all
circumstances, recognizing that either a
shorter or a longer historic time period
may be appropriate based on the
volatility patterns of a particular
product.113 The Commission expects
that DCOs would include periods of
significant financial stress. Therefore,
the Commission is adopting
§ 39.13(g)(2)(iv) as proposed.
113 See CPSS–IOSCO Consultative Report,
Principle 6: Margin, Explanatory Note 3.6.7, at 43.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
d. Independent Validation—
§ 39.13(g)(3)
Proposed § 39.13(g)(3) would require
that a DCO’s systems for generating
initial margin requirements, including
the DCO’s theoretical models, must be
reviewed and validated by a qualified
and independent party, on a regular
basis. The Commission invited
comment regarding whether a qualified
and independent party must be a third
party or whether there may be
circumstances under which an
employee of a DCO could be considered
to be independent.
In the notice of proposed rulemaking,
the Commission explained that a
validation should include a
comprehensive analysis to ensure that
such systems and models achieve their
intended goals. The Commission also
noted that, although the proposed
regulation did not define the meaning of
‘‘regular basis,’’ the Commission would
expect that, at a minimum, a DCO
would obtain such an independent
validation prior to implementation of a
new margin model and when making
any significant change to a model that
was in use by the DCO.114 The
Commission further stated that
significant changes would be those that
could materially affect the nature or
level of risks to which a DCO would be
exposed, and that the Commission
would expect a DCO to obtain an
independent validation prior to any
significant change that would relax risk
management standards. However, the
Commission noted that if a DCO needed
to adopt a significant change in an
expedited manner to enhance risk
protections, the Commission would
expect the DCO to obtain an
independent validation promptly after
the change was made.
CME, OCC, MGEX, and KCC all
expressed the view that an employee of
a DCO could be independent in
appropriate circumstances. CME
commented that permitting employees
of a DCO to conduct the required
reviews would be consistent with
proposed § 39.18(j)(2), which would
allow employees of a DCO to conduct
the required testing of a DCO’s business
continuity and disaster recovery
systems, provided that such employees
are not the persons responsible for
developing or operating the systems
114 The Commission also notes that the CPSS–
IOSCO Consultative Report recommends that a
CCP’s initial margin models should be
independently validated at least on a yearly basis.
CPSS–IOSCO Consultative Report, Principle 6:
Margin, Explanatory Note 3.6.8, at 43. The
Commission is not requiring an annual validation
at this time, although it may revisit this issue in the
future.
PO 00000
Frm 00038
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
being tested.115 OCC and MGEX took
the position that employees of a DCO
could be independent as long as they
are not, or have not been, involved in
designing the models, and OCC further
stated that internal personnel must not
otherwise be biased due to their
involvement in implementation of the
models.116 However, FIA argued that
margin models should be required to be
validated by an independent third party
with expertise in risk and the product
being cleared.
The Commission recognizes that a
third party could be more critical of a
DCO’s margin model than an employee
of a DCO, even if that employee is
‘‘qualified and independent.’’ However,
the Commission also believes that a
third party could be less critical if, for
example, it seeks to provide services to
the DCO or the industry in the future.
The Commission agrees with CME,
OCC, MGEX, and KCC that an employee
of a DCO could be a ‘‘qualified and
independent party,’’ and thus could
review and validate the DCO’s systems
for generating initial margin
requirements, under appropriate
circumstances. It would probably be
more costly for a DCO to use a third
party for this purpose rather than an
employee.
On balance, the Commission believes
that it may be appropriate for a DCO to
have an employee review and validate
its margin systems. Therefore, the
Commission is adopting § 39.13(g)(3)
with the addition of a sentence stating
that ‘‘[s]uch qualified and independent
parties may be independent contractors
or employees of the derivatives clearing
organization, but shall not be persons
responsible for development or
operation of the systems and models
being tested.’’ This is consistent with
the language contained in § 39.18(j)(2),
as adopted herein, as well as the
115 Section 39.18(j)(2), as proposed, and as
adopted herein, states that testing shall be
conducted by qualified, independent professionals.
Such qualified independent professionals may be
independent contractors or employees of the
derivatives clearing organization, but shall not be
persons responsible for development or operation of
the systems or capabilities being tested.
116 In particular, OCC noted that the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency, the Department of the
Treasury, the Federal Reserve System and the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation recently
proposed revisions to their risk-based capital
guidelines, which would require that, with respect
to the validation of banks’ internal risk models,
‘‘[t]he review personnel [would] not necessarily
have to be external to the bank in order to achieve
the required independence’’ but that ‘‘[a] bank
should ensure that individuals who perform the
review are not biased in their assessment due to
their involvement in the development,
implementation, or operation of the models.’’ See
76 FR 1890, at 1897 (Jan. 11, 2011) (Risk-Based
Capital Guidelines: Market Risk).
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
proposed approach of other financial
regulators.117 The Commission also
notes that the reference to independent
contractors as well as employees in the
added language will also prohibit a DCO
from using a particular third party to
conduct the validation if that third party
was or is responsible for development or
operation of the relevant systems and
models.
KCC requested that the Commission
clarify that the CRO or other comparable
personnel with responsibility for overall
risk management at the DCO would
meet the requirements of a ‘‘qualified
and independent party.’’ The
Commission does not believe that a
DCO’s CRO or personnel responsible for
overall risk management would
categorically qualify as an ‘‘independent
party.’’ This determination would need
to be made on a case-by-case basis
depending on whether the CRO or other
similar person was or is responsible for
development or operation of the systems
and models being tested.
MGEX requested that the Commission
clarify whether the requirement for
independent validation would apply to
the primary risk-based portfolio system
such as SPAN,118 or each DCO’s
analysis program for determining
margins, noting its belief that requiring
independent tests on the latter would be
excessive. It is not clear what MGEX
means by ‘‘each DCO’s analysis program
for determining margins.’’ However,
§ 39.13(g)(3) requires independent
validation with respect to a DCO’s
underlying model, e.g., SPAN or OCC’s
STANS model, as well as the
methodology used to compute the
inputs to any such model. On the other
hand, a DCO would not be required to
obtain an independent validation of a
change in SPAN parameters as
described by CME.119
OCC commented that, as described in
the notice of proposed rulemaking, the
‘‘could materially affect’’ standard is
deficient in two respects in that: (1) It
fails to include any reference to the
likelihood that a change would actually
materially affect the nature or level of
risk, and (2) it omits any reference to the
direction of the change in level of risk.
OCC contended that a more appropriate
standard would be to provide that
significant changes are those that ‘‘are
reasonably likely to materially change
117 Id.
118 For a description of SPAN, see CME’s Web
site, at https://www.cmegroup.com/clearing/riskmanagement/span-overview.html#works.
119 See id. for a description of SPAN parameters.
Therefore, § 39.13(g)(1), which requires that a DCO
review its margin models and parameters, on a
regular basis, requires a broader review than would
be met by compliance with § 39.13(g)(3).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
the nature or increase the level of risks
to which the DCO would be exposed.’’
In response to this comment, the
Commission is modifying the standard
to provide that significant changes are
those for which there is a reasonable
possibility that they would materially
affect the nature or level of risks to
which a DCO would be exposed. While
this standard identifies the likelihood
that a change would materially affect
the nature or level of such risks, the
Commission believes that it is more
appropriate than identifying significant
changes as only those that are
‘‘reasonably likely to materially change’’
the nature or level of such risks.
The Commission does not believe that
significant changes should be limited to
those that are likely to increase the level
of risks. As described in the notice of
proposed rulemaking, the Commission
would expect a DCO to obtain an
independent validation prior to any
significant change that would relax risk
management standards, but the
Commission would permit a DCO to
obtain an independent validation
promptly after a significant change that
would enhance risk protections, in
appropriate circumstances. A DCO
should obtain such a validation even if
the change were designed to enhance
risk protections, in order to ensure that
the change would be effective in
achieving its objective.
OCC also requested that the
Commission clarify that the addition of
a new product or new underlying
interest would not inherently be
deemed to trigger the independent
evaluation requirement. The
Commission believes that whether the
addition of a new product or a new
underlying interest would trigger the
independent validation requirement
would need to be determined on a caseby-case basis, depending on whether
there is a reasonable possibility that
such addition will materially change the
nature or level of risks to which the
DCO would be exposed. One example
would be if the addition necessitates a
significant change to the margin model
as it applies to the new product or new
underlying interest. Thus, the addition
of a futures contract based on a new
broad-based securities index where the
DCO already clears futures contracts
based on broad-based securities indexes
might not require a significant change to
the applicable margin model. However,
the addition of a new category of swaps,
even if the DCO already clears swaps,
might require a significantly different
margin model. Another example might
be if a swap cleared by a DCO became
subject to a clearing mandate and the
PO 00000
Frm 00039
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69371
risk profile changed because of changes
in volume and open interest.
e. Spread and Portfolio Margins—
§ 39.13(g)(4)(i)
Proposed § 39.13(g)(4)(i) would
permit a DCO to allow reductions in
initial margin requirements for related
positions (spread margins), if the price
risks with respect to such positions
were significantly and reliably
correlated. Under the proposed
regulation, the price risks of different
positions would only be considered to
be reliably correlated if there were a
theoretical basis for the correlation in
addition to an exhibited statistical
correlation. Proposed § 39.13(g)(4)(i)
would include a non-exclusive list of
possible theoretical bases, including the
following: (A) The products on which
the positions are based are complements
of, or substitutes for, each other; (B) one
product is a significant input into the
other product(s); (C) the products share
a significant common input; or (D) the
prices of the products are influenced by
common external factors. The
Commission requested comment
regarding the appropriateness of
requiring a theoretical basis for the
correlation between related positions
before reductions in initial margin
requirements would be permitted. In
addition, proposed § 39.13(g)(4)(ii)
would require a DCO to regularly review
its spread margins and the correlations
on which they are based.120
KCC and OCC addressed the proposed
requirement that the price risks of
related positions would only be
considered to be reliably correlated, and
thus be eligible for initial margin
reductions, if there were a theoretical
basis for the correlation in addition to
120 In addition to the other comments discussed
herein, Alice Corporation noted that it supported
the cautious approach taken by the Commission
and that offsets across products with different
maturities and risk profiles should be avoided
where possible, and ISDA stated that spread
margins should only permitted when a DCO can
demonstrate a strong correlation in stressed market
conditions and agrees to periodic public disclosure
of its methodology and results. With respect to
ISDA’s comment, the Commission notes that
§ 39.13(g)(2)(iii), discussed in section IV.D.6.c.(3),
above, requires a DCO to ensure that the actual
coverage of its initial margin requirements, along
with projected measures of the performance of its
margin models, must meet an established
confidence level of at least 99 percent, based on
data from an appropriate historic time period, for,
among other things, spreads within or between
products for which there is a defined spread margin
rate, for each account held by a clearing member
at the DCO, by customer and house origin, and for
each swap portfolio, by beneficial owner, and
§ 39.13(g)(7), discussed in section IV.D.6.g, below,
imposes related back testing requirements. In
addition, § 39.21(c)(3), discussed in section IV.L,
below, requires a DCO to publicly disclose its
margin methodology.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69372
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
an exhibited statistical correlation. KCC
contended that the proposed
requirement would be difficult for the
Commission to implement and
unnecessary because DCOs have no
incentive to offer margin reductions in
the absence of high correlation between
positions. KCC further noted that the
proposal does not detail what level of
observed statistical correlation is
required, and the proposed requirement
to articulate a theoretical basis is vague.
OCC also questioned the
appropriateness of the requirement that
there must be a theoretical basis for the
correlation, noting that a theoretical
basis for correlation is, by definition,
theoretical and may not be directly
observable or verifiable except through
the correlation. OCC stated that it is
difficult to imagine a correlation for
which no theoretical basis can be
constructed, and in many if not most
cases, the theoretical basis for any
significant correlation is obvious.
The Commission continues to believe
that reductions in initial margin
requirements should only be allowed if
a DCO is able to articulate a reasonable
theoretical explanation for an observed
statistical correlation to ensure that the
positions are reliably correlated. The
Commission notes that it is a matter of
basic statistics that correlation does not
equal causation. The world is replete
with examples of events or data that are
highly correlated at various points in
time but for which there is no
theoretical relationship. If there is no
theoretical relationship, a DCO has no
basis to believe that a statistical
relationship—no matter how strong—is
stable, and a margin based on such a
relationship may be insufficient to
capture price variation.
Several commenters addressed the
appropriateness of applying proposed
§ 39.13(g)(4) to portfolio-based margin
systems. LCH commented that the
spread margin measure which the
Commission proposed is unsuited and
inappropriate for swaps clearing and
that the Portfolio Approach to Interest
Rate Scenarios (PAIRS), the historical
simulation method that LCH uses, is
more suitable to non-standardized
swaps. Therefore, LCH urged the
Commission to amend proposed
§ 39.13(g)(4) to afford recognition to this
technique. OCC requested that the
Commission acknowledge that its
STANS methodology meets the
requirements of proposed § 39.13(g)(4),
noting that STANS currently relies on
over 20 million separate correlations.
OCC stated that it would be impractical
to attempt to document or even
articulate the ‘‘theoretical basis’’ for all
of these correlations even though it
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
believes that they would be supportable
on a theoretical level, and further
believes that its systems for determining
and reviewing the validity of the
correlations it uses are sufficient to
ensure that OCC does not allow
unjustified margin offsets. NYPC
requested that the Commission clarify
that § 39.13(g)(4) would not be
applicable to margin models that
calculate initial margin requirements at
the account level, including NYPC’s
historical VaR-based margin model.
The Commission intends § 39.13(g)(4)
to apply to portfolio-based margin
models as well as product-based margin
models. For some products, DCOs
establish defined spread margin rates,
pursuant to a product-based margin
methodology. Typically, this occurs
where there is a bilateral correlation,
e.g., a March-June calendar spread or a
correlation between two related
products.121 For other products, there
may be multilateral correlations for
which margin is calculated on a
portfolio basis, pursuant to a portfoliobased margin methodology. In the latter
instance, there is not a defined margin
amount or margin reduction for a
defined portfolio that remains the same
over time. Instead, margin is
recalculated each day for each
individual portfolio.
Therefore, the Commission is
adopting § 39.13(g)(4), with several
modifications, in order to clarify that
margin reductions calculated on a
portfolio basis are also permissible if
they meet the standards of the
regulation. First, the Commission is
changing the heading of the provision
from ‘‘[s]pread margins’’ to ‘‘[s]pread
and portfolio margins.’’ The
Commission is also removing the
parenthetical ‘‘(spread margins)’’ after
the clause in § 39.13(g)(4)(i) that states
‘‘[a] derivatives clearing organization
may allow reductions in initial margin
requirements for related positions.’’
Finally, the Commission is changing the
reference to ‘‘spread margins’’ in
§ 39.13(g)(4)(ii) to ‘‘margin reductions.’’
These changes are designed to make it
clear that § 39.13(g)(4) applies to
reductions in initial margin
requirements for related positions,
whether a DCO uses a product-based
margin model or a portfolio-based
margin model.
Better Markets and Mr. Greenberger
commented that § 39.13(g)(4) must
require that the relationship between
positions be calculated using the same
121 A defined spread margin rate may also apply
to three related products, e.g., the Chicago Board of
Trade’s soybean crush spread with respect to
soybeans, soybean oil and soybean meal.
PO 00000
Frm 00040
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
standards (with respect to volatility and
liquidity requirements) that are applied
to the calculation of initial margin for
the individual positions. The
Commission agrees with Better Markets
and Mr. Greenberger and, as discussed
above, spread and portfolio margins
would also be subject to a 99 percent
coverage standard.
f. Price Data—§ 39.13(g)(5)
Proposed § 39.13(g)(5) would require
a DCO to have a reliable source of
timely price data to measure its credit
exposure accurately, and to have written
procedures and sound valuation models
for addressing circumstances where
pricing data is not readily available or
reliable.
Interactive Data Corporation
expressed its belief that the concept of
‘‘sound valuation models’’ should be
expanded further with additional
prescriptive guidance in four key
dimensions, including: (1) Leveraging
greater trade transparency; (2) using
multiple sources; (3) mitigating conflicts
of interest; and (4) sourcing of
independent price data.
The Commission does not believe that
it is necessary to be more specific or
prescriptive with respect to this
requirement, and is adopting
§ 39.13(g)(5) as proposed. As the
Commission noted in the notice of
proposed rulemaking, the nature of the
applicable valuation models would
necessarily depend on the particular
products and the available sources of
any relevant pricing data.
g. Daily Review and Back Tests—
§§ 39.13(g)(6) and (g)(7)
Proposed § 39.13(g)(6) would require
a DCO to determine the adequacy of its
initial margin requirements for each
product, on a daily basis, with respect
to those products that are margined on
a product basis.
Proposed § 39.13(g)(7) would require
a DCO to conduct certain back tests. The
Commission has defined ‘‘back test’’ in
§ 39.2, adopted herein, as ‘‘a test that
compares a derivatives clearing
organization’s initial margin
requirements with historical price
changes to determine the extent of
actual margin coverage.’’
For purposes of proposed
§ 39.13(g)(7)(i) and (ii), the introductory
paragraph of proposed § 39.13(g)(7)
would require that, in conducting back
tests, a DCO use historical price change
data based on a time period that is
equivalent in length to the historic time
period used by the applicable margin
model for establishing the minimum 99
percent confidence level or a longer
time period. The applicable time period
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
was separately specified for the back
tests required by proposed
§ 39.13(g)(7)(iii), as discussed below.
Proposed § 39.13(g)(7)(i) would
require a DCO, on a daily basis, to
conduct back tests with respect to
products that are experiencing
significant market volatility.
Specifically, a DCO would be required
to test the adequacy of its initial margin
requirements and its spread margin
requirements for such products that are
margined on a product basis.
Proposed § 39.13(g)(7)(ii) would
require a DCO, on at least a monthly
basis, to conduct back tests to test the
adequacy of its initial margin
requirements and spread margin
requirements for each product that is
margined on a product basis. The
Commission requested comment
regarding whether initial margin
requirements for all products should be
subject to back tests on a monthly basis
or whether some other time period, such
as quarterly, would be sufficient to meet
prudent risk management standards.
Proposed § 39.13(g)(7)(iii) would
require a DCO, on at least a monthly
basis, to conduct back tests to test the
adequacy of its initial margin
requirements for each clearing member’s
accounts, by customer origin and house
origin, and each swap portfolio, by
beneficial owner, over at least the
previous 30 days. In the notice of
proposed rulemaking, the Commission
noted that, since the composition of
such accounts and swap portfolios may
change on a daily basis, it was
anticipated that back tests with respect
to such accounts and portfolios would
involve a review of the initial margin
requirements for each account and
portfolio as it existed on each day
during the 30-day period. The
Commission also requested comment
regarding whether initial margin
requirements for all clearing members’
accounts, by origin, and swap portfolios,
by beneficial owner, should be subject
to back tests on a monthly basis or
whether some other time period, such as
quarterly (based on the previous
quarter’s historical data), would be
sufficient to meet prudent risk
management standards.
Several commenters addressed the
appropriate frequency of back tests and/
or the appropriate historic time period
for the analysis of price change data.
FIA commented that initial margin
requirements should be back tested
monthly. MGEX stated that it was not
opposed to a monthly back testing
requirement with respect to proposed
§ 39.13(g)(7)(iii) based on its
understanding that the Commission
intended that the DCO must look at its
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
clearing member’s net account and not
each underlying customer account with
the exception of swaps.122
LCH took the position that back tests
should be conducted at least on a daily
basis for all products cleared by a DCO.
However, LCH argued that such back
tests should be conducted at the
portfolio level because margining
techniques appropriate for swaps, such
as LCH’s PAIRS methodology, do not
allow for the disaggregation of initial
margin and spread margin requirements
at a product level. LCH also commented
that, for back tests to be statistically
meaningful, the applicable historic time
period should be a minimum of one
calendar year.
KCC stated that it may be appropriate
for the Commission to further define
‘‘significant market volatility,’’ for
purposes of proposed § 39.13(g)(7)(i),123
but that, more generally, any backtesting requirements should be based on
a discretionary, risk-based
determination by the DCO. In addition,
KCC expressed its belief that the back
testing period should be subject to the
discretion of the DCO in light of thencurrent market conditions, i.e.,
imposing a specific back-testing period
may inappropriately reflect an
exaggerated or understated level of
market volatility.
NOCC took the position that products,
customers or spread credits should
reach a specified volume or risk
exposure level before being required to
be back tested with the proposed
frequencies so long as the DCO can
demonstrate that it is meeting the core
principle objectives underlying
proposed § 39.13(f).
NYPC requested that the Commission
clarify that proposed §§ 39.13(g)(6) and
(g)(7)(i)–(ii) would not be applicable to
margin models that calculate initial
margin requirements at the account
level, including NYPC’s historical VaRbased margin model. OCC also stated its
belief that it would not be subject to the
requirement for daily review in
proposed § 39.13(g)(7)(i), as it does not
margin on a product basis, but noted
that it does conduct daily back testing
on all accounts, i.e., on a portfolio basis.
122 MGEX correctly understands that the
Commission’s reference to ‘‘each account held by a
clearing member at the DCO, by origin, house and
customer’’ in proposed § 39.13(g)(7)(iii) was not
intended to apply to individual accounts by
beneficial owner, although proposed
§ 39.13(g)(7)(iii) would require monthly back tests
with respect to initial margin requirements for each
swap portfolio, by beneficial owner.
123 The Commission believes that each DCO
should determine what ‘‘significant volatility’’
means based upon the volatility patterns of each
individual product or swap portfolio that it clears.
PO 00000
Frm 00041
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69373
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.13(g)(6), eliminating the language
stating ‘‘for each product (that is
margined on a product basis),’’ in order
to correct a potential inconsistency
between the text of the rule and the
notice of proposed rulemaking. In the
notice of proposed rulemaking, the
Commission stated that ‘‘[d]aily review
and periodic back testing are essential to
enable a DCO to provide adequate
coverage of the DCO’s risk exposures to
its clearing members.’’ As proposed,
§ 39.13(g)(6) would only require a DCO
to determine the adequacy of its initial
margin requirements, on a daily basis,
for products that were margined on a
product basis. The adequacy of a DCO’s
initial margin requirements for futures
and options on futures products
margined on a portfolio basis, and for
swap portfolios, would not have been
subject to such daily review. The
Commission believes that such a result
is untenable, as one of the most
rudimentary steps in risk management
is to conduct daily review of margin
coverage, i.e., to determine whether any
margin breaches have occurred.
Moreover, the Commission believes that
the change will not impose any burden
because it believes that all DCOs
currently conduct some form of daily
review of the adequacy of their initial
margin requirements, whether they use
a product-based or a portfolio-based
margin methodology.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.13(g)(7)(i) with modifications that
require a DCO to conduct back tests, on
a daily basis, to test the adequacy of its
initial margin requirements with respect
to products or swap portfolios that are
experiencing significant market
volatility: (a) For that product if the
DCO uses a product-based margin
methodology; (b) for each spread
involving that product if there is a
defined spread margin rate; (c) for each
account held by a clearing member at
the DCO that contains a significant
position 124 in that product, by house
origin and by each customer origin; and
(d) for each such swap portfolio,
including any portfolio containing
futures and/or options and held in a
commingled account pursuant to
§ 39.15(b)(2),125 by beneficial owner.
Similarly, the Commission is adopting
§ 39.13(g)(7)(ii) with modifications that
124 The Commission has not defined a
‘‘significant position,’’ leaving that determination to
the discretion of each DCO, as the size of a position
that would be a ‘‘significant position’’ may vary
depending on the nature of the particular product
or the composition of the particular account.
125 See discussion of the addition of the same
language to § 39.13(g)(2)(iii)(D), in section
IV.D.6.c.(3), above.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69374
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
require a DCO to conduct back tests, on
at least a monthly basis: (a) For each
product for which the DCO uses a
product-based margin methodology; (b)
for each spread for which there is a
defined spread margin rate; (c) for each
account held by a clearing member at
the DCO, by house origin and by each
customer origin; and (d) for each swap
portfolio, including any portfolio
containing futures and/or options and
held in a commingled account pursuant
to § 39.15(b)(2),126 by beneficial owner.
As adopted, § 39.13(g)(7) no longer
contains a paragraph (iii) as paragraph
(ii) now describes all monthly back
testing requirements.
As originally proposed, § 39.13(g)(7)
would only require daily back testing
for products that were experiencing
significant market volatility if the DCO
used a product-based margin
methodology, and for spreads involving
that product if there was a defined
spread margin rate. It would not require
daily back testing for each account, by
customer origin and house origin, that
contained a significant position in that
product, whether the DCO used a
product-based or a portfolio-based
margin methodology, or for each swap
portfolio that was experiencing
significant market volatility. As with
respect to § 39.13(g)(6), there was a
potential inconsistency in the treatment
of different positions. There is no
reasonable basis to require daily back
tests solely with respect to products that
are experiencing significant market
volatility for which the DCO uses a
product-based margin methodology and
spreads involving such products if there
is a defined spread margin rate, and not
to require daily back tests with respect
to accounts, by customer origin and
house origin, which contain significant
positions in those products simply
because the DCO uses a portfolio-based
margin methodology. Similarly, there is
no justification for requiring daily back
tests with respect to products that are
experiencing significant market
volatility and not requiring daily back
tests with respect to swap portfolios that
are experiencing significant market
volatility. A DCO should be required to
conduct daily back tests when the
instruments that it clears are subject to
significant market volatility, whether
the DCO bases its initial margin
requirements on a product-based or a
portfolio-based margin methodology,
and whether those instruments are
futures, options on futures, or swaps.
Although OCC stated that it currently
conducts daily back tests on all
accounts on a portfolio basis, and LCH
126 Id.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
expressed its view that back tests should
be conducted on a daily basis for all
products and swap portfolios cleared by
a DCO, the Commission has determined
to permit a DCO to conduct back tests
on at least a monthly basis when
significant market volatility is not
present. FIA and MGEX supported
monthly back testing. Apart from KCC’s
contention that back testing should be
subject to the discretion of the DCO, and
NOCC’s suggestion that DCOs should be
able to obtain an exemption from the
proposed frequencies for products,
customers and spread credits that have
not reached a specified volume or risk
exposure level,127 none of the
commenters indicated that back tests
should be conducted less frequently
than monthly. Moreover, a particular
DCO would be able to exercise its
discretion to conduct back tests on a
more frequent basis than that required
by the Commission’s regulation.
The Commission has not proposed
and is not adopting LCH’s suggestion
that the applicable historic time period
for the price change data used for back
testing should be a minimum of one
calendar year. However, the
Commission is removing the proposed
language from the introductory
paragraph of § 39.13(g)(7) regarding the
time periods for historical price changes
that must be used in the required back
tests and is revising the introductory
paragraph to require a DCO to use an
appropriate time period but not less
than the previous 30 days for all of the
back tests required by §§ 39.13(g)(7)(i)
and (ii).
h. Customer Margin
(1) Gross Margin for Customer Accounts
—§ 39.13(g)(8)(i)
Proposed § 39.13(g)(8)(i) would
require a DCO to collect initial margin
on a gross basis for each clearing
member’s customer account equal to the
sum of the initial margin amounts that
would be required by the DCO for each
individual customer within that account
if each individual customer were a
clearing member and would prohibit a
DCO from netting positions of different
customers against one another. The
proposed regulation would permit a
DCO to collect initial margin for its
clearing members’ house accounts on a
net basis.
Better Markets and LCH (with a
suggested exception described below)
127 The Commission does not believe that it is
appropriate to adopt a regulation establishing an
exemption process with respect to back testing
requirements based on volume or risk exposure or
otherwise.
PO 00000
Frm 00042
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
supported proposed § 39.13(g)(8)(i).128
CME, KCC, OCC, ICE, NYPC, FIA, and
the Commodity Markets Council (CMC)
argued against the adoption of proposed
§ 39.13(g)(8)(i).
KCC and ICE pointed out that DCOs
that perform net margining have not had
any clearing member defaults or
customer losses, including during the
2008 financial crisis.
Various commenters opposed the
proposal based on the potential extent
and costs of operational and technology
changes that would need to be made by
clearing members and DCOs: (1) To
convert net margining systems to gross
margining systems, and (2) to permit
clearing members to provide individual
customer position information to DCOs,
and DCOs to receive individual
customer position information and
calculate the margin required for each
individual customer account (CME,
KCC, ICE, NYPC, and CMC).
OCC stated that the only means by
which it could calculate margin
requirements on a customer-bycustomer basis within a clearing
member’s omnibus futures customers’
account would be to create subaccounts
for each customer. CME, NYPC, KCC,
and FIA commented that DCOs do not
currently receive position-level
information for each individual
customer of their clearing members.
CME and FIA expressed concern about
the costs associated with clearing
members having to provide individual
customer position information, and
CME indicated that DCOs would incur
costs in processing the information
received from clearing members in order
to calculate margin requirements on
individual customer accounts on a daily
basis. NYPC also stated that the
adoption of proposed § 39.13(g)(8)(i)
would require it to make significant
changes to its systems.129
KCC stated that managing gross
customer margin at the DCO level
128 LCH also expressed its belief that a DCO
should also collect margin from all affiliated legal
entities within a house account on a gross basis
unless there is legal certainty of the DCO’s right to
offset risks across the affiliates in the event of the
default of the group or one or more of its affiliated
legal entities. The Commission has not proposed
and is not adopting such a requirement. However,
although § 39.13(g)(8)(i) permits a DCO to collect
initial margin for its clearing members’ house
accounts on a net basis, it does not require it to do
so, and a DCO could determine to collect house
margin in the manner suggested by LCH.
129 See further discussion of these costs in section
VII, below. NYPC also commented that given the
necessary technology builds, it would need more
than three years to come into compliance with
proposed §§ 39.13(g)(8)(i) and 39.13(h)(2). The
Commission believes that the modifications to
§ 39.13(g)(8)(i), discussed in this section, would
minimize any technology changes that would be
necessary in order to comply with § 39.13(g)(8)(i).
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
would require a DCO to assume the role
of a back-office account management
service, requiring continuous updates
from each clearing member regarding
customer positions. KCC further noted
that DCOs would be required to adjust
the timing deadlines for margin
payments, DCOs’ ability to track margin
requirements closely with market
movements would be decreased, and
DCOs may face difficulty in relaying
variation margin payment information
to their settlement banks quickly.
ICE noted that converting to a gross
margining system would be a major
operational change for clearing firms
and DCOs that use net margining.
However, ICE also stated that most
DCOs currently use gross margining,
including ICE Trust (now ICE Clear
Credit LLC) and ICE Clear U.S.,
although ICE Clear Europe uses net
margining. In particular, ICE stated that
gross margining would require
reengineering of firms’ end-of-day
processing. According to ICE, changes
would need to be made to such DCOs’
margining technology, data submission/
input mechanism and margin reporting
specifications, and clearing firms or
their service providers would need to
implement software updates. ICE noted
that changes to position reporting,
reconciliation and margining
methodology are challenging technology
changes for clearing members and their
third-party software vendors and
typically take at least six to nine months
to complete. However, ICE indicated
that an implementation period of at
least 12 months would allow DCOs that
currently use net margining, and their
clearing members, to adequately test
and implement the systems necessary
for gross margining.
CME, KCC, and CMC all argued that
requiring clearing members to report
gross customer positions by beneficial
owner to DCOs is not necessary in order
to accomplish reasonable and adequate
‘‘modified’’ gross margining.
Specifically, CME and KCC urged the
Commission to permit a version of gross
margining of customer accounts that
would only require clearing members to
report gross customer positions to DCOs
(not by beneficial owner) and that
would allow clearing firms to submit
positions as spreadable for those
accounts that have recognized calendar
spreads or spreads between correlated
products. However, CME further
represented that ‘‘[t]his version of gross
margining will sometimes lead to less
than aggregate gross margins as a result
of optimal spreading that occasionally
occurs between accounts. Nevertheless,
it approximates aggregate gross margins
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
without imposing significant costs on
the industry.’’
In light of the various concerns raised
by CME, KCC, ICE, NYPC, and CMC
regarding the operational and
technology changes that would be
needed and related costs of requiring a
DCO to obtain individual customer
position information from its clearing
members and to use such information to
calculate the margin requirements for
each individual customer, the
Commission is modifying
§ 39.13(g)(8)(i). In particular, the
Commission is adding a provision,
which states that ‘‘[f]or purposes of
calculating the gross initial margin
requirement for each clearing member’s
customer account(s), to the extent not
inconsistent with other Commission
regulations, a derivatives clearing
organization may require its clearing
members to report the gross positions of
each individual customer to the
derivatives clearing organization, or it
may permit each clearing member to
report the sum of the gross positions of
its customers to the derivatives clearing
organization.’’ 130
Thus, the Commission is providing a
DCO with the discretion to either
calculate customer gross margin
requirements based on individual
customer position information that it
obtains from its clearing members or
based on the sum of the gross positions
of all of a clearing member’s customers
that the clearing member provides to the
DCO, without forwarding individual
customer position information to the
DCO. In either case, the customer gross
margin requirement determined by a
DCO must equal ‘‘the sum of the initial
margin amounts that would be required
by the derivatives clearing organization
for each individual customer within that
account if each individual customer
130 The Commission is including the phrase ‘‘to
the extent not inconsistent with other Commission
regulations’’ because, in a separate rulemaking, the
Commission has proposed regulations that would
require FCM clearing members to provide daily
information identifying the positions of individual
cleared swaps customers to the relevant DCO and
that would require such DCOs to calculate the
amount of collateral required for each cleared
swaps customer of such clearing members on a
daily basis. If these regulations are adopted, they
will supersede the provisions of § 39.13(g)(8)(i) to
the extent that they are inconsistent with such
provisions, with respect to cleared swaps. See 76
FR 33818 (June 9, 2011) (Protection of Cleared
Swaps Customer Contracts and Collateral;
Conforming Amendments to the Commodity Broker
Bankruptcy Provisions).
The Commission is also making a conforming
amendment by inserting ‘‘and may not permit its
clearing members to’’ in the sentence that now
reads as follows (added text in italics): ‘‘A
derivatives clearing organization may not, and may
not permit its clearing members to, net positions of
different customers against one another.’’.
PO 00000
Frm 00043
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69375
were a clearing member.’’ The customer
gross margin collected by a DCO may
not be subject to ‘‘spreading that
occasionally occurs between accounts’’
that may lead to ‘‘less than aggregate
gross margins,’’ as described by CME.
CME commented that proposed
§ 39.13(g)(8)(i) was unclear regarding
how DCOs would be expected to treat
customer omnibus accounts of nonclearing FCMs and foreign brokers for
which the clearing firm carrying the
account generally does not know the
identities of individual customers
within the omnibus accounts. Under
current industry practice, omnibus
accounts report gross positions to their
clearing members and clearing members
collect margins on a gross basis for
positions held in omnibus accounts.131
The Commission does not intend to
alter this current practice by adopting
§ 39.13(g)(8)(i). Therefore, the
Commission is adding a provision,
which states that ‘‘[f]or purposes of this
paragraph, a derivatives clearing
organization may rely, and may permit
its clearing members to rely, upon the
sum of the gross positions reported to
the clearing members by each domestic
or foreign omnibus account that they
carry, without obtaining information
identifying the positions of each
individual customer underlying such
omnibus accounts.’’
The Commission believes that giving
a DCO the option of permitting its
clearing members to provide the sum of
their customers’ gross positions to a
DCO, without the need to provide
individual customer position
information to the DCO, allows DCOs to
provide their clearing members with a
much less costly alternative to requiring
clearing members to provide individual
customer position information to the
DCO, and requiring the DCO to calculate
the gross margin requirement for each
customer of each clearing member.
The Commission recognizes that
§ 39.13(g)(8)(i), even as modified, will
require DCOs and their clearing
members to incur certain costs.
However, the Commission continues to
believe, as stated in the notice of
proposed rulemaking, that gross
margining of customer accounts will: (a)
More appropriately address the risks
posed to a DCO by its clearing members’
customers than net margining; (b) will
increase the financial resources
available to a DCO in the event of a
131 See, e.g., Margins Handbook, https://
www.nfa.futures.org/NFA-compliance/publicationlibrary/margins-handbook.pdf, at 34; CME Rule
930.J.; ICE Futures U.S. Inc. Rule 5.04; and CBOE
Futures Exchange, LLC Rule 516.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69376
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
customer default; 132 and (c) with
respect to cleared swaps, will support
the requirement in § 39.13(g)(2)(iii) that
a DCO must margin each swap portfolio
at a minimum 99 percent confidence
level.
The Commission believes that the
clearing of swaps will increase the risk
that DCOs face. Gross margining will
maximize the amount of money DCOs
hold. Because a DCO may not have
access to customer initial margin
collected by and held at an FCM if the
DCO collects initial margin on a net
basis, if the FCM defaults, the
Commission believes that holding gross
initial margin at a DCO is the safest
mechanism by which DCOs can protect
themselves from increased risk. If a DCO
is unable to obtain customer margin in
the event of default, there is significant
risk of contagion. Consequently, if more
margin is held at the DCO, the potential
risk that the failure of one clearing
member will propagate throughout the
financial system to other clearing
members and other entities is
decreased.133
CME and KCC commented that
proposed § 39.13(g)(8)(i) would require
clearing members to ‘‘pass-through’’ the
margin deposits that they receive from
their customers to the DCO, thus
requiring clearing members to apply to
their customers the DCO’s standards for
acceptable collateral as well as the
DCO’s concentration limits with respect
to collateral types. CME indicated that
this would add pressure with respect to
the available collateral pool, and argued
that the Commission should not impose
such additional and costly constraints
on market participants in the absence of
significant and demonstrable benefits.
The Commission notes that, although as
132 ICE commented that the Commission’s
rationale for gross margining, i.e., that it would
increase the financial resources available to a DCO
in the event of a customer default, is based upon
the mutualization of customer risk to protect the
DCO. ICE stated its belief that this rationale
conflicts with the reasoning behind the proposal
that DCOs individually segregate cleared swaps
customer funds to protect such customers from
fellow customer risk. The Commission notes,
however, that gross margining is not only consistent
with, but will be instrumental in achieving,
complete legal segregation for cleared swaps
accounts. See 76 FR 33818 (June 9, 2011)
(Protection of Cleared Swaps Customer Contracts
and Collateral; Conforming Amendments to the
Commodity Broker Bankruptcy Provisions).
133 As pointed out in the CPSS–IOSCO
Consultative Report, under certain circumstances
gross margining may also increase the portability of
customer positions in an FCM insolvency. That is,
a gross margining requirement would increase the
likelihood that there will be sufficient collateral on
deposit in support of a customer position to enable
the DCO to transfer it to a solvent FCM. See CPSS–
IOSCO Consultative Report, Principle 14:
Segregation and Portability, Explanatory Notes
3.14.6 and 3.14.8, at 67–68.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
a business matter clearing members may
determine to ‘‘pass-through’’ the margin
deposits that they receive from their
customers to the relevant DCO,
proposed § 39.13(g)(8)(i) does not
require that a clearing member only
accept from its customers those types of
margin assets that are acceptable for the
clearing member to deposit with the
DCO.
KCC requested that the Commission
clarify whether the requirement to
collect gross customer margin imposes
an obligation on the DCO to determine
the defaulting customer accounts in a
customer default situation (which
would be costly and burdensome) and
stated that having the total customer
gross margin available to the DCO in the
event of a customer default is a prudent
risk management technique. The
Commission notes that Commission
rules currently permit a DCO to
commingle the initial margin with
respect to all of a clearing member’s
customers in a single customer origin
account at the DCO and to apply the
entire customer origin account to cover
losses with respect to a customer
default, whether the DCO collects initial
margin on a net basis or on a gross basis.
The Commission does not intend
§ 39.13(g)(8)(i), by its terms, to alter this
approach.
In a separate rulemaking, however,
the Commission has proposed to require
DCOs to legally segregate customer
funds and assets margining swap
positions that are held by a clearing
member at the DCO in a commingled
cleared swaps customer account.134 In
addition, European Union legislation,
although not yet finalized, would
require central counterparties to provide
individual customer segregation in
certain circumstances.135 As previously
noted, gross margining will be
instrumental if individual customer
segregation is adopted. OCC requested
that the Commission restrict the
applicability of proposed § 39.13(g)(8)(i)
to futures customer accounts at both the
clearing level and the FCM level, to
make it clear that it does not intend to
impose these margin requirements on
accounts that are restricted to securities
products (with respect to an entity that
is both a DCO and an SEC-regulated
clearing agency). OCC is correct that
134 See 76 FR 33818 (June 9, 2011) (Protection of
Cleared Swaps Customer Contracts and Collateral;
Conforming Amendments to the Commodity Broker
Bankruptcy Provisions).
135 See Financial markets: OTC derivatives,
central counterparties and trade repositories
(amend. Directive 98/26/EC), COD/2010/0250 (June
7, 2011), available at https://
www.europarl.europa.eu/oeil/
FindByProcnum.do?lang=en&procnum=COD/2010/
0250.
PO 00000
Frm 00044
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
§ 39.13(g)(8)(i) applies only to customer
and house accounts, cleared by a DCO,
which contain futures, options on
futures, and/or swap positions that are
subject to the jurisdiction of the
Commission. It does not apply to
accounts that only contain securities
products that are subject to the
jurisdiction of the SEC.
LCH requested that the Commission
allow DCOs operating from non-U.S.
jurisdictions to offer ‘‘net omnibus’’
account structures for associated entities
operating under the same group or
umbrella structure to customers outside
the U.S. The treatment of customers is
outside the scope of this rulemaking.
However, to the extent a DCO is clearing
products subject to the Commission’s
jurisdiction, this rule would apply at the
clearing level regardless of the location
of the DCO or the customer.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.13(g)(8)(i) with the modifications
described above. The Commission
recognizes that DCOs that currently use
net margining, or that use a ‘‘modified’’
version of gross margining, as well as
their clearing members and their service
providers, will need time to make the
necessary operational and technology
enhancements that will facilitate gross
margining, as described herein.
Therefore, the Commission is adopting
an effective date that is 12 months after
the publication of final § 39.13(g)(8)(i) in
the Federal Register.
(2) End-of-Day Position Reporting—
§ 39.19(c)(1)(iv)
Proposed § 39.19(c)(1)(iv) would
require each DCO to report to the
Commission, on a daily basis, the endof-day positions for each clearing
member, by customer origin and house
origin; and for customer origin,
separately, the gross positions of each
beneficial owner.136
As noted by KCC and CMC, the
Commission currently receives certain
information about the ownership and
control of reportable positions through
its large trader reporting program, under
Parts 15 through 21 of the Commission’s
136 As originally proposed, § 39.19(c)(1)(iv) would
require each DCO to report to the Commission, on
a daily basis, the end-of-day positions for each
clearing member, by customer origin and house
origin. See 75 FR 78185 (Dec. 15, 2010)
(Information Management). The preamble in the
notice of proposed rulemaking (76 FR 3698 (Jan. 20,
2011) (Risk Management)), described a proposed
amendment to proposed § 39.19(c)(1)(iv) to add
‘‘and for customer origin, separately, the gross
positions of each beneficial owner.’’ However, this
clause was inadvertently omitted from the language
of the regulation in the notice of proposed
rulemaking. Therefore, the Commission
subsequently issued a correction at 76 FR 16588
(Mar. 24, 2011) (Risk Management Requirements for
Derivatives Clearing Organizations; Correction).
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
regulations. Commission staff reviews
the effectiveness of this program on a
regular basis, and will continue to adopt
enhancements where appropriate.137
The large trader reporting system,
however, does not currently apply to
many swaps that are, or may be, cleared.
The Commission may need information
about large swap positions to assess the
risk profile of a DCO or a clearing FCM.
CME, KCC, MGEX, FIA, and CMC
commented that clearing members do
not generally have information
identifying the underlying customers in
customer omnibus accounts carried on
behalf of non-clearing member FCMs,
foreign brokers, hedge funds or
commodity pools, and therefore clearing
members cannot reasonably be expected
to report such information to DCOs, and
DCOs cannot reasonably be expected to
report such information to the
Commission. The Commission notes
that a DCO may be able to obtain such
information under its own rules. For
example, CME Rule 960 requires a
clearing member to immediately
disclose the identities and positions of
the beneficial owners of any omnibus
account to CME upon its request.
MGEX expressed its concern that the
significant costs resulting from
compliance with a requirement for the
routine daily reporting of all gross
customer positions by beneficial owner
could lead to further consolidation in
the industry at the FCM, clearing
member, and DCO levels.
The Commission is not adopting the
proposed requirement in
§ 39.19(c)(1)(iv) that a DCO provide
daily reports to the Commission of the
gross positions of each beneficial owner
within each clearing member’s customer
origin account. However, the
Commission is adopting
§ 39.19(c)(5)(iii),138 which requires a
DCO to provide this information to the
Commission upon the Commission’s
request, in the format and manner, and
within the time, specified by the
Commission.
For example, the Commission could
request that a DCO provide information
about customer positions by beneficial
owner, on a case-by-case basis, with
respect to a particular clearing member,
customer, or product. Moreover, the
Commission could request that such
information be provided for a particular
day, month, or until further notice by
the Commission. In recent years, the
Commission has worked cooperatively
137 For example, the Commission recently
adopted final rules on Large Trader Reporting for
Physical Commodity Swaps at 76 FR 43851 (July
22, 2011).
138 See further discussion of § 39.19, adopted
herein, in section IV.J, below.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
with several DCOs to obtain information
about cleared swap positions. The
Commission notes that any potential
costs should be substantially reduced by
the modified requirement that a DCO
provide information to the Commission
identifying the positions of beneficial
owners of customer accounts only upon
Commission request and not on a daily
basis.
(3) Customer Initial Margin
Requirements—§ 39.13(g)(8)(ii)
Proposed § 39.13(g)(8)(ii) would
require a DCO to require its clearing
members to collect customer initial
margin 139 from their customers for nonhedge positions at a level that is greater
than 100 percent of the DCO’s initial
margin requirements 140 with respect to
each product and swap portfolio.
Proposed § 39.13(g)(8)(ii) would permit
a DCO to have reasonable discretion in
determining the percentage by which
customer initial margins would have to
exceed the DCO’s initial margin
requirements with respect to particular
products or swap portfolios. However,
under the proposed regulation, the
Commission could review such
percentage levels and require different
percentage levels if the Commission
deemed the levels insufficient to protect
the financial integrity of the clearing
members or the DCO in accordance with
Core Principle D.141
OCC stated its view that exchanges,
which have historically set customer
level margin requirements, should
continue to do so, rather than DCOs,
noting that clearing organizations would
ordinarily have no means to enforce
customer level margin requirements.
KCC stated that it generally supports
the concept that clearing members
should collect customer initial margin at
a level above that of DCO initial margin,
but requested that the Commission
clarify the circumstances in which it
may deem the ratio of customer initial
margin to DCO initial margin
insufficient to protect the DCO.
Although the FHLBanks opposed the
proposal, they recommended that if the
Commission were to adopt it, the
Commission should provide additional
guidance and/or establish criteria for
DCOs with respect to setting the
required amount of excess margin.
MGEX noted that although it currently
139 The term ‘‘customer initial margin’’ is now
defined in § 1.3(kkk), adopted herein.
140 A DCO’s initial margin requirements are also
referred to herein as ‘‘clearing initial margin’’
requirements. ‘‘Clearing initial margin’’ is defined
as ‘‘initial margin posted by a clearing member with
a [DCO]’’ in § 1.3(jjj), adopted herein.
141 Section 5b(c)(2)(D)(iii) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C.
7a–1(c)(2)(D)(iii).
PO 00000
Frm 00045
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69377
maintains a 130 percent requirement,
this is a decision that should be left to
each DCO and its clearing members to
determine. Because the circumstances
for each DCO or the nature of its
clearing members vary, it would be
difficult to provide the general
clarification or criteria that KCC and the
FHLBanks are seeking, because such a
determination would need to be made
on a case-by-case basis.
MFA argued that a requirement that a
DCO must require its clearing members
to collect customer initial margin at a
level that is greater than the DCO’s
initial margin requirements would be
inappropriate because DCOs do not
have information about individual
customers’ creditworthiness and such a
requirement would impair market
liquidity by limiting the trading activity
of certain market participants, resulting
in greater market concentration. Citadel
and the FHLBanks made similar
comments.
ICE stated that FCMs are best able to
determine how much to charge above
the initial margin requirement because
they have complete visibility into their
customers’ positions, and the
Commission should not place this
requirement on a DCO, but should
address this with FCMs through another
set of rules. FIA opposed the proposed
rule stating that the amount of excess
margin, if any, that an FCM may require
from its customers is a credit decision
that should be made by each FCM based
on its analysis of the creditworthiness of
the particular customer, including the
nature of the customer’s trading activity
and its record of meeting margin calls.
Currently DCMs require their FCM
members to impose customer initial
margin requirements that are a specified
percentage higher than the DCO’s initial
margin requirements, generally in the
neighborhood of 125 percent to 140
percent, as determined by the DCM.
DCMs generally permit FCM members
to impose customer initial margin
requirements for hedge positions that
are equal to the applicable maintenance
margin requirements (which are
generally the same as the applicable
clearing initial margin requirements).
This rule simply shifts the
responsibility for establishing customer
initial margin requirements from DCMs
to DCOs.
DCOs have greater expertise in risk
management and a direct financial stake
in whether their clearing members’
customers, and consequently their
clearing members, are able to meet their
margin obligations. Moreover, it is
anticipated that some DCOs will clear
fungible swaps that may be listed on
multiple SEFs. SEFs may or may not
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69378
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
impose customer initial margin
requirements on their members for
cleared swaps. Requirements set by
DCOs may be less susceptible to
pressure to being lowered for
competitive reasons. Finally, DCOs will
be the only self-regulatory organizations
that will be in a position to set customer
initial margin requirements for swaps
that are executed bilaterally, and
voluntarily cleared. Moreover, DCOs
will have the opportunity to review
whether their clearing members are
collecting customer initial margin, as
required by the DCO, during their
reviews of the risk management
policies, procedures, and practices of
their clearing members, pursuant to
§ 39.13(h)(5).142
Section 39.13(g)(8)(ii) permits a DCO
to exercise its discretion in determining
the appropriate percentage by which the
customer initial margin for a particular
product or swap portfolio should exceed
the clearing initial margin,143 as DCMs
do today with respect to futures and
options. This percentage should be
based on the nature and volatility
patterns of the particular product or
swap portfolio, and the DCO’s related
evaluation of the potential risks posed
by customers in general to their clearing
members and, in turn, the potential
risks posed by such clearing members in
general to the DCO, rather than the
creditworthiness of particular
customers. Consequently, a DCO will
retain the flexibility to establish an
appropriate percentage for customer
initial margin that applies to each
product that it clears, which will apply
to all of its clearing FCMs and all of
their customers. However, as is also the
case today, such clearing FCMs would
remain free to exercise their discretion
to determine whether they will collect
additional margin over and above that
142 See discussion of § 39.13(h)(5), adopted
herein, in section IV.D.7.e, below.
143 OCC commented that its STANS margin
system calculates margin based on all positions in
an account and not on a position-by-position basis;
therefore it would not be able to furnish clearing
members with a number representing the initial
margin on a particular position without conducting
subaccounting for each customer. OCC also noted
that since STANS requirements are data-driven on
a month-to-month, and even a day-to-day, basis
they can vary in ways that cannot be readily
predicted. The Commission is adopting
§ 39.13(g)(8)(i) herein, which requires a DCO to
collect initial margin on a gross basis for its clearing
members’ customer accounts. Therefore, a clearing
member (or the DCO) will be required to determine
the initial margin that must be posted with the DCO
with respect to each customer’s positions. Even if
that amount changes from day to day as a result of
the application of a portfolio-based margin system,
a DCO could require that its clearing members
collect customer initial margin in an amount that
is a given percentage in excess of 100 percent of the
daily clearing initial margin requirement with
respect to each customer.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
amount either from all of their
customers, or from particular customers
based on such customers’ risk
profiles.144
The Commission continues to believe
that requiring a DCO to require its
clearing members to collect customer
initial margin in a percentage higher
than 100 percent of the clearing initial
margin, for non-hedge positions,
provides a valuable cushion of readily
available customer margin. Citadel
stated that the market’s extensive
experience in a range of cleared markets
demonstrates preparedness for the
regular exchange of margin between
clearing members and their customers
for cleared OTC derivatives, even where
margin calls occur more frequently than
once daily, and that frequent exchange
of margin is also current market practice
for uncleared trades. However, the
maintenance of such a cushion would
enable clearing members to deposit
additional margin with a DCO on behalf
of their customers, as necessitated by
adverse market movements, without the
need for the clearing members to make
such frequent margin calls to their
customers. In addition, many clearing
members choose to deposit excess
margin with their DCOs to provide their
own cushion, which may in some
instances obviate the need to transfer
funds to the DCO on a daily basis in
order to meet variation margin
requirements.
ISDA, FIA, and the FHLBanks
commented that if the Commission were
to adopt proposed § 39.13(g)(8)(ii), it
should clarify the meaning of ‘‘nonhedge positions.’’ The FHLBanks also
stated that the Commission should
provide guidance regarding how the
determination as to whether a position
is a hedge or a non-hedge position
would be made, whether by the DCO,
the clearing member, or the customer,
and expressed the belief that a clearing
member’s customers should be
responsible for determining and
certifying, to their clearing members or
DCOs, whether their swap positions are
‘‘hedge’’ or ‘‘non-hedge’’ positions.
Several commenters have argued that
there is no basis for distinguishing
between hedge positions and non-hedge
positions in determining whether such
positions should be subject to customer
initial margin requirements in excess of
144 See, e.g., CME Rule 8G930.E (‘‘IRS Clearing
members may call for additional performance bond
at their discretion.’’) (available at https://
www.cmegroup.com/rulebook/CME/I/8G/) and
International Derivatives Clearinghouse, LLC Rule
614(g) (‘‘A Clearing Member may call, at any time,
for [margin] above and beyond the minimums
required by the Clearinghouse.’’) (available at
https://www.idch.com/pdfs/idch/
20100901rulebook.pdf).
PO 00000
Frm 00046
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
clearing initial margin requirements.145
LCH stated that it does not believe that
a DCO or a clearing member should
distinguish in any way between a
customer’s hedge and non-hedge
positions because: (1) if the two parts of
the hedge are carried by the same
clearing member within the same DCO,
such hedges would in any event
implicitly be recognized by the DCO’s
risk calculations and the provision
would be unnecessary; and (2) if one or
the other leg of the hedge is uncleared,
or is carried by a different clearing
member, or by the same or another
clearing member at another DCO, no
recognition of the offsetting hedge
should be allowed either by the DCO(s)
or by the clearing member(s), as neither
party would have the economic benefit
of the hedged transaction. The
Commission notes that the
categorization of a position as a hedge
for purposes of this regulation does not
affect the margin collected by the DCO;
it only affects the additional increment
that the clearing member collects from
its customer.
Freddie Mac indicated that the
Commission should consider
eliminating the proposed requirement
for increased customer initial margin for
‘‘non-hedge positions,’’ noting that
customers with non-hedge positions are
not inherently riskier or more likely to
miss margin calls than customers with
‘‘hedge positions.’’
As previously noted, DCMs have
historically drawn a distinction between
hedge positions and non-hedge
positions in setting customer initial
margin requirements, and the
Commission believes that it is
reasonable to assume that hedgers may
present less risk than speculators, in
that losses on their derivatives positions
should be offset by gains on the
positions whose risks they are hedging.
The relevant consideration is the
relative risks posed by hedgers versus
non-hedgers, rather than the
145 MFA stated that it would be highly
burdensome to distinguish between hedge and nonhedge positions for purposes of the application of
differentiated margining, especially in a portfolio
margining context. As noted in n. 143, above, a
DCO that uses a portfolio-based margin model
could require that its clearing members collect
customer initial margin in an amount that is a given
percentage in excess of 100 percent of the daily
clearing initial margin requirement with respect to
each customer. If all of a particular customer’s
positions were hedge positions, the DCO could
permit the clearing member to collect customer
initial margin in an amount that equals the amount
of clearing initial margin with respect to that
customer’s positions. It is only in those
circumstances where a hedger may also engage in
speculative trading that it may be difficult to
distinguish between positions for purposes of the
application of differentiated margining in a
portfolio margining context.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
creditworthiness of particular
customers.
Freddie Mac recommended that, if the
Commission does not eliminate the
distinction between hedge and nonhedge positions, the Commission should
clarify that, for purposes of
§ 39.13(g)(8)(ii): (1) ‘‘hedge positions’’
would include all swaps that hedge or
mitigate any form of a customer’s
business risks; (2) such swaps may
qualify as ‘‘hedge positions’’ regardless
of whether they qualify as ‘‘bona fide
hedging transactions’’ under the CEA
and § 1.3(z) or qualify as hedges under
applicable accounting standards; and (3)
such swaps may qualify as ‘‘hedge
positions’’ regardless of the nature of the
entity that holds such positions (e.g.,
whether it is a financial entity or a nonfinancial entity). Freddie Mac indicated
that such treatment would be consistent
with Commission proposals for defining
hedging for purposes of other DoddFrank Act rules, including the definition
of a ‘‘major-swap participant’’ 146 and
rules relating to the availability of the
end-user exception to mandatory
clearing.147
The Commission intends to interpret
‘‘hedge positions,’’ for purposes of
§ 39.13(g)(8)(ii), as referring to those that
meet either the definition set forth in
§ 1.3(z), or the definition set forth in
§ 1.3(ttt), when, and in the form in
which, it is ultimately adopted.148 The
Commission also believes that, as is
currently the practice, it would be the
customer’s responsibility to identify its
positions as hedge positions to its
clearing FCM.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.13(g)(8)(ii) as proposed.
(4) Withdrawal of Customer Initial
Margin—§ 39.13(g)(8)(iii)
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Proposed § 39.13(g)(8)(iii) would
require a DCO to require its clearing
members to prohibit their customers
from withdrawing funds from their
accounts with such clearing members
unless the net liquidating value plus the
margin deposits remaining in the
customer’s account after the withdrawal
would be sufficient to meet the
146 See 75 FR 80174 (Dec. 21, 2010) (Further
Definition of ‘‘Swap Dealer,’’ ‘‘Security-Based Swap
Dealer,’’ ‘‘Major Swap Participant,’’ ‘‘Major
Security-Based Swap Participant’’ and ‘‘Eligible
Contract Participant’’).
147 See 75 FR 80747 (Dec. 23, 2010) (End-User
Exception to Mandatory Clearing).
148 The Commission has proposed a definition of
‘‘hedging or mitigating commercial risk,’’ to be
codified at § 1.3(ttt), for the purposes of the
definition of ‘‘Major Swap Participant,’’ 75 FR at
80214–80215 (Further Definition of ‘‘Swap Dealer,’’
‘‘Security-Based Swap Dealer,’’ ‘‘Major Swap
Participant,’’ ‘‘Major Security-Based Swap
Participant’’ and ‘‘Eligible Contract Participant’’).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
customer initial margin requirements
with respect to the products or swap
portfolios in the customer’s account,
which were cleared by the DCO.
LCH agreed with the underlying
requirement, but stated that it should be
imposed in rules that directly apply to
clearing members rather than in rules
applicable to DCOs. KCC also supported
the concept but noted that DCM rules
already require customers to maintain
minimum margin levels and that these
restrictions are generally tested by a
clearing member’s risk department and
the clearing member’s self-regulatory
organization during examinations. KCC
further noted that DCOs do not have full
access to information regarding each
customer’s financial condition. MGEX
took the position that the
Commission 149 or a clearing member’s
designated self-regulatory organization
(DSRO) should monitor compliance
with such a requirement rather than the
DCO, indicating that it would not be
economically feasible for the DCO to do
so.
As noted in the notice of proposed
rulemaking, the requirement stated in
§ 39.13(g)(8)(iii) is consistent with the
definition of ‘‘Margin Funds Available
for Disbursement’’ in the Margins
Handbook prepared by the JAC.150
Therefore, DSROs currently review
FCMs to determine whether they are
appropriately prohibiting their
customers from withdrawing funds from
their futures accounts unless the net
liquidating value plus the margin
deposits remaining in such customers’
accounts after the withdrawal would be
sufficient to meet the customer initial
margin requirements with respect to
such accounts. However, it is unclear to
what extent this requirement would
apply to cleared swaps accounts when
such swaps are executed on a DCM
which participates in the JAC.
Moreover, clearing members which only
clear swaps that are executed on a SEF
will not be subject to the requirements
set forth in the Margins Handbook or
subject to review by a DSRO.
The Commission anticipates that, at a
minimum, DCOs will be able to review
whether their clearing members are
ensuring that customers do not make
withdrawals from their accounts unless
the specified conditions are met, when
they conduct reviews of their clearing
149 The Commission does not believe that it
would be practical for the Commission to review
each clearing member of each DCO to determine
whether the clearing member is prohibiting its
customers from making impermissible withdrawals
from their accounts.
150 See https://www.nfa.futures.org/NFAcompliance/publication-library/marginshandbook.pdf, at 45.
PO 00000
Frm 00047
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69379
members’ risk management policies,
procedures, and practices pursuant to
§ 39.13(h)(5).151
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.13(g)(8)(iii) as proposed.
i. Time Deadlines—§ 39.13(g)(9)
Proposed § 39.13(g)(9) would require
a DCO to establish and enforce time
deadlines for initial and variation
margin payments.
LCH submitted a comment letter
indicating that it agrees with the
proposal, but stated that it should apply
only to a DCO’s clearing members since
a DCO has no direct relationship with
clients of its clearing members.
Consistent with its original intent, the
Commission is adopting § 39.13(g)(9)
with a modification to make it clear that
it only applies to time deadlines for
initial and variation margin payments to
a DCO by its clearing members.
7. Other Risk Control Mechanisms
a. Risk Limits—§ 39.13(h)(1)(i)
Proposed § 39.13(h)(1)(i) would
require a DCO to impose risk limits on
each clearing member, by customer
origin and house origin, in order to
prevent a clearing member from
carrying positions where the risk
exposure of those positions exceeds a
threshold set by the DCO relative to the
clearing member’s financial resources,
the DCO’s financial resources, or both.
The Commission believes that an FCM
engages in excess risk-taking if it, or its
customers, take on positions that require
financial resources that exceed this
threshold. The DCO would have
reasonable discretion in determining: (1)
the method of computing risk exposure;
(2) the applicable threshold(s); and (3)
the applicable financial resources,
provided however, that the ratio of
exposure to capital would have to
remain the same across all capital
levels. For example, if a DCO set limits
under which margin could not exceed
200 percent of capital, the limit for a
$100 million clearing member would be
$200 million and the limit for a $200
million clearing member would be $400
million. The Commission could review
any of these determinations and require
different methods, thresholds, or
financial resources, as appropriate.
Proposed § 39.13(h)(1)(ii) would allow
a DCO to permit a clearing member to
exceed the threshold(s) applied
pursuant to paragraph (h)(1)(i) provided
that the DCO required the clearing
member to post additional initial margin
that the DCO deemed sufficient to
appropriately eliminate excessive risk
151 See discussion of § 39.13(h)(5), adopted
herein, in section IV.D.7.e, below.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69380
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
exposure at the clearing member. The
Commission could review the amount of
additional initial margin and require a
different amount, as appropriate.
J.P. Morgan and Alice Corporation
supported the proposal to require DCOs
to establish risk-based position limits
for their clearing members. J.P. Morgan
indicated that in setting such position
limits applicable to any one clearing
member, a DCO should consider its
overall exposure to clearing members in
the aggregate. The Commission agrees
that this would be prudent and expects
that DCOs would take into
consideration the aggregate exposure in
establishing individual levels. J.P.
Morgan further took the position that
DCOs should monitor exposures against
these limits on a real time basis. As
discussed in section IV.D.4, above,
§ 39.13(e)(2) requires a DCO to monitor
its credit exposure to each clearing
member periodically during each
business day.
FIA stated that it generally agrees
with the proposed requirement that ‘‘the
ratio of exposure to capital must remain
the same across all capital levels’’ but
indicated that the rule should make
clear that, in computing the ratio of
exposure to capital, a clearing member’s
capital should be calculated net of all
risk exposures and potential assessment
obligations at other clearing
organizations of which it is a clearing
member. The Commission agrees that it
would be appropriate for a DCO to
consider a clearing member’s exposures
to other clearing organizations, to the
extent that it is able to obtain such
information, in determining a clearing
member’s applicable financial resources
for the purpose of setting appropriate
risk limits.
CME argued that a requirement that
DCOs impose risk limits for every
clearing member would be overly
prescriptive and unnecessary, provided
that a DCO collects adequate margin, its
stress-test results regarding the clearing
member’s exposures are acceptable, and
it employs concentration margining
(whereby the DCO would set a level of
risk at which it would begin to charge
higher margins based on indicative
stress-test levels). In other words, CME
suggested that risk limits may be
unnecessary if a DCO sets a level of risk
at which it would begin to charge higher
margins based on stress test results with
respect to a clearing member. However,
§ 39.13(h)(1)(ii) would allow a DCO to
permit a clearing member to exceed an
established risk limit provided that the
DCO required the clearing member to
post additional margin. Although CME’s
proposed approach is worded slightly
differently, the effect would be the same
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
as that of § 39.13(h)(1)(ii), i.e., a clearing
member could only exceed a defined
risk level if it posted additional margin.
MGEX indicated that the proposed
rule requiring DCOs to impose risk
limits on each clearing member might
not be practical, adding additional cost
with little benefit, noting that DCOs
currently address credit and default risk
via margins and security deposits on a
daily basis and conduct risk reviews.
Rather, according to MGEX, a DCO
should be looking for risk signs and
focusing on those that are most relevant.
The Commission believes that the
establishment of risk limits for clearing
members would impose little additional
cost on DCOs since DCOs are already
required to monitor their clearing
members’ capital levels and their own
financial resources, as well as the
trading activity of their clearing
members. On the other hand, the
Commission believes that the
establishment of such risk limits would
add significant risk management
benefits to the benefits already
conferred by margins, security deposits,
and reviews of clearing members’ risk
management policies and procedures.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.13(h)(i) as proposed, except for a
technical revision that replaces the
phrase ‘‘by customer orgin and house
origin’’ with ‘‘by house origin and by
each customer origin,’’ which conforms
the language with other provisions of
part 39. OCC requested that the
Commission clarify that proposed
§ 39.13(h)(i) would not apply to
securities accounts of broker-dealers
that are not FCMs and do no futures
business. The Commission does not
intend for § 39.13(h)(i) to apply to such
accounts. The Commission is also
adopting § 39.13(h)(ii) as proposed.
b. Large Trader Reports—§ 39.13(h)(2)
Proposed § 39.13(h)(2) would require
a DCO to obtain from its clearing
members, copies of all reports that such
clearing members are required to file
with the Commission pursuant to part
17 of the Commission’s regulations, i.e.,
large trader reports. Large trader reports
are necessary for stress testing to ensure
that FCMs and their customers have not
taken on too much risk. A DCO would
be required to obtain such reports
directly from the relevant reporting
market if the reporting market
exclusively listed self-cleared contracts,
and would therefore be required to file
such reports on behalf of clearing
members pursuant to § 17.00(i).
Proposed § 39.13(h)(2) would further
require a DCO to review the large trader
reports that it receives from its clearing
members, or reporting markets, as
PO 00000
Frm 00048
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
applicable, on a daily basis to ascertain
the risk of the overall portfolio of each
large trader. A DCO would be required
to review positions for each large trader,
across all clearing members carrying an
account for the large trader. A DCO
would also be required to take
additional actions with respect to such
clearing members in order to address
any risks posed by a large trader, when
appropriate. Such actions would
include those actions specified in
proposed § 39.13(h)(6).152
FIA supported the proposal to require
DCOs to obtain copies of all large trader
reports that are filed with the
Commission. MGEX commented that
the Commission should provide large
trader reports to each DCO rather than
imposing a requirement that would
require clearing members to make
redundant filings. KCC argued that the
proposed requirement that DCOs obtain
large trader reports from clearing
members is duplicative because a DCO
receives large trader information from
the exchange.153
MGEX recommended that the
Commission perform the review of large
trader reports itself or permit a clearing
member’s DSRO to perform such review
instead of DCOs.
NYPC recommended that the
Commission not adopt proposed
§ 39.13(h)(2) because the Commission
has expended considerable resources to
modify its own internal programs and
processes in order to glean potentially
relevant financial and risk management
information from the large trader data
that it receives from clearing members
and DCMs, and even if DCOs had
comparable financial and human
resources that they could deploy for
such a purpose, the information that
they would obtain would frequently be
fragmented and inconclusive, given
that—unlike the Commission—no single
DCO will ever have access to
information relating to the futures,
option and swap positions that are
cleared by other DCOs or to uncleared
swaps. NYPC further argued that given
the necessary technology builds, it
would need more than three years to
come into compliance with proposed
§§ 39.13(g)(8)(i) and 39.13(h)(2).
OCC indicated that it should be the
role of a clearing member’s DSRO to
require that an FCM submit sufficient
information to permit the DSRO to
identify customer accounts that could
potentially cause a clearing member to
152 See discussion of § 39.13(h)(6), adopted
herein, in section IV.D.7.f, below.
153 KCC further noted that, in its case, the
exchange in turn receives the relevant large trader
reports from the Commission.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
default, and that if DCOs were required
to perform all tasks required by the
proposed rules alone, they would be
required to build new surveillance
systems and significantly increase their
surveillance staff.
In response to suggestions that the
Commission should conduct the
required review of large trader reports,
the Commission notes that it does
review large trader reports for financial,
market, and risk surveillance purposes.
However, the Commission believes that
DCOs should also have an obligation to
review large trader reports for those
large traders whose trades they clear, for
their own risk surveillance purposes,
even though as noted by NYPC, they
may not have access to information
relating to positions cleared by other
DCOs or to uncleared swaps. Moreover,
§ 39.13(h)(2) requires a DCO to review
such large trader reports with a view
toward taking any necessary additional
actions with respect to such large
traders’ clearing members in order to
address risks posed by such large
traders to the DCO.
In addition, it would not be feasible
for a clearing member’s DSRO to review
large trader reports. DSRO designations
apply to FCMs that are members of
multiple DCMs. Therefore, clearing
members that only trade for their own
accounts do not have a DSRO. Clearing
members that solely clear SEF-executed
trades also will not have DSROs.
Moreover, risk management ultimately
is the responsibility of each DCO. A
DSRO would not be in a position to
analyze the daily risk of the overall
portfolio of each large trader at a
particular DCO, nor to take any
additional actions to address such risks
at a particular DCO.
KCC stated that it is the clearing
member’s obligation to determine the
financial fitness of large trader
customers, in that clearing members
have better, more direct information
regarding the credit quality of the
customer and the exposures of the
customer under positions the customer
may hold outside the DCO. KCC stated
its belief that imposing a duplicative
requirement on DCOs would achieve
little risk management benefit at a high
cost. The Commission agrees that
clearing members must determine the
financial capacity of their customers
and they may have information which a
particular DCO may not have regarding
positions that they may clear for their
customers on other DCOs.154 However,
154 The Commission is modifying the language in
proposed § 39.13(h)(2), which would have referred
to ‘‘positions at all clearing members carrying
accounts for each such large trader’’ by revising it
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
this does not obviate the need for each
relevant DCO to ascertain the risks that
the large trader poses to that DCO based
on the information which the DCO is
able to obtain through large trader
reports.
ISDA noted that while the expansion
of oversight required by proposed
§§ 39.13(h)(2) and § 39.13(h)(3) 155 may
provide benefits, many DCOs do not
currently have the systems or
infrastructure to monitor or assess nonclearing member risk.156
In response to ISDA’s comment, as
well as other comments that in order to
comply with § 39.13(h)(2), DCOs would
need technology builds (NYPC), new
surveillance systems and additional
surveillance staff (OCC), and that there
would be a high cost (KCC), the
Commission notes that some DCOs
already receive and review large trader
reports for risk surveillance purposes on
a daily basis. In fact, KCC stated in its
comment letter that ‘‘KCC would also
remind the Commission that DCO
compliance staff review the reportable
position files that they receive on a
daily basis to ascertain large trader risks
that [clearing members] face.’’ In
addition, at least five years ago,
Commission staff began recommending
that DCOs do so, if they had not already
been doing so, in DCO reviews that
Commission staff has conducted to
determine whether such DCOs were in
compliance with relevant core
principles under the CEA.
The Commission is modifying
§ 39.13(h)(2) to require a DCO to obtain
large trader reports either from its
clearing members or from a DCM or a
SEF for which it clears, which are
required to be filed with the
Commission by, or on behalf of, such
clearing members. However, the
Commission does not believe that it is
to read as follows: ‘‘futures, options, and swaps
cleared by the [DCO] which are held by all clearing
members carrying accounts for each such large
trader.’’ This will make it clear that the Commission
is not attempting to require a DCO to review a large
trader’s positions that were cleared by another DCO,
as it would not typically have access to information
about such positions. The technical change from
‘‘positions’’ to ‘‘futures, options, and swaps’’
conforms the language with other provisions of part
39.
155 See discussion of § 39.13(h)(3), adopted
herein, in section IV.D.7.c, below.
156 ISDA also stated that further clarity regarding
how the Commission intends to apply the large
trader definition to swaps is needed. The
Commission notes that it has begun this process by
adopting final rules for Large Trader Reporting for
Physical Commodity Swaps, in a new part 20, at 76
FR 43851 (July 22, 2011). Since these large trader
reporting rules were adopted subsequent to the
Commission’s proposal of § 39.13(h)(2), the
Commission is modifying § 39.13(h)(2) to refer to
reports required to be filed with the Commission
by, or on behalf of, clearing members pursuant to
parts 17 and 20 of this chapter.
PO 00000
Frm 00049
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69381
practical or appropriate for a DCO to
rely on the Commission to provide large
trader reports to the DCO.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.13(h)(2) with the modifications
described above.
c. Stress Tests—§ 39.13(h)(3)
Proposed § 39.13(h)(3) would require
a DCO to conduct certain daily and
weekly stress tests. The Commission has
defined a ‘‘stress test’’ in § 39.2, adopted
herein, as ‘‘a test that compares the
impact of potential extreme price
moves, changes in option volatility,
and/or changes in other inputs that
affect the value of a position, to the
financial resources of a derivatives
clearing organization, clearing member,
or large trader, to determine the
adequacy of such financial
resources.’’ 157
Proposed § 39.13(h)(3)(i) would
require a DCO to conduct daily stress
tests with respect to each large trader
who poses significant risk to a clearing
member or the DCO in the event of
default, including positions at all
clearing members carrying accounts for
the large trader. The DCO would have
reasonable discretion in determining
which traders to test and the
methodology used to conduct the stress
tests. However, the Commission could
review the selection of accounts and the
methodology and require changes, as
appropriate.
Proposed § 39.13(h)(3)(ii) would
require a DCO to conduct stress tests at
least once a week with respect to each
account held by a clearing member at
the DCO, by customer origin and house
origin, and each swap portfolio, by
beneficial owner, under extreme but
plausible market conditions. The DCO
would have reasonable discretion in
determining the methodology used to
conduct the stress tests. However, the
Commission could review the
methodology and require any
appropriate changes. The Commission
requested comment regarding whether
all clearing member accounts, by origin,
and all swap portfolios should be
subject to such stress tests on a weekly
basis or whether some other time
period, such as monthly, would be
sufficient to meet prudent risk
management standards.
Several commenters addressed daily
stress testing. FIA recommended that all
of the proposed stress tests should be
conducted on a daily basis. LCH stated
its belief that stress testing requirements
should not be extended to cover large
traders that are clients of clearing
157 See further discussion of § 39.2 in section
III.B, above.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69382
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
members but that the proposed weekly
stress tests should be conducted daily.
OCC stated that it did not see a
sufficient benefit to justify the increased
DCO resources that would be required
to undertake daily stress tests on each
large trader,158 noting that the costs
would be passed on to clearing members
and their customers. MGEX indicated
that a requirement for daily stress
testing of large traders seems excessive
since the data may be dated even after
one day and may not be more relevant
than doing an average stress test over a
weekly or monthly period. MGEX also
expressed the view that the value of
stress testing large traders is diminished
if they have accounts with different
clearing members.
As stated above, proposed
§ 39.13(h)(3)(i) would require a DCO to
include positions at all clearing
members carrying accounts for the large
trader in the required stress tests. The
Commission is making the same change
to § 39.13(h)(3)(i) that it is making to
§ 39.13(h)(2) by replacing the reference
to ‘‘positions at all clearing members
carrying accounts for each such large
trader’’ with ‘‘futures, options, and
swaps cleared by the derivatives
clearing organization, which are held by
all clearing members carrying accounts
for each such large trader.’’
KCC stated its belief that the
frequency of stress testing should be left
to the discretion of the DCO and should
be risk-based in light of prevailing
market conditions. NOCC indicated that
products, customers or spread credits
should reach a specified volume or risk
exposure level before being required to
be stress tested with the proposed
frequencies so long as the DCO can
demonstrate that it is meeting the core
principle objectives underlying
proposed § 39.13(f).159
The Commission believes that it is
appropriate to specify the minimum
frequency of stress tests as set forth in
§ 39.13(h)(3). As noted above, several
commenters supported certain daily
stress testing requirements. With the
exception of KCC’s and NOCC’s
comments, no commenters suggested
that stress tests should be conducted
less frequently than weekly.
158 As noted above, proposed § 39.13(h)(3)(i)
would not require daily stress tests on each large
trader, but only with respect to those large traders
who pose significant risk to a clearing member or
the DCO in the event of default.
159 NOCC made a similar comment with respect
to the frequency of back testing, which is discussed
in section IV.D.6.g,, above. The Commission does
not believe that it is appropriate to adopt a
regulation establishing an exemption process with
respect to stress testing requirements based on
volume or risk exposure or otherwise.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
LCH recommended that the
Commission prescribe that the stress
scenarios used by the DCO in its testing
should be adapted for current market
conditions such that price or market
shifts should not be translated literally,
but rather proportionally. The
Commission believes that § 39.13(h)(3)
should explicitly permit DCOs to
exercise reasonable discretion in
determining the methodology to be used
in conducting the required stress tests.
The Commission would recognize the
approach suggested by LCH to be an
appropriate element of a DCO’s stress
testing methodology, but does not
believe that it is necessary to adopt such
a prescriptive requirement.
OCC indicated that for regulatory
reasons associated with OCC’s status as
a dual SEC/Commission registrant,
OCC’s system does not consolidate all
positions into a single ‘‘customer
origin’’ and ‘‘house origin’’ for each
clearing member, but rather permits
multiple account types, including a firm
(proprietary) account that incorporates
both securities and futures positions, a
securities customers’ account, a regular
futures customer segregated funds
account subject to Section 4d of the
CEA, separate segregated funds accounts
for cross-margining arrangements as
provided in various Commission orders
approving such arrangements, and
others. OCC further stated that because
of the mathematical properties of the
risk measures that it uses, its
unconsolidated account level stress
testing is more rigorous than if such
stress testing were conducted at the
level of each origin as a whole and
argued that it makes sense to aggregate
positions for stress testing in the same
manner as they would be aggregated or
netted for liquidation purposes.
Therefore, OCC requested that the
Commission clarify that this method of
stress testing at the unconsolidated
account level based on appropriate
historical data would meet the
requirements of proposed
§ 39.13(h)(3)(ii). The Commission agrees
with OCC that it would be appropriate
for a DCO to conduct the stress tests
required by § 39.13(h)(3)(ii) with respect
to separate house origin and customer
origin accounts such as the house
account that incorporates both securities
and futures positions identified by
OCC,160 separate customer accounts
160 A DCO that is dually-registered as a securities
clearing agency would not be subject to the stress
testing requirements of § 39.13(h)(3)(ii) with respect
to an account that only contains securities
positions. However, such a DCO would be subject
to the requirements of § 39.13(h)(3)(ii) with respect
to any relevant account that contains positions in
instruments regulated by the Commission, even if
PO 00000
Frm 00050
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
subject to Sections 4d(a) and 4d(f) of the
CEA, respectively, or cross-margining
accounts.
OCC also argued that while the
requirement of conducting stress tests
under ‘‘extreme but plausible’’ market
conditions may be appropriate for
determining the adequacy of a clearing
organization’s resources for
withstanding the default of its largest
participant, it would be inappropriate
for measuring the adequacy of an
individual clearing member’s margin
deposits. In particular, OCC expressed
its belief that stress testing the positions,
including margin assets, in clearing
member accounts on a daily basis to
ensure a positive liquidating value at
more than a 99 percent confidence level
is adequate and appropriate and that
DCOs should have the ability to cover
for more extreme market conditions
through the use of additional financial
resources, including clearing fund
deposits.
A stress test, as defined by the
Commission, is not designed to measure
the adequacy of a clearing member’s
margin deposits or to ensure that margin
assets in clearing members’ accounts
meet a 99 percent confidence level.
Rather, these are the functions of the
daily review and back testing required
by §§ 39.13(g)(6) and (g)(7), adopted
herein.161 Stress tests address the
adequacy of the applicable financial
resources to cover losses resulting from
potential extreme price moves, changes
in option volatility, and/or changes in
other inputs that affect the value of a
position. In other words, if margin
deposits would be sufficient to cover
losses 99 percent of the time, stress tests
would determine whether other
financial resources would be available
and sufficient to cover losses the
remaining 1 percent of the time. Such
other financial resources could include
the capital of the clearing member or the
DCO, or a DCO’s guaranty fund.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.13(h)(3) with the modifications
described above.
d. Portfolio Compression—§ 39.13(h)(4)
Proposed § 39.13(h)(4)(i) would
require a DCO to offer multilateral
portfolio compression exercises, on a
regular basis, for its clearing members
that clear swaps, to the extent that such
that account also contains securities positions. In
this regard, the Commission is revising
§ 39.13(h)(3)(ii) to refer to ‘‘each clearing member
account, by house origin and by each customer
origin, and each swap portfolio, including any
portfolio containing futures and/or options and
held in a commingled account pursuant to
§ 39.15(b)(2) of this part, * * *’’
161 See discussion of §§ 39.13(g)(6) and (g)(7) in
section IV.D.6.g, above.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
exercises are appropriate for those
swaps that it clears. The Commission
requested comment regarding whether
such exercises should be offered
monthly, quarterly, or on another
frequency. In addition, the Commission
requested comment regarding whether
the frequency of such exercises should
vary for different categories of swaps.
Proposed § 39.13(h)(4)(ii) would
mandate that a DCO require its clearing
members to participate in all
multilateral portfolio compression
exercises offered by the DCO, to the
extent that any swap in the applicable
portfolio was eligible for inclusion in
the exercise, unless including the swap
would be reasonably likely to
significantly increase the risk exposure
of the clearing member.
Proposed § 39.13(h)(4)(iii) would
permit a DCO to allow clearing members
participating in such exercises to set
risk tolerance limits for their portfolios,
provided that the clearing members
could not set such risk tolerances at an
unreasonable level or use such risk
tolerances to evade the requirements of
proposed § 39.13(h)(4).
CME commended the Commission for
recognizing the importance of portfolio
compression exercises as an important
risk management tool. CME further
suggested that the Commission refrain
from prescribing the frequency of such
exercises, stating its belief that each
DCO is best positioned to determine the
optimal frequency of portfolio
compression exercises for the swaps
that it clears, based on the unique
characteristics of the particular products
and markets. On the other hand, the
FHLBanks stated that the Commission
should specify how often portfolio
compression exercises are to take place.
The Commission agrees with CME and
is retaining the language that simply
refers to ‘‘a regular basis.’’
ISDA requested that the Commission
clarify the meaning of ‘‘multilateral
portfolio compression’’ in these
proposals. ISDA stated that if the
Commission is referring to position
netting, then it agrees that a DCO must
offer such exercises. However, ISDA
indicated that if it refers to the provision
of multilateral portfolio compression
services such as those currently
provided by entities such as TriOptima,
DCOs should not be required to build
such duplicative services, which would
be likely to delay their roll-out of
comprehensive clearing services. The
Commission agrees that a DCO should
not be required to incur the expense of
building its own multilateral
compression services. Therefore, the
Commission is modifying the
requirement to make it clear that
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
although a DCO may develop its own
portfolio compression services if it
chooses, it is only required to make
such exercises available to its clearing
members if applicable portfolio
compression services have been
developed by a third party for those
swaps that it clears.162
The FHLBanks urged the Commission
to further define ‘‘reasonably likely to
increase risk exposure to a clearing
member’’ to include the risk exposures
of a clearing member’s customers, and
also stated their view that a clearing
member’s customers must have the
ability to ‘‘opt-out’’ of portfolio
compression requirements to the extent
that those customers’ swap positions
need to be retained for hedge accounting
and other business purposes. In
particular, the FHLBanks expressed
their concern that the proposal’s
ambiguities would cause the internal
risk management strategies of entities
that are not swap dealers or major swap
participants to be adversely affected,
noting that portfolio compression could
potentially jeopardize hedge accounting
treatment for customers’ swap
transactions and disrupt anticipated
cash flows.
LCH stated that it strongly supports
the use of compression services and
believes that they should be encouraged
by the Commission to the greatest extent
possible, but it would not necessarily
always be appropriate for a DCO to
require its clearing members to
participate in all such exercises. First,
LCH noted that a DCO’s clearing
members may not always be subject to
the Commission’s supervision and may
not be required to engage in such
compression activities; therefore
imposing such a requirement on the
DCO may discourage such firms from
becoming clearing members of that DCO
and thereby have the perverse effect of
discouraging such firms from clearing.
Second, LCH stated that a clearing
member may have legitimate reasons for
not participating in such compression
exercises at all times, or for not
submitting all eligible swaps to such
exercises. Therefore, LCH took the
position that the use of compression
services should be encouraged but
should not be compulsory, and
suggested that the Commission
eliminate § 39.13 (h)(4)(ii) in its entirety.
For the reasons stated by LCH and the
FHLBanks, the Commission is
modifying § 39.13(h)(4) to provide that
participation in compression exercises
162 This also addresses the FHLBanks’ comment
that the Commission should specify what types of
swaps are to be included in portfolio compression
exercises.
PO 00000
Frm 00051
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69383
by clearing members and their
customers would be voluntary.
e. Clearing Members’ Risk Management
Policies and Procedures—§ 39.13(h)(5)
Proposed § 39.13(h)(5) would impose
several requirements upon DCOs
relating to their clearing members’ risk
management policies and procedures.
Specifically, a DCO would be required
to adopt rules that: (a) require its
clearing members to maintain current
written risk management policies and
procedures (proposed
§ 39.13(h)(5)(i)(A)); (b) ensure that the
DCO has the authority to request and
obtain information and documents from
its clearing members regarding their risk
management policies, procedures, and
practices, including, but not limited to,
information and documents relating to
the liquidity of their financial resources
and their settlement procedures
(proposed § 39.13(h)(5)(i)(B)); and (c)
require its clearing members to make
information and documents regarding
their risk management policies,
procedures, and practices available to
the Commission upon the Commission’s
request (proposed § 39.13(h)(5)(i)(C)).
In addition, proposed § 39.13(h)(5)(ii)
would require a DCO to review the risk
management policies, procedures, and
practices of each of its clearing members
on a periodic basis and document such
reviews. The Commission invited
comment regarding whether it should
require that a DCO must conduct risk
reviews of its clearing members on an
annual basis or within some other time
frame. The Commission also requested
comment regarding whether it should
require that such reviews be conducted
in a particular manner, e.g., whether
there must be an on-site visit or whether
any particular testing should be
required. In addition, the Commission
invited comment regarding whether,
and to what extent, a DCO should be
permitted to vary the method and depth
of such reviews based upon the nature,
risk profiles, or other regulatory
supervision of particular clearing
members.
ISDA and FIA supported the proposed
requirement in § 39.13(h)(5)(i)(A) that
clearing members must have written
risk management policies and
procedures. FIA also recommended that
clearing members should be required to
have adequate staff and systems to
monitor customer risk on a real-time or
near-real time basis and to routinely test
their risk management procedures under
theoretical stress scenarios.
NGX stated that the requirement that
clearing members have and follow risk
management policies is a sensible
requirement in the context of the
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69384
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
typical, intermediated
clearinghouse.However, NGX argued
that such requirements should not apply
to a non-intermediated DCO such as
NGX, where clearing participants are
commercial end users, trading and
clearing for their own accounts, and
none of the clearing participants are
exposed to the default risk of any other
clearing participant or to that of fellow
customers of a clearing participant.
The Commission believes that it is
appropriate for a DCO to require all of
its clearing members to maintain written
risk management policies and
procedures, regardless of whether such
clearing members have customer
business or are exclusively self-clearing.
As noted above, the Commission
believes that written policies are a
crucial component of any risk
management framework. Moreover,
§ 39.13(h)(5)(i)(A) does not specify the
nature or extent of the required written
risk management policies and
procedures, which could vary as
appropriate to a particular type of
clearing member, subject to the
requirements of any other applicable
Commission regulations.163
The Commission has not proposed
and is not adopting the additional
requirements suggested by FIA,
described above, as part of this
rulemaking. However, the Commission
has proposed additional requirements
with respect to clearing members’ risk
management policies and procedures in
a separate rulemaking applicable
directly to clearing members.164
With respect to the proposed
requirement in § 39.13(h)(5)(i)(C) that a
DCO must have rules requiring its
clearing members to make information
regarding their risk management
policies, procedures, and practices
available to the Commission, MGEX
stated that the Commission should seek
access to a clearing member’s risk
management policies and processes
directly and a DCO should not act as an
unnecessary conduit between the
163 For example, in a separate rulemaking,
proposed § 23.600 would set forth detailed
requirements for the risk management programs of
swap dealers and major swap participants, and
would require such entities to maintain written
procedures and policies describing their Risk
Management Programs. See 75 FR 71397 (Nov. 23,
2010) (Regulations Establishing and Governing the
Duties of Swap Dealers and Major Swap
Participants). Such swap dealers and major swap
participants may or may not be clearing members.
164 See 76 FR 45724 (Aug. 1, 2011) (Clearing
Member Risk Management). In that rulemaking, the
Commission has proposed to require FCMs, swap
dealers, and major swap participants, each of which
are clearing members, to adopt certain specified risk
management procedures, including written
procedures to comply with the proposed
requirements.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
Commission and clearing members. The
Commission notes that even if it were to
propose a regulation to impose such a
requirement directly on clearing
members in the future, it does not
preclude the Commission from
requiring DCOs to impose this
requirement on their clearing members
at this time.165
LCH stated that it concurs with the
provisions of proposed § 39.13(h)(5) but
suggested that the Commission limit the
requirements under proposed paragraph
(h)(5)(C) so that they would be
applicable only to those clearing
members that are subject to the
Commission’s oversight and not to all
clearing members of a DCO regardless of
the jurisdiction in which they operate.
The Commission notes that risk
management practices of clearing
members of registered DCOs, to the
extent that such clearing members are
clearing products subject to the
Commission’s oversight, are of
importance to the Commission in its
capacity as the regulator of the DCO. For
purposes of risk management oversight,
there is no basis for differentiating
among clearing members because of
their registration status or domicile.
Although the Commission does not
directly supervise non-registrants, the
Commission has previously adopted
rules that apply to clearing members,
whether or not they are Commission
registrants, e.g., §§ 1.35(b) and (c)
(recordkeeping requirements), and Part
17 of the Commission’s regulations
(reporting requirements). Section
39.13(h)(5)(C) is consistent with the
Commission’s approach with respect to
such other rules, and is an appropriate
component of the regulatory framework
for DCO risk management.
With regard to the proposed
requirement in § 39.13(h)(5)(ii) that a
DCO must review the risk management
policies, procedures, and practices of
each of its clearing members on a
periodic basis, FIA stated that all
clearing members should be subject to
on-site audits at least annually. NGX
suggested that if the Commission
requires non-intermediated DCOs to
require their members to have written
risk management policies, the
Commission should provide guidance
that a non-intermediated DCO would
not be required to conduct on-site audits
of clearing participants and that the
DCO would meet its obligations to
165 In another context, e.g., a DCM has adopted a
rule that requires the operator of a DCM-approved
delivery facility to ’’ * * * make such reports, keep
such records and permit such facility visitation as
the Exchange, the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission or any other applicable government
agency may require * * * .’’ See CBOT Rule 703.A.
PO 00000
Frm 00052
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
review the policies of such clearing
participants if it does so only on a forcause basis.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.13(h)(5)(ii) as proposed, without
prescribing the specific frequency,
depth, or methodology of such reviews,
and without specifying when an on-site
audit may or may not be appropriate.
The Commission believes that such a
review is important to ensure that each
clearing member’s risk management
framework is sufficient and properly
implemented. The Commission also
believes that a DCO should be permitted
to exercise reasonable discretion with
respect to each of these matters, based
upon the nature, risk profiles, or other
regulatory supervision of particular
clearing members. The requirement that
such reviews must be conducted on a
‘‘periodic basis’’ means that reviews
must be conducted routinely and,
therefore, the requirement would not
permit a DCO to only conduct such
reviews on a for-cause basis.
A number of commenters noted that
many clearing members are clearing
members of multiple DCOs and thus
could be subject to multiple duplicative
risk reviews. CME, OCC, MGEX, ICE,
and NYPC indicated that this would be
burdensome for such clearing members.
For example, MGEX noted ‘‘the burden
a clearing member may be faced with
due to duplication of efforts and
associated costs.’’ KCC indicated that
such duplicative reviews would achieve
little with great expenditure of
resources.
OCC and NYPC also expressed their
concerns about the costs to DCOs. In
particular, OCC noted that requiring
DCOs to conduct such reviews would
impose a very high cost on a DCO that
is not integrated with a DCM. NYPC
noted its concern that the Commission
may be underestimating the immensity
of conducting such reviews in that a
clearing member’s risk management
plan will not address solely the risks
associated with clearing membership,
but will be integrated and cover the
broad spectrum of risks, including
market, credit, liquidity, capital, and
operational risk, that are associated with
the entirety of the clearing member’s
securities, banking and futures business,
much of which may have nothing to do
with business through the DCO.
In order to address NYPC’s specific
concern, the Commission is modifying
§ 39.13(h)(5)(i)(A) to add the qualifier
‘‘which address the risks that such
clearing members may pose to the
derivatives clearing organization’’ after
‘‘risk management policies and
procedures’’ and is adding the same
qualifier in § 39.13(h)(5)(ii) after ‘‘risk
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
management policies, procedures, and
practices of each of its clearing
members.’’
To reduce the potential burden of
duplicative risk reviews of clearing
members that are clearing members of
multiple DCOs, CME and NYPC urged
the Commission to give each DCO
reasonable discretion regarding the
frequency, scope, or manner in which it
conducts risk reviews of its clearing
members, taking into account various
factors including other regulatory
supervision, or review by a
governmental entity or self-regulatory
organization, of particular firms. Other
commenters variously suggested that
risk reviews should be conducted by the
Commission (OCC and MGEX), by the
clearing member’s DSRO or a similar
DCO industry group (KCC, OCC, ICE,
and MGEX), or by NFA (OCC).
The Commission notes that the
current DSRO system is not a viable
option for reviewing clearing members’
risk management policies, procedures
and practices. Because DSROs are only
responsible for conducting
examinations of DCM-member FCMs’
compliance with financial requirements,
clearing members that only engage in
house trading do not have a DSRO, nor
will clearing members that solely clear
SEF-executed trades. Moreover, such
examinations do not address all of the
risk issues which would concern a
particular DCO. Furthermore, even if the
current DSRO system were expanded to
include DCOs, or a similar industry
group composed of DCOs were formed,
it would be impractical to allocate the
responsibility to one DCO to analyze the
risk management policies, procedures
and practices of a common clearing
member, on behalf of all relevant DCOs,
when each DCO may impose different
risk management requirements on its
clearing members and each DCO may
have differing margin methodologies
that call for different risk management
responses from clearing members.
The Commission does not believe that
it should assume the sole oversight of
the risk management policies,
procedures, and practices of clearing
members of DCOs. The Commission
conducts risk surveillance with respect
to both DCOs and clearing members;
however, this cannot replace a DCO’s
obligation to ensure that its clearing
members are appropriately managing
the risks that such clearing members
pose to that particular DCO. Similarly,
it does not appear that NFA would be
an efficient alternative. The Commission
recognizes that certain DCMs have
entered into regulatory services
agreements with NFA, and that NFA has
thereby assumed certain audit
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
responsibilities with respect to FCMs
that are members of those DCMs.
However, a DCO remains in the best
position to review the risk management
policies, procedures, and practices of its
clearing members in the context of their
obligations to that particular DCO.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.13(h)(5) with the modifications
described above.
f. Additional Authority—§ 39.13(h)(6)
Proposed § 39.13(h)(6) would require
a DCO to take additional actions with
respect to particular clearing members,
when appropriate, based on the
application of objective and prudent
risk management standards. Such
actions could include, but would not be
limited to: (i) Imposing enhanced
capital requirements; (ii) imposing
enhanced margin requirements; (iii)
imposing position limits; (iv)
prohibiting an increase in positions; (v)
requiring a reduction of positions; (vi)
liquidating or transferring positions; and
(vii) suspending or revoking clearing
membership.
KCC stated that it generally supports
the concept that DCOs should impose
heightened risk management
requirements on clearing members as
their risk profiles change and requested
that the Commission clarify whether
each of the potential heightened risk
management requirements enumerated
in proposed § 39.13(h)(6)(i)–(vii) must
be explicitly delineated in DCO rules or
in the DCO’s clearing membership
agreement. The Commission believes
that a DCO must have the authority and
ability to take appropriate additional
actions with respect to particular
clearing members, as described in
§ 39.13(h)(6), but how the DCO asserts
such authority, whether by rule or
contractual agreement, should be left to
the discretion of the DCO.
J.P. Morgan expressed the view that
higher margin multipliers should be
adopted for members who present a
higher risk profile as a result of
excessive concentration of risk cleared,
reduced creditworthiness, or other
factors affecting a particular member,
and that such margin multipliers should
be documented in risk management
policies applicable to all members.
J.P. Morgan’s concern that margin
multipliers should be applied to
clearing members with a higher risk
profile, is addressed in § 39.13(h)(1),
adopted herein and discussed in section
IV.D.7.a, above, which requires a DCO
to impose risk limits on each clearing
member.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.13(h)(6) as proposed.
PO 00000
Frm 00053
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69385
E. Core Principle E—Settlement
Procedures—§ 39.14
Core Principle E,166 as amended by
the Dodd-Frank Act, requires a DCO to:
(1) Complete money settlements on a
timely basis, but not less frequently than
once each business day; (2) employ
money settlement arrangements to
eliminate or strictly limit its exposure to
settlement bank risks (including credit
and liquidity risks from the use of banks
to effect money settlements); (3) ensure
that money settlements are final when
effected; (4) maintain an accurate record
of the flow of funds associated with
money settlements; (5) possess the
ability to comply with the terms and
conditions of any permitted netting or
offset arrangement with another clearing
organization; (6) establish rules that
clearly state each obligation of the DCO
with respect to physical deliveries; and
(7) ensure that it identifies and manages
each risk arising from any of its
obligations with respect to physical
deliveries. The Commission proposed
§ 39.14 to establish requirements that a
DCO would have to meet in order to
comply with Core Principle E.167
1. Definitions—§ 39.14(a)
‘‘Settlement’’ was defined in proposed
§ 39.14(a)(1) to include: (i) Payment and
receipt of variation margin for futures,
options, and swap positions; (ii)
payment and receipt of option
premiums; (iii) deposit and withdrawal
of initial margin for futures, options,
and swap positions; (iv) all payments
due in final settlement of futures,
options, and swap positions on the final
settlement date with respect to such
positions; and (v) all other cash flows
collected from or paid to each clearing
member, including but not limited to,
payments related to swaps such as
coupon amounts. ‘‘Settlement bank’’
was defined in proposed § 39.14(a)(2) as
‘‘a bank that maintains an account either
for the [DCO] or for any of its clearing
members, which is used for the purpose
of transferring funds and receiving
transfers of funds in connection with
settlements with the [DCO].’’
ISDA and FIA commented that
posting of variation margin on swaps
should not be viewed as ‘‘settling’’ the
present value of the trade and noted that
price alignment interest would still be
paid on variation margin. ISDA stated
that, similarly, initial margin is not
‘‘paid’’ by a clearing member to a DCO
166 Section 5b(c)(2)(E) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 7a–
1(c)(2)(E) (Core Principle E).
167 Without addressing any specific aspect of
proposed § 39.14, LCH commented that it agrees
with the Commission’s proposals for settlement
procedures.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69386
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
but is often posted with a security
interest granted by the clearing member.
FIA also commented that the deposit
and withdrawal of initial margin is not
properly defined as a settlement.
NGX stated that, with the exception of
a relatively small power contract, its
clearing model does not require daily
variation margin payments and
collections from its clearing
participants; rather, it holds collateral
(initial margin) in an account at a
depository bank rather than in a
settlement account, and additional
collateral may be called for as required.
Therefore, NGX stated that it would be
clearer when applied to the NGX model,
to use the term ‘‘payment and receipt’’
rather than the term ‘‘deposit’’ when
referring to initial margin.
The Commission proposed a broad
definition of ‘‘settlement’’ in
§ 39.14(a)(1) to encompass all cash flows
between clearing members and a DCO.
The Commission recognizes that
accounts that are used for the payment
and receipt of variation margin are
frequently called settlement accounts,
while accounts that are used for the
deposit and withdrawal of initial margin
may be called deposit accounts, or
custody accounts, if the initial margin
deposited therein is in the form of
securities. The definition of ‘‘settlement
bank’’ in § 39.14(a)(2) was intended to
encompass any bank that a DCO uses for
settlements, as defined in § 39.14(a)(1),
whether the relevant accounts are called
settlement accounts, deposit accounts,
or custody accounts. In order to avoid
confusion, the Commission is modifying
§ 39.14(a)(2) to define a settlement bank
simply as ‘‘a bank that maintains an
account either for the [DCO] or for any
of its clearing members, which is used
for the purpose of any settlement
described in paragraph (a)(1) above.’’
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.14(a)(1) as proposed, except for a
non-substantive change, which replaces
each reference to ‘‘futures, options, and
swap positions’’ with ‘‘futures, options,
and swaps.’’
2. Daily Settlements—§ 39.14(b)
Proposed § 39.14(b) would require a
DCO to effect a settlement with each
clearing member at least once each
business day, and to have the authority
and operational capacity to effect a
settlement with each clearing member,
on an intraday basis, either routinely,
when thresholds specified by the DCO
were breached, or in times of extreme
market volatility.
CME expressed its support for intraday settlements. LCH suggested that a
DCO must measure its credit exposures
‘‘several times each business day,’’ and
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
should be obliged to recalculate initial
and variation margin requirements more
than once each business day. J.P.
Morgan stated that intraday margin calls
should be made with greater frequency
for clearing members who have a higher
risk profile.
The Commission does not believe that
it is necessary to adopt a requirement
that all DCOs recalculate initial and
variation margin requirements more
than once each business day or an
explicit requirement for intraday margin
calls for clearing members with a higher
risk profile. The Commission believes
that it has struck the appropriate
balance in § 39.14(b), by requiring a
DCO to conduct daily settlements, while
permitting a DCO to exercise its
discretion regarding whether it will
conduct routine intraday settlements, or
whether it will settle positions on an
intraday basis only when certain
thresholds are breached 168 or in times
of extreme market volatility. This
approach is also generally consistent
with proposed international
standards.169 A particular DCO could
determine to conduct routine intraday
settlements, as some have done, or to
conduct intraday settlements for
particular clearing members based on
their risk profiles.
NEM, NGX, and NOCC all requested
that the Commission afford recognition
to a clearing model that does not require
daily variation margin payments and
collections but permits accrual
accounting with respect to certain
energy products.
NEM noted that most Retail Energy
Marketers (REMs) 170 use an accrual
accounting practice that recognizes
revenues and costs after energy delivery
to their retail customers and that
clearing solutions that require daily
cash settlements would either
complicate their accounting practices or
significantly impact REM cash flows.
NGX stated that its clearing model
generally does not require daily
variation margin payments and
collections, and that settlement on its
168 E.g., a DCO could establish thresholds that
relate to the extent of market volatility, or with
respect to a particular clearing member, the extent
of losses that it has suffered on a particular day or
whether it has reached a risk limit established by
the DCO pursuant to § 39.13(h)(1)(i), which is
discussed in section IV.D.7.a, above.
169 See CPSS–IOSCO Consultative Report,
Principle 6: Margin, Key Consideration 4, at 40;
EMIR, Article 39, paragraph 3, at 46.
170 NEM stated that REMs ‘‘sell electricity and
natural gas to consumers as a competitive
alternative to the local utility’’ and ‘‘often purchase
wholesale physical natural gas and electricity on a
spot (delivery) month (day) basis and also purchase
swaps to lock in prices for any consumers who
want a long-term fixed price contract.’’
PO 00000
Frm 00054
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
energy contracts 171 occurs only on a
monthly basis, after clearing participant
obligations have been netted, consistent
with practices in the cash market and
with the end-user nature of the vast
majority of NGX clearing participants.
NGX noted that, therefore, the type of
daily settlement risk that proposed
§ 39.14 addresses is not present in the
NGX model and the degree of risk in the
monthly settlement process is reduced.
Although NOCC supported adoption
of proposed § 39.14(b) for traditional
futures and cleared swaps, it indicated
that it intends to develop a
clearinghouse that will seek registration
as a DCO to clear energy products,
including commercial forward contracts
that it believes will be outside the scope
of regulation as futures contracts or as
swaps under the CEA, as well as
financial forwards that it believes will
fall within the definition of swaps under
the CEA. NOCC stated that while gains
and losses on the commercial forward
contracts and financial forwards that it
intends to clear are calculated daily,
they are accrued throughout the
delivery period and following the
delivery period, and are not cash settled
until final payment occurs
approximately three weeks after the
month in which the commodity is
delivered. NOCC proposed that the
Commission adopt a rule that would
permit exemptions for alternative risk
management frameworks, which would
provide NOCC with the ability to
demonstrate to the Commission that
daily accrual settlement of variation
margin is a sound practice appropriately
tailored to the unique characteristics of
the cash energy markets and market
participants for which NOCC is seeking
to provide the benefits of clearing.
The Commission has not proposed
and is not adopting a rule permitting
exemptions for alternative risk
management frameworks. However, a
particular DCO may petition the
Commission for an exemption if it
believes that it can demonstrate that the
daily accrual of gains and losses
provides the same protection to the DCO
as would daily variation margin
payments and collections. Therefore,
the Commission is adding a clause to
§ 39.14(b) that states ‘‘[e]xcept as
otherwise provided by Commission
order’’ prior to the requirement that a
DCO ‘‘shall effect a settlement with each
clearing member at least once each
business day.’’
171 NGX stated that it ‘‘operates a trading and
clearing system for energy products that provides
electronic trading, central counterparty clearing and
data services to the North American natural gas,
electricity and oil markets.’’
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
3. Settlement Banks—§ 39.14(c)
The introductory paragraph of
proposed § 39.14(c) would require a
DCO to employ settlement arrangements
that eliminate or strictly limit its
exposure to settlement bank risks,
including the credit and liquidity risks
arising from the use of such banks to
effect settlements with its clearing
members.
OCC commented that it would not be
possible for a DCO to ‘‘eliminate’’ all
exposure to settlement bank risks and
that the Commission had not provided
any guidance as to what it means to
‘‘strictly limit’’ such exposure. The
Commission notes that the language in
the introductory paragraph of proposed
§ 39.14(c), which would require a DCO
to ‘‘employ settlement arrangements
that eliminate or strictly limit its
exposure to settlement bank risks,
including the credit and liquidity risks
arising from the use of such banks to
effect settlements * * *,’’ is virtually
identical to the statutory language in
Core Principle E.172 The Commission is
adopting the introductory paragraph of
§ 39.14(c) with two modifications. First,
in response to OCC’s comment, the
Commission is adding the words ‘‘as
follows:’’ at the end of the sentence, in
order to clarify that a DCO that complies
with § 39.14(c)(1), (2), and (3), discussed
below, will be deemed to have
‘‘employ[ed] settlement arrangements
that eliminate or strictly limit its
exposure to settlement bank risks’’
within the meaning of § 39.14(c). The
Commission is also inserting
parentheses around the letter ‘‘s’’ in the
word ‘‘banks’’ in order to clarify that the
Commission is not intending to require
that a DCO must have more than one
settlement bank in all circumstances.
However, a DCO will need to have more
than one settlement bank to the extent
that it is reasonably necessary in order
to eliminate or strictly limit the DCO’s
exposures to settlement bank risks,
pursuant to § 39.14(c)(3), as further
discussed below.
4. Criteria for Acceptable Settlement
Banks—§§ 39.14(c)(1) and (c)(2)
Proposed § 39.14(c)(1) would require
a DCO to have documented criteria with
respect to those banks that are
acceptable settlement banks for the DCO
and its clearing members, including
criteria addressing the capitalization,
creditworthiness, access to liquidity,
operational reliability, and regulation or
supervision of such banks. Proposed
§ 39.14(c)(2) would require a DCO to
monitor each approved settlement bank
172 See
Section 5b(c)(2)(E)(ii) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C.
7a–1(c)(2)(E)(ii).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
on an ongoing basis to ensure that such
bank continues to meet the criteria
established pursuant to § 39.14(c)(1).
Proposed §§ 39.14(c)(1) and (c)(2) are
consistent with international
recommendations.173
NYPC agreed with the proposed
requirement that DCOs must articulate
the standards that they apply to the
selection of settlement banks.
OCC indicated that a DCO may have
to deviate from its written policies on
the selection of clearing banks during a
major market disruption, as those
settlement banks that are the best
options available at the time may not
meet the technical criteria set forth in a
DCO’s written policies. The
Commission agrees with OCC that a
DCO may have to deviate from its
written policies during a major market
disruption. However, whether the
Commission would permit a DCO to do
so would need to be addressed in the
context of the particular major market
disruption, e.g., based on an analysis of
whether all available settlement banks
no longer meet such written criteria.
MGEX commented that the Federal
Reserve and other banking authorities
are in the best position to review a
bank’s financial condition. NYPC
recommended that the Commission
modify the proposed rule to reflect the
fact that the only criteria that are likely
to be susceptible to observation by a
DCO are a bank’s operational reliability,
regulatory capital, and the rating of its
parent bank holding company. The
Commission agrees that the Federal
Reserve and other banking authorities
may be in the best position to review a
bank’s financial condition and that there
is certain information about settlement
banks to which a DCO will not have
regular access. Nonetheless, a DCO has
a responsibility to undertake reasonable
efforts to ensure that its settlement
bank(s) continue to meet the criteria
established by the DCO. A DCO may be
able to obtain pertinent information
from public sources, and it should be
able to request and obtain information
from an approved settlement bank,
which demonstrates whether the bank
continues to meet the criteria
established by the DCO.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.14(c)(1) with a modification that
replaces the language that states: ‘‘with
respect to those banks that are
acceptable settlement banks for the
derivatives clearing organization and its
clearing members’’ with ‘‘that must be
met by any settlement bank used by the
173 See CPSS–IOSCO Consultative Report,
Principle 9: Money Settlements, Key Consideration
3, at 54.
PO 00000
Frm 00055
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69387
derivatives clearing organization or its
clearing members.’’ In addition, the
Commission is inserting parentheses
around the letter ‘‘s’’ in the word
‘‘banks.’’ Consistent with the
modification to the introductory
paragraph of § 39.14(c) described above,
these modifications also clarify that
there may be circumstances in which it
may be appropriate for a DCO to use a
single settlement bank. The Commission
is adopting § 39.14(c)(2) as proposed.
5. Monitoring and Addressing Exposure
to Settlement Banks—§ 39.14(c)(3)
Proposed § 39.14(c)(3) would require
a DCO to monitor the full range and
concentration of its exposures to its own
and its clearing members’ settlement
banks and assess its own and its
clearing members’ potential losses and
liquidity pressures in the event that the
settlement bank with the largest share of
settlement activity were to fail.174 A
DCO would be required to: (i) maintain
settlement accounts at additional
settlement banks; (ii) approve additional
settlement banks for use by its clearing
members; (iii) impose concentration
limits with respect to its own or its
clearing members’ settlement banks;
and/or (iv) take any other appropriate
actions if any such actions are
reasonably necessary in order to
eliminate or strictly limit such
exposures.
OCC commented that the requirement
that a DCO monitor its clearing
members’ exposure to the settlement
banks used by such clearing members
could result in a massive duplication of
effort and would be very burdensome
for the DCO. Therefore, OCC suggested
that clearing members or their primary
regulators should be responsible for
monitoring clearing members’ exposure
to their settlement banks.
The Commission does not agree with
OCC that proposed § 39.14(c)(3) could
result in a massive duplication of effort.
The focus of the monitoring required by
§ 39.14(c)(3) is on a DCO’s exposures
and its clearing members’ potential
losses insofar as they may create
exposures for the DCO. Therefore, each
174 Some DCOs have their own settlement
accounts at each settlement bank used by their
clearing members, in which case a clearing
member’s settlement bank is also the DCO’s
settlement bank, and transfers between a clearing
member’s settlement account and a DCO’s
settlement account are made internally. Other DCOs
permit their clearing members to use settlement
banks at which such DCOs do not have their own
settlement accounts, and settlement transfers are
made between a clearing member’s settlement bank
and the DCO’s settlement bank. In either event, the
settlement bank with the largest share of settlement
activity will always be a bank at which the DCO
maintains a settlement account, as all settlement
activity will involve the DCO.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69388
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
DCO must conduct the required
monitoring as each DCO’s exposures are
unique to that DCO. In addition, this
provision of § 39.14(c)(3) is consistent
with proposed international
standards.175
NYPC commented that since initial
and variation margin requirements
fluctuate daily, proposed § 39.14(c)(3)
would require DCOs to monitor their
exposures to all settlement banks and
not merely the largest. The Commission
agrees with NYPC. Proposed
§ 39.14(c)(3) would require a DCO to
‘‘monitor the full range and
concentration of its exposures to its own
and its clearing members’ settlement
banks,’’ which means that a DCO must
conduct such monitoring with respect to
all such settlement banks. The reference
to ‘‘the settlement bank with the largest
share of settlement activity’’ was made
in the context of requiring a DCO to
assess the potential impact of the failure
of such bank.
CME and OCC requested that the
Commission clarify that a DCO would
only be required to take any of the
actions specified in proposed
§ 39.14(c)(3)(i)–(iv), if the specific action
were reasonably necessary in order to
eliminate or strictly limit exposures to
settlement banks, and that a DCO would
not be required to take all of the
specified actions in all cases. CME
supported this interpretation and OCC
stated its belief that these requirements
would be reasonable if the final rule
were expressly limited in this manner.
The Commission is modifying
§ 39.14(c)(3)(i)–(iv) to clarify the
Commission’s intent to obligate a DCO
to employ any one or more of the
actions specified in (i) through (iv), only
if any one or more of such actions is
reasonably necessary in order to
eliminate or strictly limit such
exposures.
CME, ICE, MGEX, and KCC variously
commented that prescribing
concentration limits and requiring that
a DCO and its clearing members
maintain multiple settlement banks
would impose significant expenses on
the DCO, its clearing members, and their
customers. CME, MGEX, and NYPC
stated their belief that it would be
difficult to comply with this regulation
given the limited number of banks that
are qualified and willing to serve as
settlement banks.176 CME also
175 See CPSS–IOSCO Consultative Report,
Principle 9: Money Settlements, Explanatory Note,
3.9.5, at 56.
176 CME also expressed concern that, as drafted,
the proposed regulation appears to require a DCO
to approve at least two more settlement banks,
because of the reference to ‘‘settlement banks’’ in
the plural.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
commented that the meaning of
‘‘concentration limits’’ is unclear, and
stated its belief that it would be unwise
to impose artificial limits on the number
of clearing members or the size of
clearing member accounts at a particular
settlement bank.
ICE took the position that hard
concentration limits could increase
systemic risk because a DCO would
need to distribute funds across multiple
banks. ICE indicated that as settlement
funds increased, highly rated banks
would eventually be consumed by the
concentration limits and DCOs may
have to open accounts with lower rated
banks. ICE further commented that
concentration limits could act as a
constraint on customer choice, in that if
one bank had a large number of
settlement customers, there would be
natural concentration of settlement
flows, and the DCO could have to direct
customers not to use their chosen bank.
NYPC also questioned whether
current settlement banks would be
willing to continue to act in that role if
the Commission required a DCO and
some of its clearing members to transfer
their business to other banks. NYPC
stated that this would leave the existing
settlement banks with an expensive
infrastructure supported by fewer client
accounts.
MGEX stated its belief that requiring
a DCO to oversee clearing members’
banks and establishing credit or
concentration limits would be intrusive
and suggested that the final rule should
provide DCOs with flexibility.
The Commission notes that proposed
§ 39.14(c)(3)(iii) would require a DCO to
impose concentration limits with
respect to its own or its clearing
members’ settlement banks if such
action were reasonably necessary in
order to eliminate or strictly limit its
exposures to such settlement banks.
Section 39.14(c)(3) would provide a
DCO with other possible options for
addressing such exposures. For
example, a DCO could open an account
at an additional settlement bank
pursuant to § 39.14(c)(3)(i), or approve
an additional settlement bank for use by
its clearing members pursuant to
§ 39.14(c)(3)(ii), without imposing
concentration limits, if doing so would
mean that such limits would not be
reasonably necessary. In addition,
proposed § 39.14(c)(3)(iv) would allow a
DCO to take other appropriate actions,
which could obviate the potential need
for concentration limits.
KCC commented that identifying
multiple settlement banks for use by
clearing members could increase a
DCO’s operational risk by fragmenting
the DCO’s margin pool. KCC suggested
PO 00000
Frm 00056
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
that there is no need for multiple
settlement banks because there would
be little effect on the operations of a
DCO if a non-systemically significant
settlement bank failed. KCC noted that
the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation generally facilitates the
transfer of the accounts and operations
of a failed bank to a successor
institution or a bridge bank with little or
no disruption to depositors at the failed
bank. KCC further stated that a DCO’s
settlement account is essentially a passthrough account and DCOs generally do
not maintain large, long-term balances
in the account. According to KCC, even
if a DCO held significant guaranty funds
or security deposits at a settlement
bank, such assets would likely be held
in a trust or custody account, which
would be unavailable to creditors of the
failed institution and would generally
be available to the DCO within a short
period of time following the insolvency
of the settlement bank. KCC also noted
that a requirement that DCOs identify
additional settlement banks for use by
clearing members would cause a
significant rise in bank service fees for
DCOs and clearing members.
NGX noted that proposed § 39.14(c)
generally refers to settlement banks, in
the plural, assuming that all DCOs will
maintain accounts with at least two
settlement banks. NGX questioned the
benefit of requiring all DCOs, regardless
of size, to use multiple settlement
banks. According to NGX, settlement
risk varies across DCOs, and the type of
daily settlement risk the proposed rule
addresses is not present at a DCO like
NGX, which does not engage in daily
variation margin payments and
collections from its clearing
participants. NGX stated that the rule
should take account of the level of
settlement activity because requiring a
DCO with a relatively small need for
settlement services to divide the flow of
funds may cause the DCO to be less
attractive, bear higher costs, and be less
competitive with larger DCOs, while
having a negligible impact on systemic
risk.177 NGX also commented that the
rule could result in increased
operational risk at a DCO like NGX with
complex contract settlement and
delivery that requires a settlement bank
to have specialized expertise and to
maintain specialized processes and
operational capabilities. NGX requested
that the Commission provide the
flexibility to permit a DCO to
177 However, NGX stated that where a DCO has
daily settlements or monthly settlements in a
greater amount, requiring more than one settlement
bank may materially reduce systemic risk without
adverse effects.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
demonstrate that the use of a single
settlement bank is appropriate from
both a policy and a financial
perspective.
As noted above, the Commission does
not intend to require a DCO to use more
than one settlement bank if the
particular DCO otherwise employs
settlement arrangements that eliminate
or strictly limit its exposure to
settlement bank risks. The Commission
understands that the number of banks
that are willing to serve settlement
functions might be limited, particularly
for smaller DCOs. The Commission
further understands that it might be
costly for some DCOs that currently
only have one settlement bank to use an
additional settlement bank. However,
pursuant to § 39.14(c)(3), a DCO would
be required to have a second settlement
bank, if it were reasonably necessary in
order to eliminate or strictly limit the
DCO’s exposures to settlement bank
risks.
The Commission is modifying
§§ 39.14(c)(3)(i) and (ii) to refer to ‘‘one
or more’’ additional settlement banks, so
that it will be clear that a DCO would
not necessarily be required to maintain
settlement accounts with more than one
additional settlement bank or to approve
more than one additional settlement
bank that its clearing members could
choose to use, under the specified
circumstances. In addition, the
Commission is modifying
§ 39.14(c)(3)(iii) to similarly clarify that
a DCO may only be required to impose
concentration limits with respect to
‘‘one or more’’ of its own or its clearing
members’ settlement banks, under the
specified circumstances. The
Commission is also modifying
§ 39.14(c)(3)(ii) by replacing ‘‘for use by
its clearing members’’ with ‘‘that its
clearing members could choose to use’’
to make it clear that the Commission is
not suggesting that a single clearing
member might be required to use more
than one settlement bank.178
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.14(c)(3) with the modifications
described above.
178 For example, it appears that CME may have
interpreted proposed § 39.14(c)(3)(ii) in this
unintended manner, since it stated that ‘‘we do not
believe the CFTC should require clearing members
to have accounts at multiple settlement banks,
which may prove to be an impossible (and/or
extremely costly) requirement to satisfy.’’ It appears
that KCC may also have interpreted proposed
§ 39.14(c)(3)(ii) in this manner, in light of its
comment that a requirement that DCOs identify
additional settlement banks for use by clearing
members would cause a significant rise in bank
service fees for DCOs and clearing members. There
is no reason that providing greater choice to
clearing members regarding which single settlement
bank they could elect to use would cause a rise in
bank service fees for clearing members.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
6. Settlement Finality—§ 39.14(d)
Proposed § 39.14(d) would require a
DCO to ensure that settlement fund
transfers are irrevocable and
unconditional when the DCO’s accounts
are debited or credited. In addition, the
proposed regulation would require that
a DCO’s legal agreements with its
settlement banks must state clearly
when settlement fund transfers would
occur and a DCO was required to
routinely confirm that its settlement
banks were effecting fund transfers as
and when required by those legal
agreements.
ISDA and FIA requested that the rule
allow for the correction of errors.179 The
Commission agrees with ISDA and FIA
that settlement finality should not
preclude the correction of errors, and is
adding a clause to § 39.14(d) that
explicitly provides that a DCO’s legal
agreements with its settlement banks
may provide for the correction of errors.
In addition, the Commission is adding
the modifier ‘‘no later than’’ before
‘‘when the derivatives clearing
organization’s accounts are debited or
credited’’ in recognition of the fact that
a DCO’s legal agreements with its
settlement banks may provide for
settlement finality prior to the time
when the DCO’s accounts are debited or
credited, e.g., upon the bank’s
acceptance of a settlement instruction.
KCC commented that a DCO can
never effectively ensure that settlement
payments are irrevocable, given the
existence of a legal risk that a settlement
payment may be deemed to be an
inappropriate transfer pursuant to
applicable bankruptcy law. Therefore,
KCC urged the Commission to eliminate
the requirement or to restate the rule as
a requirement to monitor operational
risks related to settlement finality. The
Commission does not believe that it is
appropriate to do so. Core Principle E
requires a DCO to ‘‘ensure that money
settlements are final when effected.’’ 180
In addition, Section 546(e) of the U.S.
Bankruptcy Code 181 provides that a
bankruptcy trustee may not avoid a
transfer that is a margin payment or a
settlement payment made to a DCO by
179 ISDA also requested that the Commission
clarify how the proposed requirement would be
compatible with the fact that title transfer of initial
margin may not occur when it is posted to a DCO.
Title transfer is not a necessary element of
settlement finality. Although in some jurisdictions
a clearing member may need to transfer title to
margin collateral to a DCO in order for the DCO to
effectively exert control over such collateral, in
other jurisdictions a clearing member may transfer
margin collateral to a DCO and grant a security
interest to the DCO without transfer of title.
180 See Section 5b(c)(2)(E)(iii) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C.
7a–1(c)(2)(E)(iii).
181 11 U.S.C. 546(e).
PO 00000
Frm 00057
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69389
a clearing member, or made to a clearing
member by a DCO (with the exception
of fraudulent transfers). However, the
Commission is modifying § 39.14(d) to
state that ‘‘[a DCO] shall ensure that
settlements are final when effected by
ensuring that it has entered into legal
agreements that state that settlement
fund transfers are irrevocable and
unconditional * * *’’ (added text in
italics).
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.14(d) with the modifications
described above.
7. Recordkeeping—§ 39.14(e)
Proposed § 39.14(e) would require a
DCO to maintain an accurate record of
the flow of funds associated with each
settlement.
KCC expressed its general support of
the concept of maintaining accurate
records of settlement fund flows, but
stated that it may be prudent for the
Commission to further clarify the extent
to which the additional recordkeeping
applies to cross-margining and netting
arrangements that a DCO may have in
place with certain clearing members and
their customers. The language in
§ 39.14(e) is virtually identical to the
Core Principle E language, which the
Dodd-Frank Act added to the CEA.182
Moreover, this language is similar to the
language that had been contained in
Core Principle E prior to its amendment
by the Dodd-Frank Act.183
Therefore, proposed § 39.14(e) would
not impose any additional
recordkeeping requirements. The
Commission believes that the
requirement that a DCO must maintain
an accurate record of the flow of funds
associated with each settlement would
necessarily require the maintenance of
an accurate record with respect to any
cross-margining or netting
arrangements, without the need to
separately address such arrangements.
The Commission is adopting § 39.14(e)
as proposed.
8. Netting Arrangements—§ 39.14(f)
Proposed § 39.14(f) would incorporate
Core Principle E’s requirement that a
DCO must possess the ability to comply
with each term and condition of any
permitted netting or offset arrangement
with any other clearing organization.184
182 See Section 5b(c)(2)(E)(iv) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C.
7a–1(c)(2)(E)(iv).
183 Prior to amendment by the Dodd Frank Act,
Core Principle E provided, in part, that a [DCO]
applicant shall have the ability to ‘‘* * *
[m]aintain an adequate record of the flow of funds
associated with each transaction that the applicant
clears. * * *’’
184 See Section 5b(c)(2)(E)(v) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C.
7a–1(c)(2)(E)(v).
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69390
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
The Commission did not receive any
comment letters discussing § 39.14(f)
and is adopting § 39.14(f) as proposed.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
9. Physical Delivery—§ 39.14(g)
Proposed § 39.14(g) would require a
DCO to establish rules clearly stating
each obligation that the DCO has
assumed with respect to physical
deliveries, including whether it has an
obligation to make or receive delivery of
a physical instrument or commodity, or
whether it indemnifies clearing
members for losses incurred in the
delivery process, and to ensure that the
risks of each such obligation are
identified and managed.
KCC commented that it generally
supports the concept of proposed
§ 39.14(g), but requested that the
Commission clarify that a DCO may be
deemed to have satisfied its obligation
to establish rules relating to physical
deliveries if the rules of the exchange
that lists the cleared contracts clearly
delineates such physical delivery
obligations. The Commission notes that
the rules referenced in § 39.14(g) must
be enforceable by and against the DCO.
If a DCO were integrated with a DCM
and the DCM’s rules were enforceable
by and against the DCO, then it may be
that the DCM’s rules would satisfy the
requirements of § 39.14(g). However,
such compliance would need to be
determined on a case-by-case basis. The
Commission is adopting § 39.14(g) as
proposed, except for a technical revision
that replaces ‘‘contracts, agreements and
transactions’’ with ‘‘products’’ to ensure
consistency with other provisions in
part 39.
F. Core Principle F—Treatment of
Funds—§ 39.15
Core Principle F, 185 as amended by
the Dodd-Frank Act, requires a DCO to:
(i) Establish standards and procedures
that are designed to protect and ensure
the safety of its clearing members’ funds
and assets; (ii) hold such funds and
assets in a manner by which to
minimize the risk of loss or of delay in
the DCO’s access to the assets and
funds; and (iii) only invest such funds
and assets in instruments with minimal
credit, market, and liquidity risks. The
Commission proposed § 39.15 to
establish requirements that a DCO
would have to meet in order to comply
with Core Principle F.
1. Required Standards and Procedures—
§ 39.15(a)
Proposed § 39.15(a) would require a
DCO to establish standards and
185 Section 5b(c)(2)(F) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 7a–
1(c)(2)(F) (Core Principle F).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
procedures that are designed to protect
and ensure the safety of funds and
assets belonging to clearing members
and their customers.186 The
Commission did not receive any
comments on proposed § 39.15(a) and is
adopting the provision as proposed.
2. Segregation—§ 39.15(b)(1)
Proposed § 39.15(b)(1) would require
a DCO to comply with the segregation
requirements of Section 4d of the CEA
and Commission regulations
thereunder, or any other applicable
Commission regulation or order
requiring that customer funds and assets
be segregated, set aside, or held in a
separate account.
LCH suggested that the Commission
clarify the meaning of ‘‘segregated’’ and
limit the segregation requirement to the
funds of clearing members’ clients. LCH
also urged the Commission to limit
these requirements to client business
cleared by the DCO under the FCM
clearing structure, noting that a DCO
based outside the United States may
offer client clearing services through
alternative structures and that it did not
believe it would be appropriate for
clients clearing under these non-U.S.
structures to be subject to the
segregation requirements of Section 4d
of the CEA, but rather to the
requirements set out by the DCO’s home
or other regulators.
FIA recommended that the proposed
rule be revised to make clear that a DCO
should keep margin posted by clearing
members to support proprietary
positions separate from the DCO’s own
assets, noting that although proprietary
funds held at a DCO are not subject to
the segregation provisions of the CEA, it
is essential that these funds are
protected in the event of the default of
the DCO. The Commission has not
proposed and is not adopting FIA’s
suggestion that the Commission expand
the applicability of § 39.15(b)(1) in this
manner.
BlackRock and FHLBanks expressed
their views on specific segregation
models. The Commission has proposed
rules in a separate rulemaking regarding
the segregation of cleared swaps
customer contracts and collateral, and
the Commission will address
BlackRock’s and FHLBanks’ comments
186 Such ‘‘assets’’ would include any securities or
property that clearing members deposit with a DCO
in order to satisfy initial margin obligations, which
are also sometimes referred to as ‘‘collateral.’’
Proposed § 39.15 uses the term ‘‘assets’’ rather than
‘‘securities or property’’ or ‘‘collateral’’ in order to
be consistent with the statutory language.
PO 00000
Frm 00058
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
in connection with the final rulemaking
for that proposal.187
The comments submitted by LCH,
FIA, BlackRock, and FHLBanks all
address the substance or applicability of
segregation requirements. Proposed
§ 39.15(b)(1) would not have imposed
any additional substantive segregation
requirements upon a DCO. It would
simply require a DCO to comply with
the substantive segregation
requirements of the CEA and other
Commission regulations or orders,
which are currently applicable or which
may become applicable in the future. In
particular, § 39.15(b)(1) is not intended
to extend the extraterritorial reach of
existing segregation requirements
beyond that which may already exist in
such requirements. However, in order to
clarify the Commission’s intent in this
regard, the Commission has added
‘‘applicable’’ before ‘‘segregation
requirements’’ in § 39.15(b)(1). In
addition, the Commission wishes to
clarify that its current segregation
requirements apply to a non-U.S. based
DCO with respect to clearing members
that are registered as FCMs, whether
they are clearing business for U.S. based
customers or non-U.S. based customers.
Such requirements do not apply with
respect to clearing members that are
non-U.S. based and that are not
registered as FCMs, nor required to be
registered as FCMs.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.15(b)(1) with the modification
described above.
3. Commingling of Futures, Options on
Futures, and Swap Positions—
§ 39.15(b)(2)
Proposed § 39.15(b)(2)(i) would
permit a DCO to commingle, and a DCO
to permit clearing member FCMs to
commingle, customer positions in
futures, options on futures, and swaps,
and any money, securities, or property
received to margin, guarantee, or secure
such positions, in an account subject to
the requirements of Section 4d(f) of the
CEA (cleared swaps account), pursuant
to DCO rules that have been approved
by the Commission under § 40.5 of the
Commission’s regulations. The DCO’s
rule filing 188 would have to include, at
a minimum, the following: (A) an
identification of the futures, options on
futures, and swaps that would be
commingled, including contract
specifications or the criteria that would
187 See 76 FR 33818 (June 9, 2011) (Protection of
Cleared Swaps Customer Contracts and Collateral;
Conforming Amendments to the Commodity Broker
Bankruptcy Provisions).
188 The DCO’s rule filing would also need to
comply with the procedural requirements of
§ 40.5(a).
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
be used to define eligible futures,
options on futures, and swaps; (B) an
analysis of the risk characteristics of the
eligible products; (C) a description of
whether the swaps would be executed
bilaterally and/or executed on a DCM
and/or a SEF; (D) an analysis of the
liquidity of the respective markets for
the futures, options on futures, and
swaps that would be commingled, the
ability of clearing members and the DCO
to offset or mitigate the risks of such
products in a timely manner, without
compromising the financial integrity of
the account, and, as appropriate,
proposed means for addressing
insufficient liquidity; (E) an analysis of
the availability of reliable prices for
each of the eligible products; (F) a
description of the financial, operational,
and managerial standards or
requirements for clearing members that
would be permitted to commingle the
eligible products; (G) a description of
the systems and procedures that would
be used by the DCO to oversee such
clearing members’ risk management of
the commingled positions; (H) a
description of the financial resources of
the DCO, including the composition and
availability of a guaranty fund with
respect to the commingled products; (I)
a description and analysis of the margin
methodology that would be applied to
the commingled products, including
any margin reduction applied to
correlated positions, and any applicable
margin rules with respect to both
clearing members and customers; (J) an
analysis of the ability of the DCO to
manage a potential default with respect
to any of the commingled products; (K)
a discussion of the procedures that the
DCO would follow if a clearing member
defaulted, and the procedures that a
clearing member would follow if a
customer defaulted, with respect to any
of the commingled products; and (L) a
description of the arrangements for
obtaining daily position data from each
beneficial owner of the commingled
products.189
189 As noted in the Commission’s notice of
proposed rulemaking regarding the protection of
cleared swaps customer contracts and collateral, 76
FR at 33818 (June 9, 2011) (Protection of Cleared
Swaps Customer Contracts and Collateral;
Conforming Amendments to the Commodity Broker
Bankruptcy Provisions), if the complete legal
segregation model is adopted for cleared swaps, a
DCO could more easily justify the approval of rules
or the issuance of a 4d order allowing the
commingling of futures, options, and swaps, since
the impact of any different risk from the product
being brought into the portfolio would be limited
to the customer who chooses to trade that product.
In such case, the Commission may still wish to
obtain and review all of the information specified
in proposed § 39.15(b)(2)(i), although its specific
concerns may be minimized. However, if the
complete legal segregation model is adopted for
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
Proposed § 39.15(b)(2)(ii) would
address situations where customer
positions in futures, options on futures,
and cleared swaps could be carried in
a futures account subject to Section
4d(a) of the CEA. Proposed
§ 39.15(b)(2)(ii) would incorporate the
informational requirements of proposed
§ 39.15(b)(2)(i), but would require a
DCO to file a petition with the
Commission for an order pursuant to
Section 4d(a) of the CEA, permitting the
DCO and its clearing members to
commingle customer positions in
futures, options on futures, and swaps
in a futures account (4d order).
Proposed § 39.15(b)(2)(iii)(A) would
provide that the Commission may
request additional information in
support of a rule submission and that it
may approve the rules in accordance
with § 40.5.190 Proposed
§ 39.15(b)(2)(iii)(B) would provide that
the Commission could request
additional information in support of a
petition and that it could issue a 4d
order in its discretion.
As noted in the notice of proposed
rulemaking, in the case of a rule
approval under § 39.15(b)(2)(i), as well
as the issuance of an order under
§ 39.15(b)(2)(ii), the Commission would
take action pursuant to Section 4d of the
CEA (permitting commingling) and
Section 4(c) of the CEA (exempting the
DCO and clearing members from the
requirement to hold customer positions
in a 4d(a) or 4d(f) account, as
applicable).
The Commission requested comment
on whether it should take the same
approach (rule submission or petition
for an order) with respect to the futures
account and the cleared swap account
and, if so, what that approach should
be. In addition, the Commission
requested comment on whether the
enumerated informational requirements
fully capture the relevant considerations
for making a determination on either
rule approval or the granting of an
order, and whether the Commission’s
analysis should take into consideration
the type of account in which the
positions would be carried, the
particular type of products that would
be involved, or the financial resources
cleared swaps, and after the Commission obtains
experience with respect to considering requests to
commingle futures, options, and swaps under
§ 39.15(b)(2) in an environment where that margin
model applies, the Commission may revisit its
ongoing need for all of the information listed in
§ 39.15(b)(2)(i).
190 A rule submitted for prior approval would be
approved unless the rule is inconsistent with the
CEA or the Commission’s regulations. See Section
5c(c)(5) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 7a–2(c)(5); and 75 FR
at 44793–44794 (Provisions Common to Registered
Entities; final rule).
PO 00000
Frm 00059
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69391
of the clearing members that would hold
such accounts. The Commission further
requested comment on what, if any,
additional or heightened requirements
should be imposed to manage the
increased risks introduced to a futures
account that also holds cleared swaps.
In some instances, commenters
addressed topics that are more properly
considered by the Commission in
connection with a separate
rulemaking,191 that relate to substantive
requirements that the Commission
might impose as a condition of
approving a rule or granting an order
under § 39.15(b)(2),192 or that relate to
other provisions adopted herein.193 The
Commission is not addressing those
comments in its discussion of
§ 39.15(b)(2) because they are not within
the scope of the proposal.
CME, FIA, and MFA expressed their
general support for the adoption of rules
that would allow commingling of
customer positions in futures, options
on futures, and cleared swaps. In
particular, CME indicated that such
commingling could achieve important
benefits with respect to greater capital
efficiency which would result from
margin reductions for correlated
positions, and that adoption of a
regulation permitting such commingling
would be consistent with the public
interest, in accordance with Section 4(c)
of the CEA. CME further stated that
‘‘[h]aving positions in a single account
can also enhance risk management
practices and systemic risk containment
by allowing the customer’s portfolio to
191 E.g., CME and FIA raised operational concerns
in the event the Commission adopts a different
segregation regime for each type of customer
account. Those comments will be considered in
connection with the Commission’s proposal
regarding the appropriate segregation regime for
cleared swaps accounts. See 76 FR 33818 (June 9,
2011) (Protection of Cleared Swaps Customer
Contracts and Collateral; Conforming Amendments
to the Commodity Broker Bankruptcy Provisions).
192 E.g., LCH suggested additional factors that the
Commission should consider before a DCO or its
clearing members should be able to commingle, and
offer offsets between, futures, options on futures,
and swaps, including: (a) clients must hold their
futures, options, and swaps under the same account
structure and within the same legal entity, and (b)
the DCO must margin the futures, options, and
swaps using the same margin model; and ELX
expressed the view that in order for a customer to
gain the portfolio margining benefits of
commingling futures, options, and swaps executed
on a SEF, it would be necessary for a customer to
clear its futures, options, and swaps through the
same DCO.
193 LCH stated that all offset assumptions in the
DCO’s margin calculations must, at a minimum, be
replicated in the DCO’s stress testing and must be
recalibrated frequently. The Commission notes that
permitted spread and portfolio margins are
addressed in § 39.13(g)(4), discussed in section
IV.D.6.e, above, and back testing of such spread and
portfolio margins is addressed in § 39.13(g)(7),
discussed in section IV.D.6.g, above.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69392
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
be handled in a coordinated fashion in
a transfer or liquidation scenario.’’
CME stated its belief that it would be
logical to apply the same methodology
(rule submission or petition for an
order) with respect to the futures
account and the cleared swaps account,
and that a rule submission would be the
most efficient and optimal approach.
The Commission is retaining the
proposed distinction whereby the
Commission may permit futures to be
commingled in a Section 4d(f) cleared
swaps account subject to a rule approval
process, and may permit cleared swaps
to be commingled in a Section 4d(a)
futures account subject to a 4d order. In
the latter instance, the 4d petition
process would provide additional
procedural protections in that: (1)
Review of a 4d petition by the
Commission is not subject to the time
limits that apply to a request for rule
approval under § 40.5; and (2) the
Commission may impose conditions in
a 4d order, as appropriate. The
Commission has determined that, at this
time, it is appropriate to provide these
additional procedural protections before
exposing futures customers to the risks
of swaps that may be commingled in a
futures account. As also noted in other
contexts in this notice of final
rulemaking, DCOs have greater
experience in clearing futures. Swaps
will expose DCOs to risks that can differ
in their nature and magnitude.
However, as the Commission and the
industry gain more experience with
cleared swaps, the Commission may
revisit this issue in the future.
The Commission is adopting CME’s
suggestion that it revise
§ 39.15(b)(2)(i)(L) to remove the
reference to obtaining daily position
data ‘‘from each beneficial owner.’’
Therefore, § 39.15(b)(2)(i)(L), as
modified, requires a DCO to submit ‘‘[a]
description of the arrangements for
obtaining daily position data with
respect to futures, options on futures,
and swaps in the account,’’ without
specifying the level of detail or the
source of the daily position data that the
DCO must obtain. As noted by CME, the
Commission could request additional
information from the DCO, in support of
its request for rule approval or petition
for a 4d order, pursuant to
§ 39.15(b)(2)(iii).
The Commission is also making
conforming changes to § 39.15(b)(2), to
replace a reference to ‘‘cleared swap
account’’ with ‘‘cleared swaps account’’
to achieve consistency with the
terminology in another Commission
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
rulemaking; 194 is revising the references
to ‘‘futures, options on futures, and
swap positions’’ and ‘‘futures, options
on futures, and swaps’’ to read ‘‘futures,
options, and swaps;’’ 195 is replacing a
reference to ‘‘contract’’ with ‘‘product;’’
and is correcting the references to
§ 39.15(b)(2)(i) and (ii) in
§ 39.15(b)(iii)(A) and (B), respectively.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.15(b)(2) with the modifications
described above.
4. Holding of Funds and Assets—
§ 39.15(c)
The introductory paragraph of
proposed § 39.15(c) would require that a
DCO hold funds and assets belonging to
clearing members and their customers
in a manner that minimizes the risk of
loss or of delay in the DCO’s access to
those funds and assets. The Commission
did not receive any comment letters
discussing the introductory paragraph of
proposed § 39.15(c) and is adopting the
provision as proposed.
5. Types of Assets—§ 39.15(c)(1)
Proposed § 39.15(c)(1) would require
a DCO to limit the assets it accepts as
initial margin to those that have
minimal credit, market, and liquidity
risks, and prohibit a DCO from
accepting letters of credit as initial
margin.
LCH agreed with the provisions of
proposed § 39.15(c), but added that the
rules might more properly require that
a DCO must be able to convert any
funds and assets held promptly into
cash, and should prove that it is able to
do so on an ongoing basis. J.P. Morgan
stated that it is necessary for DCOs to
maintain sufficient liquidity, and that
this could be achieved by requiring that
clearing members post a minimum
amount of liquid (cash and qualifying
government securities) margin, among
other things.196
The Commission believes that the
standard of ‘‘minimal credit, market,
and liquidity risks’’ is sufficient and
194 See 76 FR 33818 (June 9, 2011) (Protection of
Cleared Swaps Customer Contracts and Collateral;
Conforming Amendments to the Commodity Broker
Bankruptcy Provisions).
195 This conforming terminology, which appears
elsewhere in part 39, streamlines the rule text
without changing the meaning of the provision. The
scope of part 39 covers only those products subject
to the Commission’s oversight and would not
include, for example, options on securities.
Refinements in the definitions of products subject
to Commission oversight will be addressed in the
future.
196 J.P. Morgan also suggested that DCOs could
maintain liquidity by requiring clearing members to
make guarantee fund contributions or by requiring
clearing members to participate in a liquidity
facility. The Commission has not proposed and is
not adopting such requirements.
PO 00000
Frm 00060
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
that it is not necessary to modify the
language of the regulation to include an
explicit requirement that a DCO must be
able to convert funds and assets
promptly into cash or to require that
clearing members must post a minimum
amount of cash and qualifying
government securities. Moreover, the
requirement that a DCO shall limit the
assets that it accepts as initial margin to
those that have ‘‘minimal credit, market,
and liquidity risks’’ is consistent with
international recommendations.197
OCC expressed its belief that the
proposal places an excessive focus on
the types of assets that may be used as
margin and that the Commission’s
central focus should be on whether a
DCO’s procedures and risk management
systems are sufficient to provide a high
degree of assurance that a portfolio,
including margin assets, can be
liquidated with a positive liquidation
value. OCC further noted its concern
that some of the collateral that it
currently accepts as initial margin,
including less-liquid stocks and longdated Treasury securities, would no
longer be permitted under the proposed
rule. OCC explained that its ‘‘collateral
in margins’’ or ‘‘CIM’’ program looks at
each type of collateral as an asset with
specific risk characteristics rather than
as a fixed value, and it recognizes both
positive and negative correlations with
other assets and liabilities in a
particular account.
As an example, OCC stated that even
though XYZ stock may be less liquid
than other stocks, it may have a greater
value than a more liquid stock when it
is used as margin for a short position in
XYZ call options. Therefore, OCC urged
the Commission not to impose a
standard of ‘‘minimal credit, market,
and liquidity risk,’’ or not to adopt an
interpretation of such a standard in a
manner that would reduce the
opportunities for diversification of
collateral and use of assets that may
have specific risk-reducing properties in
a particular portfolio. In particular, OCC
stated that ‘‘[w]here a DCO is capable of
reflecting the risk of certain assets in its
margin model, we see no reason why
less liquid instruments or instruments
with higher than average credit or
market risks should not be acceptable
for initial margin.’’
The Commission agrees that a DCO
should be permitted to accept assets as
initial margin if such assets have
specific risk-reducing properties in a
particular portfolio and the DCO’s
margin model is capable of
appropriately reflecting the risk of those
197 See CPSS–IOSCO Consultative Report,
Principle 5: Collateral, at 37.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
assets. Accordingly, although the
Commission is retaining the standard of
minimal credit, market, and liquidity
risk, it is revising the provision to add
the following: ‘‘A [DCO] may take into
account the specific risk-reducing
properties that particular assets have in
a particular portfolio.’’ As illustrated by
OCC, an asset that would not generally
be acceptable could be acceptable for
use in connection with a particular
portfolio.
Freddie Mac requested that the
Commission clarify that DCOs may
accept collateral types beyond those
specified as permitted investments
under § 1.25. Section 39.15(c) does not
prohibit a DCO from accepting collateral
types that are not specified as permitted
investments under § 1.25. The
Commission believes that it is
appropriate to permit DCOs to retain the
flexibility to accept a broader range of
assets that meet the general requirement
of ‘‘minimal credit, market, and
liquidity risks’’ than those which are
appropriate investments for funds
received from clearing members.
Several comment letters specifically
discussed the proposal to prohibit the
use of letters of credit as initial margin.
The commenters disagreed with the
Commission’s proposed requirement
that a DCO may not accept letters of
credit for this purpose. CME stated that
letters of credit provide an absolute
assurance of payment and, therefore, the
issuing bank must honor the demand
even in circumstances where the DCO
(the beneficiary) breached its duty to the
clearing member and even if the
clearing member is unable to reimburse
the bank for its payment. CME also
stated that it was not aware of any
instances in the cleared derivatives
industry in which a beneficiary of a
letter of credit posted as collateral had
sought to draw upon the letter of credit
and had not been promptly paid by the
issuer. CME noted that letters of credit
have been especially useful for clearing
members to post as collateral for lateday margin calls. ICE and NOCC
similarly commented that letters of
credit should be permitted to serve as
non-cash collateral. NGX indicated that
letters of credit are consistent with
Section 4s(e)(3)(D) of the CEA, which
provides that the financial regulators
shall establish comparable capital
requirements and minimum initial and
variation margin requirements,
including the use of non-cash collateral,
for swap dealers.198
198 The Commission notes that the minimum
initial and variation margin requirements
referenced in Section 4s(e)(3)(D) of the CEA, 7
U.S.C. 6s(e)(3)(D), apply to uncleared swaps.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
Many commenters suggested that
letters of credit should be acceptable if
they are subject to appropriate
conditions. OCC recommended that the
Commission should allow letters of
credit as long as a DCO sets criteria with
respect to issuers, diversifies
concentration of risk among issuers, and
limits the proportion of a clearing
member’s margin requirement that can
be represented by letters of credit. In
addition, OCC stated that it would be
appropriate for the Commission to
prohibit a DCO from accepting a letter
of credit from a clearing member if the
letter of credit is issued by an institution
affiliated with the clearing member.
Similarly, FIA suggested that a DCO
should be permitted to accept letters of
credit on a case-by-case basis subject to
the credit quality of the bank and
appropriate limits on the percentage of
a clearing member’s margin
requirements that can be met by letters
of credit. FIA also indicated that DCOs
should limit the aggregate value of
letters of credit that may be issued by
any one bank.
FHLBanks wrote that ‘‘a hard and fast
prohibition against letters of credit is
inappropriate because it fails to take
into account that a letter of credit issued
by a highly creditworthy entity could
contain terms that would make the letter
of credit just as liquid as a funded
asset.’’ 199
CME stated that it only accepts letters
of credit that comply with its specified
terms and conditions, including
payment within one hour of notification
of a draw, from issuers that it has
reviewed and approved and that meet
its criteria for issuing banks. CME
further noted that it conducts periodic
reviews of approved banks and uses
caps and concentration limits in
connection with letters of credit.
NGX stated that it has accepted letters
of credit that comply with its
requirements regarding timing and
acceptable institutions, for many years,
and has successfully drawn on such
letters of credit.
Several commenters warned of the
potential risks associated with
prohibiting letters of credit, including
higher costs for clearing members and
their customers (OCC), the placement of
NGX also stated its view that in a nonintermediated model, such as that operated by
NGX, the DCO is familiar with its clearing
participants, and can exercise a degree of discretion
in accepting letters of credit without the same risk
management challenges that may be faced by an
intermediated DCO.
199 The FHLBanks further noted that the
prohibition on letters of credit may unnecessarily
constrain certain end-users from clearing swaps
because they may be precluded from pledging other
assets, e.g., by loan covenants.
PO 00000
Frm 00061
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69393
U.S. DCOs at a disadvantage to foreign
clearing houses (ICE),200 and increased
systemic risk as a result of decreased
voluntary clearing (NOCC).
The Commission acknowledges that
DCOs have historically been permitted
to exercise their discretion regarding
whether and to what extent they would
accept letters of credit for initial margin
for futures and options. Certain DCOs
have accepted such letters of credit
without incident and continue to do so.
On the other hand, as stated in the
notice of proposed rulemaking, letters of
credit are unfunded financial resources
with respect to which funds might be
not be available when they are most
needed by the DCO. Moreover, the
initial margin of a defaulting clearing
member would typically be the first
asset tapped to cure the clearing
member’s default. Taking into account
both the strong track record of letters of
credit in connection with cleared
futures and options on futures and the
potentially greater risks of cleared
swaps, the Commission is modifying the
provision to permit DCOs to accept
letters of credit as initial margin for
futures and options on futures.
However, the Commission has
determined to maintain an additional
safeguard for swaps at this time by
prohibiting a DCO from accepting letters
of credit as initial margin for swaps. In
cases where futures and swaps are
margined together, the Commission has
determined that letters of credit may not
be accepted. The Commission will
monitor developments in this area and
may revisit this issue in the future.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.15(c)(1), redesignated as
§ 39.13(g)(10),201 with the modification
described above.
6. Valuation and Haircuts—
§§ 39.15(c)(2) and 39.15(c)(3)
Proposed § 39.15(c)(2) would require
a DCO to use prudent valuation
practices to value assets posted as initial
margin on a daily basis. Proposed
§ 39.15(c)(3) would require a DCO to
apply appropriate reductions in value to
reflect the market and credit risk of the
assets that it accepts in satisfaction of
200 ICE noted that the CPSS–IOSCO Consultative
Report did not prohibit any type of collateral.
201 Redesignation of this provision and several
other provisions proposed as part of § 39.15 is a
non-substantive change that moves the provisions
to the risk management rules for margin
requirements. As a risk management rule, the
provision implements Core Principle D, Section
5b(c)(2)(D)(iii) of the CEA, which provides that
‘‘Each [DCO], through margin requirements and
other risk control mechanisms, shall limit the
exposure of the [DCO] to potential losses from
defaults by members and participants of the
[DCO].’’
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69394
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
initial margin obligations and to
evaluate the appropriateness of its
haircuts on at least a quarterly basis.
OCC commented that if a DCO can
only accept instruments with minimal
risk, then haircuts should either not be
required at all or should be very small.
The Commission notes that, as defined
in § 39.15(c)(3), haircuts are
‘‘appropriate reductions in value to
reflect market and credit risk.’’ This is
a flexible standard that would allow a
DCO to determine the extent of the
haircut based on the extent of the risk
posed by the instrument deposited as
initial margin.
OCC further stated that proposed
§ 39.15(c)(3) is ambiguous regarding
what OCC would be required to test on
a quarterly basis. OCC explained that its
STANS margin methodology does not
apply fixed haircuts to securities
deposited as collateral, but rather treats
collateral as part of a clearing member’s
overall portfolio, revisiting each
‘‘haircut’’ or valuation on a security-bysecurity, account-by-account, and dayby-day basis. Thus, OCC stated that it
checks the adequacy of its haircuts
through back testing and not through a
periodic review.
The general language of § 39.15(c)(3),
requiring a DCO to ‘‘apply appropriate
reductions in value to reflect market and
credit risk * * * to the assets that it
accepts in satisfaction of initial margin
obligations’’ and to ‘‘evaluate the
appropriateness of such haircuts on at
least a quarterly basis,’’ is broad enough
to encompass the method of daily
valuation and back testing described by
OCC.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.15(c)(2), redesignated as
§ 39.13(g)(11), as proposed. The
Commission is adopting a technical
revision to § 39.15(c)(3), redesignated as
§ 39.13(g)(12), by adding a reference to
‘‘liquidity’’ risk to conform the
terminology used to describe haircuts
(proposed as ‘‘appropriate reductions in
value to reflect market and credit risk’’)
with the terminology used in
§ 39.13(g)(10), which refers to assets that
have ‘‘minimal credit, market, and
liquidity risks.’’ 202 The Commission is
also making a non-substantive revision
to replace the phrase ‘‘including in
stressed market conditions’’ with
‘‘taking into consideration stressed
market conditions.’’
202 Credit, market, and liquidity risks are concepts
that are not mutually exclusive, and this
articulation of the types of risks to be evaluated by
a DCO appears in the CEA (Core Principle F,
Treatment of Funds (requiring that ‘‘[f]unds and
assets invested by a [DCO] shall be held in
instruments with minimal credit, market, and
liquidity risks’’), and ‘‘minimal credit, market, and
liquidity risks’’ is set forth as the standard for assets
acceptable for a guaranty fund (§ 39.11(e)(3)(i)), and
as the standard for assets acceptable as initial
margin (§ 39.13(g)(10)).
8. Pledged Assets—§ 39.15(c)(5)
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
7. Concentration Limits—§ 39.15(c)(4)
Proposed § 39.15(c)(4) would require
a DCO to apply appropriate limitations
on the concentration of assets posted as
initial margin, as necessary, in order to
ensure the DCO’s ability to liquidate
those assets quickly with minimal
adverse price effects. The proposed
regulation also would require a DCO to
evaluate the appropriateness of its
concentration limits, on at least a
monthly basis.
OCC indicated that the proposed rule
was not clear regarding whether it
would be sufficient to impose
concentration charges rather than
imposing concentration limits, but
argued that if the margin system
adequately penalizes concentration of
risk, it does not believe that fixed
concentration limits are required. The
Commission agrees that concentration
charges, rather than concentration
limits, may be appropriate in certain
circumstances, and is modifying the
provision to permit a DCO to apply
‘‘appropriate limitations or charges on
the concentration of assets posted as
initial margin’’ and to ‘‘evaluate the
appropriateness of any such
concentration limits or charges, on at
least a monthly basis.’’ The inclusion of
concentration charges as an acceptable
alternative to concentration limits is
consistent with international
recommendations.203
CME stated its view that the
Commission should not prescribe the
frequency of a DCO’s reviews of its
concentration limits and it urged the
Commission to revise § 39.15(c)(4) to
replace ‘‘on at least a monthly basis’’
with ‘‘on a regular basis.’’ The
Commission believes that it is
appropriate to require a DCO to evaluate
the appropriateness of its concentration
limits (or charges) on at least a monthly
basis and notes that § 39.15(c)(4)
provides a DCO with the discretion to
determine the nature of such evaluation.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.15(c)(4), redesignated as
§ 39.13(g)(13), with the modifications
described above.
Under proposed § 39.15(c)(5), if a
DCO were to permit its clearing
members to pledge assets for initial
margin while retaining such assets in
accounts in the names of such clearing
203 See CPSS–IOSCO Consultative Report,
Principle 5: Collateral, Explanatory Note 3.5.4, at
38.
PO 00000
Frm 00062
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
members, the DCO would have to
ensure that the assets are unencumbered
and that the pledge has been validly
created and validly perfected in the
relevant jurisdiction. The Commission
did not receive any comments
discussing proposed § 39.15(c)(5) and is
adopting the provision, redesignated as
§ 39.13(g)(14), as proposed.
9. Permitted Investments—§ 39.15(d)
Proposed § 39.15(d) would require
that clearing members’ funds and assets
that are invested by a DCO must be held
in instruments with minimal credit,
market, and liquidity risks and that any
investment of customer funds or assets
by a DCO must comply with § 1.25 of
the Commission’s regulations.
Moreover, the proposed regulation
would apply the limitations contained
in § 1.25 to all customer funds and
assets, whether they are the funds and
assets of futures and options customers
subject to the segregation requirements
of Section 4d(a) of the CEA, or the funds
and assets of cleared swaps customers
subject to the segregation requirements
of Section 4d(f) of the CEA.
The Commission did not receive any
comment letters discussing proposed
§ 39.15(d). The Commission is adopting
the provision, redesignated as § 39.15(e),
as proposed.
10. Transfer of Customer Positions—
§ 39.15(d)
The Commission proposed
regulations addressing the processing,
clearing, and transfer of customer
positions by swap dealers (SDs), major
swap participants (MSPs), FCMs, SEFs,
DCMs, and DCOs.204 Proposed
§ 39.15(d) would require a DCO to have
rules providing that, upon the request of
a customer and subject to the consent of
the receiving clearing member, the DCO
would promptly transfer all or a portion
of such customer’s portfolio of positions
and related funds from the carrying
clearing member of the DCO to another
clearing member of the DCO, without
requiring the close-out and rebooking of
the positions prior to the requested
transfer.
MFA, Citadel, and FHLBanks
supported the proposal. MFA and
Citadel suggested that the Commission
clarify that associated margin should
transfer simultaneously with the
transferred positions.
LCH also suggested that the section
should be revised to require that the
transfer of positions and related funds
be effected simultaneously. LCH
believes that absent such a provision, a
204 76 FR 13101 (March 10, 2011) (StraightThrough Processing).
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
DCO could be understood to be required
to transfer either the positions or the
funds, but not both, and such an
obligation would expose the DCO to risk
during the customer transfer.
FIA agreed with the Commission that
a customer should not be required to
close-out and re-book positions as a
condition of transferring such positions,
and that a clearing member should not
unnecessarily interfere with a
customer’s request to transfer positions.
However, FIA noted that a DCO will not
have the immediate ability to determine
which positions carried in a clearing
member’s omnibus account belong to a
particular customer. FIA suggested that
a DCO’s rules provide that the customer
submit its request to transfer its
positions to the clearing member
carrying the positions, not to the DCO.
FIA also suggested that the Commission
revise the proposed rule to confirm that
a clearing member is required to transfer
a customer’s positions only after that
customer has met all contractual
obligations, including outstanding
margin calls and any additional margin
required to support any remaining
positions.
OCC also noted that a customer will
not ask a DCO directly to transfer a
customer position. Like FIA, OCC
believes that any such transfer must be
subject to all legitimate conditions or
restrictions established by the DCO in
connection with its clearing of swaps.
CME stated that it fully supports the
concept of applying the same standards
to transfer of customer cleared swaps as
have historically been applied to
transfer of customer futures. It noted
that a customer request to transfer its
account is made not to a DCO but to the
FCM that carries the customer’s
account.
ISDA commented that any transfer
rule must provide that a party seeking
transfer not be in default to its existing
clearing member. ISDA believes that the
transfer rule must take into account any
cross-cleared or cross-margined
transactions and in the case where only
a portion of a customer’s portfolio is
transferred, clearing members must have
the ability to condition the transfer on
the posting of additional margin by the
customer.
KCC commented that this rule is not
necessary because KCC has never
required a futures position to be closed
out and re-booked prior to transfer from
the carrying clearing member to another
clearing member, nor would KCC
require a wheat calendar swap to be
closed out and re-booked prior to
transfer. The Commission notes that
such a requirement has been imposed
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
by other clearinghouses in connection
with swaps.
In response to concerns raised by
commenters, the Commission is revising
§ 39.15(d) to read as set forth in the
regulatory text of this final rule.
The language making it explicit that
positions and margin be transferred at
the same time is responsive to the
comments of MFA, Citadel, and LCH
and consistent with prudent risk
management procedures. The language
clarifying that a customer transfer
instruction would go to a clearing
member and not directly to the DCO is
responsive to the comments of FIA,
OCC, and CME. The requirement that a
customer may not be in default is
responsive to the comments of FIA and
ISDA and consistent with the statement
in the notice of proposed rulemaking
that transfers should be subject to
contractual requirements. The
requirement that positions at both
clearing members will have appropriate
margin is responsive to the comments of
MFA, Citadel, and ISDA and consistent
with the statement in the notice of
proposed rulemaking that transfers
should be subject to contractual
requirements.
G. Core Principle G—Default Rules and
Procedures—§ 39.16
Core Principle G,205 as amended by
the Dodd-Frank Act, requires each DCO
to have rules and procedures designed
to allow for the efficient, fair, and safe
management of events during which
clearing members become insolvent or
otherwise default on their obligations to
the DCO. In addition, Core Principle G
requires each DCO to clearly state its
default procedures, make its default
rules publicly available, and ensure that
it may take timely action to contain
losses and liquidity pressures and to
continue meeting its obligations. The
Commission proposed § 39.16 to
establish requirements that a DCO
would have to meet in order to comply
with Core Principle G.
1. General—§ 39.16(a)
Proposed § 39.16(a) would require a
DCO to adopt rules and procedures
designed to allow for the efficient, fair,
and safe management of events during
which clearing members become
insolvent or default on the obligations of
such clearing members to the DCO.
The Commission did not receive any
comment letters discussing proposed
§ 39.16(a), although LCH stated that it
concurs with all the provisions set out
under proposed § 39.16. The
205 Section 5b(c)(2)(G) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 7a–
1(c)(2)(G) (Core Principle G).
PO 00000
Frm 00063
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69395
Commission is adopting § 39.16(a) as
proposed.
2. Default Management Plan—§ 39.16(b)
Proposed § 39.16(b) would require a
DCO to maintain a current written
default management plan that delineates
the roles and responsibilities of its
board of directors, its Risk Management
Committee, any other committee that
has responsibilities for default
management, and the DCO’s
management, in addressing a default,
including any necessary coordination
with, or notification of, other entities
and regulators. The proposed regulation
also would require the default
management plan to address any
differences in procedures with respect
to highly liquid contracts (such as
certain futures) and less liquid contracts
(such as certain swaps). In addition,
proposed § 39.16(b) would require a
DCO to conduct and document a test of
its default management plan on at least
an annual basis.
OCC agreed with the proposal for
annual testing of a DCO’s default
management plan, while ISDA stated
that such tests should be conducted at
least on a semi-annual basis. FIA
indicated that the default management
plan should be subject to frequent,
periodic testing. The Commission
believes that it is appropriate and
sufficient to require at least annual
testing of a DCO’s default management
plan. A particular DCO could determine
to test its plan on a semi-annual or other
periodic basis, in its discretion.
ISDA expressed its view that
regulators should review and sign off on
the default management plans of DCOs.
KCC requested that the Commission
clarify that the default management plan
concepts in proposed § 39.16(b) may be
satisfied by annual testing of the DCO’s
existing set of default rules and
procedures. The Commission does not
believe that it is necessary to adopt an
explicit requirement that the
Commission review and approve a
DCO’s default management plan.
However, Commission staff will review
a DCO’s default management plan in the
context of the Commission’s ongoing
DCO review program, including a
determination of whether a DCO’s
‘‘existing set of default rules and
procedures’’ meet the requirements of
§ 39.16(b).
The Commission is making a
technical revision to § 39.16(b),
removing the parentheticals and
substituting the word ‘‘products’’ for the
word ‘‘contracts.’’ The sentence now
reads: ‘‘Such plan shall address any
differences in procedures with respect
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69396
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
to highly liquid products and less liquid
products.’’
3. Default Procedures—§ 39.16(c)(1)
Proposed § 39.16(c)(1) would require
a DCO to adopt procedures that would
permit the DCO to take timely action to
contain losses and liquidity pressures
and to continue meeting its obligations
in the event of a default on the
obligations of a clearing member to the
DCO.
The Commission did not receive any
comment letters discussing proposed
§ 39.16(c)(1) and is adopting
§ 39.16(c)(1) as proposed.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
4. Default Rules—§ 39.16(c)(2)
Proposed § 39.16(c)(2) would require
a DCO to include certain identified
procedures in its default rules. In
particular, proposed § 39.16(c)(2)(i)
would require a DCO to set forth its
definition of a default. Proposed
§ 39.16(c)(2)(ii) would require a DCO to
set forth the actions that it is able to take
upon a default, which must include the
prompt transfer, liquidation, or hedging
of the customer or proprietary positions
of the defaulting clearing member, as
applicable. Proposed § 39.16(c)(2)(ii)
would further state that such procedures
could also include, in the DCO’s
discretion, the auctioning or allocation
of such positions to other clearing
members. Proposed § 39.16(c)(2)(iii)
would require a DCO to include in its
default rules any obligations that the
DCO imposed on its clearing members
to participate in auctions, or to accept
allocations, of a defaulting clearing
member’s positions, and would
specifically provide that any allocation
would have to be proportional to the
size of the participating or accepting
clearing member’s positions at the DCO.
Proposed § 39.16(c)(2)(iv) would
require that a DCO’s default rules
address the sequence in which the
funds and assets of the defaulting
clearing member and the financial
resources maintained by the DCO would
be applied in the event of a default.
Proposed § 39.16(c)(2)(v) would require
that a DCO’s default rules contain a
provision that customer margin posted
by a defaulting clearing member could
not be applied in the event of a
proprietary default.206 Proposed
§ 39.16(c)(2)(vi) would require that a
DCO’s default rules contain a provision
that proprietary margins posted by a
defaulting clearing member would have
to be applied in the event of a customer
206 This
is consistent with the segregation
requirements of Section 4d of the CEA and § 1.20
of the Commission’s regulations.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
default, if the relevant customer margin
were insufficient to cover the shortfall.
The Commission did not receive any
comment letters discussing proposed
§ 39.16(c)(2)(i), (ii) or (iii). The
Commission is adopting § 39.16(c)(2)(i)
as proposed. The Commission is making
technical revisions to §§ 39.16(c)(2)(ii),
(iii), (v) and (vi), as well as § 39.16(d)(3),
by replacing each use of the word
‘‘proprietary’’ with ‘‘house.’’
As discussed above in connection
with participant eligibility requirements
under § 39.12,207 the Commission is
revising § 39.16(c)(2)(iii) to require a
DCO that imposes obligations on its
clearing members to participate in
auctions or to accept allocations of a
defaulting clearing member’s positions,
to permit its clearing members to
outsource these obligations to qualified
third parties, subject to appropriate
safeguards imposed by the DCO. The
Commission believes that it is important
to permit outsourcing, while
recognizing that it is essential to limit
participation only to qualified third
parties. Accordingly, a DCO’s rules may
impose appropriate terms and
conditions on outsourcing
arrangements, addressing, for example,
the necessary qualifications to be
eligible to act in the clearing member’s
place and conflicts of interest issues.
Thus, for example, a clearing member
could hire a qualified third party to act
as its agent in an auction. The
Commission cautions, however, that any
DCO imposing terms and conditions
that could indirectly deny fair and open
access and therefore are not
‘‘appropriate,’’ i.e., not supported by
sound risk management policies, may
run afoul of Core Principle C and
§ 39.12.
The Commission is also making two
additional technical revisions to
§ 39.16(c)(2)(iii). First, the Commission
is replacing ‘‘a defaulting clearing
member’s positions’’ with ‘‘the customer
or house positions of the defaulting
clearing member,’’ to correct an
oversight in the proposed language.
Second, the Commission is revising
§ 39.16(c)(2)(iii)(A) to provide that any
allocation shall be ‘‘[p]roportional to the
size of the participating or accepting
clearing member’s positions in the same
product class at the derivatives clearing
organization’’ (added text in italics) to
clarify the Commission’s intent.
With respect to proposed
§ 39.16(c)(2)(iv), OCC agreed that it
would be appropriate to require DCOs to
adopt rules that would define the
sequence in which the funds and assets
of a defaulting clearing member and the
207 See
PO 00000
discussion in section IV.C.1.i, above.
Frm 00064
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
financial resources maintained by the
DCO would be applied in the event of
a default.
Freddie Mac expressed concern with
the broad discretion that would be given
to DCOs to determine the sequence in
which financial resources would be
applied in the event of a clearing
member default, and recommended that
DCOs should be required to place noncustomer resources (e.g., clearing
member guaranty funds and their own
capital) ahead of non-defaulting
customer collateral in the risk waterfall.
In particular, Freddie Mac indicated
that if the Commission does not require
individual segregation of customer
collateral, it should require DCOs to
place non-defaulting customers at the
bottom of the risk waterfall. Freddie
Mac stated that the Commission should
defer adoption of proposed § 39.16(c)
until after adoption of rules relating to
customer segregation.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.16(c)(2)(iv) to require that a DCO
adopt rules that identify the sequence of
its default waterfall, as proposed,
without imposing any substantive
requirements with respect to such
sequence, as suggested by Freddie Mac.
The Commission is addressing the issue
of the application of the collateral of
non-defaulting swaps customers in a
separate pending rulemaking,208 but
does not believe that it is appropriate to
defer the adoption of proposed
§ 39.16(c) until that rulemaking is
complete.
The Commission is making a
technical revision to § 39.16(c)(2)(iv) by
inserting ‘‘and its customers’’ after ‘‘the
funds and assets of the defaulting
clearing member’’ to correct an
oversight in the proposed language.
ISDA commented that proposed
§ 39.16(c)(2)(v), which would require a
DCO to adopt ‘‘[a] provision that
customer margin posted by a defaulting
clearing member shall not be applied in
the event of a proprietary default’’
should be revised to replace the words
‘‘in the event of’’ with ‘‘to cover losses
in respect of’’; otherwise, ISDA believed
that customer margin would not be able
to be applied even to cover customer
losses. The Commission agrees with
ISDA and is modifying § 39.16(c)(2)(v)
by replacing ‘‘in the event of’’ with ‘‘to
cover losses with respect to’’ and has
made a similar modification to
§ 39.16(c)(2)(vi).
CME recommended that the
Commission replace ‘‘proprietary
208 See 76 FR 33818 (June 9, 2011) (Protection of
Cleared Swaps Customer Contracts and Collateral;
Conforming Amendments to the Commodity Broker
Bankruptcy Provisions).
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
margins posted by a defaulting clearing
member’’ in § 39.16(c)(2)(vi) with
‘‘proprietary margins, positions and any
other assets in the account of the
defaulting clearing member.’’ CME
argued that the Commission’s proposed
reference to ‘‘proprietary margins posted
by a defaulting clearing member’’ is too
narrow in scope, since in the event of
a clearing member default (whether
originating in the customer origin or the
house origin), a DCO would likely
liquidate positions in the defaulting
clearing member’s house account and
then apply excess funds and not just
proprietary margins to cure the default.
The Commission agrees that
‘‘proprietary margins posted by a
defaulting clearing member’’ is too
narrow and is replacing the phrase in
§ 39.16(c)(2)(vi) with ‘‘house funds and
assets of a defaulting clearing member.’’
The Commission believes that ‘‘house
funds and assets’’ is broad enough to
include ‘‘proprietary margins, positions
and any other assets,’’ as suggested by
CME, and is consistent with the
language in § 39.16(c)(2)(iv) and § 39.15.
The Commission is similarly replacing
‘‘customer margin posted by a
defaulting clearing member’’ in
§ 39.16(c)(2)(v) with ‘‘the funds and
assets of a defaulting clearing member’s
customers’’ and is replacing ‘‘customer
margin’’ in § 39.16(c)(2)(vi) with
‘‘customer funds and assets.’’
ISDA commented that proposed
§ 39.16(c)(2)(vi) should be revised to
insert the word ‘‘excess’’ immediately
before the words ‘‘proprietary margins’’
to make it clear that proprietary margin
is to be applied first to cover proprietary
losses, noting that the use of proprietary
margin to cover customer losses ahead
of proprietary losses would hasten the
mutualization of losses among clearing
members, which would likely result in
higher margin levels being imposed
with respect to customer positions in
order to avoid that outcome. The
Commission agrees with ISDA and is
modifying § 39.16(c)(2)(vi) by inserting
‘‘excess’’ before ‘‘house funds and assets
of a defaulting clearing member,’’ as
suggested by ISDA.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.16(c)(2) with the modifications
described above.
The Commission did not receive any
comment letters discussing proposed
§ 39.16(c)(3) and is adopting
§ 39.16(c)(3) as proposed.
6. Insolvency of a Clearing Member—
§ 39.16(d)
Proposed § 39.16(d)(1) would require
a DCO to adopt rules that require a
clearing member to provide prompt
notice to the DCO if the clearing
member becomes the subject of a
bankruptcy petition, a receivership
proceeding, or an equivalent
proceeding, e.g., a foreign liquidation
proceeding. Proposed § 39.13(d)(2)
would require a DCO to review the
clearing member’s continuing eligibility
for clearing membership, upon receipt
of such notice. Proposed § 39.16(d)(3)
would require a DCO to take any
appropriate action, in its discretion,
with respect to the clearing member or
its positions, including but not limited
to liquidation or transfer of positions,
and suspension or revocation of clearing
membership, upon receipt of such
notice.
CME recommended that, in order to
preserve a DCO’s right to take
appropriate steps before a clearing
member files for, or is placed into,
bankruptcy, the Commission should
amend proposed §§ 39.16(d)(2) and (3)
to require DCOs to take appropriate
actions ‘‘no later than upon receipt’’ of
notice that the clearing member is the
subject of a bankruptcy petition or
similar proceeding. The Commission is
adopting § 39.16(d) with the
modifications to §§ 39.16(d)(2) and (3)
suggested by CME. In addition, the
Commission is making a technical
revision to § 39.16(d)(3) by replacing the
phrase ‘‘with respect to such clearing
member or its positions’’ with the
phrase ‘‘with respect to such clearing
member or its house or customer
positions.’’ This revision eliminates
possible ambiguity in the reference to
‘‘its positions,’’ which was intended to
reflect current industry practice and
include both house and customer
positions, not just house positions.
5. Publication of Default Rules—
§ 39.16(c)(3)
Proposed § 39.16(c)(3) would require
that a DCO must make its default rules
publicly available, and would crossreference § 39.21, adopted herein, which
also addresses this requirement.209
H. Core Principle H—Rule
Enforcement—§ 39.17
Core Principle H,210 as amended by
the Dodd-Frank Act, requires a DCO to
maintain adequate arrangements and
resources for the effective monitoring
and enforcement of compliance with its
rules and resolution of disputes. It also
requires a DCO to have the authority
and ability to discipline, limit, suspend,
or terminate the activities of a member
209 See discussion of § 39.21 in section IV.L,
below.
210 Section 5b(c)(2)(H) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 7a–
1(c)(2)(H).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00065
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69397
or participant due to a violation by the
member or participant of any rule of the
DCO. It further requires that a DCO
report to the Commission regarding rule
enforcement activities and sanctions
imposed against clearing members.
Proposed § 39.17 would codify these
requirements, adding a provision that
would require a DCO to report to the
Commission in accordance with
proposed § 39.19(c)(4)(xiii). As
proposed, § 39.19(c)(4)(xiii) would
require a DCO to report the initiation of
a rule enforcement action against a
clearing member or the imposition of
sanctions against a clearing member, no
later than two business days after the
DCO takes such action. As discussed in
connection with rules implementing
Core Principle J (Reporting), the
Commission is adopting that reporting
requirement with a modification that
only requires a DCO to report sanctions
imposed against a clearing member.211
The Commission received no
comments on proposed § 39.17. The
Commission is adopting § 39.17 as
proposed, but with a change to the
cross-reference to § 39.19(c)(4)(xiii) in
§ 39.17(a)(3) to reflect the redesignation
of that provision as § 39.19(c)(4)(xi).212
I. Core Principle I—System
Safeguards—§ 39.18
Core Principle I,213 as amended by the
Dodd-Frank Act, requires a DCO to
establish and maintain a program of risk
analysis and oversight that identifies
and minimizes sources of operational
risk through the development of
appropriate controls and procedures,
and automated systems that are reliable,
secure and have adequate scalable
capacity. Core Principle I also requires
that the emergency procedures, back-up
facilities, and disaster recovery plans
that a DCO is obligated to establish and
maintain specifically allow for the
timely recovery and resumption of the
DCO’s operations and the fulfillment of
each obligation and responsibility of the
DCO. Finally, Core Principle I requires
that a DCO periodically conduct tests to
verify that the DCO’s back-up resources
are sufficient to ensure daily processing,
clearing, and settlement.
Proposed § 39.18 would codify the
obligations contained in Core Principle
I and delineate the minimum
requirements that a DCO would be
required to satisfy in order to comply
with Core Principle I. Proposed § 39.18
also would define the terms ‘‘relevant
211 See discussion of rule enforcement reporting
in section IV.J.5.j, below.
212 See id. (The Commission is adopting
§ 39.19(c)(4)(xiii) as a renumbered § 39.19(c)(4)(xi)).
213 Section 5b(c)(2)(I) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 7a–
1(c)(2)(I).
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69398
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
area,’’ ‘‘recovery time objective,’’ and
‘‘wide-scale disruption’’ for purposes of
that section.
The Commission received one general
comment from LCH. LCH generally
‘‘concurred with all the provisions set
out under proposed rule 39.18,’’ but
urged the Commission to align these
provisions with the CPSS–IOSCO
standards, and to phase in such
standards.
As discussed below, the Commission
received comments on proposed
§§ 39.18 (h), (j), and (k), and proposed
§ 39.30(a).
The Commission did not receive any
comments specifically related to the
definitions contained in proposed
§ 39.18(a); proposed §§ 39.18(b),(c) and
(d), which would address the required
program of risk analysis and oversight;
proposed § 39.18(e), which would
require a DCO to have a business
continuity and disaster recovery (BC–
DR) plan and resources sufficient to
enable the DCO to resume daily
processing, clearing and settlement no
later than the next business day
following a disruption; proposed
§ 39.18(f), which would address
outsourcing by a DCO of resources
required to meet its responsibilities with
respect to business continuity and
disaster recovery plans; proposed
§ 39.18(g), which would delineate
certain exceptional events upon the
occurrence of which a DCO would be
obligated to notify promptly the
Commission’s Division of Clearing and
Risk; proposed § 39.18(h)(1), which
would require a DCO to provide timely
advance notice to the Division of
Clearing and Risk of certain planned
changes to automated systems; or
proposed § 39.18(i), which would set
forth certain records that a DCO would
be required to maintain. The
Commission is adopting each of these
provisions as proposed, except that the
Commission is replacing ‘‘contracts’’
with ‘‘products’’ in § 39.18(a) and is
adding ‘‘of the derivatives clearing
organization’s’’ before ‘‘own and
outsourced resources’’ in § 39.18(f)(2)(ii)
for clarification.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
1. Notice of Changes to Program of Risk
Analysis and Oversight—§ 39.18(h)(2)
Proposed § 39.18(h)(2) would require
a DCO to give Division of Clearing and
Risk staff ‘‘timely advance notice’’ of
‘‘planned changes to the DCO’s program
of risk analysis and oversight.’’ CME
commented that this is an
‘‘extraordinarily broad requirement’’
and urged the Commission to
‘‘appropriately consider[] context and
relative risks.’’
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.18(h)(2) as proposed. The provision
merely requires that DCOs submit such
notice as part of their planning process.
The Commission expects that staff will
evaluate compliance with this
provision, as with all other provisions,
giving appropriate consideration to
context and relative risks.
2. Testing—§ 39.18(j)
Proposed § 39.18(j) would set forth
the requirements for the testing that a
DCO must conduct of its automated
systems and BC–DR plans. Proposed
§ 39.18(j)(1) would require that DCOs
conduct regular, periodic, and objective
testing and review of (i) their automated
systems, to ensure that such systems are
reliable, secure, and have adequate
scalable capacity, and (ii) their BC–DR
capabilities, to ensure that the DCO’s
backup resources meet the standards set
forth in proposed § 39.18(e). Proposed
§ 39.18(j)(2) would require that these
tests ‘‘be conducted by qualified,
independent professionals * * * [who]
may be independent contractors or
employees [of the DCO] but shall not be
persons responsible for development or
operation of the capabilities being
tested.’’ Proposed § 39.18(j)(3) would
require that reports setting forth the
protocols for, and the results of, such
tests ‘‘be communicated to, and
reviewed by, senior management of the
[DCO]’’ and that ‘‘[p]rotocols of tests
which result in few or no exceptions
shall be subject to more searching
review.’’
ICE, OCC, and MGEX objected to the
obligation that the testing required by
§ 39.18(j) be performed by ‘‘qualified,
independent professionals.’’ ICE
contended that the proper standard
should be to have qualified,
independent professionals review,
rather than conduct testing of, systems
or capabilities. Similarly, OCC
suggested that the testing could be
overseen, rather than conducted, by an
independent professional. MGEX
objected more generally to the
requirement that tests of its BC–DR
capabilities be performed by
‘‘independent professionals’’ and
expressly objected to the proposal’s
prohibition on the use of any employees
who participated in the development or
the operation of the systems or
capabilities being tested to fulfill this
role. MGEX argued that such persons
are the most qualified persons to run the
tests. KCC requested that a DCO’s CRO
or other similar official qualify as an
‘independent professional’ for purposes
of the testing rule.
The Commission is adopting § 39.18(j)
as proposed. The Commission notes that
PO 00000
Frm 00066
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
the obligation that the required testing
of automated systems and BC–DR
capabilities be performed by qualified,
independent professionals is consistent
with the Commission’s historical
practice of requiring independent
testing of systems where appropriate.214
The Commission recognizes that
persons charged with developing or
operating a system are frequently called
upon to test that system. The
Commission believes, however, that the
active involvement and direction of
qualified, independent professionals in
the testing process is needed to ensure
objective and accurate results.
MGEX’s requested approach would
result in tests being conducted only by
persons with an inherent conflict of
interest (because negative results of the
tests might call into question the work
of those who developed or operate the
systems) and, separately, would deny
the DCO the benefit of an independent
analysis of the workings of the system.
Accordingly, while some testing of a
DCO’s automated systems and BC–DR
capabilities may be conducted by
persons who design or operate such
system or capabilities, the Commission
has decided to retain the requirement
that the objective testing performed to
satisfy § 39.18(j) must be conducted by
qualified, independent persons, as
defined therein. While a DCO’s CRO
may appropriately serve this function if
he or she has the appropriate training
and experience to be ‘‘qualified’’ in this
context, and the appropriate role in the
organization to be ‘‘independent,’’ the
Commission does not believe it would
be advisable to determine that the
person serving in such a role is
necessarily qualified and independent.
3. Coordination of BC–DR Plans With
Members and Providers of Essential
Services—§ 39.18(k)
Proposed § 39.18(k) would require
that a DCO to the extent practicable: (1)
Coordinate its BC–DR plan with those of
its clearing members, in a manner
adequate to enable effective resumption
of daily processing, clearing, and
settlement following a disruption; (2)
initiate and coordinate periodic,
synchronized testing of its BC–DR plans
and the plans of its clearing members;
and (3) ensure that its BC–DR plan takes
into account the plans of its providers
214 For example, paragraph (a)(2) of the
application guidance to Core Principle 9 (prior to
amendment by the Dodd-Frank Act) for contract
markets noted that ‘‘Any program of independent
testing and review of [an automated] system should
be performed by a qualified, independent
professional.’’ 17 CFR part 38, appendix B at Core
Principle 9, paragraph (a)(2).
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
of essential services, including
telecommunications, power, and water.
MGEX proposed that industrysponsored events should suffice to
satisfy the requirement that a DCO must
coordinate its BC–DR plan with those of
its members. Similarly, KCC requested
that the Commission clarify that
coordination would be deemed to be
satisfied if the DCO reviews the BC–DR
plans of its clearing members and
essential service providers and
subsequently provides to such parties
the DCO’s own BC–DR plan. KCC stated
that it does not believe that coordination
should involve extensive efforts at
achieving specific consistency between
the procedures of each party, as each
has a distinct business model that faces
varying operational risks.
NYPC objected to the requirement
contained in proposed § 39.18(k)(3).
NYPC noted that its business continuity
plan (BCP) would be invoked any time
a service provider ceases to provide an
essential service, regardless of whether
that service provider has invoked its
own BCP, and thus such information
would not necessarily give DCOs any
additional insight into their own BCP.
Similarly, CME noted that, while it
obtains representations that its major
vendors have disaster recovery plans,
CME does not control, or generally have
access to, the details of the proprietary
plans of those service providers.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.18(k) as proposed. With respect to
the requirements of §§ 39.18(k)(1) and
(2), the Commission recognizes that
participation in industry-sponsored
events, such as the annual testing
conducted by FIA, serves as an
important assessment of the
connectivity between the systems of
DCOs and their members (including
backup sites), but such participation
would not, in and of itself, satisfy the
requirements of these regulations. The
level of participation of a particular
DCO in a particular industry test is left
to the discretion of the DCO, and
different DCOs may participate in such
tests to different extents. Moreover,
while such industry-sponsored events
may be helpful, it is the responsibility
of each DCO—not that of an industry
organization—to ensure that the
functionality of clearing will be
maintained between the DCO and its
members. The Commission believes that
a DCO will best be able to meet its
responsibilities reliably in a wide-area
disaster that affects a DCO and its
clearing members if the DCO has
actively worked together with those
clearing members to coordinate their
plans and has obtained some evidence
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
that such plans will appropriately mesh
when implemented.
While it is true that a DCO should
have backup arrangements that
promptly can be engaged to address a
failure of essential services, it is likely
that most DCOs will prepare for a
temporary, rather than an indefinite,
loss of such services. Among the
benefits provided by coordination of a
DCO’s BCP with that of providers of
essential services is an insight into the
period of time for which the DCO
should be prepared to provide such
services itself.
The Commission recognizes that a
service provider may reasonably be
reluctant to provide sensitive details of
its own BCP, such as the precise
location of backup facilities, and notes
that the proposed requirement is
prefaced with the limitation that a DCO
is required to obtain this information
only ‘‘to the extent practicable.’’
Nonetheless, merely obtaining a
representation that states that a service
provider has a backup plan—with no
detail as to the Recovery Time Objective
(RTO) of that service provider, and no
insight into how that service provider’s
BCP might affect the BCP of the DCO—
would likely be insufficient.
4. Recovery Time Objective—§ 39.18(a)
Proposed § 39.18(a) would define an
RTO as the period within which an
entity should be able to achieve
recovery and resumption of clearing and
settlement of existing and new contracts
after those capabilities become
temporarily inoperable for any reason
up to a wide-scale disruption, and
defines a wide-scale disruption as an
event that causes a severe disruption or
destruction of transportation,
telecommunications, power, water or
other critical infrastructure components
in a relevant area, or an event that
results in an evacuation or
unavailability of the population in a
relevant area. Proposed § 39.18(e)(3)
would require that a DCO have an RTO
of the next business day, while
proposed § 39.30(a) would require that a
SIDCO have an RTO of two hours.
ICE noted that proposed § 39.18(a)
does not specify a minimum time that
a wide-scale disruption must be
accommodated, and that costs would be
higher if the unavailability of staff in the
relevant area that must be
accommodated is the total loss of
personnel. ICE suggested that one week
would allow relocation of personnel
outside the affected area.
The Commission is adopting
§§ 39.18(a) and 39.18(e)(3) as proposed.
However, as discussed above in
connection with the financial resources
PO 00000
Frm 00067
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69399
requirements, the Commission believes
that it would be premature to take
action regarding § 39.30 at this time.
The Commission will consider the
proposals relating to SIDCOs together in
the future.
J. Core Principle J—Reporting
Requirements—§ 39.19
Core Principle J,215 as amended by the
Dodd-Frank Act, requires a DCO to
provide the Commission with all
information that the Commission
determines to be necessary to conduct
oversight of the DCO. The Commission
proposed § 39.19 to establish
requirements that a DCO would have to
meet in order to comply with Core
Principle J. Under proposed § 39.19,
certain reports would have to be made
by a DCO to the Commission: (1) On a
periodic basis (daily, quarterly, or
annually), (2) where the reporting
requirement is triggered by the
occurrence of a significant event; and (3)
upon request by the Commission.
Section 39.19(a) states the general
requirement of Core Principle J. The
Commission did not receive any
comment letters discussing § 39.19(a)
and is adopting the provision as
proposed.
1. Submission of Reports—§ 39.19(b)
The Commission proposed § 39.19(b)
to establish procedural requirements for
electronic submission of reports and
determination of time zones applicable
to filing deadlines. The Commission
received no comments and is adopting
§§ 39.19(b)(1) and (2) as proposed. For
purposes of clarification, the
Commission is also adopting
§ 39.19(b)(3) to provide a definition of
‘‘business day’’ as ‘‘the intraday period
of time starting at the business hour of
8:15 a.m. and ending at the business
hour of 4:45 p.m., on all days except
Saturdays, Sundays, and Federal
holidays.’’ This is consistent with the
definition of ‘‘business day’’ set forth in
§ 40.1(a).216
2. Daily Reporting—§ 39.19(c)(1)
Proposed § 39.19(c)(1) would require
a DCO to submit daily reports with
certain initial margin and variation
margin data as well as other cash flows
for each clearing member. More
specifically, § 39.19(c)(1)(i) would
require a DCO to report both the initial
margin requirement for each clearing
member, by customer origin and house
origin, and the initial margin on deposit
for each clearing member, by origin.
215 Section 5b(c)(2)(J) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 7a–
1(c)(2)(J).
216 See 76 FR at 44790 (July 27, 2011) (Provisions
Common to Registered Entities; final rule).
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69400
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
Proposed § 39.19(c)(1)(ii) would require
a DCO to report the daily variation
margin collected and paid by the DCO,
listing the mark-to-market amount
collected from or paid to each clearing
member, by origin.217
Proposed § 39.19(c)(1)(iii) would
require a DCO to report all other cash
flows relating to clearing and settlement
including, but not limited to, option
premiums and payments related to
swaps such as coupon amounts,
collected from or paid to each clearing
member, by origin. Proposed
§ 39.19(c)(1)(iv) would require a DCO to
report the end-of-day positions for each
clearing member, by customer origin
and house origin.
In addition, as discussed in section
IV.D.6.h.(2), above, in connection with
the Commission’s proposal to require
DCOs to collect initial margin for
customer accounts on a gross basis
under proposed § 39.13(g)(8)(i), the
Commission further proposed an
addition to proposed § 39.19(c)(1)(iv)
that would also require DCOs to report,
for each clearing member’s customer
account, the end-of-day positions of
each beneficial owner. The Commission
is adopting § 39.19(c)(1) with two
modifications. First, the Commission is
not requiring reporting of customer
positions by beneficial owner, except
upon Commission request.218 Second,
as discussed below, the Commission is
renumbering the paragraphs in
§ 39.19(c)(1) and adding a new
paragraph (ii) to clarify the applicability
of the daily reporting requirements to
FCM/BDs. In addition, the Commission
is replacing ‘‘by customer origin and
house origin’’ with ‘‘by house origin and
by each customer origin’’; and is
replacing ‘‘options on futures positions’’
with ‘‘options positions.’’
MGEX and KCC commented that
while such information is available to
them,219 they are concerned that if the
Commission mandates a specific form of
delivery, the cost to DCOs will be
significantly higher than expected.
MGEX referred to its recent experience
with the Trade Capture Reporting
initiative conversion to the
Commission’s new FIXML standards,
which was more costly and time
consuming than expected. KCC
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
217 This
requirement would apply to options
transactions only to the extent a DCO uses futuresstyle margining for options.
218 See further discussion of reports of beneficial
ownership in section IV.D.6.h.(2), above.
219 MGEX noted that it is already ‘‘internally
performing these tasks’’ in reference to the several
daily reporting requirements. KCC has also noted
that it already submits trading activity and
positions by each clearing member by origin on a
daily basis in file formats prescribed by the
Commission.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
commented that all of the data proposed
to be reported to the Commission is
already made readily available to the
Commission in varying degrees, and
there is little need for the Commission
to require the increasing level of
detailed information in specified
formats. In addition, MGEX expressed
concern with the Commission’s
potential data storage capacity
limitations. MGEX concluded that the
combination of these two factors suggest
that the burden of the daily reporting
requirements on DCOs and the
Commission outweigh the value of these
reports.
MGEX suggested that requiring such
data on an as-needed, rather than a
daily, basis would limit the burden on
DCOs and the Commission while
ensuring relevancy as to the data being
requested. KCC asked that the
Commission reconsider the amount and
detail of information necessary for its
oversight role. While CME supported
the proposed reporting requirement, it
suggested that the Commission work
with DCOs to determine the form and
manner of delivery.
As mentioned in the notice of
proposed rulemaking, many DCOs
already provide the Commission with
much of the data required under this
provision. The Commission recognizes
that the daily reporting requirements
may place an additional burden on a
DCO, particularly if the DCO must
employ a specific form of delivery that
it does not already have in place.
However, establishment of an
automated reporting system is a onetime cost, and a uniform reporting
format for all DCOs is necessary to
facilitate the Commission’s ability to
receive data promptly and quickly
disseminate it within the agency.220
The overall purpose of receiving the
daily data is to enable Commission staff
to analyze the data on a regular basis so
that it can detect certain trends or
unusual activity on a timely basis.
Receiving such data less frequently
would significantly reduce its
usefulness. While there may be initial
costs for DCOs to set up the reporting
systems, there should be little cost to
DCOs on a continuing basis.221 Finally,
MGEX’s suggestion to require such data
on an as-needed basis does not further
the objective of enhanced risk
surveillance, given that the purpose of
gathering the data is to identify and
220 The Commission notes that its staff is in the
process of developing a plan for uniform
submission of DCO reports.
221 See further discussion of the costs and benefits
of the reporting requirements in section VII.J,
below.
PO 00000
Frm 00068
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
address potential problems at the
earliest possible time.
OCC expressed concern that the
reporting requirements make no
accommodation for clearing members
that are FCM/BDs, with respect to their
securities positions. In response to
OCC’s comment, the Commission is
adding a new paragraph (ii) to
§ 39.19(c)(1) to clarify the limited
applicability of the daily reporting
requirements to securities positions.
The final rule provides that ‘‘The report
shall contain the information required
by paragraph (c)(1)(i) of this section for
(A) all futures positions, and options on
futures positions, as applicable; (B) all
swaps positions; and (C) all securities
positions that are held in a customer
account subject to Section 4d of the Act
or are subject to a cross-margining
agreement.’’
3. Quarterly Reporting—§ 39.19(c)(2)
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.19(c)(2), requirements for quarterly
reporting of financial resources, as
proposed.222
4. Annual Reporting—§ 39.19(c)(3)
Proposed § 39.19(c)(3) would require
a DCO to submit a report of the CCO and
an audited financial statement annually,
as required by § 39.10(c). The
Commission received no comments on
proposed § 39.19(c)(3), and the
Commission is adopting § 39.19(c)(3) as
proposed.
The Commission notes that in a
separate proposed rulemaking
implementing Core Principle O
(Governance Fitness Standards), it
proposed a new § 39.24(b)(4) which
would require annual verification that
directors, members of the disciplinary
panel and disciplinary committee,
clearing members, persons with direct
access, and certain affiliates of a DCO,
satisfy applicable fitness standards.223
In connection with this, the
Commission subsequently proposed to
cross-reference this annual reporting
obligation as a renumbered
§ 39.19(c)(3)(iii). At such time as the
Commission may adopt the verification
requirement as a final rule, § 39.19(c)(3)
will be amended accordingly.
5. Event-Specific Reporting—
§ 39.19(c)(4)
a. Decrease in Financial Resources—
§ 39.19(c)(4)(i)
Under proposed § 39.19(c)(4)(i), a
DCO would be required to report to the
222 See further discussion of the quarterly
reporting requirement under § 39.11(f) in section
IV.B.10, above.
223 See 76 FR at 736 (Jan. 6, 2011) (Governance).
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Commission a 10 percent decrease in
the total value of the financial resources
required to be maintained by the DCO
under § 39.11(a), either from the last
quarterly report. or from the value as of
the close of the previous business day.
Such notification would alert the
Commission of potential strain on the
DCO’s financial resources, either
gradual or precipitous.
The Commission invited comments
regarding possible alternatives as to
what would be considered a significant
drop in the value of financial resources.
Although many commenters opposed
using the 10 percent threshold as a
barometer for a ‘‘significant’’ decrease,
no commenter questioned the
Commission’s objective in obtaining this
type of information in a timely manner.
MGEX commented that 10 percent is
an arbitrary threshold and it is not
uncommon for financial resources to
fluctuate by 10 percent even in a stable
market. Similarly, OCC and KCC stated
that the threshold is arbitrary and would
most likely be crossed on a frequent
basis during the ordinary course of
business.224 In addition, KCC suggested
that this requirement is duplicative, as
a material drop in financial resources
would already be required to be
reported by the proposed requirement to
report all material adverse changes
(Material Adverse Change Reporting
Requirement).225
OCC, Better Markets, and Mr. Barnard
were also concerned about the types of
financial resources to consider when
calculating a decrease. OCC suggested it
is counterproductive to report a
decrease in financial resources as a
result of a decrease in margin
requirements, which is a sign of risk
reduction. Similarly, Better Markets
suggested that coincidental increases in
margin-based financial resources, which
could fluctuate substantially, could
offset decreases by more important
financial resources. In addition, Mr.
Barnard raised concerns regarding: (1)
Grouping all types of financial resources
together for purposes of calculating
decreases, and (2) whether only
requiring a report of a decrease in
financial resources is sufficient.
224 KCC mentioned that changes in the level of
excess permanent margin deposited by clearing
members, changes in the minimum margin
requirements on contracts or in the level of the
guarantee pool requirements, and changes in the
level of assessments that can be levied against
clearing members in the event of a default, could
cause financial resources to drop more than 10
percent within the ordinary course of business.
OCC stated it would cross the 10 percent threshold
on an almost monthly basis, i.e., the day after
monthly expirations occur.
225 See discussion of proposed § 39.19(c)(4)(xiv)
(finalized as § 39.19(c)(4)(xii)) in section IV.J.5.k,
below.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
69401
Several commenters proposed using a
different threshold: (1) OCC suggested
25 percent; (2) MGEX suggested
allowing a DCO to determine what
constitutes a material decrease or, as an
alternative, adopting a threshold of 30
percent over a five-day period and 25
percent when compared to the previous
quarter; and (3) Better Markets
suggested adopting a threshold of 5
percent of non-margin-based financial
resources. NYPC recommended taking
an approach similar to the FCM ‘‘early
warning’’ reporting requirement.226
To compensate for an upwards
adjustment of the financial resources
requirement, Better Markets suggested
also requiring a report if the ratio of
financial resources to minimum
required levels decreases to 1 to 1. Mr.
Barnard suggested splitting financial
resources into two groups: (1) The more
‘‘robust’’ financial resources (a DCO’s
own capital and guaranty fund), and (2)
market or risk-related items (margins);
and requiring a report for a decrease in
either amount or a decrease in the total
of both amounts. Mr. Barnard also
suggested requiring a DCO to report a
calculation of its ‘‘solvency ratio’’
(available financial resources/financial
resources requirements) and a 5 percent
or more drop in such ratio.
In response to commenters’ objections
to setting the level at 10 percent, the
Commission is setting the reporting
threshold at a level of 25 percent for
both the daily and quarterly financial
resources decreases. As noted, OCC
suggested 25 percent while MGEX
suggested 25 percent for the quarterly
and 30 percent for a report covering any
5-day period. MGEX did not explain
why there should be a distinction
between the percentage decrease
triggering the quarterly and shorter-term
reports. The Commission believes that a
25 percent level addresses the
commenters’ concerns about ‘‘noise’’
while providing the Commission with
notification of material decreases.
The Commission is not excluding
certain financial resources from the
decrease calculation as suggested by
several commenters. Although there are
certain financial resources that may
fluctuate in the ordinary course of
business, the Commission believes that
setting the reporting threshold level
higher should resolve many of these
issues because fewer fluctuations that
occur in the ordinary course of business
would trigger the higher 25 percent
threshold. Additionally, the purpose of
the financial resources requirement in
Core Principle B and as codified in the
Commission’s regulations is to ensure
that a DCO has adequate resources to
cover the default of the clearing member
with the largest exposure. Financial
resources are looked at in the aggregate.
Thus, fluctuations during the ordinary
course of business, even coincidental
decreases in financial resources, all
reflect the financial health of the DCO
at that time.
The Commission is not replacing the
financial resources percentage decrease
reporting requirement with a
requirement similar to the FCM ‘‘early
warning’’ reporting requirement, as
suggested by NYPC. While FCMs do
have an ‘‘early warning’’ reporting
requirement, this is only in addition to
an FCM’s requirement to also report
decreases of 20 percent pursuant to
§ 1.12(g)(1).227 In fact, even with the
new financial resources reporting
requirement for DCOs, DCOs still have
a lesser reporting requirement than
FCMs in this regard: DCOs are only
required to report 25 percent decreases,
while FCMs are required to report 20
percent decreases in addition to
reporting decreases below certain
thresholds (the ‘‘early warning’’
requirement).
The Commission is adopting the
modified § 39.19(c)(4)(i) reporting
requirement described herein. The
Commission does not consider it to be
duplicative of the Material Adverse
Change Reporting Requirement, or the
quarterly financial resource reporting
requirement under § 39.11(f), as
suggested by KCC. Each reporting
requirement, including the financial
resources reporting requirement, relates
to specific circumstances that the
Commission has determined to be
material and which, based on its
experience in conducting financial risk
surveillance, the Commission believes
warrants notification. The Material
Adverse Change Reporting Requirement
is intended to cover more unusual
changes that are not readily identifiable
in advance but would nonetheless be of
interest to Commission staff in
conducting its oversight of a DCO. The
Commission is also not requiring the
solvency ratio decrease reporting
requirement suggested by Mr. Barnard.
The Commission believes that receiving
reports regarding financial resources
decreases will serve the purpose of
alerting the Commission to possible
financial distress at a DCO, without
226 Section 1.12(b)(2) requires an FCM to give 24
hours notice to the Commission if it ‘‘knows or
should have known’’ that its adjusted net capital is
at any time less than 110 percent of the amount
required by the Commission’s net capital rule.
227 Section 1.12(g)(1) requires an FCM to provide
written notice within two business days of a
substantial reduction in capital as compared to that
last reported in a financial report if there is a
reduction in net capital of 20 percent or more.
PO 00000
Frm 00069
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69402
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
unnecessarily burdening a DCO with
additional reporting requirements.
NYPC pointed out that the proposed
rule language referring to a decrease in
the ‘‘total value of financial resources’’
could be read to refer to the total
combined default and operating
resources. It also raised a question as to
whether the reference to financial
resources ‘‘required to be maintained
* * * under § 39.11(a)’’ referred to the
minimum amount ‘‘required’’ or if it
was intended to encompass all financial
resources ‘‘available to satisfy’’ the
requirements.
The Commission intends the
reporting requirement in § 39.19(c)(4)(i)
to refer only to financial resources
available to cover a default in
accordance with § 39.11(a)(1). A
significant change in the amount of
financial resources available to meet
operating expenses is addressed by
§ 39.19(c)(4)(iv).228 In response to the
interpretive issues raised by NYPC, the
Commission is revising the language in
§ 39.19(c)(4)(i) to clarify that the
decrease in financial resources refers to
a decrease in resources ‘‘available to
satisfy the requirements under
§ 39.11(a)(1)’’ so it is clear that the
reporting requirement applies only to
default resources and refers to those
resources available to the DCO to satisfy
the default resource requirements, even
if the amount of those resources exceeds
the minimum amount that is required
by § 39.11(a)(1).229
The Commission notes that it should
be apprised when a DCO experiences a
25 percent decrease in the value of its
default resources from the value as of
the close of the previous business day,
even if their value has increased
substantially since the last quarterly
report. Such a change could signal a
significant change in a DCO’s risk
profile and early reporting will enable
the Commission to take appropriate
measures to facilitate proper risk
management at the DCO.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
b. Decrease in Ownership Equity—
§ 39.19(c)(4)(ii)
Proposed § 39.19(c)(4)(ii) would
require a DCO to report an expected 20
percent decrease in ownership equity
228 See discussion of § 39.19(c)(4)(iv) in section
IV.J.5.d, below.
229 As a technical matter, ICE Clear sought
clarification in the rule text regarding the reference
to § 39.11(a), pointing out that § 39.11(a) sets the
standard for financial resources and § 39.11(b) lists
the financial resources available to satisfy those
standards. ICE Clear recommended that
§ 39.19(c)(4)(i) be revised to refer to both §§ 39.11(a)
and (b). The Commission declines to include a
reference to § 39.11(b) as the purpose of the crossreference is to incorporate by reference the
standard, not the means for satisfying the standard.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
two business days prior to the event (or
two business days following the event,
if the DCO does not and reasonably
should not have known prior to the
event). Such report must include pro
forma financial statements (or current
financial statements) reflecting the
anticipated condition of the DCO
following the decrease (or current
condition). The report is intended to
alert the Commission of major planned
events that would significantly affect
ownership equity, most of which are
events of which the DCO would have
advance knowledge, such as a
reinvestment of capital, dividend
payment, or a major acquisition.
Better Markets commented that a
decrease in ownership equity is an
extraordinary event which would
warrant notification for even a 5 percent
decrease, the threshold the SEC uses for
triggering reporting of acquisition of
beneficial ownership of a class of
shares. While a decrease in ownership
equity can have a significant effect on
the financial resources of a DCO, the
Commission determined that 20 percent
is a level that would represent a
significant decrease and yet would not
occur on a frequent basis. The
Commission believes that setting the
threshold lower than 20 percent would
unnecessarily increase the potential
burden on DCOs as well as on the
Commission, which could then be
responsible for reviewing a larger
number of reports.
Better Markets also suggested that five
business days advance notice is more
appropriate and would not pose a
significant burden for DCOs. While
changing the requirement to five
business days does not itself pose an
additional burden on a DCO, the
Commission is adopting the two-day
notification requirement, as proposed.
The Commission has determined that
requiring the report two days prior to
such an event is sufficient for its
purposes in reviewing the transaction,
particularly given the confidential
nature of such a transaction.
OCC expressed concern that it would
be problematic to provide the necessary
financial statements within the time
frame required; OCC stated that it runs
financial statements on a monthly basis,
thus it would not have them readily
available within two days. Rather, OCC
suggested keeping the notification time
frame at two days, but allowing up to 30
days, or when the financial statements
are ready, whichever occurs first, to
provide the financial statements. The
Commission is adopting the two-day
requirement, as proposed. A 20 percent
decrease in ownership equity is
generally a major, planned event and
PO 00000
Frm 00070
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
the Commission believes it would be
highly unusual for a DCO not to have
financial statements prepared in
connection with such a transaction.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.19(c)(4)(ii) as proposed.
c. Six-Month Liquid Asset Test—
§ 39.19(c)(4)(iii)
Proposed § 39.19(c)(4)(iii) would
require immediate notice of a deficit in
the six months of liquid assets required
by § 39.11(e)(2). CME expressed concern
with other ‘‘immediate notice’’
events,230 stating that this would require
a DCO to immediately notify the
Commission, in the specific form and
manner requested, even before the DCO
attends to the situation and gathers all
the relevant information. CME
recommended only requiring ‘‘prompt’’
notice, which would require the DCO to
notify the Commission ‘‘quickly and
expeditiously,’’ while allowing the DCO
to first attend to the situation at hand
and ensure that the information
reported to the Commission is correct
and accurate. CME also suggested
‘‘prompt’’ notice for the Material
Adverse Change Reporting Requirement.
The Commission is adopting the rule
as proposed and retaining the
‘‘immediate’’ reporting requirement for
both § 39.19(c)(4)(iii) and the Material
Adverse Change Reporting
Requirement.231 While the Commission
appreciates that in such situations a
DCO would be busy attending to the
matter at hand, the burden to contact
the Commission is minimal. The
Commission does not specify a
particular form or manner of delivery,
so as to minimize the burden on the
DCO. Moreover, the Commission is
concerned that using a time frame of
‘‘prompt’’ would leave too much open
to interpretation by the DCO and could
lead to untimely notices.
d. Change in Working Capital (Current
Assets)—§ 39.19(c)(4)(iv)
Proposed § 39.19(c)(4)(iv) would
require a DCO to report to the
Commission no later than two business
days after working capital is negative.
The report must include a current
balance sheet of the DCO. Better
Markets commented that allowing a
DCO two days to report negative
working capital is too much time, given
the potential gravity of the situation,
and that anything less than a
requirement of immediate notification is
‘‘simply indefensible.’’
230 CME referred to the immediate notice required
under proposed §§ 39.19(c)(4)(v)–(ix).
231 See further discussion of the Material Adverse
Change Reporting Requirement in section IV.J.5.k,
below.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
As with the ownership equity
decrease reporting requirement, OCC
commented that it is problematic to
submit a balance sheet in two business
days. OCC suggested keeping the
notification requirement at two days,
but allowing up to 30 days (or sooner if
ready) to provide a balance sheet.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.19(c)(4)(iv) as proposed, except that
it is revising certain terminology to
clarify the intended meaning of the term
‘‘working capital.’’ While the
Commission agrees that negative
working capital is a serious matter,
immediate reporting is not necessary to
further the Commission’s purpose in
obtaining this information. The
Commission is allowing up to two days
for notification because immediate
notification would require a DCO to put
in place a potentially expensive system
to allow for real-time tracking of
working capital. Nonetheless, a DCO is
expected to have a general knowledge of
the level of its working capital at all
times. By allowing two days for
notification, a DCO will have time to
compute whether working capital is
negative if it has reason to believe that
this may be the case, without being
required to implement a real-time
notification system. Thus, the purpose
of the two business days is actually to
give a DCO time to become aware of its
obligation to report, not to allow the
DCO to wait two days after it becomes
aware of the situation.
The Commission is also requiring the
DCO to submit a balance sheet within
two business days of the DCO
experiencing negative working capital.
Given that a DCO would be expected to
update its balance sheet upon realizing
that it has negative working capital, the
Commission does not believe this
requirement imposes an additional
burden on the DCO.
As ‘‘working capital’’ is not a defined
term, the Commission is substituting the
term ‘‘current assets’’ for ‘‘working
capital’’ for purposes of clarification.
Thus, ‘‘negative working capital’’ now
refers to a situation when current
liabilities exceed current assets. Section
39.19(c)(4)(iv) now reads as follows:
‘‘Change in current assets. No later than
two business days after current
liabilities exceed current assets; the
notice shall include a balance sheet that
reflects the derivatives clearing
organization’s current assets and current
liabilities and an explanation as to the
reason for the negative balance.’’
e. Intraday Initial Margin Calls—
§ 39.19(c)(4)(v)
Proposed § 39.19(c)(4)(v) would
require a DCO to report to the
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
Commission any intraday margin call to
a clearing member, no later than one
hour following the margin call. Several
commenters stated that the requirement
is unnecessary and a burden on DCOs,
while other commenters requested
certain modifications to the proposal.
The Commission is not adopting the
intraday margin call reporting
requirement in proposed
§ 39.19(c)(4)(v). While such information
could provide early notice of potential
problems at a DCO, the Commission has
concluded that the requirement would
be overly burdensome to DCOs given
the amount of work commenters
indicated it would entail. In addition,
the Commission will still receive much
of the same information as part of each
DCO’s daily reporting under
§ 39.19(c)(1), and unusual intraday
initial margin calls that reflect a
material adverse change will still be
reported under the Material Adverse
Change Reporting Requirement.
f. Issues Related to Clearing Members—
§§ 39.19(c)(4)(vi)–(ix)
Proposed §§ 39.19(c)(4)(vi)–(ix) would
require a DCO to report the following
issues related to clearing members: (1) A
delay in collection of initial margin; (2)
a request to clearing members to reduce
positions; (3) a determination by the
DCO to transfer or liquidate a clearing
member position; and (4) a default of a
clearing member. The Commission
received comments suggesting that these
reporting requirements are unnecessary
or, at the very least, require some
modification. KCC suggested not
adopting these requirements altogether,
because notification of these events
would still be required under the
Material Adverse Change Reporting
Requirement.
The Commission has concluded that
delays in the collection of initial margin
are not necessarily signs of a financial
problem at either the DCO or its clearing
members. The Commission therefore is
not adopting the requirement to report
such delays under proposed
§ 39.19(c)(4)(vi). Nonetheless, if a delay
is evidence of a material adverse change
in the financial condition of a clearing
member, it would still have to be
reported under the Material Adverse
Change Reporting Requirement.
The Commission is adopting the
remainder of these reporting
requirements as proposed. However, it
is redesignating proposed
§§ 39.19(c)(4)(vii)–(ix) as
§§ 39.19(c)(4)(v)–(vii). These reporting
requirements relate to events that occur
infrequently but can be of significance
to the Commission’s risk surveillance
program even if they do not rise to the
PO 00000
Frm 00071
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69403
level of having ‘‘a material adverse
financial impact’’ on the DCO or
represent ‘‘a material adverse change in
the financial condition of any clearing
member’’ under the Material Adverse
Change Reporting Requirement. Thus,
with respect to these reports, the
Commission is not relying on the
Material Adverse Change Reporting
Requirement as suggested by KCC.
In connection with these proposed
requirements, the Commission also
proposed removing § 1.12(f)(1) in light
of the fact that its requirements were
substantially similar to those being
proposed as § 39.19(c)(4)(viii). The
Commission did not receive any
comments on this proposal and is
removing § 1.12(f)(1) as proposed.
g. Change in Ownership or Corporate or
Organizational Structure—
§ 39.19(c)(4)(x)
Proposed § 39.19(c)(4)(x) would
require a DCO to report certain changes
in ownership or corporate or
organizational structure. In general,
such reports must be submitted to the
Commission three months in advance of
the anticipated change. With the
exception of the change discussed
below, the Commission is adopting
§ 39.19(c)(4)(x) as proposed,
redesignated as § 39.19(c)(4)(viii).
Proposed § 39.19(c)(4)(x)(A)(2)
(redesignated as § 39.19(c)(4)(viii)(A)(2))
would require a DCO to report the
creation of a new subsidiary, or the
elimination of a current subsidiary, of
the DCO or its parent company. CME
commented that the creation or
elimination of a separate subsidiary of
the DCO’s parent company would not
serve the Commission’s purpose of
conducting effective oversight of the
DCO or enhance the Commission’s
ability to conduct timely analysis of a
DCO’s activities. CME added that the
plans of a DCO’s parent company to
create (or eliminate) a subsidiary may be
highly confidential.232 CME urged the
Commission to eliminate such reporting
requirement, asserting that ‘‘the value of
this information to the [Commission] is
questionable, and the burdens
associated with providing it may be
substantial.’’ CME did not provide any
explanation as to why the burden of
reporting might be substantial.
While information about corporate
changes that potentially impact a DCO’s
232 MGEX also commented on the highly
confidential nature of changes in ownership,
corporate or organizational structure. The
Commission believes MGEX’s concerns are
addressed by the Commission’s procedures for
nonpublic records and confidential treatment
requests set forth in Part 145 of the Commission’s
regulations.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69404
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
financial standing or operations is
helpful to the Commission in its
oversight of a DCO, to avoid creating an
unintended burden on DCOs and
Commission staff, particularly where a
DCO is part of a complex corporate
structure, the Commission is modifying
§ 39.19(c)(4)(viii)(A)(2) to eliminate the
requirement to report a change in
subsidiaries of the DCO’s parent
company. Thus, § 39.19(c)(4)(viii)(A)
now requires only that a DCO report
‘‘[a]ny anticipated change in the
ownership or corporate or
organizational structure of the [DCO] or
its parent(s) that would: * * * (2)
Create a new subsidiary or eliminate a
current subsidiary of the [DCO].
* * * 233
h. Change in Key Personnel—
§ 39.19(c)(4)(xi)
Proposed § 39.19(c)(4)(xi) would
require a DCO to report the departure or
addition of any person who qualifies as
‘‘key personnel,’’ as defined in § 39.2,
no later than two business days
following the change. KCC suggested
requiring a report ‘‘within a reasonable
period of time.’’ The Commission notes
that key personnel are not likely to
change often, and KCC did not provide
any explanation as to why the two
business day notification period is
inappropriate. The Commission is
adopting § 39.19(c)(4)(xi) as proposed,
but redesignated as § 39.19(c)(4)(ix).
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
i. Change in Credit Facility Funding
Arrangement—§ 39.19(c)(4)(xii)
Proposed § 39.19(c)(4)(xii) would
require a DCO to report no later than
one business day after a DCO changes
an existing credit facility funding
arrangement, is notified that such
arrangement has changed, or knows or
reasonably should have known that the
arrangement will change. KCC
commented that this requirement is
duplicative: such reports would already
be required by the Material Adverse
Change Reporting Requirement. CME
had no objection to the requirement to
report such changes, but opposed the
requirement to notify the Commission
when it knows that the arrangement will
change in the future, stating that it
serves little purpose to notify the
Commission without knowing what will
change. CME suggested that the
233 As proposed, the provision referred to the
DCO’s ‘‘parent company.’’ The Commission is
adopting a technical amendment to refer to the
‘‘parent(s)’’ to clarify that there could be more than
one parent, such as in the case of a DCO owned by
a joint venture, and the parent need not have any
particular corporate form. For purposes of these
reporting requirements, a ‘‘parent’’ is a direct
parent, not an entity further up the chain of
ownership.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
requirement should be to report to the
Commission after the terms have
changed. Conversely, Better Markets
opposed several components of the
proposed rule, asserting that it is ‘‘too
narrow and too loose,’’ allowing one
business day is too long, and the
standard of reporting when the DCO
‘‘knows or reasonably should have
known’’ is insufficient. Better Markets
suggested expanding the reporting
requirement to cover alternative sources
of liquidity such as access to
commercial paper and repurchase
agreement markets. It also suggested
requiring such a report (i) immediately,
and (ii) when ‘‘there is a reasonable
likelihood that the arrangement may
change.’’
The Commission is modifying the rule
as suggested by CME by removing the
following: ‘‘or knows or reasonably
should have known that the
arrangement will change.’’ Thus, a DCO
is required to report a change in a credit
facility funding arrangement no later
than one business day after it changes
the arrangement or is notified that such
arrangement has changed. The provision
is also being redesignated as
§ 39.19(c)(4)(x). The Commission is not
adopting KCC’s suggestion to rely on the
Material Adverse Change Reporting
Requirement because a change in a
credit facility funding arrangement
would be of specific interest to the
Commission in its conduct of DCO
oversight, but such a change is not
likely to rise to the level of being a
material adverse change. The
Commission also is declining to adopt
Better Markets’ recommendations
because they would result in the filing
of multiple reports, many of limited
usefulness, which, on balance, would
place an unnecessary burden on DCOs
and Commission staff. Nonetheless, the
Commission notes that unusual market
conditions such as those that might
limit a DCO’s access to commercial
paper or ability to enter into repurchase
agreements, thereby adversely affecting
the DCO’s liquidity, could constitute a
material adverse change that would
have to be reported under the Material
Adverse Change Reporting Requirement.
j. Rule Enforcement—§ 39.19(c)(4)(xiii)
Proposed § 39.19(c)(4)(xiii) would
require a DCO to report the initiation of
a rule enforcement action against a
clearing member or the imposition of
sanctions against a clearing member, no
later than two business days after the
DCO takes such action. Several
commenters observed that this would
result in multiple reports with little
useful information. They further noted
that the DCO would otherwise inform
PO 00000
Frm 00072
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
the Commission about serious financial
issues, as a matter of current practice
and pursuant to the Material Adverse
Change Reporting Requirement. MGEX
recommended that the Commission not
adopt the rule enforcement reporting
requirement. OCC and CME
recommended that the Commission not
adopt the enforcement reporting
requirement as proposed.
MGEX commented that requiring
notification of the initiation of rule
enforcement is unnecessary and
premature, noting that many
investigations are unrelated to financial
risk and many are routine. OCC made a
similar comment. MGEX expressed
concern about the harm such a report
could cause to a clearing member’s
reputation by notifying the Commission
before there has been any determination
of any guilt. MGEX also noted that the
Commission is already routinely
informed or is aware of ongoing or
potential actions.
OCC stated that the proposed
enforcement reports would serve no
purpose because if there were serious
financial issues, the DCO would already
have been in regular contact with the
Commission long before the DCO
reached the stage of initiating a rule
enforcement action. Thus, OCC believes
these reports would not serve as an
effective early warning sign. OCC
further opposed this reporting
requirement because a clearing member
could appeal a decision after a sanction
is imposed. OCC recommended
notification to the Commission within
30 days after a final decision on a
disciplinary matter.
CME believes it is unclear when the
notification requirement would be
triggered, and that there are situations
when it is unclear when an enforcement
action is considered to be initiated.
The Commission is adopting the rule
with modifications. While the
Commission considers information
about enforcement actions to be useful
in its oversight of a DCO’s rule
enforcement program under Core
Principle H, and more broadly in its
oversight of a DCO’s overall risk
management program, the Commission
has concluded that the requirement, as
proposed, could result in the reporting
of many events that are not material to
the Commission’s oversight of a DCO.234
The Commission recognizes that many
enforcement actions may be based on
relatively minor offenses and are
234 Core Principle H provides in relevant part that
‘‘each derivatives clearing organization shall * * *
(iii) report to the Commission regarding rule
enforcement activities and sanctions imposed
against members and participants. * * * ’’ See also
discussion of § 39.17 in section IV.H, above.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
unlikely to have a significant impact on
a DCO’s ability to manage risk related to
the provision of clearing and settlement
services.
Therefore, the Commission is
adopting the regulation with a
modification such that it would only
require the reporting of sanctions
against clearing members, no later than
two business days after the DCO takes
such action, and would not require the
reporting of the initiation of rule
enforcement actions. The Commission is
also redesignating the provision as
§ 39.19(c)(4)(xi). The Commission notes
that events or circumstances that rise to
the level of having a material adverse
impact on a DCO’s ability to comply
with the requirements of Part 39, or
relate to a material adverse change in
the financial condition of any clearing
member, whether or not they form the
basis of an enforcement action, will
have to be formally reported under
§ 39.19(c)(4)(xii)(B) or (C), respectively.
Last, OCC requested clarification as to
whether the rule enforcement reporting
requirement applies to DCO
enforcement activities involving a
clearing member that is only registered
as a BD. The Commission confirms that
the requirement to report the imposition
of sanctions against clearing members
does not apply to a DCO’s clearing
members that are registered as BDs only
and engaged solely in securities-based
transactions. However, insofar as such a
clearing member’s actions might have a
material adverse impact on the DCO’s
ability to comply with the requirements
of Part 39 or would constitute a material
adverse change in the financial
condition of a clearing member, the
DCO would be required to submit a
Material Adverse Change Report, as
discussed below.
k. Financial Condition and Events
(Material Adverse Change Reporting
Requirement)—§ 39.19(c)(4)(xiv)
Proposed § 39.19(c)(4)(xiv) would
require a DCO to immediately notify the
Commission after the DCO knows or
reasonably should have known of
certain material adverse changes, i.e.,
the institution of any legal proceedings
which may have a material adverse
financial impact on the DCO; any event,
circumstance or situation that materially
impedes the DCO’s ability to comply
with part 39 of the Commission’s
regulations and is not otherwise
required to be reported; or a material
adverse change in the financial
condition of any clearing member that is
not otherwise required to be reported.235
235 Because of the potential impact on a DCO of
an adverse change in the financial condition of a
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
CME and OCC are opposed to this
‘‘catch-all’’ requirement. In particular,
CME is concerned that the requirement
is too broad and thus would include a
reporting requirement for anything that
is technically in violation of Part 39,
e.g., even if the DCO’s email or Web site
goes down temporarily. OCC also
commented that the requirement is
unnecessary because the Commission
will be receiving adequate reporting as
a result of other reporting requirements
in Part 39 and the reporting
requirements for FCMs. Alternatively,
CME suggested requiring ‘‘prompt’’
notice, rather than ‘‘immediate’’ notice.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.19(c)(4)(xiv) as proposed, but
redesignated as § 39.19(c)(4)(xii). CME’s
concerns are unwarranted as the
reporting requirement would only
require reporting incidents that could
have a material adverse effect on the
DCO. A Web site temporarily going
down would not necessarily be
expected to have a ‘‘material’’ adverse
effect on the DCO. However, if it did
have a material adverse impact, the
Commission would expect it to be
reported. The Commission recognizes
that it is requiring a DCO to exercise its
discretion in the first instance to
determine what events trigger this
reporting requirement, but the
Commission considers this to be an
appropriate responsibility for a DCO.
Moreover, while the Commission will
be getting information as a result of
other Part 39 and FCM reporting
requirements, there may be certain
conditions or events that could
materially impact a DCO that the
Commission could not anticipate, yet
about which it would still be important
for the Commission to be notified. This
is especially important in light of the
Commission’s decision not to adopt
certain proposed reporting
requirements, as discussed above.
The Commission is also keeping the
timing of the reporting requirement as
‘‘immediate’’ rather than ‘‘prompt,’’ as
these are material changes for which
immediate notification is essential and
for which the more ambiguous
‘‘prompt’’ is not appropriate.236
l. Financial Statements Material
Inadequacies—§ 39.19(c)(4)(xv)
Proposed § 39.19(c)(4)(xv) would
require a DCO to report material
inadequacies in its financial statements.
The Commission received no comments
on this requirement, and the
clearing member, this reporting requirement would
apply to ‘‘any’’ clearing member, including one that
is solely a BD engaging in securities activities.
236 See discussion of timing requirements in
section IV.J.5.c, above.
PO 00000
Frm 00073
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69405
Commission is adopting
§ 39.19(c)(4)(xv) as proposed
(redesignated as § 39.19(c)(4)(xiii)), with
the exception of a technical revision to
add a reference to ‘‘in a financial
statement’’ so that the language now
reads ‘‘If a derivatives clearing
organization discovers or is notified by
an independent public accountant of the
existence of any material inadequacy in
a financial statement, such derivatives
clearing organization shall give notice.
* * *’’ 237
m. Action of Board of Directors or Risk
Management Committee—
§ 39.19(c)(4)(xvi)
In a separate proposed rulemaking
that would implement Core Principle P
(Conflicts of Interest), the Commission
proposed § 39.25(b), which would
require a DCO to report when the board
of directors of a DCO rejects a
recommendation or supersedes an
action of the DCO’s Risk Management
Committee, or when the Risk
Management Committee rejects a
recommendation or supersedes an
action of its subcommittee.238 In
connection with this, the Commission
subsequently proposed to cross
reference this reporting obligation in
proposed § 39.19(c)(4)(xvi). At such
time as the Commission may adopt the
reporting requirement in § 39.25(b) as a
final rule, § 39.19(c)(4) will be amended
accordingly.
n. Election of Board of Directors—
§ 39.19(c)(4)(xvii)
In a separate proposed rulemaking
that would implement Core Principles P
(Conflicts of Interest) and Q
(Composition of Governing Boards), the
Commission proposed § 40.9(b)(1)(iii),
which would require a DCO to report
certain information to the Commission
after each election of its board of
directors.239 In connection with this, the
Commission subsequently proposed to
cross-reference this reporting obligation
in proposed § 39.19(c)(4)(xvii). At such
time as the Commission may adopt the
reporting requirement in § 40.9(b)(1)(iii)
as a final rule, § 39.19(c)(4) will be
amended accordingly.
o. System Safeguards—
§ 39.19(c)(4)(xviii)
Proposed § 39.19(c)(4)(xviii) would
require a DCO to report certain
exceptional events and planned changes
as required by § 39.18(g) and § 39.18(h),
237 The Commission is also making a technical
non-substantive change by substituting the word
‘‘shall’’ for the word ‘‘must’’ to conform this
provision with other provisions in § 39.19.
238 See 76 FR at 736 (Jan. 6, 2011) (Governance).
239 Id.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69406
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
respectively. The Commission received
no comments on this reporting
requirement, and the Commission is
adopting § 39.19(c)(4)(xviii),
redesignated as § 39.19(c)(4)(xvi), as
proposed.240
K. Core Principle K—Recordkeeping—
§ 39.20
Core Principle K,241 as amended by
the Dodd-Frank Act, requires a DCO to
maintain records of all activities related
to the business of the DCO as a DCO, in
a form and manner that is acceptable to
the Commission and for a period of not
less than 5 years. The Commission
proposed § 39.20 to establish
requirements that a DCO would have to
meet in order to comply with Core
Principle K.
Under proposed § 39.20(b), a DCO
would have to maintain records of all
activities related to its business as a
DCO ‘‘for a period of not less than 5
years,’’ except for swap data that must
be maintained in accordance with the
SDR rules in part 45 of the
Commission’s regulations. Mr. Barnard
expressed the view that limiting record
retention to five years is insufficient and
records should be required to be kept
indefinitely.
The Commission is adopting § 39.20
as proposed. The Commission believes
that codifying the statutory minimum
requirement of five years is appropriate,
noting that a five-year minimum is
consistent with other Commission
recordkeeping requirements.242 In
addition, the exception for swap data
recordkeeping addresses situations
where the Commission has previously
determined that a five-year minimum
may not be sufficient.243
L. Core Principle L—Public
Information—§ 39.21
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Core Principle L,244 as amended by
the Dodd-Frank Act, requires a DCO to
provide market participants sufficient
information to enable the market
participants to identify and evaluate
accurately the risks and costs associated
with using the DCO’s services. More
specifically, a DCO is required to make
available to market participants
information concerning the rules and
operating and default procedures
governing its clearing and settlement
240 See discussion of system safeguards reporting
in section IV.I, above.
241 Section 5b(c)(2)(K) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 7a–
1(c)(2)(K).
242 See, e.g., § 1.31 of the Commission’s
regulations.
243 See 75 FR 76574 (Dec. 8, 2010) (Swap Data
Recordkeeping and Reporting Requirements).
244 Section 5b(c)(2)(L) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 7a–
1(c)(2)(L).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
systems and also to disclose publicly
and to the Commission the terms and
conditions of each contract, agreement,
and transaction cleared and settled by
the DCO, each clearing and other fee
charged to members,245 the DCO’s
margin-setting methodology, daily
settlement prices, and other matters
relevant to participation in the DCO’s
clearing and settlement activities.
Proposed § 39.21 would require a
DCO to provide market participants
with sufficient information to enable the
market participants to identify and
evaluate accurately the risks and costs
associated with using the services of the
DCO. In particular, proposed
§§ 39.21(c)(2), (3) and (4) would require
a DCO to disclose publicly and to the
Commission information concerning its
margin-setting methodology and the size
and composition of the financial
resource package available in the event
of a clearing member default.
KCC, MGEX, and NGX variously
commented that DCO fees and charges,
margin methodology and financial
resource information are confidential
and should not be required to be
publicly disclosed for the following
reasons: (1) It is intellectual property,
(2) there is no correlation between the
availability of such information and the
decision whether to invest in or trade
with a DCO, and (3) privately held
companies (or non-intermediated DCOs
in the case of NGX) should not have to
disclose such information. MGEX also
suggested that making margin
methodology information available to
the public could lead to market
manipulation by those who might
attempt to influence the margin level.
MGEX suggested that the rule should
only require making the financial
resource package information available
upon request by a clearing member that
has signed the DCO’s confidentiality
agreement. Conversely, Better Markets
believes that § 39.21 does not go far
enough and that many of the DCO
reports required by § 39.19 should also
be required to be disclosed to the
public, as the Dodd-Frank Act requires
that market participants and the public
be informed of the risks and other
potential consequences of transacting
with a DCO.246 Similarly, Mr. Barnard
245 The statutory language refers to fees charged
to ‘‘members and participants,’’ and the
Commission interprets this phrase to mean fees
charged to ‘‘clearing members.’’
246 In particular, Better Markets stated that, at a
minimum, a DCO should be required to publicly
disclose (i) the adequacy of its financial resources,
measured by the required level of financial
resources under Commission rules, and (ii) to the
extent they must be reported to the Commission, a
reduction in financial resources, decrease in
PO 00000
Frm 00074
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
suggested requiring public disclosure of
all items of public interest, including
event-specific reports under
§ 39.19(c)(4), except for those that
would expose business-specific
confidential issues.
The Commission is adopting § 39.21
as proposed, except for proposed
§ 39.21(c)(7), which would require the
public disclosure of information related
to governance and conflicts of interest
in accordance with provisions that were
proposed in a separate rulemaking. At
such time as the Commission adopts
those provisions, § 39.21 will be
amended accordingly. The requirement
to publicly disclose clearing and other
fees charged by the DCO, margin
methodology and financial resources
information comes directly from Core
Principle L. Moreover, the Commission
believes that concerns regarding the
confidential nature of this information
are unfounded because such
information would seem to be
fundamental to a clearing member or
potential clearing member’s assessment
of the strengths and weaknesses of a
DCO. This does not necessarily require
disclosure of proprietary information;
certain DCOs, e.g., CME, already
disclose this type of information on
their Web sites.
The Commission is not revising the
rule to incorporate Better Markets’ or
Mr. Barnard’s proposals. From a
practical standpoint, some of the
information Better Markets and Mr.
Barnard have requested to be publicly
disclosed is otherwise going to be public
information, particularly if the DCO is a
public company, and thus subject to
SEC filing requirements. Regardless, the
Commission does not interpret Core
Principle L as requiring disclosure of all
of the financial workings of a DCO.
M. Core Principle M—Information
Sharing—§ 39.22
Core Principle M,247 as amended by
the Dodd-Frank Act, requires a DCO to
enter into and abide by the terms of
each appropriate and applicable
domestic and international informationsharing agreement and to use relevant
information obtained under such
agreements in carrying out its risk
management program. The Commission
proposed § 39.22 to codify the statutory
requirement.
Proposed § 39.22 would require a
DCO to enter into certain informationsharing agreements and use relevant
information obtained from those
ownership equity, or change in ownership or
corporate structure.
247 Section 5b(c)(2)(M) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 7a–
1(c)(2)(M).
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
agreements in carrying out the risk
management program of the DCO.
MGEX is opposed to sharing
confidential information such as
proprietary intellectual property. MGEX
also asked for further clarity to be able
to comment further on this requirement.
The Commission is adopting § 39.22
as proposed. The provision purposely
lacks specific details to allow each DCO
the discretion to make its own
determination as to which informationsharing agreements are necessary and
appropriate, including taking into
account confidentiality concerns. DCOs
may seek further guidance from
Commission staff if they have specific
questions about existing or potential
information-sharing arrangements.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
N. Core Principle N—Antitrust
Considerations—§ 39.23
Core Principle N,248 as amended by
the Dodd-Frank Act, conforms the
standard for DCOs with the standard
applied to DCMs under Core Principle
19.249 Proposed § 39.23 would codify
Core Principle N. CME commented that
the proposed regulation is adequate, and
the Commission is adopting the rule as
proposed.
O. Core Principle R—Legal Risk—
§ 39.27
Section 725(c) of the Dodd-Frank Act
sets forth a new Core Principle R (Legal
Risk).250 Core Principle R requires a
DCO to have a well-founded,
transparent, and enforceable legal
framework for each aspect of the DCO’s
activities. Proposed § 39.27 would set
forth the required elements of such a
legal framework. The Commission
solicited comment as to the legal risks
addressed in proposed § 39.27 and
whether the rule should address
additional legal risks.
CME commented that proposed
§ 39.27(c)(1), which would require a
DCO that provides clearing services
outside the United States to identify and
address all conflict of law issues, should
only require a DCO to identify and
address any ‘‘material’’ conflict of law
issues. The Commission agrees with
CME that a DCO should not be
burdened to identify non-material
conflict of law issues and has revised
§ 39.27(c)(1) to provide that such a DCO
must identify and address ‘‘any material
conflict of law issues.’’ The Commission
is otherwise adopting the rule as
proposed.
248 Section 5b(c)(2)(N) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 7a–
1(c)(2)(N).
249 See Section 5(d)(19) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C.
7(d)(19) (DCM Core Principle 19).
250 Section 5b(c)(2)(R) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 7a–
1(c)(2)(R).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
P. Special Enforcement Authority for
SIDCOs
Under Section 807(c) of the DoddFrank Act, for purposes of enforcing the
provisions of Title VIII, a SIDCO is
subject to, and the Commission has
authority under the provisions of
subsections (b) through (n) of Section 8
of, the Federal Deposit Insurance Act 251
in the same manner and to the same
extent as if the SIDCO were an insured
depository institution and the
Commission were the appropriate
Federal banking agency for such insured
depository institution. Proposed § 39.31
would codify this special authority. The
Commission did not receive any
comments on this provision.
Nevertheless, as discussed above in
connection with the proposals relating
to SIDCO financial resources and system
safeguards for SIDCOs, the Commission
is not finalizing the rules relating to
SIDCOs at this time. The Commission
expects to consider all the proposals
relating to SIDCOs together in the
future.
V. Part 140 Amendments—Delegations
of Authority
Under § 140.94, the Commission
delegates the authority to perform
certain functions that are reserved to the
Commission to the Director of the
Division of Clearing and Risk. In
connection with the regulations the
Commission is adopting herein, as well
as previously adopted § 39.5, the
Commission is amending § 140.94 to
delegate authority to perform certain
functions to the Director of the Division
of Clearing and Risk, as discussed
below.
With respect to DCO applications,
under § 140.94(a)(6), the Commission is
delegating authority to determine
whether a DCO application is materially
complete under § 39.3(a)(2), and to
request that an applicant submit
supplemental information in order for
the Commission to process a DCO
application under § 39.3(a)(3).
In addition to the authority delegated
to the Director of the Division of
Clearing and Risk in connection with
the Commission’s final rulemaking for
§ 39.5,252 § 140.94(a)(7) delegates
authority to request specific additional
251 12
U.S.C. 1818.
Commission has already delegated
authority to the Director of the Division of Clearing
and Risk to: (1) consolidate multiple swap
submissions from one DCO or subdivide a
submission as appropriate for review under
§ 39.5(b)(2); and request information from a DCO to
assist the Commission’s review of a clearing
requirement that has been stayed under § 39.5(d)(3).
See 76 FR at 44474 (July 26, 2011) (Process for
Review of Swaps for Mandatory Clearing; final
rule).
252 The
PO 00000
Frm 00075
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69407
information as part of a DCO’s swap
submission under § 39.5(b)(3)(ix).
Section 140.94(a)(8) delegates
authority to grant an extension of time
for a DCO to file its annual compliance
report under § 39.10(c)(4)(iv).
With respect to financial resources
requirements for DCOs, § 140.94(a)(9)
delegates authority to: (1) determine
whether a particular financial resource
may be used to satisfy the requirements
of § 39.11(a)(1) under § 39.11(b)(1)(vi);
(2) determine whether a particular
financial resource may be used to satisfy
the requirements of § 39.11(a)(2) under
§ 39.11(b)(2)(ii); (3) review the
methodology used to compute the
requirements of § 39.11(a)(1) and require
changes as appropriate under
§ 39.11(c)(1); (4) review the
methodology used to compute the
requirements of § 39.11(a)(2) and require
changes as appropriate under
§ 39.11(c)(2); (5) request financial
reporting from a DCO (in addition to the
quarterly reports) under § 39.11(f)(1);
and (6) grant an extension of time for a
DCO to file its quarterly financial report
under § 39.11(f)(4).
Section 140.94(a)(10) delegates
authority to request the periodic
financial reports of a DCO’s clearing
members that are not FCMs under
§ 39.12(a)(5)(i)(B).
With respect to risk management
requirements, § 140.94(a)(11) delegates
authority to: (1) Review percentage
levels for customer initial margin
requirements and require different
percentage levels if levels are deemed
insufficient under § 39.13(g)(8)(ii); (2)
review methods, thresholds, and
financial resources and require the
application of different methods,
thresholds, and financial resources as
appropriate (relating to risk limits on
clearing members) under
§ 39.13(h)(1)(i)(C); (3) review the
amount of additional initial margin
required of a clearing member permitted
to exceed its risk threshold and require
a different amount as appropriate under
§ 39.13(h)(1)(ii); (4) review the selection
of accounts and methodology used in
daily stress testing of large trader
positions and require changes as
appropriate under § 39.13(h)(3)(i); (5)
review methodology for weekly stress
testing of clearing member accounts and
swap portfolios and require changes as
appropriate under § 39.13(h)(3)(ii); and
(6) request clearing member information
and documents regarding their risk
management policies, procedures, and
practices under § 39.13(h)(5)(i)(A).
With respect to rule submissions and
4d petitions relating to the commingling
of futures, options on futures, and
cleared swaps in a cleared swaps
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69408
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
account or futures account, respectively,
§ 140.94(a)(12) delegates authority to
request additional information in
support of a rule submission, under
§ 39.15(b)(2)(iii)(A), and to request
additional information in support of a
4d petition, under § 39.15(b)(2)(iii)(B).
With respect to DCO reporting
requirements, § 140.94(a)(13) delegates
authority to: (1) Grant an extension of
time for filing of reports required to be
filed annually under § 39.19(c)(3)(iv); (2)
request that a DCO file information
related to its business as a clearing
organization, including information
relating to trade and clearing details,
under § 39.19(c)(5)(i); (3) request that a
DCO file a written demonstration that
the DCO is in compliance with one or
more core principles and relevant rule
provisions under § 39.19(c)(5)(ii); and
(4) request that a DCO file, for each
clearing member, by customer origin,
the end-of day positions for each
beneficial owner under § 39.19(c)(5)(iii).
Finally, § 140.94(a)(14) delegates
authority to permit a DCO to refrain
from publishing on its Web site
information that is otherwise required to
be published under § 39.21(d).
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
VI. Effective Dates
For purposes of publication in the
Code of Federal Regulations, all of the
rules adopted herein will have an
effective date of 60 days after
publication in the Federal Register. The
Commission received a number of
comments, however, that discussed a
DCO’s need for time to develop
appropriate systems and procedures to
come into compliance with some of the
rules. The Commission is extending the
date by which DCOs must come into
compliance for certain rules as follows:
DCOs must comply with the following
rules 180 days after publication in the
Federal Register: Financial resources—
§ 39.11; participant and product
eligibility—§ 39.12; risk management—
§ 39.13 (except gross margin—
§ 39.13(g)(8)(i)); and settlement
procedures—§ 39.14.
DCOs must comply with the following
rules 1 year after publication in the
Federal Register: chief compliance
officer—§ 39.10(c); gross margin—
§ 39.13(g)(8)(i); system safeguards—
§ 39.18; reporting—§ 39.19; and
recordkeeping—§ 39.20.
VII. Section 4(c)
Proposed §§ 39.15(b)(2)(i) and
39.15(b)(2)(ii) would establish
procedures for permitting futures and
options on futures to be carried in a
cleared swaps account (subject to
Section 4d(f) of the CEA), and for
cleared swaps to be carried in a futures
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
account (subject to Section 4d(a) of the
CEA), respectively. In connection with
proposing those rules, the Commission
proposed to grant an exemption under
Section 4(c) of the CEA and requested
comment on its proposed exemption.253
Section 4(c) of the CEA provides 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
exempt any agreement, contract, or
transaction, or class thereof, including
any person or class of persons offering,
entering into, rendering advice or
rendering other services with respect to,
the agreement, contract, or transaction,
from the contract market designation
requirement of Section 4(a) of the CEA,
or any other provision of the CEA other
than certain enumerated provisions, if
the Commission determines that the
exemption would be consistent with the
public interest.254
Proper treatment of customer funds
requires, among other things,
segregation of customer money,
securities and property received to
margin, guarantee, or secure positions in
futures or options on futures, in an
account subject to Section 4d(a) of the
CEA (i.e., a futures account), and
segregation of customer money,
securities and property received to
margin, guarantee, or secure positions in
cleared swaps, in an account subject to
Section 4d(f) of the CEA (i.e., a cleared
swaps account). Customer funds
required to be held in a futures account
cannot be commingled with noncustomer funds and cannot be held in
an account other than an account
subject to Section 4d(a), absent
Commission approval in the form of a
rule, regulation or order. Section 4d(f) of
the CEA mirrors these limitations as
applied to customer positions in cleared
swaps.
Under the proposed exemption, a
DCO and its clearing members would be
exempt from complying with the
segregation requirements of Section
4d(a) when holding customer segregated
funds in a cleared swaps account
subject to Section 4d(f) of the CEA,
instead of a futures account; and
similarly, a DCO and its clearing
members would be exempt from
complying with the segregation
requirements of Section 4d(f) when
holding customer funds related to
cleared swap positions in a futures
account subject to Section 4d(a) of the
CEA, instead of a cleared swaps
253 See 76 FR at 3715–3716 (Jan. 20, 2011) (Risk
Management).
254 7 U.S.C. 6(c).
PO 00000
Frm 00076
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
account. For the reasons discussed
below, the Commission has determined
to grant the exemption under Section
4(c) of the CEA.
In the notice of proposed rulemaking,
the Commission expressed its view that
the adoption of proposed
§§ 39.15(b)(2)(i) and 39.15(b)(2)(ii)
would promote responsible economic
and financial innovation and fair
competition, and would be consistent
with the ‘‘public interest,’’ as that term
is used in Section 4(c) of the CEA.
However, the Commission solicited
public comment on whether the
proposed regulations would satisfy the
requirements for exemption under
Section 4(c) of the CEA.
The Commission received one
comment. CME supported the
Commission’s conclusion, agreeing that
in appropriate circumstances, the
commingling of customer positions in
futures, options on futures, and cleared
swaps could achieve important benefits
with respect to greater capital efficiency
resulting from margin reductions for
correlated positions. CME believes that
adoption of a regulation permitting such
commingling would be consistent with
the public interest, adding that
‘‘[h]aving positions in a single account
can also enhance risk management
practices and systemic risk containment
by allowing the customer’s portfolio to
be handled in a coordinated fashion in
a transfer or liquidation scenario.’’
In light of the foregoing, the
Commission finds that permitting the
commingling of positions pursuant to
§§ 39.15(b)(2)(i) and 39.15(b)(2)(ii) will
promote responsible economic and
financial innovation and fair
competition, and is consistent with the
‘‘public interest,’’ as that term is used in
Section 4(c) of the CEA.
VIII. Considerations of Costs and
Benefits
Section 15(a) of the CEA requires the
Commission to ‘‘consider the costs and
benefits’’ of its actions before
promulgating a regulation.255 In
particular, these costs and benefits must
be evaluated in light of five broad areas
of market and public concern: (1)
Protection of market participants and
the public; (2) efficiency,
competitiveness, and financial integrity
of futures markets; (3) price discovery;
(4) sound risk management practices;
and (5) other public interest
considerations. In conducting its
evaluation, the Commission may, in its
discretion, give greater weight to any
one of the five enumerated areas and it
may determine that, notwithstanding
255 7
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
U.S.C. 19(a).
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
costs, a particular rule is necessary to
protect the public interest or to
effectuate any of the provisions or to
accomplish any of the purposes of the
CEA.256
In the following discussion, the
Commission presents its considerations
of the costs and benefits of the final
rulemaking in light of the comments it
received, other relevant data and
information, and the five broad areas of
market and public concern as required
by section 15(a) of the CEA.
A. Background
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
A derivatives clearing organization
(DCO) is an entity registered with the
Commission through which derivatives
transactions are cleared and settled. A
DCO acts as a central counterparty,
serving principally to ensure
performance of the contractual
obligations of the original counterparties
to derivatives transactions and to
manage and mitigate counterparty risk
and systemic risk in the markets they
serve. This is accomplished by
interposing the DCO between the
counterparties so that the DCO becomes
the buyer to every seller and the seller
to every buyer. Upon novation by the
original parties to a transaction, the
contractual obligations of the original
parties to one another are extinguished
and replaced by a pair of equal and
opposite transactions between the DCO
and the counterparties or their agents.
The DCO’s role as central
counterparty potentially exposes the
DCO itself to risk from every user whose
transactions are cleared through the
DCO. Conversely, if a DCO itself fails or
suffers a risk of failure, the
consequences for the market at large are
likely to be serious and widespread.
Effective risk management, therefore, is
critical to the functioning of a
marketplace in which swaps are cleared
through DCOs.
256 See, e.g., Fisherman’s Doc Co-op., Inc v.
Brown, 75 F.3d 164 (4th Cir. 1996); Center for Auto
Safety v. Peck, 751 F.2d 1336 (D.C. Cir. 1985)
(noting that an agency has discretion to weigh
factors in undertaking cost-benefit analysis).
Section 3 of the CEA states the purposes of the Act:
It is the purpose of this Act to serve the public
interests described in subsection (a) through a
system of effective self-regulation of trading
facilities, clearing systems, market participants and
market professionals under the oversight of the
Commission. To foster these public interests, it is
further the purpose of this Act to deter and prevent
price manipulation or any other disruptions to
market integrity; to ensure the financial integrity of
all transactions subject to this Act and the
avoidance of systemic risk; to protect all market
participants from fraudulent or other abusive sales
practices and misuses of customer assets; and to
promote responsible innovation and fair
competition among boards of trade, other markets
and market participants.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
Clearing members are the entities that
deal directly with DCOs. They may be
acting on their own behalf or as agents.
DCOs establish rules and risk
management requirements for their
clearing members, which typically
include specified levels of financial
resources, operational capacity, and risk
management capability; deposit of riskbased initial margin and payment of
daily variation margin sized to cover
current and potential losses of the
member; and contribution to a guaranty
fund that can be used in the event of a
clearing member default. These
requirements lower systemic risk by
reducing the likelihood of a clearing
member default and, in the event a
clearing member default does occur,
reducing the likelihood that it will
result in the default of other market
participants.
Additionally, unlike bilateral
derivatives transactions where parties
do not know the exposures their
counterparties have to other market
participants, as a result of the
multilateral nature of centralized
clearing, DCOs have a real-time, more
complete picture of each clearing
member’s risk exposure to multiple
parties. Thus the DCO can more
effectively and quickly identify
developing risk exposures for individual
clearing members and better manage
these risks if clearing members become
distressed.
B. General Comments and
Considerations
The Dodd-Frank Act is intended to
facilitate stability in the financial
system of the United States by reducing
risk, increasing transparency, and
promoting market integrity. To
accomplish these objectives, among
other things, the Dodd-Frank Act
provides for the mandatory clearing of
certain swaps by DCOs and explicitly
authorizes the Commission to
promulgate rules to establish
appropriate standards for DCOs in
carrying out their risk mitigation
function. Regulatory standards for DCOs
will serve to assure market participants
that credit and other risks associated
with cleared swap transactions are being
appropriately managed by DCOs. This,
in turn, can promote the use of cleared
swaps. Regulatory standards also can
foster market confidence in the integrity
of the derivatives clearing system.
In this final rulemaking, the
Commission is adopting regulations to
implement 15 DCO core principles: A
(Compliance), B (Financial Resources),
C (Participant and Product Eligibility), D
(Risk Management), E (Settlement
Procedures), F (Treatment of Funds), G
PO 00000
Frm 00077
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69409
(Default Rules and Procedures), H (Rule
Enforcement), I (System Safeguards), J
(Reporting), K (Recordkeeping), L
(Public Information), M (Information
Sharing), N (Antitrust Considerations),
and R (Legal Risk). In addition, the
Commission is adopting regulations to
implement the Chief Compliance Officer
provisions of Section 725 of the DoddFrank Act, and to update the regulatory
framework for DCOs to reflect standards
and practices that have evolved over the
past decade since the enactment of the
CFMA.
This rulemaking process has
generated an extensive record, which is
discussed at length throughout this
notice as it relates to the substantive
provisions in the final rules. A number
of commenters expressed the view that
there would be significant costs
associated with implementing and
complying with proposed rules. The
Commission also received comments
from KCC, CME, and OCC who stated
generally that the cost-benefit analysis
presented in the proposed rulemakings
was insufficient. The Commission has
carefully considered alternatives
suggested by commenters, and in a
number of instances, for reasons
discussed in detail above, has adopted
such alternatives or modifications to the
proposed rules where, in the
Commission’s judgment, the alternative
or modified standard accomplishes the
same regulatory objective in a more
cost-effective manner.
The Commission invited comments
on the comprehensive or ‘‘systemic’’
costs and benefits of the proposed rules.
MFA and Better Markets addressed this
issue stating that the Commission’s costbenefit analyses presented in the notices
of proposed rulemaking may have
understated the benefits of the proposed
rules.257 MFA commented that the costs
to market participants would be
substantial if the Commission does not
adopt the proposed regulations. Better
Markets commented that the only
reasonable way to consider costs and
benefits of any of the Commission’s rule
proposals under Dodd-Frank is to view
them as a whole. According to Better
Markets:
It is undeniable that the Proposed Rules are
intended and designed to work as a system.
Costing-out individual components of the
Proposed Rules inevitably double counts
costs which are applicable to multiple
individual rules. It also prevents the
consideration of the full range of benefits that
arise from the system as a whole that
provides for greater stability, reduces
257 See Letter from Better Markets dated June 3,
2011; Letter from MFA dated March 21, 2011
(comment file for 76 FR 3698 (Risk Management)).
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69410
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
systemic risk and protects taxpayers and the
public treasury from future bailouts.
Better Markets believes that the
benefits must include the avoided risk
of a new financial crisis and the best
measure of this benefit is the cost of the
2008 financial crisis, which is still
accumulating. It cited Andrew G.
Haldane, Executive Director, Financial
Stability of the Bank of England, who
estimated that the worldwide cost of the
crisis in terms of lost output was
between $60 trillion and $200 trillion,
depending primarily on the long term
persistence of the effects.
The Commission agrees with Better
Markets that the DCO rules operate in
an integrated, systemic manner to
ensure that the risks associated with
cleared swap transactions are being
appropriately managed or addressed by
DCOs. When implemented in their
entirety, these rules have the potential
to significantly change not only the
aggregate risk profile of the entire
derivatives clearing industry, but also
the allocation of risks among DCOs,
clearing firms, and market participants.
The final rules require DCOs to admit
firms as clearing members that may
differ substantially from existing
members with respect to size, risk
profiles, specializations, and risk
management abilities. The rules also
help create an environment in which
DCOs will compete for the business of
clearing trades of different sizes, and of
many different derivatives products—
both futures and swaps. In a potentially
much more diverse range of both
participants and products, these final
rules will allow, and in some cases
require, DCOs to make use of a number
of risk management tools, including,
among others, periodic valuation of
financial resources; a potentially more
rigorous design for margins; stress
testing and back testing for financial
resources and margin, respectively; and
additional rules and procedures
designed to allow for management of
events associated with a clearing
member defaulting on its obligations to
the DCO. These rules help reduce the
potential for DCO default, and the
potential follow-on effects on financial
markets as a whole. In addition, the
daily, quarterly, annual, and eventspecific reporting requirements for
DCOs enhance the tools available to the
Commission in conducting its financial
risk surveillance in connection with
derivatives clearing by DCOs.
Certain of the regulations
promulgated in this final rulemaking
merely codify the requirements of the
CEA, as amended by the Dodd-Frank
Act, e.g., §§ 39.10(a) and (b) (compliance
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
with core principles); 39.17 (rule
enforcement); 39.22 (information
sharing); and 39.23 (antitrust
considerations). For such provisions,
the Commission has not considered
alternatives to the statute’s prescribed
requirements, even though a DCO may
incur costs to comply with these
provisions. As these requirements are
imposed by the Dodd-Frank Act, any
associated costs and benefits are the
result of statutory directives, as
previously determined by the Congress,
that govern DCO activities independent
of the Commission’s regulations. By its
terms, CEA Section 15(a) requires the
Commission to consider and evaluate
the prospective costs and benefits of
regulations and orders of the
Commission prior to their issuance; it
does not require the Commission to
evaluate the costs and benefits of the
actions or mandates of the Congress.
In its notice of proposed rulemaking,
the Commission requested data or other
information in connection with its costbenefit considerations. The Commission
received only a few comments
providing quantitative information on
the costs of the proposed rules. It
received two comments on the benefits
of the proposed rules.
The Commission invited but did not
receive public comments specific to, or
related to, its consideration of costs and
benefits for proposed §§ 1.3, 39.1, 39.2,
39.4, 39.9, 39.16, 39.18, 39.20, 39.21,
and 39.27. However, the Commission
received comments on substantive
provisions of those proposed rules and
such comments are addressed above.
The following discussion summarizes
the Commission’s consideration of the
costs and benefits of the final rules
pursuant to CEA Section 15(a).
C. Form DCO—§ 39.3(a)(2)
Section 5b(c)(1) of the CEA provides
that ‘‘[a] person desiring to register as a
derivatives clearing organization shall
submit to the Commission an
application in such form and containing
such information as the Commission
may require for the purpose of making
the determinations required for
approval under paragraph (2).’’
Paragraph (2), which sets forth the 18
core principles applicable to DCOs,
further provides in paragraph (i) that
‘‘[t]o be registered and to maintain
registration as a derivatives clearing
organization, a derivatives clearing
organization shall comply with each
core principle described in this
paragraph and any requirement that the
Commission may impose by rule or
regulation pursuant to section 8a(5) [of
the CEA].’’ Accordingly, the standard
for approval of DCO registration is the
PO 00000
Frm 00078
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
applicant’s ability to satisfy the DCO
core principles.
Proposed § 39.3(a)(2) would require
that any person seeking to register as a
DCO submit a completed Form DCO,
which would be provided as an
appendix to part 39 of the Commission’s
regulations. The Form DCO, composed
of a cover sheet and list of exhibits,
would replace the general guidance
contained in Appendix A to Part 39,
‘‘Application Guidance and Compliance
With Core Principles’’ (Guidance),
which was adopted by the Commission
in 2001. In accordance with Section
5b(c) of the Act, the Form DCO is
designed to elicit a demonstration that
an applicant can satisfy each of the DCO
core principles. Toward this end, the
Form DCO requires submission of
extensive information about an
applicant’s intended operations. This
information has been required of
applicants under the previous
Guidance, and the use of the Form DCO
does not represent a departure in
substance from the Commission’s
practices over the past decade.
Rather, as explained in the proposed
rulemaking, the Form DCO was
designed to standardize and clarify the
information that the Commission has
required from DCO applicants in the
past, in an effort to facilitate a more
streamlined and efficient application
process. The Commission has learned
from experience that the general
guidance contained in the previous
Appendix A did not provide sufficiently
specific instructions to applicants. As a
result, the registration process has been
prolonged in some cases because of the
need for Commission staff to provide
applicants with additional guidance
about the nature of the information that
the Commission requires to conclude
that the applicant has demonstrated its
ability to comply with the core
principles.
The Commission did not receive
comments specifically with respect to
its cost-benefit analysis of proposed
§ 39.3(a)(2) or to its Paperwork
Reduction Act estimate that the cost of
preparing a completed application
would be $100,000. The Commission
notes that applicants for DCO
registration will incur direct costs
associated with the preparation of the
completed Form DCO. However,
because the Form DCO to a large extent
captures information that has already
been required by the Commission under
the Guidance or, with respect to new
core principles, captures information
that tracks the statutory
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
requirements,258 the use of the Form
DCO will not impose greater costs than
have been imposed in the past. In fact,
by providing greater clarity as to what
is expected from an applicant and by
reducing the need for Commission staff
to request, and the applicant to provide,
supplementary information, the Form
DCO should reduce costs for applicants.
As discussed in more detail in this
notice of final rulemaking, the
Commission received two comment
letters that addressed the proposed
Form DCO.259 The comments did not
oppose the concept of the Form DCO.
The comments were directed at the large
amount of information required and the
necessity of submitting certain specific
information. One of the comment letters
focused on the use of the Form DCO for
amending an existing DCO registration,
and the Commission has provided a
clarification to address that
commenter’s concerns. The Commission
has determined to adopt the final Form
DCO largely as proposed, but it has
modified several of the exhibits in
response to specific comments.
The Commission has evaluated the
costs and benefits of the required use of
Form DCO, under § 39.3(a)(2), in light of
the specific considerations identified in
Section 15(a) of the CEA as follows:
1. Protection of Market Participants and
the Public
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Costs
Applicants currently incur costs in
demonstrating compliance with the core
principles. As described above, based
on the staff’s experience in processing
DCO applications over the last ten years,
the Commission believes that use of the
Form DCO will not increase, and often
may decrease, the time and expense
associated with applying for registration
as a DCO for future applicants.
Benefits
The Commission expects that use of
the Form DCO will promote the
protection of market participants and
the public. Given the critical role that
DCOs play in providing financial
integrity to the markets for which they
clear—which now include swaps as
well as futures markets—it is essential
that the Commission conduct a
comprehensive and thorough review of
all DCO applications. Such review is
essential for the protection of market
participants and the public insofar as it
serves to limit the performance of DCO
258 Exhibits O, P, and Q, relating to the
requirements of Core Principles O (Governance
Fitness Standards), P (Conflicts of Interest), and Q
(Composition of Governing Boards), respectively.
259 See discussion in Section III.C.1, above.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
functions to only those entities that
have provided adequate demonstration
that they are capable of satisfying the
core principles.
2. Efficiency, Competitiveness, and
Financial Integrity
Costs
As noted, the Commission believes
that use of the Form DCO will not
increase, and often may decrease, the
time and expense associated with
applying for registration as a DCO for
future applicants.
Benefits
The Commission expects that use of
the Form DCO will promote efficiency,
competitiveness, and financial integrity.
As discussed above, the CEA requires
that prospective DCO registrants submit
an application and comply with the core
principles. In connection with these
requirements, in 2001, the Commission
adopted the Guidance to assist
applicants in preparing application
materials. However, the Commission’s
experience with protracted reviews of
draft applications and materially
incomplete final submissions has
indicated a need for streamlining the
application process.
By requiring the use of Form DCO, the
Commission is promoting increased
efficiency by providing greater clarity to
applicants before they undertake the
application process, thereby facilitating
the submission of a materially complete
final application in the first instance.
This will also reduce the need for
submission of supplemental materials
and consultation between applicants
and the Commission staff. The result
will be more cost effective and
expeditious review and approval of
applications. This will benefit
applicants as well as free Commission
staff to handle other regulatory matters.
In addition, use of the Form DCO
makes available to the public the
Commission’s informational
requirements so that all prospective
applicants have a heightened
understanding of what is involved in
the preparation and processing of an
application. It promotes greater
transparency in the process and will
enhance competition among DCOs by
making it easier for qualified applicants
to undertake and navigate the
application process in a timely manner.
The Form DCO is designed to address
an applicant’s ability to comply with the
core principles. Compliance with the
core principles is essential to ensure the
financial integrity of the derivatives
clearing process and of derivatives
markets, generally. In particular, the
PO 00000
Frm 00079
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69411
required information in Form DCO
Exhibits B (financial resources), D (risk
management), E (settlement
procedures), F (treatment of funds), G
(default rules and procedures) and I
(system safeguards) elicits important
information supporting the applicant’s
ability to operate a financially sound
clearing organization that can provide
reliable clearing and settlement services
and appropriately manage the risks
associated with its role as a central
counterparty.
3. Price Discovery
The Commission does not anticipate
that use of the Form DCO will impact
the price discovery process.
4. Sound Risk Management Practices
Costs
As noted, the Commission believes
that use of the Form DCO will not
increase, and often may decrease, the
time and expense associated with
applying for registration as a DCO for
future applicants.
Benefits
The Commission expects that use of
the Form DCO will promote sound risk
management practices. Use of the Form
DCO will reinforce sound risk
management by requiring an applicant
to examine its proposed risk
management program through the
preparation of a series of detailed
exhibits. The submission of exhibits
relating to risk management also make
it easier for Commission staff to analyze
and evaluate an applicant’s ability to
comply with Core Principle D (risk
management, which includes
monitoring and addressing credit
exposure through margin requirements
and other risk control mechanisms).
Sound risk management practices are
required by the CEA and Commission
regulations, and are essential to the
effective functioning of a DCO.
5. Other Public Interest Considerations
Costs
As noted, the Commission believes
that use of the Form DCO will not
increase, and often may decrease, the
time and expense associated with
applying for registration as a DCO for
future applicants.
Benefits
There are considerable benefits to the
public in standardizing and
streamlining the DCO application
process in terms of more efficient use of
Commission resources and more costeffective and transparent requirements
for applicants. DCOs play a key role in
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69412
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
supporting the financial integrity of
derivatives markets, and this role takes
on even greater significance with the
Dodd-Frank requirements for swaps
clearing. A coherent and comprehensive
approach to DCO registration is needed
to ensure that only qualified applicants
will be approved and that they are
capable of satisfying the requirements of
the core principles and Commission
regulations.
D. Chief Compliance Officer—§ 39.10(c)
Section 725(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act
added a new paragraph (i) to Section 5b
of the CEA to require each DCO to
designate an individual as its CCO,
responsible for the DCO’s compliance
with the CEA and Commission
regulations and the filing of an annual
compliance report.
The provisions regarding the CCO in
proposed § 39.10(c) would largely
codify Section 5b(i) of the CEA. There
are certain provisions, however, that
effectuate or implement the statutory
requirements. For example, the
proposed rules would require that the
CCO have the appropriate background
and skills for the position and not be
disqualified from registration under
Sections 8a(2) or 8a(3) of the CEA; meet
with the board of directors or the senior
officer at least once a year to discuss the
DCO’s compliance program; and
perform duties including establishing a
code of ethics. In addition, with respect
to the annual report, the proposed rules
would set forth certain content
requirements (e.g., discussing areas for
compliance program improvement and
listing any material changes to
compliance policies and procedures
since the last annual report) and
procedural requirements (e.g.,
submitting the annual report to the
board of directors or senior officer prior
to submitting the report to the
Commission, and submitting the annual
report not more than 90 days after the
end of the DCO’s fiscal year unless the
Commission grants an extension of
time.)
As discussed in detail above, the
Commission received a number of
comments that supported the proposed
rules for CCOs and the annual
compliance report, and other comments
that suggested alternatives or
refinements to the Commission’s
proposed rules. Commenters did not
provide any quantitative data regarding
the costs to either DCOs or market
participants and the public. The
Commission addressed those comments
above and, where appropriate, the final
rules reflect commenters’ suggestions.
One commenter, MGEX, expressed
concerns that relate to the Commission’s
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
implementation of the compliance
framework established by Congress.
MGEX stated that the regulations
regarding organizational structure and
reporting lines seem ‘‘excessive and
beyond what was contemplated by the
passage of the Dodd-Frank Act.’’ It also
believes that the regulations do not
‘‘guarantee improved market protection,
which is one of the main goals of the
Dodd-Frank Act.’’
The Commission does not agree with
MGEX that the rules exceed what was
contemplated by Congress. To a great
extent the rules codify the relevant
provisions of the CEA, as amended, and
it was Congress, not the Commission,
that specified the compliance
framework that the Commission is now
implementing. The additional
requirements set forth by the rules are
designed to increase the CCO’s
effectiveness and ensure that the annual
report is a useful compliance and
oversight tool.
MGEX also commented that ‘‘the rules
will impose a cost and burden on the
market that will be passed along to the
market participants which decreases the
overall efficiency and risk mitigation.’’
MGEX did not provide any details to
support its conclusion.
The Commission disagrees with
MGEX that the Commission’s rules will
impose such a significant burden on the
market and market participants. The
principal costs of the CCO requirement
result from the statutory provisions of
the CEA which, as amended by the
Dodd-Frank Act, requires each DCO to
designate a CCO and submit an annual
compliance report. Although the
Commission’s rules would impose
certain additional costs in order to
implement this statutory requirement,
these additional costs are not expected
to significantly increase costs to the
DCO or market participants. For
example, a DCO may incur higher costs
to the extent that it needs to pay a
higher salary to a person who has the
qualifications set forth in the rule to
perform the statutory and regulatory
duties of the CCO.260 The Commission
believes that such costs are appropriate
because it has determined that a CCO
should have these qualifications to be
effective, and notes that the standards
are general enough to provide
reasonable discretion to the DCO in its
designation of a CCO.261 Similarly, a
260 The Commission believes that even in the
absence of this specific rule many DCOs would
employ well-qualified persons to perform the
responsibilities of the statutorily-required CCO. In
such circumstances this rule would not result in
any additional costs for a DCO.
261 As noted in section IV.A.3, above, the rules do
not require that the person designated as the CCO
PO 00000
Frm 00080
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
DCO may have to incur higher costs in
terms of staff time to prepare an annual
report that contains the information
required by § 39.10(c)(3), as opposed to
a less comprehensive annual report.
However, the Commission believes that
the annual report must contain adequate
information if it is to be useful to the
DCO and the Commission. The
Commission does not anticipate that
these costs of hiring a qualified CCO, or
of preparing a more detailed annual
report, will be significantly higher than
the costs to the DCO imposed by the
basic statutory requirements for the
CCO.262
For purposes of the Paperwork
Reduction Act, the notice of proposed
rulemaking estimated the cost of
preparing the annual report to be $8000
to $9000 per year. The Commission
received no comments on this estimate.
The Commission received comments
that the annual report should be more
limited than proposed. The Commission
notes that those comments did not
suggest limiting the annual report to
achieve a more favorable cost-benefit
ratio, and the Commission addressed
those comments above.
The Commission has evaluated the
costs and benefits of § 39.10(c) in light
of the specific considerations identified
in Section 15(a) of the CEA as follows:
1. Protection of Market Participants and
the Public
Costs
As discussed above, there are likely to
be direct costs to DCOs in connection
with designating a qualified CCO and
annually preparing a comprehensive
compliance report. To the extent that
the Commission’s regulations impose
more specific or supplemental
requirements when compared to those
requirements explicitly imposed by
Section 5b(i) of the CEA, those
incremental costs are not likely to be
significant. While it is possible that
those incremental costs will be passed
along to clearing members and market
participants in the form of increased
clearing fees, the size of those
incremental costs, when spread across
recipients of clearing services, are likely
to be negligible.
hold that position, exclusively. A CCO may have
dual responsibilities so long as the CCO can
effectively carry out his or her duties as the CCO.
Accordingly, depending on the skills and
background of the personnel within a particular
DCO, a DCO may be able to use an existing staff
member to perform the duties of the CCO.
262 In light of the variations that exist today
among DCO compliance programs, including the
qualifications of DCO compliance personnel, the
Commission does not believe it is feasible to
quantify the incremental costs associated with
§ 39.10(c).
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
Benefits
The Commission believes that the
CCO rules will protect market
participants and the public by
promoting compliance with the core
principles and Commission regulations
through the designation and effective
functioning of the CCO, and the
establishment of a framework for
preparation of a meaningful annual
review of a DCO’s compliance program.
While there may be incremental costs
associated with imposition of the
Commission’s regulatory standards,
those costs may be mitigated by the
countervailing benefits of an effective
compliance program that fosters
financial integrity of the clearing
process and responsible risk
management practices to protect the
public from the adverse consequences
that would result from a DCO failure.
The annual compliance report, in
particular, will help the DCO and the
Commission to assess whether the DCO
has mechanisms in place to adequately
address compliance issues and whether
the DCO remains in compliance with
the core principles and the
Commission’s regulations. Such
compliance will protect market
participants and the public.
2. Efficiency, Competitiveness, and
Financial Integrity
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Costs
The Commission believes that
designation of a qualified CCO who will
effectively perform required duties,
including the preparation of an annual
compliance report, will not increase
costs and is likely to lead to reduction
of costs, in terms of the efficiency,
competitiveness, and financial integrity
of the derivatives markets.
Benefits
Clearing is a critical component of the
efficient, competitive, and financially
sound functioning of derivatives
markets. The financial integrity of these
markets, in particular, is achieved
through layers of protection.
Requirements for an effective DCO
compliance program will add a new
layer of protection to ensure that the
DCO remains compliant with the CEA
and Commission regulations, especially
relating to Core Principles B (financial
resources), D (risk management), E
(settlement procedures), F (treatment of
funds), G (default rules and procedures),
I (system safeguards), and N (antitrust
considerations).
An effective CCO will provide
benefits to DCOs and the markets they
serve by implementing measures that
enhance the safety and efficiency of
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
DCOs and reduce systemic risk. Reliable
and financially sound DCOs are
essential for the stability of the
derivatives markets they serve, and for
the greater public which benefits from a
sound financial system.
3. Price Discovery
The Commission does not anticipate
that § 39.10(c) will impact the price
discovery process.
4. Sound Risk Management Practices
Costs
The Commission does not believe that
the CCO provisions will impose costs in
terms of sound risk management
practices. To the contrary, the
Commission perceives there to be
benefits that will result from its CCO
implementing regulations.
Benefits
The regulatory provisions that
interpret or implement the statutory
requirements for the CCO and annual
report serve to enhance the standards
for a DCO’s compliance program which
will necessarily emphasize risk
management compliance because of its
significance to the overall purpose and
functioning of the DCO. Compliance
with Core Principle D (risk
management) and related regulations
encompasses, among other things,
measurement and monitoring of credit
exposures to clearing members,
implementation of effective risk-based
margin methodologies, and appropriate
calculation and back testing of margin
levels. It is the responsibility of the CCO
to ensure that the DCO is compliant
with Core Principle D and the
regulations thereunder, and is otherwise
engaged in appropriate risk management
activities in accordance with the DCO’s
own rules, policies and procedures.
5. Other Public Interest Considerations
The Commission does not believe that
the rule will have a material effect on
public interest considerations other than
those identified above.
E. Financial Resources—§ 39.11
Section 5b(c)(2)(B) of the CEA, Core
Principle B, as amended by the DoddFrank Act, requires a DCO to possess
financial resources that, at a minimum,
exceed the total amount that would
enable the DCO to meet its financial
obligations to its clearing members
notwithstanding a default by the
clearing member creating the largest
financial exposure for the DCO in
extreme but plausible market
conditions, and to cover its operating
costs for a period of one year, calculated
on a rolling basis.
PO 00000
Frm 00081
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69413
Proposed § 39.11 would codify these
requirements and set forth additional
standards for the types of financial
resources that are acceptable
(§ 39.11(b)); computation of the amount
of financial resources required to satisfy
the statutory default and operational
resources requirements (§ 39.11(c));
valuation of financial resources
(§ 39.11(d)); liquidity of financial
resources (§ 39.11(e)); and quarterly
reporting of financial resources
(§ 39.11(f)).263
As discussed in more detail above, the
Commission received comment letters
requesting further clarity as to the
proposed requirements. The
Commission also received comment
letters that discussed how the proposed
rules might impose costs or burdens on
DCOs.264 Two commenters objected to
the requirement that DCOs must
monitor ‘‘on a continual basis’’ a
clearing member’s ability to meet
potential assessments, which one of the
commenters characterized as ‘‘overly
burdensome and difficult to
administer.’’ Regarding the proposed
restrictions on the use of assessment
powers, another commenter stated that
the inclusion of assessment powers as a
financial resource is necessary for it to
meet its obligations in the event of a
default. Two commenters recommended
that the Commission permit letters of
credit to be considered in the financial
resources computation. Finally, several
DCOs urged the Commission to allow
U.S. Treasuries, in addition to cash, as
a financial resource sufficient to meet
the proposed financial resource
liquidity requirement.
As discussed above, in proposing that
a DCO ‘‘monitor, on a continual basis,
the financial and operational capacity of
its clearing members to meet potential
assessments,’’ the Commission did not
intend to require real-time monitoring of
clearing members. Rather, the purpose
of the provision was to require a DCO
to monitor often enough to enable it to
become aware of any potential problems
in a timely manner. The Commission
has modified § 39.11(d)(2)(ii) to remove
the ‘‘continual basis’’ standard, leaving
the DCO to exercise its discretion in
determining the appropriate frequency
of periodic reviews or more frequent
reviews as circumstances warrant in
connection with particular clearing
members.
The Commission is permitting DCOs
to include potential clearing member
263 The Commission also proposed § 39.29 which
would apply certain stricter requirements to
SIDCOs. As discussed above, the Commission is not
taking action on those proposed rules as part of this
final rulemaking.
264 See discussion in Section IV.B, above.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69414
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
assessments in calculating default
financial resources, as proposed, subject
to the limitations of § 39.11(d)(2)(iii) (30
percent haircut) and § 39.11(d)(2)(iv)
(DCO may count the value of
assessments, after the haircut, to meet
up to 20 percent of its default resources
requirement). The comments on this
proposal were varied. Some commenters
stated that the Commission had
proposed an appropriate, balanced
approach; others stated that the
limitations on assessments were too
strict; and still others stated that the
Commission should not permit
assessments to count at all.
It is the Commission’s view that, in
light of recent market events and as a
general matter, it is not prudent to
permit a DCO to rely on letters of credit.
However, for the reasons discussed
above, the Commission would consider
permitting letters of credit to be
included as a DCO financial resource on
a very limited case-by-case basis.
Finally, the Commission is revising
§ 39.11(e)(1) so that, in addition to cash,
a DCO may use U.S. Treasury
obligations and high quality, liquid,
general obligations of a sovereign nation
to satisfy financial resource liquidity
requirements. This revised standard
reflects the current practices of U.S. and
foreign-based DCOs.
The Commission has evaluated the
costs and benefits of § 39.11 in light of
the specific considerations identified in
Section 15(a) of the CEA as follows:
1. Protection of Market Participants and
the Public
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Costs
The regulations require DCOs to take
specific actions to ensure that they are
able to meet the statutory requirements
for covering default and operating
expenses. These actions include
monthly stress testing to calculate what
those financial obligations are, and
quarterly reporting to the Commission
to demonstrate the adequacy of financial
resources in terms of dollar amount and
liquidity. DCOs will incur direct costs
related to staffing and technology
programming to calculate, monitor, and
report financial resources.
Existing DCOs will have already
implemented certain practices and
systems for tracking and managing
financial resources in order to comply
with Core Principle B, as originally
enacted in 2000. Given the staffing and
operational differences among DCOs,
the Commission is unable to accurately
estimate or quantify the additional costs
DCOs may incur to comply with the
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
new financial resource rules.265
Moreover, the cost-effects of new
cleared products and new market
participants clearing those products are
too speculative and uncertain for the
Commission to be able to quantify or
estimate at this time. Such costs or
benefits will depend upon a number of
variables that are not estimable or
quantifiable at this time, such as the
nature and number of the new products
that become subject to clearing, the
nature and number of market
participants that enter into transactions
involving such products, and the
resulting costs or benefits to such
market participants from the clearing of
such products.
As to costs associated with
restrictions the Commission is imposing
on the types and valuation of financial
resources that may be counted as
financial resources for purposes of
satisfying Core Principle B, those too
will vary among DCOs. For example, for
DCOs that do not include potential
clearing member assessments in their
calculations of financial resources, the
limitations on assessments will not
result in increased costs. For DCOs that
to any extent rely on potential
assessments, the new limitations might
require revisions to their default
management plans, an increase in
guaranty fund requirements, or an
infusion of additional capital. The same
would apply to letters of credit that
cannot be considered to be financial
resources for purposes of complying
with Core Principle B, absent relief.
Again, because of the range of
circumstances of different DCOs, it is
not feasible to estimate or quantify the
costs of the safeguards imposed by the
Commission’s financial resource rules.
Benefits
The financial resource rules establish
uniform standards that further the goals
of avoiding market disruptions and
financial losses to market participants
and the general public, and avoiding
systemic problems that could arise from
a DCO’s failure to maintain adequate
default or operating resources. While it
is not possible to estimate or quantify
the benefits to market participants and
the public in facilitating the financial
soundness of a DCO, the Commission
believes that a DCO failure, regardless of
the size of the DCO, could adversely
affect the financial markets, market
participants, and the public.
265 Commenters did not provide the Commission
with quantitative data regarding such costs.
PO 00000
Frm 00082
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
2. Efficiency, Competitiveness, and
Financial Integrity
Costs
As discussed in connection with
factor 1 above, quantification or
estimation of these costs and benefits is
not readily feasible. For some DCOs, the
financial resource rules will have little
or no direct or indirect impact. For
others, the impact may be more
substantial. Although there may be
disparate impact among DCOs, overall
the rules are not expected to impose
significant costs in terms of efficiency,
competitiveness, or financial integrity of
derivatives markets.
Benefits
The regulations promote financial
strength and stability, thereby fostering
efficiency and a greater ability to
compete in the broader financial
markets. The regulations promote
competition by preventing DCOs that
lack adequate financial safeguards from
expanding in ways that may ultimately
harm the broader financial market. The
regulations promote efficiency insofar as
DCOs that operate with adequate
financial resources are less likely to fail.
The regulations are designed to ensure
that DCOs can meet their financial
obligations to market participants, thus
contributing to the financial integrity of
the derivatives markets as a whole.
As highlighted by recent events in the
global financial markets, maintaining
sufficient financial resources is a critical
aspect of any financial entity’s risk
management system, and ultimately
contributes to the goal of stability in the
broader financial markets. Therefore,
the Commission believes it is prudent to
include financial resources
requirements for entities applying to
become or operating as DCOs. Finally,
Congress has determined that a DCO
must comply with Core Principle B to
achieve the purposes of the CEA and the
Commission has determined that § 39.11
sets forth the minimum standards for a
DCO to do so.
3. Price Discovery
The Commission does not believe that
this rule will have a material effect on
price discovery.
4. Sound Risk Management Practices
Costs
Adequate financial resources are a
corollary to strong risk management. To
the extent that the financial resource
rules result in additional costs, these
costs are associated with implementing
the practices and procedures that are
necessary to ensure a DCO has adequate
financial resources.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
Benefits
The regulations, by setting specific
standards with respect to how DCOs
should assess, monitor, and report the
adequacy of their financial resources,
contribute to DCOs’ maintenance of
sound risk management practices and
further the goal of minimizing systemic
risk. The reporting requirements, in
particular, will enable the Commission
to conduct more thorough and
meaningful oversight of DCOs that will
contribute to improved risk
management by DCOs overall.
5. Other Public Interest Considerations
Costs
The Commission has not identified
any public interest considerations that
would be negatively affected by the
provisions of the financial resource
rules that effectuate or implement the
statutory requirements of Core Principle
B (financial resources).
Benefits
The benefits to the public of a DCO
maintaining adequate financial
resources are discussed above.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
F. Participant and Product Eligibility—
§ 39.12
Participant Eligibility
Section 5b(c)(2)(C) of the CEA, Core
Principle C, as amended by the DoddFrank Act, requires each DCO to
establish appropriate admission and
continuing eligibility standards for
members of, and participants in, the
DCO, including sufficient financial
resources and operational capacity to
meet the obligations arising from
participation. Core Principle C further
requires that such participation and
membership requirements be objective,
be publicly disclosed, and permit fair
and open access. Core Principle C also
requires that each DCO establish and
implement procedures to verify
compliance with each participation and
membership requirement, on an ongoing
basis.
As discussed above, the Commission
crafted the provisions of proposed
§ 39.12(a) and related rules to establish
a regulatory framework that
accomplishes two goals: (1) to provide
for fair and open access, while (2)
limiting risk to the DCO and its clearing
members. The provisions in
§ 39.12(a)(1) provide for fair and open
access in a number of ways. A DCO is
prohibited from adopting restrictive
clearing member standards if less
restrictive requirements that would not
materially increase risk to the DCO or
clearing members could be adopted
(§ 39.12(a)(1)(i)); a DCO must allow all
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
market participants who satisfy
participation requirements to become
clearing members (§ 39.12(a)(1)(ii)); the
standards must be non-discriminatory
(§ 39.12(a)(1)(iii)); and they may not
require clearing members to be swap
dealers (§ 39.12(a)(1)(iv)), or clearing
members to maintain a swap portfolio of
any particular size or meet a swap
transaction volume threshold
(§ 39.12(a)(1)(v)).
Section 39.12(a)(2) facilitates greater
participation by requiring that capital
requirements for clearing members be
based on objective, transparent, and
commonly accepted standards that
appropriately match capital to risk
(§ 39.12(a)(2)(i)); and by setting the
minimum capital requirement at not
more than $50 million (§ 39.12(a)(2)(ii)).
A number of commenters supported
the proposed rules. They asserted that
increased access to clearing would
stimulate competition and diversify
risk. A number of other commenters
opposed aspects of the proposed rules,
particularly the $50 million capital
standard. They argued that these
provisions could increase risk by
providing access to firms with
insufficient financial resources or
operational capacity.
The Commission did not receive any
comments that quantified the costs
associated with the proposed
participation rules. Instead, commenters
focused on qualitative considerations,
including how the proposed rules
would affect market participants, market
risk, efficiency, competitiveness, the
financial integrity of futures markets,
and price discovery.
The Commission is adopting these
provisions essentially as proposed.
The Commission has evaluated the
costs and benefits of the proposed
regulations in light of the specific
considerations identified in Section
15(a) of the CEA, as follows:
1. Protection of Market Participants and
the Public
Costs
The participant eligibility rules may
result in costs beyond those incurred in
the normal course of operating a DCO or
clearing firm, but such potential costs
are, at this time, speculative in nature
and impossible to estimate or quantify.
By providing access to clearing to
additional firms, the rules could impose
costs on DCOs, other clearing members,
or customers if a firm admitted to
clearing membership in a DCO pursuant
to these rules failed to meet its
obligations. Any such costs depend
upon a number of factors that are not
presently knowable, quantifiable, or
estimable.
PO 00000
Frm 00083
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69415
It is not possible to estimate or
quantify these costs in a reliable way for
a number of reasons. The historical
record prior to the enactment of the
Dodd-Frank Act with respect to the
operation of clearing organizations
provides little guidance as to the costs
that may be incurred in the future in the
unlikely event of a default at a DCO.
Defaults at DCOs are very rare and the
circumstances of each one are unique.
Moreover, the Dodd-Frank Act and
implementing regulations will alter the
landscape significantly. Existing DCOs
and FCMs will be clearing new
products. New DCOs and FCMs will
enter the market. Mandatory clearing
will bring new products and
participants to DCOs and FCMs. The
interaction of all these factors creates a
wide range of uncertainty as to the
nature of the potential consequences of
a default under the new regulatory
regime. In sum, the Commission
believes that the possible future
circumstances leading to and potential
resulting consequences of a DCO default
are too speculative and uncertain to be
able to quantify or estimate the resulting
costs to DCOs, clearing members, or
market participants with any precision
or degree of magnitude.
Whatever these potential costs, the
Commission believes that the
participant eligibility rules will reduce
the risk that clearing members will in
fact incur such costs. First, increased
access to clearing membership should
reduce concentration at any one clearing
member and diversify risk. Second, the
rules contain risk management
provisions specifically designed to
minimize the likelihood and extent of
defaults. The provisions in § 39.12(a)(2)
set forth requirements that mandate
DCOs: Require that all clearing members
have sufficient financial resources to
meet obligations arising from
participation in the DCO
(§ 39.12(a)(2)(i)); establish capital
requirements that are scalable so that
they are proportional to the risks posed
by clearing members (§ 39.12(a)(2)(ii));
require that clearing members have
adequate operational capacity to meet
obligations arising from participation in
the DCO (§ 39.12(a)(3)); verify the
compliance of each clearing member
with the requirements of the DCO
(§ 39.12(a)(4)); satisfy certain reporting
requirements (§ 39.12(a)(5)); and have
the ability to enforce participation
requirements (§ 39.12(a)(6)).
For reasons similar to those described
above, it is also not feasible to quantify
or estimate this reduction in costs with
any confidence. Based on its judgment
and experience with the regulation and
operation of clearing organizations, the
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69416
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
Commission believes that these rules
will lower the risk that clearing
members will in fact incur such costs.
However, the possible future
circumstances leading to and potential
resulting consequences of a future
default are too speculative and
uncertain to quantify or estimate, either
under the current regulatory regime or
under the rules being adopted by the
Commission.
Benefits
Greater access to clearing should
benefit market participants by
increasing competition among clearing
members. Allowing more firms to clear
should increase competition among
clearing firms on both price and service
which should, in turn, reduce costs to
market participants. Further, the
safeguards in § 39.12(a)(2) will benefit
DCOs, clearing members, and market
participants by reducing risk.
Reductions in risk also benefit the
general public by decreasing the
probability of a systemic failure.
For the reasons described above in
connection with costs, it is also
impractical to quantify or estimate these
benefits associated with reductions in
risk to clearing members, market
participants, and the public.
2. Efficiency, Competitiveness, and
Financial Integrity
Costs
The considerations under this factor
are very similar to the considerations
under the previous factor with respect
to participant eligibility requirements.
Quantification or estimation of these
costs and benefits is not feasible for the
reasons set forth under the first factor.
The potential increase in risk of default
resulting from open access is mitigated
by the decrease in risk resulting from
diversification of risk, increased
competition, and the safeguards set
forth in § 39.12(a)(2).
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Benefits
By opening access the rules should
increase competition among clearing
members thereby resulting in increased
efficiency in the provision of clearing
services. The safeguards in the rules
such as the requirement that DCOs
impose risk limits on clearing members
will enhance the financial integrity of
the DCO and its clearing members.
3. Price Discovery
Costs
The Commission has not identified
any way in which the rules will impair
price discovery.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
Benefits
Product Eligibility
Increased competition among clearing
members could bring more participants
into the markets which could result in
more competitive pricing and enhanced
price discovery.
Core Principle C also requires a DCO
to establish ‘‘appropriate standards for
determining the eligibility of
agreements, contracts, or transactions
submitted to the [DCO] for clearing.’’
Section 39.12(b) implements this
provision.
Proposed § 39.12(b)(1) would require
a DCO to establish requirements for
determining product eligibility taking
into account the DCO’s ability to
manage risks associated with the
product. Proposed §§ 39.12(b)(2) and
(b)(3) would codify section 2(h)(1)(B) of
the CEA. Proposed § 39.12(b)(4) would
prohibit a DCO from requiring an
executing party to be a clearing member
in order for the product to be eligible for
clearing. Proposed § 39.12(b)(5) would
require a DCO to select contract units
for clearing purposes that maximize
liquidity, facilitate transparency,
promote open access, and allow for
effective risk management. Proposed
§ 39.12(b)(6) would require novation
upon acceptance of a swap. Finally,
proposed § 39.12(b)(8) would require a
DCO to confirm the terms of a swap at
the time the swap is accepted for
clearing.266
The Commission did not receive any
comments directly addressing costbenefit considerations. The Commission
did receive several comments on
substantive provisions that bear on
those considerations. One commenter
suggested that § 39.12(b)(4) may be an
impediment to the development of new
DCOs. Several commenters suggested
that it would be impractical or
inappropriate for a DCO to establish
unit sizes for clearing that differ from
the unit size at execution (§ 39.12(b)(5)).
The Commission also received several
comments requesting clarification of
certain provisions. As discussed above,
the Commission has made changes to
these rules that are responsive to the
comments.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.12(b) largely as proposed with
several clarifying amendments as
discussed above.
The Commission has evaluated the
costs and benefits of § 39.12(b) in light
of the specific considerations identified
in Section 15(a) of the CEA, as follows:
4. Sound Risk Management Practices
Costs
According to some commenters, the
open access rules could hinder sound
risk management practices by admitting
clearing members unable to participate
in the default management process.
Other commenters assert that the rules
provide appropriate protections and
will facilitate sound risk management
practices. The Commission believes that
the open access rules, when coupled
with the default management rules
discussed below, will not impair sound
risk management practices. Under the
rules, clearing members will be required
to demonstrate that they have
operational capacity to carry out their
responsibilities as well as sufficient
financial resources to meet their
obligations.
Benefits
As explained above, the provisions in
§ 39.12(a)(2) require that DCOs establish
a risk management framework with
respect to their members. In addition,
open access should lead to
diversification of risk at DCOs and allow
additional firms to assist in the
resolution of any defaults.
5. Other Public Interest Considerations
Costs
The Commission has not identified
any other public interest considerations
that would be negatively affected by the
potential costs of the eligibility
requirements.
Benefits
The CEA, as amended by the DoddFrank Act, requires DCOs to allow for
open access and, therefore, broader
participation. The Commission believes
that greater participation in clearing
could increase liquidity in the markets.
This could help prevent price
manipulation or other anti-competitive
practices because it will be harder to
organize concerted efforts to achieve
such ends. Finally, Congress has
determined that a DCO must comply
with Core Principle C to achieve the
purposes of the CEA and the
Commission has determined that
§ 39.12(a) sets forth the minimum
standards for a DCO to comply with the
CEA’s participation requirements.
PO 00000
Frm 00084
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
1. Protection of Market Participants and
the Public
Costs
The Commission has not identified
any new costs arising out of
§§ 39.12(b)(1), 39.12(b)(6), or
266 Proposed § 39.12(b)(7) will be addressed in a
separate rulemaking.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
39.12(b)(8). DCOs currently perform risk
analysis before accepting new products
for clearing, currently novate trades
upon acceptance, and currently issue
confirmations to clearing members.
As noted, one commenter suggested
that prohibiting a DCO from requiring
one of the original executing parties to
be a clearing member in order for a
contract to be eligible for clearing may
be an impediment to the development of
new DCOs. The Commission believes
that, to the contrary, such restrictions on
product eligibility for clearing increase
overall costs for market participants,
and that prohibiting such restrictions
will lead to lower overall costs. Such
restrictions deny the availability and
benefits of clearing to non-clearing
members. Open access will enable nonclearing members to obtain the benefits
of clearing and increase competition in
clearing and trading, thereby increasing
liquidity, and reducing costs.
The commenters who questioned the
unit size provision did not elaborate on
the costs. It is not feasible to quantify
these costs for a number of reasons. The
rule provides DCOs with significant
flexibility in selecting unit sizes.
Different DCOs may select different
sizes for the same or similar products.
Numerous SEFs will also be making
judgments concerning unit size which
will influence the decisions of DCOs
and traders. Some products will be
subject to mandatory clearing and others
to voluntary clearing. The unpredictable
interaction of these variables creates a
wide range of uncertainty as to the
nature of the consequences of the
selection of unit sizes by DCOs. Similar
considerations apply to the other
provisions of § 39.12(b). In sum, the
Commission believes that the possible
future circumstances leading to, and the
potential resulting consequences of, the
implementation of § 39.12(b) are too
speculative and uncertain to be able to
quantify or estimate resulting costs with
any precision or degree of magnitude.
Benefits
The Commission believes that
§ 39.12(b) will protect market
participants and the public in many
ways. First, these provisions are likely
to facilitate the standardization of
swaps, thereby eliminating differences
between the terms of a swap as cleared
at the DCO level and as carried at the
customer level. Any such outstanding
differences would raise both customer
protection and systemic risk concerns.
From a customer protection standpoint,
if the terms of the swap at the customer
level differ from those at the clearing
level, then the customer still has a
bilateral position opposite its
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
counterparty. The customer is still
exposed to the credit risk of the
counterparty and the position would not
be able to be offset against other
positions at the DCO. Similarly, from a
systemic perspective, any differences in
terms between the trades would
eliminate the possibility of multilateral
offset and thereby diminish liquidity.
Second, § 39.12(b) can promote
liquidity by permitting more parties to
trade the product and by permitting
more clearing members to clear the
product. Third, it can enhance risk
management by enabling a DCO, in the
event of a default, to have more
potential counterparties for liquidation.
Fourth, these provisions will support
the requirement in section 2(h)(1)(B) of
the CEA and proposed § 39.12(b)(2) that
a DCO must adopt rules providing that
all swaps with the same terms and
conditions submitted to the DCO are
economically equivalent within the
DCO and may be offset with each other.
Fifth, clearing will eliminate the need
for a counterparty to ascertain the
credit-worthiness of each of its
counterparties. This will promote
liquidity, competition, and financial
integrity to the benefit of all market
participants.
3. Price Discovery
2. Efficiency, Competitiveness, and
Financial Integrity
69417
Costs
Costs
The Commission has not identified
any ways in which the proposals would
reduce efficiency, competitiveness, or
financial integrity.
Benefits
The rules should increase
participation by clearing members,
which should increase competition
among clearing members to provide
services to customers. In addition, the
rules will lead to standardization of
products. Finally, the rules will allow
for more clearing through novation,
which should result in increased open
interest and liquidity. In turn, this
should lead to more competitive and
efficient markets. As noted above,
smaller units can promote liquidity and
encourage prospective clearing members
to bid on positions and enable them to
accept a forced allocation in the event
of a clearing member’s default. This
facilitates open access, and at same time
promotes risk management by enabling
a DCO, in the event of a default, to be
able to rely on more potential
counterparties for liquidation.
PO 00000
Frm 00085
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Costs
The Commission has not identified
any ways in which the rules would
reduce price discovery.
Benefits
As discussed above, the rules will
increase competition, which should
enhance price discovery by bringing
more participants into the markets. In
addition, standardization means that
prices observed on different trades are
more directly comparable, which can
improve price discovery.
4. Sound Risk Management Practices
Costs
The Commission has not identified
any ways in which the rules would
impair sound risk management
practices.
Benefits
The rules require DCOs to establish
appropriate standards for determining
the eligibility of contracts submitted to
the DCO for clearing taking into account
the DCO’s ability to manage risks
associated with the product. Such
standards are a sound risk management
practice.
5. Other Public Interest Considerations
The Commission has not identified
any ways in which the rules would
harm any other public interest
considerations.
Benefits
As discussed above, open access,
increased competition, greater liquidity,
improved price discovery, and greater
financial integrity are all benefits of the
rules. All these factors will benefit the
general public, which may not
participate in these markets directly but
may feel their impact on the larger
economy.
G. Risk Management—§ 39.13
In General
Core Principle D,267 as amended by
the Dodd-Frank Act, requires each DCO
to ensure that it possesses the ability to
manage the risks associated with
discharging the responsibilities of the
DCO through the use of appropriate
tools and procedures. It further requires
each DCO to measure its credit
exposures to each clearing member not
less than once during each business day
and to monitor each such exposure
267 Section 5b(c)(2)(D) of the CEA; 7 U.S.C. 7a–
1(c)(2)(D).
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69418
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
periodically during the business day.
Core Principle D also requires each DCO
to limit its exposure to potential losses
from defaults by clearing members,
through margin requirements and other
risk control mechanisms, to ensure that
its operations would not be disrupted
and that non-defaulting clearing
members would not be exposed to
losses that non-defaulting clearing
members cannot anticipate or control.
Finally, Core Principle D provides that
a DCO must require margin from each
clearing member sufficient to cover
potential exposures in normal market
conditions and that each model and
parameter used in setting such margin
requirements must be risk-based and
reviewed on a regular basis.
The Commission proposed § 39.13 to
establish requirements that a DCO
would have to meet in order to comply
with Core Principle D. For a number of
provisions of proposed § 39.13, the
Commission did not receive any
comments on the associated costs or on
cost-benefit analysis. The Commission
discussed in the notice of proposed
rulemaking and above why it believes a
DCO must satisfy each of those
provisions to be in compliance with the
Core Principle D and why it is
appropriate for market participants to
incur any costs associated with
implementing each of those provisions.
The Commission also addressed
comments that suggested alternative
standards, frameworks, or procedures.
Where appropriate, the Commission
revised the proposed rules. To avoid
repetition, the Commission incorporates
by reference the above discussion of
§ 39.13.
Commenters raised concerns about
the costs of §§ 39.13(g)(2)(ii) (minimum
liquidation time), 39.13(g)(2)(iii)
(margin confidence level), 39.13(g)(8)(i)
(gross margin), 39.13(h)(1)(i) (risk
limits), 39.13(h)(2) (large trader reports),
and 39.13(h)(5)(ii) (clearing member risk
review) or the Commission’s costbenefit analysis relating to these rules.
The Commission’s consideration of the
costs and benefits associated with these
rules is discussed in greater detail
below.
Minimum Liquidation Time
As proposed, § 39.13(g)(2)(ii) would
require a DCO to use a liquidation time
that is a minimum of five business days
for cleared swaps that are not executed
on a DCM, and a liquidation time that
is a minimum of one business day for
all other products that it clears,
although it would be required to use
longer liquidation times, if appropriate,
based on the unique characteristics of
particular products or portfolios.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
Numerous commenters objected to the
proposed difference in requirements
that would subject swaps that were
either executed bilaterally or executed
on a SEF to a minimum five-day
liquidation time, while permitting
equivalent swaps that were executed on
a DCM to be subject to a minimum oneday liquidation time. The Commission
did not receive any comments that
quantified the costs of this rule.
As to the actual periods proposed,
commenters variously contended that a
liquidation time of five business days
may be excessive for some swaps, a oneday liquidation period is too short, a
one-day liquidation period is
appropriate for swaps executed on a
DCM or a SEF, and a two-day
liquidation period is appropriate for
cleared swaps.
Some commenters encouraged the
Commission to permit a DCO to
determine the appropriate liquidation
time for all products that it clears based
on the unique characteristics and
liquidity of each relevant product or
portfolio. Two commenters
recommended that if the Commission
were to mandate minimum liquidation
times in the final rules, it should allow
DCOs to apply for exemptions for
specific groups of swaps if market
conditions prove that such minimum
liquidation times are excessive.
Upon consideration of the comments,
the Commission is adopting
§ 39.13(g)(2)(ii) with a number of
modifications. First, the final rule
requires a DCO to use the same
liquidation time for a product whether
it is executed on a DCM, a SEF, or
bilaterally. Second, the final rule
provides that the minimum liquidation
time for swaps based on certain physical
commodities, i.e., agricultural
commodities, energy, and metals, as
well as futures and options, is one day.
For all other swaps, the minimum
liquidation time is five days. Third, to
provide further flexibility, the
Commission is adding a provision
specifying that, by order, the
Commission may provide for a different
minimum liquidation time for particular
products or portfolios.
The Commission has evaluated the
costs and benefits of the proposed
regulations in light of the specific
considerations identified in Section
15(a) of the CEA, as follows:
1. Protection of Market Participants and
the Public
Costs
The Commission anticipates that
using only one criterion—i.e., the
characteristic of the commodity
PO 00000
Frm 00086
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
underlying a swap—to determine
liquidation time could result in lessthan-optimal margin calculations. For
some products, a five-day minimum
may prove to be excessive and tie up
more funds than are strictly necessary
for risk management purposes. For other
products, a one-day or even a five-day
period may be insufficient and expose a
DCO and market participants to
additional risk.
The Commission believes that it is not
feasible to estimate or quantify these
costs reliably. In addition to the
liquidation time frame, the margin
requirements for a particular instrument
depend upon a variety of characteristics
of the instrument and the markets in
which it is traded, including the risk
characteristics of the instrument, its
historical price volatility, and liquidity
in the relevant market. Determining
such margin requirements does not
solely depend upon such quantitative
factors, but also requires expert
judgment as to the extent to which such
characteristics and data may be an
accurate predictor of future market
behavior with respect to such
instruments, and applying such
judgment to the quantitative results.
Thousands of different swap products
may be subject to clearing. Determining
the risk characteristics, price volatility,
and market liquidity of even a sample
for purposes of determining a
liquidation time specifically for such
instrument would be a formidable task
for the Commission to undertake and
any results would be subject to a range
of uncertainty. Reliable data is not
readily available for many swaps that
prior to the Dodd-Frank Act were
executed in unregulated markets.
Given the amount of uncertainty in
estimating margin requirements using
either a five-day liquidation time or a
one-day liquidation time, the amount of
uncertainty in estimating the cost of
using one rather than the other is
compounded. For all the reasons stated
in the previous paragraph, the possible
range within which the size of the
difference would fall is very large. In
sum, in the absence of a reasonably
feasible and reliable methodology at the
present time for the Commission to use
in calculating the appropriate margin
requirements for swaps with either fiveday or one-day liquidation times,268 the
268 The Commission notes that ‘‘[t]he existence of
significant outstanding notional exposures, trading
liquidity, and adequate pricing data’’ is one of the
factors the Commission must consider in reviewing
whether a swap or group or class of swaps is subject
to the mandatory clearing requirement in CEA
Section 2(h)(1). See Section 2(h)(2)(D) of the CEA.
To enable the Commission to make this
determination, the Commission requires DCOs that
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
Commission believes that possible
future circumstances surrounding
margin levels are too speculative and
uncertain to be able to quantify or
estimate the resulting costs to DCOs,
clearing members, or the public from
the rule with any precision or degree of
magnitude.
Moreover, any potential costs of this
rule may be mitigated by the provision
that allows DCOs to request, or the
Commission on its own initiative to
make, a determination that the
liquidation time for a particular contract
is too long or too short. As markets
evolve, it may become appropriate to
ease the requirement for certain swaps
subject to the five-day minimum.
Conversely, analysis may reveal that for
other products or portfolios the five-day
or one-day minimum is insufficient.
This procedure could serve to reduce
costs that may arise from application of
the rule.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Benefits
A minimum liquidation time is a
standard input in value-at-risk models
used by DCOs to compute a confidence
interval to estimate their risk. The
value-at-risk confidence interval
protects DCOs, their clearing members,
market participants, and the public by
fixing the probability that a default will
occur and the position cannot be
liquidated in time.
The five-day/one-day distinction for
different types of swaps is based on the
ease of liquidation of different product
groups and is consistent with existing
requirements that reflect the risk
assessments DCOs have made over the
course of their experience clearing these
types of swaps. Several DCOs have
determined that these are the
appropriate standards for these
instruments and apply it to their margin
requirements. The Commission believes
that this is a reasonable and prudent
judgment.
A minimum standard is designed to
prevent DCOs from competing by
offering lower margin requirements than
other DCOs and, as a result, taking on
more risk than is prudent. In addition,
the Commission is concerned that a
DCO may misjudge the appropriate
submit swaps to the Commission for a mandatory
clearing determination to submit data and other
information that would enable the Commission to
effectively consider this factor. See
§ 39.5(b)(3)(ii)(A), 76 FR at 44473 (July 26, 2011)
(Process for Review of Swaps for Mandatory
Clearing; final rule). Not only is this type of
information needed for the Commission to consider
the statutory factors and make the determinations
as to which swaps should be subject to mandatory
clearing, but it also would be needed to calculate
appropriate margin amounts for such swaps, were
the Commission to attempt such calculations.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
liquidation time frame because of
limited experience with clearing and
managing the risks of financial swaps. A
minimum liquidation time frame should
prevent DCOs from taking on too much
risk.
While it is not possible to estimate or
quantify the benefits to market
participants and the public in
facilitating the financial soundness of
DCOs, the Commission believes that a
DCO failure, regardless of the size of the
DCO, could adversely affect the
financial markets, market participants,
and the public. This rule will diminish
the chances that such a failure will
occur.
2. Efficiency, Competitiveness, and
Financial Integrity
Costs
The considerations under this factor
are similar to the considerations under
the first factor.
Benefits
The rule will promote efficiency,
competitiveness and financial integrity
by establishing a minimum standard for
all DCOs. While a DCO will still have
considerable latitude in setting riskbased margin levels, the Commission
has determined that establishing a
minimum liquidation time will provide
legal certainty for an evolving
marketplace, will offer a practical means
for assuring that the thousands of
different swaps that are going to be
cleared subject to the Commission’s
oversight will have prudent minimum
margin requirements, and will help
prevent a potential ‘‘race to the bottom’’
by competing DCOs. Competition
among DCOs will be channeled to other
areas such as level of service.
The Commission believes that default
by a clearing member could have a
significant, adverse effect on market
participants or the public. Market
participants may have to incur the costs
of making up any shortfall in margin
through guaranty fund deposits and/or
assessments, and any costs associated
with participation in an auction or
allocation of the positions of a
defaulting clearing member. In a worst
case scenario, a default by a clearing
member may undermine the financial
integrity of the DCO, which could have
serious and widespread consequences
for the U.S. financial markets. This rule
protects market participants and the
public from bearing these costs by
requiring a DCO to follow certain
minimum standards in establishing
margin requirements.
PO 00000
Frm 00087
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69419
3. Price Discovery
The Commission does not believe that
this rule will have a material effect on
price discovery.
4. Sound Risk Management Practices
Costs
Because the rule simply establishes
minimums, it will not hinder the
exercise of sound risk management
practices. The rule specifically requires
DCOs to use longer liquidation times if
appropriate for particular products.
Benefits
As discussed under the first two
factors, the rule will foster sound risk
management practices.
5. Other Public Interest Considerations
The Commission has not identified
any costs or benefits beyond those
discussed under the first factor.
Margin Confidence Level
As proposed, § 39.13(g)(2)(iii) would
require a DCO’s initial margin models to
meet an established confidence level of
at least 99% based on data from an
appropriate historical period.
A number of commenters stated that
each DCO should have discretion to
establish confidence levels based on the
particular characteristics of the products
and portfolios it clears and their
underlying markets. However, a number
of other commenters stated that a 99%
confidence level was the proper
minimum.
The Commission is adopting the rule
as proposed.
The Commission has evaluated the
costs and benefits of the proposed
regulation in light of the specific
considerations identified in Section
15(a) of the CEA, as follows:
1. Protection of Market Participants and
the Public
Costs
A 99% confidence level will require
that more money be held as margin as
compared to a lower confidence level.
There is an opportunity cost to clearing
members holding this money as margin.
The Commission believes that it is not
feasible to estimate or quantify this cost
reliably. In addition to the confidence
level, the margin requirements for a
particular instrument depend upon a
variety of characteristics of the
instrument and the markets in which it
is traded, including the risk
characteristics of the instrument, its
historical price volatility, and liquidity
in the relevant market. Determining
such margin requirements does not
solely depend upon such quantitative
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69420
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
factors, but also requires expert
judgment as to the extent to which such
characteristics and data may be an
accurate predictor of future market
behavior with respect to such
instruments, and applying such
judgment to the quantitative results.
Thousands of different swap products
may be subject to clearing. Determining
the risk characteristics, price volatility,
and market liquidity of even a sample
for purposes of determining a
confidence level specifically for such
instrument would be a formidable task
for the Commission to undertake and
any results would be subject to a range
of uncertainty. Reliable data is not
readily available for many swaps that
prior to the Dodd-Frank Act were
executed in unregulated markets. In
sum, in the absence of a reasonably
feasible and reliable methodology at the
present time for the Commission to use
in calculating the margin requirements
for swaps,269 the Commission believes
that possible future circumstances
surrounding margin levels are too
speculative and uncertain to be able to
quantify or estimate the resulting costs
to DCOs, clearing members, or the
public from the rule with any precision
or degree of magnitude.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Benefits
A minimum confidence level is
essential to protect market participants
and the public. A minimum confidence
level will prevent DCOs from competing
with respect to how much risk they are
willing to take on or from misjudging
the amount of risk they would take on
if they operated under lower standards.
In addition, it will provide assurance to
market participants that every DCO has
sufficient margin to effectively manage
a default.
Some DCOs currently apply the 99
percent standard. Others use 95–99
percent for some contracts depending
on facts and circumstances.
International standards currently
recommend 99 percent.270 In view of
the increased risk that DCOs will face as
a result of clearing swaps, the
Commission believes that protection of
market participants and the public
dictates that the minimum standard on
this key risk management element
should be set in accordance with
current best practices among DCOs and
international standards.
269 Id.
270 See
CPSS–IOSCO Consultative Report,
Principle 6: Margin, Key Consideration 3, at 40;
EMIR, Article 39, paragraph 1, at 46.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
2. Efficiency, Competitiveness, and
Financial Integrity
Costs
The considerations under this factor
are very similar to the considerations
under the first factor.
Benefits
The rule will promote efficiency,
competitiveness and financial integrity
by establishing a minimum standard for
all DCOs. While a DCO will still have
considerable latitude in setting riskbased margin levels, the Commission
has determined that establishing a
minimum confidence level will provide
legal certainty for an evolving
marketplace, will offer a practical means
for assuring that the thousands of
different swaps that are going to be
cleared subject to the Commission’s
oversight will have prudent minimum
margin requirements, and will prevent a
potential ‘‘race to the bottom’’ by
competing DCOs. As noted above, the
Commission is adopting a 99% standard
in order to conform to current best
practices among DCOs as well as
international standards. Competition
among DCOs will be channeled to other
areas such as level of service.
The Commission believes that default
by a clearing member could have a
significant, adverse effect on market
participants and the public. Market
participants may have to incur the costs
of making up any shortfall in margin
through guaranty fund deposits and/or
assessments, and any costs associated
with participation in an auction or
allocation of the positions of a
defaulting clearing member. In a worst
case scenario, a default by a clearing
member may undermine the financial
integrity of the DCO, which could have
significant negative consequences for
the financial stability of U.S. financial
markets. As highlighted by recent events
in the global financial markets, the
ability to manage the risks associated
with clearing is critical to the goal of
stability in the broader financial
markets. This rule protects market
participants and the public from bearing
these costs by requiring a DCO to follow
certain minimum standards in
establishing margin requirements.
3. Price Discovery
The Commission does not believe that
this rule will have a material effect on
price discovery.
4. Sound Risk Management Practices
Costs
Because the rule simply establishes
minimums, it will not hinder the
exercise of sound risk management
PO 00000
Frm 00088
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
practices. The rule specifically requires
DCOs to use higher confidence levels if
appropriate for particular products.
Benefits
As discussed under the first two
factors, the rule will foster sound risk
management practices.
5. Other Public Interest Considerations
The Commission does not believe that
the rule will have a material effect on
public interest considerations other than
those identified above.
Gross Margin
As proposed, § 39.13(g)(8)(i) would
require a DCO to collect initial margin
on a gross basis for customer accounts.
Two commenters supported the
proposal. Several commenters stated
that the provision of individual
customer position information to DCOs
may entail significant, costly, and timeconsuming changes to systems
infrastructure at the clearing member
level and the DCO level.
In light of the various concerns
regarding the operational and
technology changes that would be
needed and related costs of requiring a
DCO to obtain individual customer
position information from its clearing
members and to use such information to
calculate the margin requirements for
each individual customer, the
Commission is modifying
§ 39.13(g)(8)(i). As amended, the rule
provides a DCO with the discretion to
either calculate customer gross margin
requirements based on individual
customer position information that it
obtains from its clearing members or
based on the sum of the gross positions
of all of a clearing member’s customers
that the clearing member provides to the
DCO, without forwarding individual
customer position information to the
DCO.
The Commission has evaluated the
costs and benefits of the proposed
regulation in light of the specific
considerations identified in Section
15(a) of the CEA, as follows:
1. Protection of Market Participants and
the Public
Costs
Three kinds of costs could result from
a change from net to gross margining,
for those DCOs that currently use net
margining.271 First, gross margining
could change the loss that customers of
a clearing member may face in the event
271 As discussed in section IV.D.6.h.(1), above,
certain DCOs already use a version of gross
margining, in which case the costs of complying
with § 39.13(g)(8)(i) would be considerably less.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
of default by a fellow customer of that
clearing member. Under net margining,
a greater portion of customer margin is
held at the clearing member and thereby
insulated from the DCO, so that nondefaulting customers face lower risk of
losing their margin deposits to the DCO
if a fellow customer defaults. Gross
margining gives a DCO access to the
margin deposits of non-defaulting
customers of a defaulting FCM.272 In
this sense, gross margining could shift a
portion of the default risk from the DCO
to fellow customers.273
It is not possible to estimate or
quantify these costs—which would only
arise in the event of a default of a
customer—in a reliable way for a
number of reasons. The historical record
prior to the enactment of the DoddFrank Act with respect to the operation
of clearing organizations provides little
guidance as to the costs that may be
incurred in the future in the unlikely
event of a default at a DCO. Defaults at
DCOs are very rare and the
circumstances of each one are unique.
Moreover, the Dodd-Frank Act and
implementing regulations will alter the
landscape significantly. Existing DCOs
and FCMs will be clearing new
products. New DCOs and FCMs will
enter the market. Mandatory clearing
will bring new products and
participants to DCOs and FCMs. The
interaction of all these factors creates a
wide range of uncertainty as to the
nature of the potential consequences of
a default under the new regulatory
regime. In sum, the Commission
believes that the possible future
circumstances leading to and potential
resulting consequences of a future
default are too speculative and
uncertain to be able to quantify or
estimate the resulting costs to clearing
members with any precision or degree
of magnitude.
Second, because gross margining
means that more customer margin is
held at the DCO, rather than the FCM,
gross margining also means that any
return on this margin (e.g., interest
earned) is earned by the DCO, rather
than the FCM. This is largely a transfer
between those parties. If there is no
offsetting change in other terms of the
relationship between customers, FCMs
and DCOs, gross margining leads to a
272 Offsetting this effect is the potential for a
failing FCM to misappropriate customer funds. That
potential is greater under net margining.
273 The Commission has proposed rules that
would not permit this in the case of swaps. See 76
FR 33818 (June 9, 2011) (Protection of Cleared
Swaps Customer Contracts and Collateral;
Conforming Amendments to the Commodity Broker
Bankruptcy Provisions).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
69421
cost for FCMs and a benefit to DCOs
from this change.
Third, gross margining could result in
changes in operating costs for DCOs and
clearing members. Gross margining
could require the DCO to possess more
detailed information about customer
positions. The provision of individual
customer position information to DCOs
may entail significant, costly, and timeconsuming changes to systems
infrastructure at the clearing firm level
and the DCO level. For example, NYPC
stated that its preliminary cost estimate
for compliance with the customer gross
margin and large trader report
requirements contained in proposed
§§ 39.13(g)(8)(i) and 39.13(h)(2) was
approximately 128,650 hours and $14.5
million.
In order to reduce the potential costs,
the Commission has revised
§ 39.13(g)(8)(i) to allow a DCO to permit
an FCM to provide the DCO with the
sum of the gross positions of all of its
customers so that the DCO may
calculate the applicable gross margin
requirement based on that sum. Under
this scenario, a DCO will not have to
establish a framework to receive each
customer’s position information and
calculate the initial margin requirement
applicable to each customer’s positions.
The Commission believes this
alternative framework will be
significantly less expensive for market
participants. Whether a DCO chooses to
make the calculation based on
individual customer position
information or the sum of customers’
gross positions submitted by the
clearing member, the clearing member’s
customer gross margin requirement will
be the same.
NYPC also commented that such
implementation costs could
significantly deter new clearinghouses
like NYPC from launching. However,
NYPC did not provide an estimate for
the costs of a new clearinghouse system
capable of gross margining in relation to
the cost of retrofitting an existing net
margin system. The Commission
believes that retrofitting an existing
system may be more expensive than
implementing a new system from
scratch, and that it is unclear whether
additional implementation costs would
deter any new clearinghouses.
customers than net margining and
increases the financial resources
available to a DCO in the event of a
customer default.
A DCO may not be able to collect
initial customer margin from an FCM if
the FCM defaults. This could have a
serious adverse impact on the financial
stability of a DCO, non-defaulting
customers, and potentially wider
markets. In this regard, a significant
customer default leading to an FCM
default could strain a DCO’s financial
resources, causing it to exhaust the
initial margin available to cover the
default and forcing other clearing
members and/or the DCO to incur
related costs. In the worst case, an FCM
default resulting from a large customer
default could cause a DCO to fail if its
financial resources are inadequate to
cover the losses it incurs as a result of
the default. Gross margining provides
the DCO with a larger financial cushion
that can be tapped in the event of a
default. Initial margin is the DCO’s first
‘‘line of defense’’ in managing a default,
and a larger initial margin held at the
DCO will help compensate for the
DCO’s inability to collect additional
margin from a defaulting clearing
member. This rule protects market
participants and the public from bearing
these costs by requiring a DCO to hold
additional margin.
Benefits
The Commission believes that the
clearing of swaps will increase the risk
that DCOs face. Gross margining will
increase the amount of money that
DCOs hold. Under gross margining, the
amount of margin at the DCO more
accurately approximates the risks posed
to a DCO by its clearing members’
4. Sound Risk Management Practices
PO 00000
Frm 00089
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
2. Efficiency, Competitiveness, and
Financial Integrity
Costs
The considerations under this factor
are very similar to the considerations
under the first factor.
Benefits
The rule promotes efficiency,
competitiveness, and financial integrity
by providing that the amount of margin
at the DCO more accurately
approximates the risks posed to a DCO
by its clearing members’ customers and
by increasing the financial resources
available to a DCO in the event of a
customer default.
3. Price Discovery
The Commission does not believe that
this rule will have a material effect on
price discovery.
The considerations relating to sound
risk management practices are very
similar to the considerations under the
first factor.
5. Other Public Interest Considerations
The Commission does not believe that
the rule will have a material effect on
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69422
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
public interest considerations other than
those identified above.
Risk Limits
As proposed, § 39.13(h)(1)(i) would
require a DCO to impose risk limits on
each clearing member, by customer
origin and house origin, in order to
prevent a clearing member from
carrying positions where the risk
exposure of those positions exceeds a
threshold set by the DCO relative to the
clearing member’s financial resources,
the DCO’s financial resources, or both.
Several commenters supported the
rule as an appropriate risk management
procedure. Two commenters suggested
that the rule is overly prescriptive. The
Commission did not receive any
comments that quantified the costs of
this rule.
The Commission is adopting
§ 39.13(h)(i) as proposed.
The Commission has evaluated the
costs and benefits of the proposed
regulation in light of the specific
considerations identified in Section
15(a) of the CEA, as follows:
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
1. Protection of Market Participants and
the Public
Costs
Some DCOs already set limits and
will not incur any costs. Others will
incur the costs of calculating limits for
each clearing member. Such costs will
be incremental because all DCOs
currently have procedures for
monitoring clearing member risk and
may already have informal triggers or
alerts in place. For clearing members,
the rule would impose opportunity
costs to the extent the limits constrain
their activities.
Under the rule each DCO would have
discretion to set limits for each clearing
member. It would be pure conjecture for
the Commission to estimate what levels
DCOs would set for their clearing
members and how much that would
constrain such clearing members. Each
DCO would rely on the informed
judgment of its risk management
committee and/or risk management staff
to assess the risks and resources of each
clearing member and arrive at the
applicable limits for each one.
Estimating the extent to which this
would constrain clearing members is
even more speculative. That would
entail a guess as to the risk appetite of
each clearing member. In sum, the
Commission believes that possible
future circumstances surrounding risk
limits are too speculative and uncertain
to be able to quantify or estimate the
resulting costs to DCOs, clearing
members, or the public with any
precision or degree of magnitude.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
Benefits
The rule will benefit market
participants by reducing the ability of
clearing members and their customers to
assume excessive risks. This will
diminish the chances of default with all
the attendant consequences previously
discussed.
2. Efficiency, Competitiveness, and
Financial Integrity
Costs
The considerations under this factor
are very similar to the considerations
under the first factor.
Benefits
Because the rule provides DCOs the
discretion to tailor the limits for each
clearing member in accordance with the
DCO’s assessment of the risk that the
clearing member poses, it will foster
efficiency and competitiveness in the
markets. Because it will decrease the
chance of default it will foster financial
integrity.
The Commission believes that default
by a clearing member could have a
significant, adverse effect on market
participants or the public. Market
participants may have to incur the costs
of making up any shortfall in margin
through guaranty fund deposits and/or
assessments, and any costs associated
with participation in an auction or
allocation of the positions of a
defaulting clearing member. In a worst
case scenario, a default by a clearing
member may undermine the financial
integrity of the DCO, which could have
serious and widespread consequences
for the stability of U.S. financial
markets. This rule protects market
participants and the public from bearing
these costs by requiring a DCO to
analyze the risk posed by each clearing
member and impose appropriate limits.
3. Price Discovery
The Commission does not believe that
this rule will have a material effect on
price discovery.
4. Sound Risk Management Practices
Costs
The considerations under this factor
are very similar to the considerations
under the first factor.
Benefits
Risk limits are a sound risk
management practice currently
employed by several DCOs. The rule
will extend the practice across all DCOs.
5. Other Public Interest Considerations
The Commission does not believe that
the rule will have a material effect on
PO 00000
Frm 00090
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
public interest considerations other than
those identified above.
Large Trader Reports
As proposed, § 39.13(h)(2) would
require a DCO to obtain from its clearing
members, copies of all reports that such
clearing members are required to file
with the Commission pursuant to part
17 of the Commission’s regulations, i.e.,
large trader reports. Proposed
§ 39.13(h)(2) would further require a
DCO to review the large trader reports
that it receives from its clearing
members on a daily basis to ascertain
the risk of the overall portfolio of each
large trader.
One commenter supported the
proposal. One commenter argued that
the proposed requirement that DCOs
obtain large trader reports from clearing
members is duplicative because a DCO
receives large trader information from
the exchange. One commenter stated
that a DCO would need new technology
to implement the rule. One commenter
stated that a DCO would need
additional surveillance staff.
The Commission is modifying
§ 39.13(h)(2) to require a DCO to obtain
large trader reports either from its
clearing members or from a DCM or a
SEF for which it clears.
The Commission has evaluated the
costs and benefits of the proposed
regulations in light of the specific
considerations identified in Section
15(a) of the CEA, as follows:
1. Protection of Market Participants and
the Public
Costs
The Commission notes that some
DCOs already receive large trader
reports from DCMs and review large
trader reports for risk surveillance
purposes on a daily basis. For them, this
rule imposes no additional cost. For
other DCOs, the receipt and analysis of
large trader information may entail
significant, costly, and time-consuming
changes to systems infrastructure.
Clearing members could also incur costs
to provide large trader reports to DCOs.
For example, NYPC stated that its
preliminary cost estimate for
compliance with the customer gross
margin and large trader report
requirements contained in proposed
§§ 39.13(g)(8)(i) and 39.13(h)(2) was
approximately 128,650 hours and $14.5
million.
In order to reduce costs, the
Commission modified § 39.13(h)(2) to
permit a DCO to obtain large trader
reports either from its clearing members
or from a DCM or a SEF for which it
clears. The latter approach would
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
eliminate duplicative reporting for
clearing members and would
significantly reduce costs for DCOs by
enabling them to obtain the data from a
single source.
Benefits
Currently, at some DCOs, the receipt
and analysis of large trader reports is an
integral part of their risk management
programs. Extension of this practice to
all DCOs would benefit market
participants and the public. Proactive
analysis of this information allows
DCOs to identify and to address
incipient problems in customer
accounts before they get out of hand. In
particular, large trader reports are an
essential part of a rigorous risk
management system because they
provide information that is required for
stress testing.
A default by a clearing member could
have a significant, adverse effect on
market participants or the public.
Market participants may have to incur
the costs of making up any shortfall in
margin through guaranty fund deposits
and/or assessments, and any costs
associated with participation in an
auction or allocation of the positions of
a defaulting clearing member. In a worst
case scenario, a default by a clearing
member may undermine the financial
integrity of the DCO, which could have
serious and widespread consequences
for the stability of U.S. financial
markets. This rule protects market
participants and the public by requiring
a DCO to analyze the potential risks at
an earlier stage.
2. Efficiency, Competitiveness, and
Financial Integrity
The considerations under this factor
are very similar to the considerations
under the first factor.
3. Price Discovery
The Commission does not believe that
this rule will have a material effect on
price discovery.
4. Sound Risk Management Practices
The considerations under this factor
are very similar to the considerations
under the first factor.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
5. Other Public Interest Considerations
The Commission does not believe that
the rule will have a material effect on
public interest considerations other than
those identified above.
Clearing Member Risk Review
As proposed, § 39.13(h)(5)(ii) would
require each DCO to review the risk
management policies, procedures, and
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
practices of each of its clearing members
on a periodic basis.
Several commenters asserted that the
review would be burdensome for such
clearing members. The Commission did
not receive any comments that
quantified the costs of this rule.
The Commission is adopting the rule
with two modifications. These changes
clarify that a DCO’s review need only
cover those procedures of a clearing
member which address the risks that
such clearing member may pose to the
DCO.
The Commission has evaluated the
costs and benefits of § 39.13(h)(5)(ii) in
light of the specific considerations
identified in Section 15(a) of the CEA,
as follows:
1. Protection of Market Participants and
the Public
Costs
Those DCOs that currently conduct
risk reviews of their clearing members
are not likely to incur any additional
costs as a result of the rule.274 Those
DCOs that do not currently have such a
program will incur costs to build on
existing procedures for reviewing
applicants for clearing membership in
order to develop programs for ongoing
review of clearing members. Clearing
members will incur costs in working
with the DCOs that review them.
Commission staff intends to work with
the DCOs to develop arrangements
designed to avoid duplicative efforts
without compromising the requirement
that each DCO maintain an
understanding of the risks of each of its
clearing members.
In recognition that each DCO has a
unique product mix and set of rules, the
rule does not prescribe the specific
frequency, depth, or methodology of
such reviews, nor does it specify when
an on-site audit may or may not be
appropriate. Nevertheless, based on the
Commission’s experience overseeing
DCOs that currently conduct risk
reviews of clearing members, the
Commission estimates the approximate
costs of this rule as follows.275
The Commission estimates that a risk
review by a large DCO typically would
require on the order of 100 person-hours
of work by a supervisor and several risk
analysts. This includes preparation, an
on-site visit, and drafting the report. The
274 To the extent that some DCOs would conduct
risk reviews in the absence of a rule, the
incremental benefits of the rule are reduced. Even
for these DCOs, however, a rule provides the market
with the benefit of greater certainty that risk
reviews of members will be continued in the future.
275 Figures used in the estimate are based on the
judgment of Commission staff with experience
overseeing DCO reviews of clearing member risk.
PO 00000
Frm 00091
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69423
Commission also estimates that a large
DCO would perform, on average, 40 risk
reviews a year, although the number
would vary depending on the number of
clearing members a particular DCO has,
and other circumstances. The
Commission estimates compensation
costs on the order of $150 an hour for
risk analysts, and $250 an hour for a
supervisor. Based on these estimates,
the Commission estimates that the
annual cost to a large DCO would be
roughly on the order of $700,000.276
Costs for particular DCOs are likely to
vary from this amount based on the size
of the DCO, the DCO’s management and
compensation practices, and the DCO’s
exercise of the flexibility allowed by the
rule provision. In light of the potential
consequences of risk management
failures by clearing members discussed
below, and of the Commission’s
judgment that DCOs are the market
participants in the best position to
review clearing member risk
management programs, the Commission
believes that the benefits of this
provision would justify the costs even if
costs proved to be substantially larger
than the Commission’s estimate.
Benefits
Rigorous risk management programs
at clearing members benefit market
participants by providing safeguards to
prevent default. Clearing members are at
the front line of risk management. The
Commission believes that risk reviews
are important to ensure that each
clearing member’s risk management
framework is sufficient and properly
implemented. The Commission believes
that a clearing member’s DCO should
undertake the review because that DCO
is in the best position to review the risk
management policies, procedures, and
practices of its clearing members in the
context of the clearing members’
obligations under the DCO’s rules.
2. Efficiency, Competitiveness, and
Financial Integrity
Costs
The considerations under this factor
are very similar to the considerations
under the first factor.
Benefits
Ensuring that each clearing member
has proper risk management procedures
for each DCO at which it clears will
promote efficiency and competitiveness
in the clearing process by ensuring that
the clearing member is in compliance
276 For example, 20 hours supervisor time per
review × $250/hr plus 80 hours analyst time per
review × $150/hr = $17,000 × 40 reviews =
$680,000.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69424
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
with each such DCO’s rules and
encouraging the exercise of best
practices. The rule will foster financial
integrity for the reasons set forth under
the first factor.
The Commission believes that default
by a clearing member could have a
significant, adverse effect on market
participants and the public. Market
participants may have to incur the costs
of making up any shortfall in margin
through guaranty fund deposits and/or
assessments, and any costs associated
with participation in an auction or
allocation of the positions of a
defaulting clearing member. In a worst
case scenario, a default by an FCM may
undermine the financial integrity of the
DCO, which could have serious and
widespread consequences for the
stability of U.S. financial markets. This
rule protects market participants and
the public from bearing these costs by
requiring a DCO to periodically review
the risk management procedures of each
of its clearing members.
3. Price Discovery
The Commission does not believe that
this rule will have a material effect on
price discovery.
4. Sound Risk Management Practices
The considerations under this factor
are similar to the considerations under
the first factor.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
5. Other Public Interest Considerations
The Commission does not believe that
the rule will have a material effect on
public interest considerations other than
those identified above.
H. Settlement Procedures—§ 39.14(c)(3)
Section 5b(c)(2)(E) of the CEA, Core
Principle E, as amended by the DoddFrank Act, requires a DCO to: (1)
complete money settlements on a timely
basis, but not less frequently than once
each business day; (2) employ money
settlement arrangements to eliminate or
strictly limit its exposure to settlement
bank risks (including credit and
liquidity risks from the use of banks to
effect money settlements); (3) ensure
that money settlements are final when
effected; (4) maintain an accurate record
of the flow of funds associated with
money settlements; (5) possess the
ability to comply with the terms and
conditions of any permitted netting or
offset arrangement with another clearing
organization; (6) establish rules that
clearly state each obligation of the DCO
with respect to physical deliveries; and
(7) ensure that it identifies and manages
each risk arising from any of its
obligations with respect to physical
deliveries.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
The Commission proposed § 39.14 to
implement Core Principle E. With the
exception of proposed § 39.14(c), the
commenters did not address the costs of
the proposed rule or the Commission’s
consideration of costs and benefits.
Proposed § 39.14(c)(3) would require
a DCO to ‘‘monitor the full range and
concentration of its exposures to its own
and its clearing members’ settlement
banks and assess its own and its
clearing members’ potential losses and
liquidity pressures in the event that the
settlement bank with the largest share of
settlement activity were to fail.’’ It
would further require that a DCO (i)
maintain settlement accounts at
additional settlement banks; (ii) approve
additional settlement banks for use by
its clearing members; (iii) impose
concentration limits with respect to its
own or its clearing members’ settlement
banks; and/or (iv) take any other
appropriate actions reasonably
necessary in order to eliminate or
strictly limit such exposures.
As discussed above, several
commenters expressed concern that
these provisions would impose costly
requirements that are unnecessary or
could have unintended adverse
consequences. In this regard, one
commenter claimed that the
requirement to monitor clearing
members’ exposure to their settlement
banks could result in a duplication of
effort that would be burdensome for a
DCO. Commenters also stated that there
are a limited number of banks that are
qualified and willing to serve as
settlement banks; as such, it may be
difficult for smaller DCOs to maintain
more than one settlement bank given the
associated costs. Further, commenters
stated that imposing concentration
limits could increase systemic risk
because a DCO would need to distribute
funds across multiple banks and as
settlement funds increased, highly rated
banks would eventually reach the
applicable concentration limit,
potentially forcing DCOs to open
accounts with lower rated banks.
None of the commenters provided
quantitative data or information to
support their assertions as to the
potential costs and burdens of
compliance with § 39.14(c)(3), and none
addressed the benefits of the rule.
As discussed above, the Commission
believes that there are risks associated
with a DCO concentrating all its funds
in a single settlement bank. Bank failure
in such a circumstance could have
adverse consequences for the DCO, its
clearing members, and their customers.
However, the Commission also
acknowledges the concerns expressed
by commenters, particularly given the
PO 00000
Frm 00092
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
settlement practices and procedures that
DCOs currently maintain in the absence
of such a regulation.
Accordingly, the Commission is
modifying § 39.14(c)(3) to eliminate any
implied requirement that all DCOs must
maintain settlement accounts at more
than one bank, and is retaining the
requirement that a DCO monitor
exposure to its settlement bank(s) and
those of its clearing members, including
an ongoing assessment of the effect to
the DCO of a failure of the settlement
bank that has the largest share of
settlement activity. It is also clarifying
its intent to qualify the need to take
actions set forth in § 39.14(c)(3)(i)–(iv)
(such as imposing concentration limits)
‘‘to the extent that any such action or
actions are reasonably necessary in
order to eliminate or strictly limit such
exposures.’’ Thus, the Commission is
providing DCOs with more flexibility
than would have been provided under
the proposed rule which, in turn,
should reduce the costs associated with
compliance.
The Commission has evaluated the
costs and benefits of § 39.14(c)(3) in
light of the specific considerations
identified in Section 15(a) of the CEA,
as follows:
1. Protection of Market Participants and
the Public
Costs
A DCO’s monitoring of its exposure to
its settlement bank(s) and those of its
clearing members is a sound business
practice in which a DCO should be
engaged notwithstanding the rule.
Nevertheless, the Commission believes
the rule will require commitment of
DCO staff resources, the costs of which
could be passed along to clearing
members and market participants as
part of the DCO’s clearing fees. Such
costs could vary significantly across
DCOs given differences in operational
and risk management procedures,
settlement arrangements, and fee pricing
practices. Given these circumstances,
the Commission is unable to quantify
the costs attributable to the
Commission’s rule, and no commenter
provided an estimate. As a general
matter, however, the Commission is
mindful that the measures set forth in
§ 39.14(c)(3)(i)–(iv), specifically the
requirement that DCOs take actions that
are ‘‘reasonably necessary in order to
eliminate or strictly limit’’ exposure to
settlement banks, could cause DCOs to
incur costs. Such costs could include,
for example, the costs of establishing an
account at an additional settlement
bank, which would entail evaluating the
bank to ensure that it meets the DCO’s
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
criteria for a settlement bank, reviewing
account agreements, and establishing
connectivity to the bank. There may also
be fees charged by a bank for standby
services if the bank is not used as the
primary settlement bank, or there may
be other account-related fees. The
Commission is unable to ascertain the
specific amount of any such costs for
DCOs because of the varying nature of
settlement bank arrangements across
DCOs.
Benefits
Use of multiple settlement banks by
DCOs, as well as imposition of
concentration limits and other
safeguards provided for in
§ 39.14(c)(3)(i)–(iv), when reasonably
necessary, could help insulate the DCO
and its members from the risk of default
by a settlement bank. This in turn could
provide market participants and the
public with greater protection from
disruption of markets, as well as the
clearing and settlement system.
Affording a DCO flexibility in
managing its settlement bank
arrangements and, to a lesser degree,
those of its clearing members, benefits
market participants and the public by
reducing the costs and potential
inefficiencies associated with
maintaining settlement arrangements
with multiple settlement banks when
that might not yield a concomitant
benefit in the form of risk reduction.
The rule sets forth general standards
while permitting each DCO to tailor its
settlement bank arrangements to its
unique circumstances and risk
tolerances.
2. Efficiency, Competitiveness, and
Financial Integrity
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Costs
Quantification or estimation of costs
to efficiency, competitiveness, and
financial integrity of markets are not
readily ascertainable, and no commenter
provided an estimate.
Benefits
The rule permits DCOs to obtain
settlement services from a single bank if
the size and needs of the DCO, as well
as the availability of suitable settlement
bank services, makes the use of more
than one settlement bank costprohibitive and it is not reasonably
necessary to have more than one
settlement bank in order to eliminate or
strictly limit the DCO’s exposures. More
efficient use of DCO resources can result
in enhanced efficiency and financial
integrity of the markets for which the
DCO clears. Particularly for smaller
DCOs, it may not be practical to obtain
settlement services from more than one
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
settlement bank because of the costs of
evaluating a bank’s suitability to
perform settlement functions, reviewing
account agreements, and establishing
connectivity to the bank. There also may
be account-related fees charged by a
bank, including fees for standby
services, if the bank is used as a backup settlement bank and not the primary
settlement bank.
3. Price Discovery
The Commission has not identified
any ways in which § 39.14(c)(3) could
affect price discovery.
4. Sound Risk Management Practices
Costs
The Commission has not identified
any ways in which § 39.14(c)(3) could
impair sound risk management
practices.
Benefits
The Commission regards an effective
settlement framework as a sound risk
management practice because it reduces
the risks associated with a bank’s
potential failure to make timely
settlement. The requirements that a
DCO monitor risk exposures to
settlement banks and address
diversification concerns, as reasonably
necessary, are important adjuncts to a
DCO’s overall risk management
practices.
5. Other Public Interest Considerations.
The Commission has not identified
any other costs or benefits that should
be taken into account.
I. Treatment of Funds—§ 39.15
Core Principle F, as amended by the
Dodd-Frank Act, requires a DCO to: (i)
Establish standards and procedures that
are designed to protect and ensure the
safety of its clearing members’ funds
and assets; (ii) hold such funds and
assets in a manner by which to
minimize the risk of loss or of delay in
the DCO’s access to the assets and
funds; and (iii) only invest such funds
and assets in instruments with minimal
credit, market, and liquidity risks.277
Proposed § 39.15 would establish
minimum standards for DCO
compliance with Core Principle F.
Among other things, it would set forth
standards for the types of assets that
could be accepted as initial margin. In
this regard, proposed § 39.15(c)(1)
would require a DCO to limit the assets
it accepts as initial margin to those that
have minimal credit, market, and
liquidity risk. It would further specify
277 Section 5b(c)(2)(F) of the CEA; 7 U.S.C. 7a–
1(c)(2)(F) (Core Principle F).
PO 00000
Frm 00093
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69425
that a DCO may not accept letters of
credit as initial margin.
The Commission received comments
on substantive aspects of the proposed
rules, and it has addressed those
comments above. The Commission also
received several comments on potential
costs associated with the proposed
§ 39.15(c)(1) prohibition on the
acceptance of letters of credit as initial
margin.278 CME asserted that the
prohibition is unnecessary because
letters of credit provide an absolute
assurance of payment and, therefore, the
issuing bank must honor the demand
even in circumstances where the
beneficiary is unable to reimburse the
bank for its payment. Other commenters
suggested that letters of credit should be
acceptable if they are subject to
appropriate conditions. Finally, several
commenters warned of the potential
risks associated with prohibiting letters
of credit, including higher costs for
clearing members and their customers,
the potential placement of U.S. DCOs at
a disadvantage as compared to foreign
clearing houses, and increased systemic
risk as a result of decreased voluntary
clearing.
Taking into account both the strong
track record of letters of credit in
connection with cleared futures and
options on futures and the potentially
greater risks of cleared swaps, the
Commission has determined to modify
the rule to permit letters of credit in
connection with cleared futures and
options on futures but to retain the
prohibition on letters of credit as initial
margin for swaps. Certain DCOs have
accepted letters of credit as initial
margin for futures and options on
futures for a number of years without
incident and continue to do so. On the
other hand, letters of credit are only a
promise by a bank to pay, not an asset
that can be sold. The Commission is
concerned that the potential losses that
swap market participants could incur
may be of a greater magnitude than
potential losses with respect to futures
and options. Initial margin is the first
financial resource that a DCO will apply
in the event of a clearing member
default. If a DCO were to need to draw
on a letter of credit posted by a clearing
member whose customers had suffered
such losses, the larger the amount that
it would need to draw, the greater the
risk that the issuing bank may be unable
to pay under the terms of the letter of
credit. Accordingly, the Commission is
modifying the proposal as described.
278 The Commission notes that proposed
39.15(c)(1) regarding types of assets that can be
accepted as initial margin has been redesignated as
§ 39.13(g)(10) under the risk management rules.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69426
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
The Commission has evaluated the
costs and benefits of § 39.13(g)(10) in
light of the specific considerations
identified in Section 15(a) of the CEA,
as follows:
1. Protection of Market Participants and
the Public
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Costs
The prohibition on accepting letters of
credit as initial margin for swaps may
impose higher costs for clearing
members because they will have to
deposit cash or other assets that have
minimal credit, market, and liquidity
risk for those products. This could
increase costs for market participants
and decrease capital efficiency. It may
also place U.S. DCOs at a disadvantage
to those foreign clearing houses that
permit letters of credit to be used as
initial margin for swaps. The
Commission notes, however, that in
response to the comments it has
modified the rule to permit letters of
credit for futures. Therefore, futures
market participants will not incur any
costs as a result of this provision.
It is not possible to estimate or
quantify these costs for a number of
reasons. The Dodd-Frank Act and
implementing regulations will
significantly affect the manner in which
swaps are developed, traded, executed,
and cleared. Existing DCOs and FCMs
will be clearing new products. New
DCOs and FCMs will enter the market.
Mandatory clearing will bring new
products and participants to DCOs and
FCMs. The interaction of all these
factors creates a wide range of
uncertainty as to which products will be
cleared, what their margin requirements
will be, and the extent to which clearing
members would post letters of credit as
margin if permitted. Under these
circumstances, the potential
opportunity costs that may arise from
the deposit of cash or other assets rather
than letters of credit depends on a
variety of future circumstances and
actions of market participants that
cannot be known or predicted at the
present time. In sum, the Commission
believes that the possible future
circumstances involving the posting of
letters of credit as margin is too
speculative and uncertain to be able to
quantify or estimate the resulting costs
to clearing members with any precision
or degree of magnitude.
Benefits
One of the primary functions of a
DCO is to guarantee financial
performance, which includes
performing daily variation settlement.
Daily pays are made in cash, and to the
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
extent a DCO relies on margin deposits
to meet its end-of-day obligations, it
must have access to sufficient cash or
highly liquid assets. Similarly, initial
margin may be tapped by a DCO in the
event of a clearing member default. By
limiting the use of letters of credit, the
DCO will avoid the possibility that a
letter of credit would be dishonored
when presented to the issuing bank.
Thus, requiring initial margin in the
form of assets that can be immediately
sold provides greater financial
protection to the DCO, clearing
members, and market participants.
2. Efficiency, Competitiveness, and
Financial Integrity
Costs
As noted above, there could be
competitive disadvantages to DCOs if
foreign competitors do not impose
similar restrictions on initial margin
deposits. In addition, the prospect of
increased costs may reduce voluntary
clearing of swaps, which would be
inconsistent with the goals of the DoddFrank Act and could potentially lead to
systemic risk.
Benefits
A DCO can be more efficient in
facilitating payments if it has readily
available liquid assets as opposed to a
conditional obligation that must be
presented for payment. Holding actual
assets provides greater assurance of
financial integrity to the clearing
process, as the DCO will not have to
bear the costs of possible default on the
part of the issuing bank. Even an
irrevocable letter of credit can be
dishonored, with the DCO’s only
recourse being a lawsuit.
3. Price Discovery
The Commission does not believe this
rule will have a material effect on price
discovery.
4. Sound Risk Management Practices
Costs
The Commission does not believe this
rule will have a material adverse impact
on sound risk management practices.
Benefits
The Commission expects that
prohibiting the use of letters of credit as
initial margin for swaps could serve to
strengthen a DCO’s risk management
program. It eliminates the risk of funds
not being available if a letter of credit
were to be dishonored, which could
have a significant impact because initial
margin is the first financial resource to
be tapped in the event of a clearing
member default.
PO 00000
Frm 00094
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
5. Other Public Considerations
The Commission does not believe this
rule will have a material impact on
public interest considerations other than
those discussed above.
J. Reporting—§ 39.19
Core Principle J,279 as amended by the
Dodd-Frank Act, requires a DCO to
provide the Commission with all
information that the Commission
determines to be necessary to conduct
oversight of the DCO.
The Commission proposed § 39.19 to
establish minimum requirements that a
DCO would have to meet in order to
comply with Core Principle J. Under
proposed § 39.19, certain reports would
have to be made by a DCO to the
Commission (1) On a periodic basis
(daily, quarterly, or annually); (2) where
the reporting requirement is triggered by
the occurrence of a significant event;
and (3) upon request by the
Commission.
The rules would require DCOs to
provide information that the
Commission has determined is
necessary to conduct oversight of DCOs.
The proposed reporting regime would
assist the Commission in monitoring the
financial strength and operational
capabilities of a DCO and in evaluating
whether a DCO’s risk management
practices are effective. The required
reports also would assist the
Commission in taking prompt action as
necessary to identify incipient problems
and address them at an early stage. A
self-reporting program of this type
enhances the Commission’s ability to
conduct oversight given its limited
resources which do not permit routine
on-site surveillance of DCOs.
The proposed rules would require
submission of information electronically
and in a form and manner prescribed by
the Commission. These general
procedural standards would provide
flexibility to the Commission in
establishing and updating uniform
format and delivery protocols that
would assist the Commission in
conducting timely review of
submissions. In this regard, the
transmission of information using a
uniform format would enable
Commission staff to sort and interpret
data without the need to convert the
data into a format that provides the
necessary functionality, e.g., it would be
designed to provide the Commission
with the ability to compare data across
DCOs when necessary.
A number of commenters discussed
costs associated with proposed § 39.19
279 Section 5b(c)(2)(J) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 7a–
1(c)(2)(J).
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
in the form of comments on the
substantive provisions of the proposed
rule. For example, a number of
commenters discussed whether
alternative reporting requirements might
better inform the Commission of
potential risks. Some commenters
questioned the need for certain
information and some commenters
questioned the feasibility of the
reporting requirements. The
Commission has addressed those
comments above.
The Commission also received
comments that directly addressed two
areas of the Commission’s cost-benefit
analysis of proposed § 39.19: (1) The
cost of preparing and submitting daily
and annual audited financial reports;
and (2) the cost of reporting a 10 percent
decrease in financial resources. Those
comments are discussed in detail below.
a. Cost of Preparing and Submitting
Daily and Annual Reports
Proposed § 39.19(c) would require a
DCO to submit various periodic reports
for the purposes of risk surveillance and
oversight of the DCO’s compliance with
the core principles and Commission
regulations. In the notice of proposed
rulemaking, the Commission observed
that the information that would be
reported was information readily
available to a DCO and which, in certain
instances, was already being reported to
the Commission. The Commission
requested data or other information that
could quantify or qualify costs.
Only NYPC provided an estimate of
the fixed cost of implementing an
automated system for daily reporting. In
a comment letter submitted by NYPC,
the cost was estimated at $582,000.
In a follow-up phone conversation
with representatives of NYPC,
Commission staff discussed the basis for
NYPC’s estimate that implementing an
automated system for daily reporting
would cost $582,000. Staff was told that
NYPC already provides certain daily
reports to the Commission, but that the
additional data that it would have to
report under the proposal (not including
the proposed gross margin data or large
trader data) would necessitate
implementing an automated system.
NYPC representatives confirmed that
the estimate was for a one-time cost, not
the cost of generating and transmitting
the actual daily reports. NYPC also
confirmed that the cost of generating
and transmitting the actual daily reports
would be minimal.
The Commission was able to estimate
the costs of providing reports and
presented this information in the
Paperwork Reduction Act discussion. It
estimated that daily reporting could
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
require a DCO to expend up to $8,280
per year, and an annual report could
require a DCO to expend up to $482,110
per year.
KCC and MGEX commented that the
variable cost for daily reporting could be
significantly more than the
Commission’s estimates if the
Commission were to require a costly
format and method of delivery. MGEX
also commented that the Commission
may have underestimated the cost of
providing the annual report (audited
financial report under § 39.19(c)(3)(ii)),
and that the Commission’s estimate is
‘‘extremely excessive, particularly when
most of [the annual reporting
requirements do] not appear to be
required by the Dodd-Frank Act.’’
Finally, MGEX believes that the
proposed rules will not guarantee
increased market participation or
improve legitimate risk management
and hedging activity, and the additional
costs will create barriers to entry and
decrease DCO competition.
Although KCC and MGEX commented
that the costs of preparing the reports
may be greater than the Commission’s
estimates, neither DCO provided an
alternative estimate. Nor did they
suggest alternative reporting
requirements that would achieve the
purposes of the CEA with a more
favorable cost-benefit ratio. As to the
estimated costs of the required format
and method of delivery, the
Commission notes that it based its
estimate on the cost of using the
SHAMIS system. The Commission has
no basis for concluding that the cost of
using an alternative system would be
less substantial and it received no
comments on this.
The Commission believes that the
costs that DCOs will incur to implement
a system to provide such information to
the Commission are necessary and
justified. As explained above, the
Commission has determined that the
information required in the reports is
necessary for the Commission to
conduct adequate oversight of DCOs,
particularly given its limited ability to
conduct on-site reviews.
b. Reporting a 10 Percent Decrease in
Financial Resources
Under proposed § 39.19(c)(4)(i), a
DCO would be required to report a
decrease of 10 percent in the total value
of its financial resources either from (1)
the value reported in the DCO’s last
quarterly report or (2) from the value as
of the close of the previous business
day. This would allow the Commission
to more quickly identify and address
financial problems at the DCO. As
discussed above, the Commission raised
PO 00000
Frm 00095
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69427
the reporting threshold from 10 percent
to 25 percent in response to comments
that a higher percentage might yield
more meaningful results. In addition,
the higher threshold is likely to reduce
the number of reports that might be
submitted under this requirement.
NYPC commented that compliance
with the proposed reporting
requirement would necessitate an
expenditure of approximately 15,000
hours and $1.7 million. NYPC explained
that this estimate reflects implementing
a system that would track default
resources and working capital,
combined. After talking with
Commission staff, NYPC submitted a
comment letter that provided a
preliminary estimate of approximately
4,600 hours and $566,000 for designing,
building, and testing a reporting system
for a decline in default resources only.
Based on NYPC’s initial comment
letter, the Commission believes that the
material costs associated with
§ 39.19(c)(4)(i) are the initial
investments made by a DCO to develop
and implement a system (automated or
not) to alert the DCO that the valuation
threshold has been met. As discussed
above, it is important for the
Commission to be apprised of a 25%
reduction in default resources because it
could indicate that the DCO’s financial
resources are strained and corrective
action may be needed.
The Commission has evaluated the
costs and benefits of § 39.19 in light of
the specific considerations identified in
Section 15(a) of the CEA as follows:
1. Protection of Market Participants and
the Public
Costs
Section 39.19 requires DCOs to
provide information that the
Commission has determined is
necessary for oversight of DCOs and to
provide that information in a time
frame, format, and delivery method that
will enable effective use of the
information. To the extent that DCOs do
not already have an infrastructure for
preparing and transmitting reports, they
will incur one-time costs to put such a
framework in place.
Benefits
The comprehensive regulatory
reporting program will enhance
protection of market participants and
the public by promoting more in-depth
and effective oversight by the
Commission. The reports will assist the
Commission’s Risk Surveillance staff in
monitoring clearing house risk and
evaluating DCOs’ management and
mitigation of that risk. In addition, the
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69428
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
information will assist the Commission
to identify incipient problems and
address them at an early stage.
2. Efficiency, Competitiveness, and
Financial Integrity
Costs
The Commission does not believe that
the reporting requirements will
adversely impact efficiency,
competitiveness, or the financial
integrity of derivatives markets.
Benefits
The reporting requirements will
protect the financial integrity of
derivatives markets because they will
support effective and timely oversight of
DCOs. This will help to minimize the
risk of default and the impact default
would have on the markets.
3. Price Discovery
The Commission does not believe that
§ 39.19 will have a material impact on
price discovery.
4. Sound Risk Management Practices
Costs
The Commission does not believe that
the reporting requirements will
adversely impact sound risk
management practices.
Benefits
The reporting requirements are
expected to enhance sound risk
management practices because the
Commission will be able to more
effectively evaluate a DCO’s risk
management practices on an on-going
basis. The Commission staff can build a
knowledge base that will support
prompt action if there are adverse
changes in trends or financial profiles.
5. Other Public Interest Considerations
The Commission does not believe this
rule will have a material impact on
public interest considerations other than
those discussed above. Effective
oversight of DCOs will enhance the
safety and efficiency of DCOs and
reduce systemic risk. Safe and reliable
DCOs are essential not only for the
stability of the derivatives markets they
serve but also the public which relies on
the prices formed in these markets for
all manner of commerce.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
IX. Related Matters
A. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act
(‘‘RFA’’) requires that agencies consider
whether the rules they propose will
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities
and, if so, provide a regulatory
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
flexibility analysis respecting the
impact.280 The rules adopted herein will
affect only DCOs). The Commission has
previously established certain
definitions of ‘‘small entities’’ to be used
by the Commission in evaluating the
impact of its regulations on small
entities in accordance with the RFA.281
The Commission has previously
determined that DCOs are not small
entities for the purpose of the RFA.282
Accordingly, the Chairman, on behalf of
the Commission, hereby certifies
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b) that these
rules will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The Chairman
made the same certification in the
proposed rulemakings, and the
Commission did not receive any
comments on the RFA in relation to any
of those rulemakings.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Commission may not conduct or
sponsor, and a registered entity is not
required to respond to, a collection of
information unless it displays a
currently valid Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) control number. The
Commission’s adoption of §§ 39.3 (DCO
registration application requirements),
39.10 (annual compliance report and
recordkeeping), 39.11 (financial
resources quarterly report), 39.14
(settlement recordkeeping), 39.18
(system safeguards reporting and
recordkeeping), 39.19 (periodic and
event-specific reporting), and 39.20
(general recordkeeping), imposes new
information collection requirements on
registered entities within the meaning of
the Paperwork Reduction Act.283
Accordingly, the Commission
requested and OMB assigned control
numbers for the required collections of
information. The Commission has
submitted this notice of final
rulemaking along with supporting
documentation for OMB’s review in
accordance with 44 U.S.C. 3507(d) and
5 CFR 1320.11. The titles for these
collections of information are
‘‘Financial Resources Requirements for
Derivatives Clearing Organizations,
OMB control number 3038–0066,’’
‘‘Information Management
Requirements for Derivatives Clearing
Organizations, OMB control number
3038–0069,’’ ‘‘General Regulations and
Derivatives Clearing Organizations,
OMB control number 3038–0081,’’ and
‘‘Risk Management Requirements for
280 5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.
FR 18618 (Apr. 30, 1982).
282 See 66 FR 45604, at 45609 (Aug. 29, 2001)
(New Regulatory Framework for Clearing
Organizations).
283 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
281 47
PO 00000
Frm 00096
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Derivatives Clearing Organizations,
OMB control number 3038–0076.’’
Many of the responses to this new
collection of information are mandatory.
The Commission protects proprietary
information according to the Freedom of
Information Act and 17 CFR part 145,
‘‘Commission Records and
Information.’’ In addition, Section
8(a)(1) of the CEA strictly prohibits the
Commission, unless specifically
authorized by the Act, from making
public ‘‘data and information that
would separately disclose the business
transactions or market positions of any
person and trade secrets or names of
customers.’’ The Commission also is
required to protect certain information
contained in a government system of
records according to the Privacy Act of
1974, 5 U.S.C. 552a.
The regulations require each
respondent to file certain information
with the Commission and to maintain
certain records.284 The Commission
received comments from NYPC and
MGEX regarding the estimated costs of
preparing and submitting daily reports.
It also received comments from MGEX
regarding costs associated with annual
reports and the proposed rules in
general.
NYPC and MGEX commented that the
costs associated with the rules in the
Information Management proposed
rulemaking would be higher than the
284 See 75 FR at 63119 (Oct. 14, 2010) (Financial
Resources) (requirement to file quarterly reports);
see also discussion of the financial resources
reporting requirements in section IV.B.10, above.
See 75 FR at 77583–77584 (Dec. 13, 2010)
(General Regulations) (proposed requirements: (i)
For the CCO to submit an annual report to the
Commission; (ii) to retain a copy of the policies and
procedures adopted in furtherance of compliance
with the CEA; (iii) to retain copies of materials,
including written reports provided to the board of
directors in connection with the board’s review of
the annual report; and (iv) to retain any records
relevant to the annual report, including, but not
limited to, work papers and other documents that
form the basis of the report, and memoranda,
correspondence, other documents, and records that
are (a) created, sent or received in connection with
the annual report and (b) contain conclusions,
opinions, analyses, or financial data related to the
annual report); see also discussion of § 39.10 in
section IV.A, above.
See 75 FR at 78193 (Dec. 15, 2010) (Information
Management) (proposed requirements to file
specified information with the Commission (i)
periodically, on a daily, quarterly, and annual basis;
(ii) as specified events occur; and (iii) upon
Commission request); see also discussion of
reporting requirements in section IV.J, above.
See 75 FR at 78196 (Dec. 15, 2010) (Information
Management) (proposed requirement to maintain
records of all activities related to its business as a
DCO, including all information required to be
created, generated, or reported under part 39,
including but not limited to the results of and
methodology used for all tests, reviews, and
calculations); see also discussion of recordkeeping
requirements in section IV.K, above.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Commission estimated.285 With respect
to daily reporting, NYPC commented
that designing, building, and testing the
application necessary to automate the
process of producing daily reports
would require approximately 5,200
hours and cost $582,000.286 MGEX
commented that the cost to a DCO could
be significantly more than the estimated
cost if the Commission were to require
a costly format and method of delivery.
With respect to annual reporting,
MGEX commented that the Commission
may have underestimated the associated
costs because the Commission did not
address the costs of building reporting
methods, forms, programs, or the
allocation of labor resources. In
addition, MGEX believes that the
estimated costs associated with the
annual report are ‘‘extremely excessive,
particularly when most of [the annual
report requirements do] not appear to be
required by the Dodd-Frank Act.’’
MGEX further commented that the
proposed rules will not guarantee
increased market participation or
improve legitimate risk management
and hedging activity, and the additional
costs would create barriers to entry and
decreased DCO competition.
Finally, with respect to the estimated
costs identified in the Risk Management
notice of proposed rulemaking,287
MGEX noted that the Commission had
estimated the total hours for the
proposed collection of information to be
50 hours per year per respondent for the
additional reporting requirements at an
annual cost of $500 per respondent (50
hours × $10). MGEX stated its belief that
these estimates, both in hours and cost,
are extremely low, and that it did not
appear that the Commission had
accounted for the costs to implement a
285 See 75 FR at 78193 (Dec. 15, 2010)
(Information Management). In the Paperwork
Reduction Act discussion, the Commission
estimated that daily reporting would result in an
aggregated cost of $8,280 initially (12 respondents
× $690) and $16,800 per annum (12 respondents ×
$1,400). Annual reporting would result in an
aggregated cost of $5,785,320 per annum (12
respondents × $482,110).
286 In a follow-up phone conversation with
representatives of NYPC, Commission staff
discussed the basis for NYPC’s estimate that
implementing an automated system for daily
reporting would cost $582,000. Commission staff
was told that NYPC already provides certain daily
reports to the Commission’s Risk Surveillance
Group, but that the additional data that it would
have to report under the Information Management
NPRM (not including the gross margin data or large
trader data) would necessitate implementing an
automated system. NYPC representatives confirmed
that the estimate was for a one-time cost, not the
cost of generating and transmitting the actual daily
reports. NYPC also confirmed that the cost of
generating and transmitting the actual daily reports
would be minimal.
287 See 76 FR at 3716–3717 (Jan. 20, 2011) (Risk
Management).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
system; collect, forward and format
data; monitor and enforce compliance;
and document compliance with the
proposed rulemaking. MGEX noted that
the costs are not limited to reporting to
the Commission for many of the
proposed rules, and that reporting may
be the least expensive facet. MGEX
specifically identified reporting the
gross position of each beneficial owner
as a requirement for which the
Commission did not provide any cost
estimates.
Although MGEX commented that the
costs of the proposed requirements may
be greater than the costs the
Commission set forth in the Information
Management and Risk Management
proposed rulemakings, and that the
Commission did not estimate the costs
of building reporting methods, forms,
programs, or the allocation of labor
resources, MGEX did not provide an
estimate of these costs. Nor did MGEX
suggest alternative reporting
requirements that would achieve the
purposes of the CEA with a more
favorable cost-benefit ratio.
As to the estimated costs of the
required format and method of delivery,
the Commission notes that the estimates
of these costs were based on the cost of
using the SHAMIS system. There was
no basis for concluding that the cost of
using an alternative system would be
more substantial and the Commission
received no comment to that effect.
Moreover, Core Principle J requires a
DCO to provide reports to the
Commission, and all DCOs will have to
bear these costs in order to comply with
Core Principle J. Core Principle J
requires each DCO ‘‘to provide to the
Commission all information that the
Commission determines to be necessary
to conduct oversight of the [DCO].’’ As
discussed above and in the Information
Management proposed rulemaking, the
Commission believes that the daily and
annual reporting requirements provide
the Commission with information that is
important to its oversight of a DCO to
ensure the DCO is in compliance with
the core principles. This can lead to
increased market participation and
improve legitimate risk management
and hedging activity. Accordingly, the
Commission believes the collection of
information related to the reporting
rules is necessary to achieve the
purposes of the CEA, particularly in
light of the Dodd-Frank Act clearing
mandate for swaps.288
The Commission has considered the
comments of NYPC and MGEX but is
288 See further discussion of the costs and benefits
associated with the reporting requirements in
section VII.J, above.
PO 00000
Frm 00097
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69429
declining to revise the estimated costs.
The Commission believes that its
original estimates remain appropriate
for PRA purposes.
List of Subjects
17 CFR Part 1
Brokers, Commodity futures,
Consumer protection, Definitions,
Swaps.
17 CFR Part 21
Brokers, Commodity futures,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
17 CFR Part 39
Definitions, Commodity futures,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Swaps, Business and
industry, Participant and product
eligibility, Risk management, Settlement
procedures, Treatment of funds, Default
rules and procedures, System
safeguards, Enforcement authority,
Application form.
17 CFR Part 140
Authority delegations (Government
agencies), Conflict of interests,
Organization and functions
(Government agencies).
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, amend 17 CFR parts 1, 21, 39,
and 140 as follows:
PART 1—GENERAL REGULATIONS
UNDER THE COMMODITY EXCHANGE
ACT
1. The authority citation for part 1 is
revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1a, 2, 5, 6, 6a, 6b, 6c,
6d, 6e, 6f, 6g, 6h, 6i, 6j, 6k, 6l, 6m, 6n, 6o,
6p, 7, 7a, 7b, 8, 9, 12, 12a, 12c, 13a, 13a–1,
16, 16a, 19, 21, 23, and 24, as amended by
Pub. L. 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376.
2. Amend § 1.3 to revise paragraphs
(c) and (d), remove and reserve
paragraph (k), and add paragraphs (aaa),
(bbb), (ccc), (ddd), (eee), and (fff) to read
as follows:
■
§ 1.3
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Clearing member. This term means
any person that has clearing privileges
such that it can process, clear and settle
trades through a derivatives clearing
organization on behalf of itself or others.
The derivatives clearing organization
need not be organized as a membership
organization.
(d) Clearing organization or
derivatives clearing organization. This
term means a clearinghouse, clearing
association, clearing corporation, or
similar entity, facility, system, or
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69430
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
organization that, with respect to an
agreement, contract, or transaction—
(1) Enables each party to the
agreement, contract, or transaction to
substitute, through novation or
otherwise, the credit of the derivatives
clearing organization for the credit of
the parties;
(2) Arranges or provides, on a
multilateral basis, for the settlement or
netting of obligations resulting from
such agreements, contracts, or
transactions executed by participants in
the derivatives clearing organization; or
(3) Otherwise provides clearing
services or arrangements that mutualize
or transfer among participants in the
derivatives clearing organization the
credit risk arising from such agreements,
contracts, or transactions executed by
the participants.
(4) Exclusions. The terms clearing
organization and derivatives clearing
organization do not include an entity,
facility, system, or organization solely
because it arranges or provides for—
(i) Settlement, netting, or novation of
obligations resulting from agreements,
contracts or transactions, on a bilateral
basis and without a central
counterparty;
(ii) Settlement or netting of cash
payments through an interbank payment
system; or
(iii) Settlement, netting, or novation of
obligations resulting from a sale of a
commodity in a transaction in the spot
market for the commodity.
*
*
*
*
*
(k) [Reserved]
*
*
*
*
*
(aaa) Clearing initial margin. This
term means initial margin posted by a
clearing member with a derivatives
clearing organization.
(bbb) Customer initial margin. This
term means initial margin posted by a
customer with a futures commission
merchant, or by a non-clearing member
futures commission merchant with a
clearing member.
(ccc) Initial margin. This term means
money, securities, or property posted by
a party to a futures, option, or swap as
performance bond to cover potential
future exposures arising from changes in
the market value of the position.
(ddd) Margin call. This term means a
request from a futures commission
merchant to a customer to post customer
initial margin; or a request by a
derivatives clearing organization to a
clearing member to post clearing initial
margin or variation margin.
(eee) Spread margin. This term means
reduced initial margin that takes into
account correlations between certain
related positions held in a single
account.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
(fff) Variation margin. This term
means a payment made by a party to a
futures, option, or swap to cover the
current exposure arising from changes
in the market value of the position since
the trade was executed or the previous
time the position was marked to market.
3. Amend § 1.12 to remove and
reserve paragraph (f)(1).
■
PART 21—SPECIAL CALLS
4. The authority citation for part 21 is
revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1a, 2, 2a, 4, 6a, 6c, 6f,
6g, 6i, 6k, 6m, 6n, 7, 7a, 12a, 19 and 21, as
amended by Pub. L. 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376;
5 U.S.C. 552 and 552(b), unless otherwise
noted.
5. Redesignate § 21.04 as § 21.05.
6. Add a new § 21.04 to read as
follows:
■
■
§ 21.04 Special calls for information on
customer accounts or related cleared
positions.
Upon special call by the Commission,
each futures commission merchant,
clearing member or foreign broker shall
provide information to the Commission
concerning customer accounts or related
positions cleared on a derivatives
clearing organization in the format and
manner and within the time provided
by the Commission in the special call.
■
7. Add § 21.06 to read as follows:
§ 21.06 Delegation of authority to the
Director of the Division of Clearing and
Risk.
The Commission hereby delegates,
until the Commission orders otherwise,
the special call authority set forth in
§ 21.04 to the Director of the Division of
Clearing and Risk to be exercised by
such Director or by such other employee
or employees of such Director as
designated from time to time by the
Director. The Director of the Division of
Clearing and Risk may submit to the
Commission for its consideration any
matter which has been delegated in this
section. Nothing in this section shall be
deemed to prohibit the Commission, at
its election, from exercising the
authority delegated in this section to the
Director.
PART 39—DERIVATIVES CLEARING
ORGANIZATIONS
■
8. Revise part 39 to read as follows:
Subpart A—General Provisions Applicable
to Derivatives Clearing Organizations
Sec.
39.1 Scope.
39.2 Definitions.
39.3 Procedures for registration.
PO 00000
Frm 00098
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
39.4
Procedures for implementing
derivatives clearing organization rules
and clearing new products.
39.5 Submission of swaps for Commission
determination regarding clearing
requirements.
39.6 [Reserved]
39.7 Enforceability.
39.8 Fraud in connection with the clearing
of transactions on a derivatives clearing
organization.
Subpart B—Compliance With Core
Principles
39.9 Scope.
39.10 Compliance with core principles.
39.11 Financial resources.
39.12 Participant and product eligibility.
39.13 Risk management.
39.14 Settlement procedures.
39.15 Treatment of funds.
39.16 Default rules and procedures.
39.17 Rule enforcement.
39.18 System safeguards.
39.19 Reporting.
39.20 Recordkeeping.
39.21 Public information.
39.22 Information sharing.
39.23 Antitrust considerations.
39.24 [Reserved]
39.25 [Reserved]
39.26 [Reserved]
39.27 Legal risk considerations.
Appendix A to Part 39—Form DCO
Derivatives Clearing Organization
Application for Registrations
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 7a–1 as amended by
Pub. L. 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376.
Subpart A—General Provisions
Applicable to Derivatives Clearing
Organizations
§ 39.1
Scope.
The provisions of this subpart A
apply to any derivatives clearing
organization as defined under section
1a(15) of the Act and § 1.3(d) of this
chapter which is registered or deemed
to be registered with the Commission as
a derivatives clearing organization, is
required to register as such with the
Commission pursuant to section 5b(a) of
the Act, or which voluntarily applies to
register as such with the Commission
pursuant to section 5b(b) or otherwise.
§ 39.2
Definitions.
For the purposes of this part,
Back test means a test that compares
a derivatives clearing organization’s
initial margin requirements with
historical price changes to determine
the extent of actual margin coverage.
Customer means a person trading in
any commodity named in the definition
of commodity in section 1a(9) of the Act
or in § 1.3 of this chapter, or in any
swap as defined in section 1a(47) of the
Act or in § 1.3 of this chapter; Provided,
however, an owner or holder of a house
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
account as defined in this section shall
not be deemed to be a customer within
the meaning of section 4d of the Act, the
regulations that implement sections 4d
and 4f of the Act and § 1.35, and such
an owner or holder of such a house
account shall otherwise be deemed to be
a customer within the meaning of the
Act and §§ 1.37 and 1.46 of this chapter
and all other sections of these rules,
regulations, and orders which do not
implement sections 4d and 4f of the Act.
Customer account or customer origin
means a clearing member account held
on behalf of customers, as that term is
defined in this section, and which is
subject to section 4d(a) or section 4d(f)
of the Act.
House account or house origin means
a clearing member account which is not
subject to section 4d(a) or 4d(f) of the
Act.
Key personnel means derivatives
clearing organization personnel who
play a significant role in the operations
of the derivatives clearing organization,
the provision of clearing and settlement
services, risk management, or oversight
of compliance with the Act and
Commission regulations and orders. Key
personnel include, but are not limited
to, those persons who are or perform the
functions of any of the following: chief
executive officer; president; chief
compliance officer; chief operating
officer; chief risk officer; chief financial
officer; chief technology officer; and
emergency contacts or persons who are
responsible for business continuity or
disaster recovery planning or program
execution.
Stress test means a test that compares
the impact of potential extreme price
moves, changes in option volatility,
and/or changes in other inputs that
affect the value of a position, to the
financial resources of a derivatives
clearing organization, clearing member,
or large trader, to determine the
adequacy of such financial resources.
Systemically important derivatives
clearing organization means a financial
market utility that is a derivatives
clearing organization registered under
section 5b of the Act, which has been
designated by the Financial Stability
Oversight Council to be systemically
important and for which the
Commission acts as the Supervisory
Agency pursuant to section 803(8) of the
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act.
§ 39.3
Procedures for registration.
(a) Application procedures. (1) An
organization desiring to be registered as
a derivatives clearing organization shall
file electronically an application for
registration with the Secretary of the
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
Commission in the format and manner
specified by the Commission. The
Commission will review the application
for registration as a derivatives clearing
organization pursuant to the 180-day
timeframe and procedures specified in
section 6(a) of the Act. The Commission
may approve or deny the application or,
if deemed appropriate, register the
applicant as a derivatives clearing
organization subject to conditions.
(2) Application. Any person seeking
to register as a derivatives clearing
organization, any applicant amending
its pending application, or any
registered derivatives clearing
organization seeking to amend its order
of registration (applicant), shall submit
to the Commission a completed Form
DCO, which shall include a cover sheet,
all applicable exhibits, and any
supplemental materials, including
amendments thereto, as provided in the
appendix to this part 39 (application).
An applicant, when filing a Form DCO
for purposes of amending its pending
application or requesting an amendment
to an existing registration, is only
required to submit exhibits and updated
information that are relevant to the
requested amendment and are necessary
to demonstrate compliance with the
core principles affected by the requested
amendment. The Commission will not
commence processing an application
unless the applicant has filed the
application as required by this section.
Failure to file a completed application
will preclude the Commission from
determining that an application is
materially complete, as provided in
section 6(a) of the Act. Upon its own
initiative, an applicant may file with its
completed application additional
information that may be necessary or
helpful to the Commission in processing
the application.
(3) Submission of supplemental
information. The filing of a completed
application is a minimum requirement
and does not create a presumption that
the application is materially complete or
that supplemental information will not
be required. At any time during the
application review process, the
Commission may request that the
applicant submit supplemental
information in order for the Commission
to process the application. The
applicant shall file electronically such
supplemental information with the
Secretary of the Commission in the
format and manner specified by the
Commission.
(4) Application amendments. An
applicant shall promptly amend its
application if it discovers a material
omission or error, or if there is a
material change in the information
PO 00000
Frm 00099
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69431
provided to the Commission in the
application or other information
provided in connection with the
application.
(5) Public information. The following
sections of all applications to become a
registered derivatives clearing
organization will be public: first page of
the Form DCO cover sheet, proposed
rules, regulatory compliance chart,
narrative summary of proposed clearing
activities, documents establishing the
applicant’s legal status, documents
setting forth the applicant’s corporate
and governance structure, and any other
part of the application not covered by a
request for confidential treatment,
subject to § 145.9 of this chapter.
(b) Stay of application review. (1) The
Commission may stay the running of the
180-day review period if an application
is materially incomplete, in accordance
with section 6(a) of the Act.
(2) Delegation of authority. (i) The
Commission hereby delegates, until it
orders otherwise, to the Director of the
Division of Clearing and Risk or the
Director’s designee, with the
concurrence of the General Counsel or
the General Counsel’s designee, the
authority to notify an applicant seeking
designation under section 6(a) of the Act
that the application is materially
incomplete and the running of the 180day period is stayed.
(ii) The Director of the Division of
Clearing and Risk may submit to the
Commission for its consideration any
matter which has been delegated in this
paragraph.
(iii) Nothing in this paragraph
prohibits the Commission, at its
election, from exercising the authority
delegated in paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this
section.
(c) Withdrawal of application for
registration. An applicant for
registration may withdraw its
application submitted pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section by filing
electronically such a request with the
Secretary of the Commission in the
format and manner specified by the
Commission. Withdrawal of an
application for registration shall not
affect any action taken or to be taken by
the Commission based upon actions,
activities, or events occurring during the
time that the application for registration
was pending with the Commission.
(d) Reinstatement of dormant
registration. Before listing or relisting
products for clearing, a dormant
registered derivatives clearing
organization as defined in § 40.1 of this
chapter must reinstate its registration
under the procedures of paragraph (a) of
this section; provided, however, that an
application for reinstatement may rely
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69432
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
upon previously submitted materials
that still pertain to, and accurately
describe, current conditions.
(e) Request for vacation of
registration. A registered derivatives
clearing organization may vacate its
registration under section 7 of the Act
by filing electronically such a request
with the Secretary of the Commission in
the format and manner specified by the
Commission. Vacation of registration
shall not affect any action taken or to be
taken by the Commission based upon
actions, activities or events occurring
during the time that the entity was
registered by the Commission.
(f) Request for transfer of registration
and open interest. (1) In anticipation of
a corporate change that will result in the
transfer of all or substantially all of a
derivatives clearing organization’s assets
to another legal entity, the derivatives
clearing organization shall submit a
request for approval to transfer the
derivatives clearing organization’s
registration and positions comprising
open interest for clearing and
settlement.
(2) Timing of submission and other
procedural requirements. (i) The request
shall be submitted no later than three
months prior to the anticipated
corporate change, or as otherwise
permitted under § 39.19(c)(4)(viii)(C) of
this part.
(ii) The derivatives clearing
organization shall submit a request for
transfer by filing electronically such a
request with the Secretary of the
Commission in the format and manner
specified by the Commission.
(iii) The derivatives clearing
organization shall submit a confirmation
of change report pursuant to
§ 39.19(c)(4)(viii)(D) of this part.
(3) Required information. The request
shall include the following:
(i) The underlying agreement that
governs the corporate change;
(ii) A narrative description of the
corporate change, including the reason
for the change and its impact on the
derivatives clearing organization’s
financial resources, governance, and
operations, and its impact on the rights
and obligations of clearing members and
market participants holding the
positions that comprise the derivatives
clearing organization’s open interest;
(iii) A discussion of the transferee’s
ability to comply with the Act,
including the core principles applicable
to derivatives clearing organizations,
and the Commission’s regulations
thereunder;
(iv) The governing documents of the
transferee, including but not limited to
articles of incorporation and bylaws;
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
(v) The transferee’s rules marked to
show changes from the current rules of
the derivatives clearing organization;
(vi) A list of products for which the
derivatives clearing organization
requests transfer of open interest;
(vii) A representation by the
derivatives clearing organization that it
is in compliance with the Act, including
the core principles applicable to
derivatives clearing organizations, and
the Commission’s regulations
thereunder; and
(viii) A representation by the
transferee that it understands that the
derivatives clearing organization is a
regulated entity that must comply with
the Act, including the core principles
applicable to derivatives clearing
organizations, and the Commission’s
regulations thereunder, in order to
maintain its registration as a derivatives
clearing organization; and further, that
the transferee will continue to comply
with all self-regulatory requirements
applicable to a derivatives clearing
organization under the Act and the
Commission’s regulations thereunder.
(4) Commission determination. The
Commission will review a request as
soon as practicable, and based on the
Commission’s determination as to the
transferee’s ability to continue to
operate the derivatives clearing
organization in compliance with the Act
and the Commission’s regulations
thereunder, such request will be
approved or denied pursuant to a
Commission order.
§ 39.4 Procedures for implementing
derivatives clearing organization rules and
clearing new products.
(a) Request for approval of rules. An
applicant for registration, or a registered
derivatives clearing organization, may
request, pursuant to the procedures of
§ 40.5 of this chapter, that the
Commission approve any or all of its
rules and subsequent amendments
thereto, including operational rules,
prior to their implementation or,
notwithstanding the provisions of
section 5c(c)(2) of the Act, at any time
thereafter, under the procedures of
§ 40.5 of this chapter. A derivatives
clearing organization may label as,
‘‘Approved by the Commission,’’ only
those rules that have been so approved.
(b) Self-certification of rules. Proposed
new or amended rules of a derivatives
clearing organization not voluntarily
submitted for prior Commission
approval pursuant to paragraph (a) of
this section must be submitted to the
Commission with a certification that the
proposed new rule or rule amendment
complies with the Act and rules
PO 00000
Frm 00100
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
thereunder pursuant to the procedures
of § 40.6 of this chapter.
(c) Acceptance of new products for
clearing. (1) A dormant derivatives
clearing organization within the
meaning of § 40.1 of this chapter may
not accept for clearing a new product
until its registration as a derivatives
clearing organization is reinstated under
the procedures of § 39.3 of this part;
provided however, that an application
for reinstatement may rely upon
previously submitted materials that still
pertain to, and accurately describe,
current conditions.
(2) A derivatives clearing organization
that accepts for clearing a new product
that is a swap shall comply with the
requirements of § 39.5 of this part.
(d) Orders regarding competition. An
applicant for registration or a registered
derivatives clearing organization may
request that the Commission issue an
order concerning whether a rule or
practice of the organization is the least
anticompetitive means of achieving the
objectives, purposes, and policies of the
Act.
(e) Holding securities in a futures
portfolio margining account. A
derivatives clearing organization
seeking to provide a portfolio margining
program under which securities would
be held in a futures account as defined
in § 1.3(vv) of this chapter, shall submit
rules to implement such portfolio
margining program for Commission
approval in accordance with § 40.5 of
this chapter. Concurrent with the
submission of such rules for
Commission approval, the derivatives
clearing organization shall petition the
Commission for an order under section
4d of the Act.
§ 39.5 Review of swaps for Commission
determination on clearing requirement.
(a) Eligibility to clear swaps. (1) A
derivatives clearing organization shall
be presumed eligible to accept for
clearing any swap that is within a
group, category, type, or class of swaps
that the derivatives clearing
organization already clears. Such
presumption of eligibility, however, is
subject to review by the Commission.
(2) A derivatives clearing organization
that wishes to accept for clearing any
swap that is not within a group,
category, type, or class of swaps that the
derivatives clearing organization already
clears shall request a determination by
the Commission of the derivatives
clearing organization’s eligibility to
clear such a swap before accepting the
swap for clearing. The request, which
shall be filed electronically with the
Secretary of the Commission, shall
address the derivatives clearing
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
organization’s ability, if it accepts the
swap for clearing, to maintain
compliance with section 5b(c)(2) of the
Act, specifically:
(i) The sufficiency of the derivatives
clearing organization’s financial
resources; and
(ii) The derivative clearing
organization’s ability to manage the
risks associated with clearing the swap,
especially if the Commission determines
that the swap is required to be cleared.
(b) Swap submissions. (1) A
derivatives clearing organization shall
submit to the Commission each swap, or
any group, category, type, or class of
swaps that it plans to accept for
clearing. The derivatives clearing
organization making the submission
must be eligible under paragraph (a) of
this section to accept for clearing the
submitted swap, or group, category,
type, or class of swaps.
(2) A derivatives clearing organization
shall submit swaps to the Commission,
to the extent reasonable and practicable
to do so, by group, category, type, or
class of swaps. The Commission may in
its reasonable discretion consolidate
multiple submissions from one
derivatives clearing organization or
subdivide a derivatives clearing
organization’s submission as
appropriate for review.
(3) The submission shall be filed
electronically with the Secretary of the
Commission and shall include:
(i) A statement that the derivatives
clearing organization is eligible to
accept the swap, or group, category,
type, or class of swaps for clearing and
describes the extent to which, if the
Commission were to determine that the
swap, or group, category, type, or class
of swaps is required to be cleared, the
derivatives clearing organization will be
able to maintain compliance with
section 5b(c)(2) of the Act;
(ii) A statement that includes, but is
not limited to, information that will
assist the Commission in making a
quantitative and qualitative assessment
of the following factors:
(A) The existence of significant
outstanding notional exposures, trading
liquidity, and adequate pricing data;
(B) The availability of rule framework,
capacity, operational expertise and
resources, and credit support
infrastructure to clear the contract on
terms that are consistent with the
material terms and trading conventions
on which the contract is then traded;
(C) The effect on the mitigation of
systemic risk, taking into account the
size of the market for such contract and
the resources of the derivatives clearing
organization available to clear the
contract;
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
(D) The effect on competition,
including appropriate fees and charges
applied to clearing; and
(E) The existence of reasonable legal
certainty in the event of the insolvency
of the relevant derivatives clearing
organization or one or more of its
clearing members with regard to the
treatment of customer and swap
counterparty positions, funds, and
property;
(iii) Product specifications, including
copies of any standardized legal
documentation, generally accepted
contract terms, standard practices for
managing any life cycle events
associated with the swap, and the extent
to which the swap is electronically
confirmable;
(iv) Participant eligibility standards, if
different from the derivatives clearing
organization’s general participant
eligibility standards;
(v) Pricing sources, models, and
procedures, demonstrating an ability to
obtain sufficient price data to measure
credit exposures in a timely and
accurate manner, including any
agreements with clearing members to
provide price data and copies of
executed agreements with third-party
price vendors, and information about
any price reference index used, such as
the name of the index, the source that
calculates it, the methodology used to
calculate the price reference index and
how often it is calculated, and when
and where it is published publicly;
(vi) Risk management procedures,
including measurement and monitoring
of credit exposures, initial and variation
margin methodology, methodologies for
stress testing and back testing,
settlement procedures, and default
management procedures;
(vii) Applicable rules, manuals,
policies, or procedures;
(viii) A description of the manner in
which the derivatives clearing
organization has provided notice of the
submission to its members and a
summary of any views on the
submission expressed by the members
(a copy of the notice to members shall
be included with the submission); and
(ix) Any additional information
specifically requested by the
Commission.
(4) The Commission must have
received the submission by the open of
business on the business day preceding
the acceptance of the swap, or group,
category, type, or class of swaps for
clearing.
(5) The submission will be made
available to the public and posted on
the Commission Web site for a 30-day
public comment period. A derivatives
clearing organization that wishes to
PO 00000
Frm 00101
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69433
request confidential treatment for
portions of its submission may do so in
accordance with the procedures set out
in § 145.9(d) of this chapter.
(6) The Commission will review the
submission and determine whether the
swap, or group, category, type, or class
of swaps described in the submission is
required to be cleared. The Commission
will make its determination not later
than 90 days after a complete
submission has been received, unless
the submitting derivatives clearing
organization agrees to an extension. The
determination of when such submission
is complete shall be at the sole
discretion of the Commission. In making
a determination that a clearing
requirement shall apply, the
Commission may impose such terms
and conditions to the clearing
requirement as the Commission
determines to be appropriate.
(c) Commission-initiated reviews. (1)
The Commission, on an ongoing basis,
will review swaps that have not been
accepted for clearing by a derivatives
clearing organization to make a
determination as to whether the swaps
should be required to be cleared. In
undertaking such reviews, the
Commission will use information
obtained pursuant to Commission
regulations from swap data repositories,
swap dealers, and major swap
participants, and any other available
information.
(2) Notice regarding any
determination made under paragraph
(c)(1) of this section will be made
available to the public and posted on
the Commission Web site for a 30-day
public comment period.
(3) If no derivatives clearing
organization has accepted for clearing a
particular swap, group, category, type,
or class of swaps that the Commission
finds would otherwise be subject to a
clearing requirement, the Commission
will:
(i) Investigate the relevant facts and
circumstances;
(ii) Within 30 days of the completion
of its investigation, issue a public report
containing the results of the
investigation; and
(iii) Take such actions as the
Commission determines to be necessary
and in the public interest, which may
include requiring the retaining of
adequate margin or capital by parties to
the swap, group, category, type, or class
of swaps.
(d) Stay of clearing requirement. (1)
After making a determination that a
swap, or group, category, type, or class
of swaps is required to be cleared, the
Commission, on application of a
counterparty to a swap or on its own
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69434
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
initiative, may stay the clearing
requirement until the Commission
completes a review of the terms of the
swap, or group, category, type, or class
of swaps and the clearing arrangement.
(2) A counterparty to a swap that
wishes to apply for a stay of the clearing
requirement for that swap shall submit
a written request to the Secretary of the
Commission that includes:
(i) The identity and contact
information of the counterparty to the
swap;
(ii) The terms of the swap subject to
the clearing requirement;
(iii) The name of the derivatives
clearing organization clearing the swap;
(iv) A description of the clearing
arrangement; and
(v) A statement explaining why the
swap should not be subject to a clearing
requirement.
(3) A derivatives clearing organization
that has accepted for clearing a swap, or
group, category, type, or class of swaps
that is subject to a stay of the clearing
requirement shall provide any
information requested by the
Commission in the course of its review.
(4) The Commission will complete its
review not later than 90 days after
issuance of the stay, unless the
derivatives clearing organization that
clears the swap, or group, category,
type, or class of swaps agrees to an
extension.
(5) Upon completion of its review, the
Commission may:
(i) Determine, subject to any terms
and conditions as the Commission
determines to be appropriate, that the
swap, or group, category, type, or class
of swaps must be cleared; or
(ii) Determine that the clearing
requirement will not apply to the swap,
or group, category, type, or class of
swaps, but clearing may continue on a
non-mandatory basis.
[Reserved]
§ 39.7
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
§ 39.6
Enforceability.
An agreement, contract or transaction
submitted to a derivatives clearing
organization for clearing shall not be
void, voidable, subject to rescission, or
otherwise invalidated or rendered
unenforceable as a result of:
(a) A violation by the derivatives
clearing organization of the provisions
of the Act or of Commission regulations;
or
(b) Any Commission proceeding to
alter or supplement a rule under section
8a(7) of the Act, to declare an
emergency under section 8a(9) of the
Act, or any other proceeding the effect
of which is to alter, supplement, or
require a derivatives clearing
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
organization to adopt a specific rule or
procedure, or to take or refrain from
taking a specific action.
§ 39.8 Fraud in connection with the
clearing of transactions on a derivatives
clearing organization.
It shall be unlawful for any person,
directly or indirectly, in or in
connection with the clearing of
transactions by a derivatives clearing
organization:
(a) To cheat or defraud or attempt to
cheat or defraud any person;
(b) Willfully to make or cause to be
made to any person any false report or
statement or cause to be entered for any
person any false record; or
(c) Willfully to deceive or attempt to
deceive any person by any means
whatsoever.
Subpart B—Compliance with Core
Principles
§ 39.9
Scope.
The provisions of this subpart B apply
to any derivatives clearing organization,
as defined under section 1a(15) of the
Act and § 1.3(d) of this chapter, which
is registered or deemed to be registered
with the Commission as a derivatives
clearing organization, is required to
register as such with the Commission
pursuant to section 5b(a) of the Act, or
which voluntarily registers as such with
the Commission pursuant to section
5b(b) or otherwise.
§ 39.10
Compliance with core principles.
(a) To be registered and to maintain
registration as a derivatives clearing
organization, a derivatives clearing
organization shall comply with each
core principle set forth in section
5b(c)(2) of the Act and any requirement
that the Commission may impose by
rule or regulation pursuant to section
8a(5) of the Act; and
(b) Subject to any rule or regulation
prescribed by the Commission, a
registered derivatives clearing
organization shall have reasonable
discretion in establishing the manner by
which it complies with each core
principle.
(c) Chief compliance officer—(1)
Designation. Each derivatives clearing
organization shall establish the position
of chief compliance officer, designate an
individual to serve as the chief
compliance officer, and provide the
chief compliance officer with the full
responsibility and authority to develop
and enforce, in consultation with the
board of directors or the senior officer,
appropriate compliance policies and
procedures, to fulfill the duties set forth
in the Act and Commission regulations.
PO 00000
Frm 00102
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
(i) The individual designated to serve
as chief compliance officer shall have
the background and skills appropriate
for fulfilling the responsibilities of the
position. No individual who would be
disqualified from registration under
sections 8a(2) or 8a(3) of the Act may
serve as a chief compliance officer.
(ii) The chief compliance officer shall
report to the board of directors or the
senior officer of the derivatives clearing
organization. The board of directors or
the senior officer shall approve the
compensation of the chief compliance
officer.
(iii) The chief compliance officer shall
meet with the board of directors or the
senior officer at least once a year.
(iv) A change in the designation of the
individual serving as the chief
compliance officer of the derivatives
clearing organization shall be reported
to the Commission in accordance with
the requirements of § 39.19(c)(4)(ix) of
this part.
(2) Chief compliance officer duties.
The chief compliance officer’s duties
shall include, but are not limited to:
(i) Reviewing the derivatives clearing
organization’s compliance with the core
principles set forth in section 5b of the
Act, and the Commission’s regulations
thereunder;
(ii) In consultation with the board of
directors or the senior officer, resolving
any conflicts of interest that may arise;
(iii) Establishing and administering
written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to prevent violation
of the Act;
(iv) Taking reasonable steps to ensure
compliance with the Act and
Commission regulations relating to
agreements, contracts, or transactions,
and with Commission regulations
prescribed under section 5b of the Act;
(v) Establishing procedures for the
remediation of noncompliance issues
identified by the chief compliance
officer through any compliance office
review, look-back, internal or external
audit finding, self-reported error, or
validated complaint; and
(vi) Establishing and following
appropriate procedures for the handling,
management response, remediation,
retesting, and closing of noncompliance
issues.
(3) Annual report. The chief
compliance officer shall, not less than
annually, prepare and sign a written
report that covers the most recently
completed fiscal year of the derivatives
clearing organization, and provide the
annual report to the board of directors
or the senior officer. The annual report
shall, at a minimum:
(i) Contain a description of the
derivatives clearing organization’s
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
written policies and procedures,
including the code of ethics and conflict
of interest policies;
(ii) Review each core principle and
applicable Commission regulation, and
with respect to each:
(A) Identify the compliance policies
and procedures that are designed to
ensure compliance with the core
principle;
(B) Provide an assessment as to the
effectiveness of these policies and
procedures;
(C) Discuss areas for improvement,
and recommend potential or prospective
changes or improvements to the
derivatives clearing organization’s
compliance program and resources
allocated to compliance;
(iii) List any material changes to
compliance policies and procedures
since the last annual report;
(iv) Describe the financial,
managerial, and operational resources
set aside for compliance with the Act
and Commission regulations; and
(v) Describe any material compliance
matters, including incidents of
noncompliance, since the date of the
last annual report and describe the
corresponding action taken.
(4) Submission of annual report to the
Commission. (i) Prior to submitting the
annual report to the Commission, the
chief compliance officer shall provide
the annual report to the board of
directors or the senior officer of the
derivatives clearing organization for
review. Submission of the report to the
board of directors or the senior officer
shall be recorded in the board minutes
or otherwise, as evidence of compliance
with this requirement.
(ii) The annual report shall be
submitted electronically to the Secretary
of the Commission in the format and
manner specified by the Commission
not more than 90 days after the end of
the derivatives clearing organization’s
fiscal year, concurrently with
submission of the fiscal year-end
audited financial statement that is
required to be furnished to the
Commission pursuant to § 39.19(c)(3)(ii)
of this part. The report shall include a
certification by the chief compliance
officer that, to the best of his or her
knowledge and reasonable belief, and
under penalty of law, the annual report
is accurate and complete.
(iii) The derivatives clearing
organization shall promptly submit an
amended annual report if material errors
or omissions in the report are identified
after submission. An amendment must
contain the certification required under
paragraph (c)(4)(ii) of this section.
(iv) A derivatives clearing
organization may request from the
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
Commission an extension of time to
submit its annual report in accordance
with § 39.19(c)(3) of this part.
(5) Recordkeeping. (i) The derivatives
clearing organization shall maintain:
(A) A copy of all compliance policies
and procedures and all other policies
and procedures adopted in furtherance
of compliance with the Act and
Commission regulations;
(B) Copies of materials, including
written reports provided to the board of
directors or the senior officer in
connection with the review of the
annual report under paragraph (c)(4)(i)
of this section; and
(C) Any records relevant to the annual
report, including, but not limited to,
work papers and other documents that
form the basis of the report, and
memoranda, correspondence, other
documents, and records that are created,
sent, or received in connection with the
annual report and contain conclusions,
opinions, analyses, or financial data
related to the annual report.
(ii) The derivatives clearing
organization shall maintain records in
accordance with § 1.31 of this chapter
and § 39.20 of this part.
§ 39.11
Financial resources.
(a) General. A derivatives clearing
organization shall maintain financial
resources sufficient to cover its
exposures with a high degree of
confidence and to enable it to perform
its functions in compliance with the
core principles set out in section 5b of
the Act. A derivatives clearing
organization shall identify and
adequately manage its general business
risks and hold sufficient liquid
resources to cover potential business
losses that are not related to clearing
members’ defaults, so that the
derivatives clearing organization can
continue to provide services as an
ongoing concern. Financial resources
shall be considered sufficient if their
value, at a minimum, exceeds the total
amount that would:
(1) Enable the derivatives clearing
organization to meet its financial
obligations to its clearing members
notwithstanding a default by the
clearing member creating the largest
financial exposure for the derivatives
clearing organization in extreme but
plausible market conditions; Provided
that if a clearing member controls
another clearing member or is under
common control with another clearing
member, the affiliated clearing members
shall be deemed to be a single clearing
member for purposes of this provision;
and
(2) Enable the derivatives clearing
organization to cover its operating costs
PO 00000
Frm 00103
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69435
for a period of at least one year,
calculated on a rolling basis.
(b) Types of financial resources. (1)
Financial resources available to satisfy
the requirements of paragraph (a)(1) of
this section may include:
(i) Margin to the extent permitted
under parts 1, 22, and 190 of this
chapter and under the rules of the
derivatives clearing organization;
(ii) The derivatives clearing
organization’s own capital;
(iii) Guaranty fund deposits;
(iv) Default insurance;
(v) Potential assessments for
additional guaranty fund contributions,
if permitted by the derivatives clearing
organization’s rules; and
(vi) Any other financial resource
deemed acceptable by the Commission.
(2) Financial resources available to
satisfy the requirements of paragraph
(a)(2) of this section may include:
(i) The derivatives clearing
organization’s own capital; and
(ii) Any other financial resource
deemed acceptable by the Commission.
(3) A financial resource may be
allocated, in whole or in part, to satisfy
the requirements of either paragraph
(a)(1) or paragraph (a)(2) of this section,
but not both paragraphs, and only to the
extent the use of such financial resource
is not otherwise limited by the Act,
Commission regulations, the derivatives
clearing organization’s rules, or any
contractual arrangements to which the
derivatives clearing organization is a
party.
(c) Computation of financial resources
requirement. (1) A derivatives clearing
organization shall, on a monthly basis,
perform stress testing that will allow it
to make a reasonable calculation of the
financial resources needed to meet the
requirements of paragraph (a)(1) of this
section. The derivatives clearing
organization shall have reasonable
discretion in determining the
methodology used to compute such
requirements, provided that the
methodology must take into account
both historical data and hypothetical
scenarios. The Commission may review
the methodology and require changes as
appropriate.
(2) A derivatives clearing organization
shall, on a monthly basis, make a
reasonable calculation of its projected
operating costs over a 12-month period
in order to determine the amount
needed to meet the requirements of
paragraph (a)(2) of this section. The
derivatives clearing organization shall
have reasonable discretion in
determining the methodology used to
compute such projected operating costs.
The Commission may review the
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69436
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
methodology and require changes as
appropriate.
(d) Valuation of financial resources.
(1) At appropriate intervals, but not less
than monthly, a derivatives clearing
organization shall compute the current
market value of each financial resource
used to meet its obligations under
paragraph (a) of this section. Reductions
in value to reflect credit, market, and
liquidity risks (haircuts) shall be
applied as appropriate and evaluated on
a monthly basis.
(2) If assessments for additional
guaranty fund contributions are
permitted by the derivatives clearing
organization’s rules, in calculating the
financial resources available to meet its
obligations under paragraph (a)(1) of
this section:
(i) The derivatives clearing
organization shall have rules requiring
that its clearing members have the
ability to meet an assessment within the
time frame of a normal end-of-day
variation settlement cycle;
(ii) The derivatives clearing
organization shall monitor the financial
and operational capacity of its clearing
members to meet potential assessments;
(iii) The derivatives clearing
organization shall apply a 30 percent
haircut to the value of potential
assessments, and
(iv) The derivatives clearing
organization shall only count the value
of assessments, after the haircut, to meet
up to 20 percent of those obligations.
(e) Liquidity of financial resources. (1)
(i) The derivatives clearing organization
shall effectively measure, monitor, and
manage its liquidity risks, maintaining
sufficient liquid resources such that it
can, at a minimum, fulfill its cash
obligations when due. The derivatives
clearing organization shall hold assets
in a manner where the risk of loss or of
delay in its access to them is minimized.
(ii) The financial resources allocated
by the derivatives clearing organization
to meet the requirements of paragraph
(a)(1) of this section shall be sufficiently
liquid to enable the derivatives clearing
organization to fulfill its obligations as
a central counterparty during a one-day
settlement cycle. The derivatives
clearing organization shall maintain
cash, U.S. Treasury obligations, or high
quality, liquid, general obligations of a
sovereign nation, in an amount greater
than or equal to an amount calculated
as follows:
(A) Calculate the average daily
settlement pay for each clearing member
over the last fiscal quarter;
(B) Calculate the sum of those average
daily settlement pays; and
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
(C) Using that sum, calculate the
average of its clearing members’ average
pays.
(iii) The derivatives clearing
organization may take into account a
committed line of credit or similar
facility for the purpose of meeting the
remainder of the requirement under
paragraph (e)(1)(ii) of this section.
(2) The financial resources allocated
by the derivatives clearing organization
to meet the requirements of paragraph
(a)(2) of this section must include
unencumbered, liquid financial assets
(i.e., cash and/or highly liquid
securities) equal to at least six months’
operating costs. If any portion of such
financial resources is not sufficiently
liquid, the derivatives clearing
organization may take into account a
committed line of credit or similar
facility for the purpose of meeting this
requirement.
(3)(i) Assets in a guaranty fund shall
have minimal credit, market, and
liquidity risks and shall be readily
accessible on a same-day basis;
(ii) Cash balances shall be invested or
placed in safekeeping in a manner that
bears little or no principal risk; and
(iii) Letters of credit shall not be a
permissible asset for a guaranty fund.
(f) Reporting requirements.
(1) Each fiscal quarter, or at any time
upon Commission request, a derivatives
clearing organization shall:
(i) Report to the Commission;
(A) The amount of financial resources
necessary to meet the requirements of
paragraph (a);
(B) The value of each financial
resource available, computed in
accordance with the requirements of
paragraph (d) of this section; and
(C) The manner in which the
derivatives clearing organization meets
the liquidity requirements of paragraph
(e) of this section;
(ii) Provide the Commission with a
financial statement, including the
balance sheet, income statement, and
statement of cash flows, of the
derivatives clearing organization or of
its parent company; and
(iii) Report to the Commission the
value of each individual clearing
member’s guaranty fund deposit, if the
derivatives clearing organization reports
having guaranty funds deposits as a
financial resource available to satisfy
the requirements of paragraph (a)(1) of
this section.
(2) The calculations required by this
paragraph shall be made as of the last
business day of the derivatives clearing
organization’s fiscal quarter.
(3) The derivatives clearing
organization shall provide the
Commission with:
PO 00000
Frm 00104
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
(i) Sufficient documentation
explaining the methodology used to
compute its financial resources
requirements under paragraph (a) of this
section,
(ii) Sufficient documentation
explaining the basis for its
determinations regarding the valuation
and liquidity requirements set forth in
paragraphs (d) and (e) of this section,
and
(iii) Copies of any agreements
establishing or amending a credit
facility, insurance coverage, or other
arrangement evidencing or otherwise
supporting the derivatives clearing
organization’s conclusions.
(4) The report shall be filed not later
than 17 business days after the end of
the derivatives clearing organization’s
fiscal quarter, or at such later time as the
Commission may permit, in its
discretion, upon request by the
derivatives clearing organization.
§ 39.12
Participant and product eligibility.
(a) Participant eligibility. A
derivatives clearing organization shall
establish appropriate admission and
continuing participation requirements
for clearing members of the derivatives
clearing organization that are objective,
publicly disclosed, and risk-based.
(1) Fair and open access for
participation. The participation
requirements shall permit fair and open
access;
(i) A derivatives clearing organization
shall not adopt restrictive clearing
member standards if less restrictive
requirements that achieve the same
objective and that would not materially
increase risk to the derivatives clearing
organization or clearing members could
be adopted;
(ii) A derivatives clearing organization
shall allow all market participants who
satisfy participation requirements to
become clearing members;
(iii) A derivatives clearing
organization shall not exclude or limit
clearing membership of certain types of
market participants unless the
derivatives clearing organization can
demonstrate that the restriction is
necessary to address credit risk or
deficiencies in the participants’
operational capabilities that would
prevent them from fulfilling their
obligations as clearing members.
(iv) A derivatives clearing
organization shall not require that
clearing members be swap dealers.
(v) A derivatives clearing organization
shall not require that clearing members
maintain a swap portfolio of any
particular size, or that clearing members
meet a swap transaction volume
threshold.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
(2) Financial resources. (i) The
participation requirements shall require
clearing members to have access to
sufficient financial resources to meet
obligations arising from participation in
the derivatives clearing organization in
extreme but plausible market
conditions. A derivatives clearing
organization may permit such financial
resources to include, without limitation,
a clearing member’s capital, a guarantee
from the clearing member’s parent, or a
credit facility funding arrangement. For
purposes of this paragraph, ‘‘capital’’
means adjusted net capital as defined in
§ 1.17 of this chapter, for futures
commission merchants, and net capital
as defined in § 240.15c3–1of this title,
for broker-dealers, or any similar risk
adjusted capital calculation for all other
clearing members.
(ii) The participation requirements
shall set forth capital requirements that
are based on objective, transparent, and
commonly accepted standards that
appropriately match capital to risk.
Capital requirements shall be scalable to
the risks posed by clearing members.
(iii) A derivatives clearing
organization shall not set a minimum
capital requirement of more than $50
million for any person that seeks to
become a clearing member in order to
clear swaps.
(3) Operational requirements. The
participation requirements shall require
clearing members to have adequate
operational capacity to meet obligations
arising from participation in the
derivatives clearing organization. The
requirements shall include, but are not
limited to: the ability to process
expected volumes and values of
transactions cleared by a clearing
member within required time frames,
including at peak times and on peak
days; the ability to fulfill collateral,
payment, and delivery obligations
imposed by the derivatives clearing
organization; and the ability to
participate in default management
activities under the rules of the
derivatives clearing organization and in
accordance with § 39.16 of this part.
(4) Monitoring. A derivatives clearing
organization shall establish and
implement procedures to verify, on an
ongoing basis, the compliance of each
clearing member with each participation
requirement of the derivatives clearing
organization.
(5) Reporting. (i) A derivatives
clearing organization shall require all
clearing members, including nonfutures commission merchants, to
provide to the derivatives clearing
organization periodic financial reports
that contain any financial information
that the derivatives clearing
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
organization determines is necessary to
assess whether participation
requirements are being met on an
ongoing basis.
(A) A derivatives clearing
organization shall require clearing
members that are futures commission
merchants to provide the financial
reports that are specified in § 1.10 of
this chapter to the derivatives clearing
organization.
(B) A derivatives clearing organization
shall require clearing members that are
not futures commission merchants to
make the periodic financial reports
provided pursuant to paragraph (a)(5)(i)
of this section available to the
Commission upon the Commission’s
request or, in lieu of imposing this
requirement, a derivatives clearing
organization may provide such financial
reports directly to the Commission upon
the Commission’s request.
(ii) A derivatives clearing organization
shall adopt rules that require clearing
members to provide to the derivatives
clearing organization, in a timely
manner, information that concerns any
financial or business developments that
may materially affect the clearing
members’ ability to continue to comply
with participation requirements.
(6) Enforcement. A derivatives
clearing organization shall have the
ability to enforce compliance with its
participation requirements and shall
establish procedures for the suspension
and orderly removal of clearing
members that no longer meet the
requirements.
(b) Product eligibility. (1) A
derivatives clearing organization shall
establish appropriate requirements for
determining the eligibility of
agreements, contracts, or transactions
submitted to the derivatives clearing
organization for clearing, taking into
account the derivatives clearing
organization’s ability to manage the
risks associated with such agreements,
contracts, or transactions. Factors to be
considered in determining product
eligibility include, but are not limited
to:
(i) Trading volume;
(ii) Liquidity;
(iii) Availability of reliable prices;
(iv) Ability of market participants to
use portfolio compression with respect
to a particular swap product;
(v) Ability of the derivatives clearing
organization and clearing members to
gain access to the relevant market for
purposes of creating, liquidating,
transferring, auctioning, and/or
allocating positions;
(vi) Ability of the derivatives clearing
organization to measure risk for
PO 00000
Frm 00105
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69437
purposes of setting margin
requirements; and
(vii) Operational capacity of the
derivatives clearing organization and
clearing members to address any
unusual risk characteristics of a
product.
(2) A derivatives clearing organization
shall adopt rules providing that all
swaps with the same terms and
conditions, as defined by product
specifications established under
derivatives clearing organization rules,
submitted to the derivatives clearing
organization for clearing are
economically equivalent within the
derivatives clearing organization and
may be offset with each other within the
derivatives clearing organization.
(3) A derivatives clearing organization
shall provide for non-discriminatory
clearing of a swap executed bilaterally
or on or subject to the rules of an
unaffiliated swap execution facility or
designated contract market.
(4) A derivatives clearing organization
shall not require that one of the original
executing parties be a clearing member
in order for a product to be eligible for
clearing.
(5) A derivatives clearing organization
shall select product unit sizes and other
terms and conditions that maximize
liquidity, facilitate transparency in
pricing, promote open access, and allow
for effective risk management. To the
extent appropriate to further these
objectives, a derivatives clearing
organization shall select product units
for clearing purposes that are smaller
than the product units in which trades
submitted for clearing were executed.
(6) A derivatives clearing organization
that clears swaps shall have rules
providing that, upon acceptance of a
swap by the derivatives clearing
organization for clearing:
(i) The original swap is extinguished;
(ii) The original swap is replaced by
an equal and opposite swap between the
derivatives clearing organization and
each clearing member acting as
principal for a house trade or acting as
agent for a customer trade;
(iii) All terms of a cleared swap must
conform to product specifications
established under derivatives clearing
organization rules; and
(iv) If a swap is cleared by a clearing
member on behalf of a customer, all
terms of the swap, as carried in the
customer account on the books of the
clearing member, must conform to the
terms of the cleared swap established
under the derivatives clearing
organization’s rules.
(7) [Reserved]
(8) Confirmation. A derivatives
clearing organization shall provide each
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69438
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
clearing member carrying a cleared
swap with a definitive written record of
the terms of the transaction which shall
legally supersede any previous
agreement and serve as a confirmation
of the swap. The confirmation of all
terms of the transaction shall take place
at the same time as the swap is accepted
for clearing.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
§ 39.13
Risk management.
(a) General. A derivatives clearing
organization shall ensure that it
possesses the ability to manage the risks
associated with discharging the
responsibilities of the derivatives
clearing organization through the use of
appropriate tools and procedures.
(b) Documentation requirement. A
derivatives clearing organization shall
establish and maintain written policies,
procedures, and controls, approved by
its board of directors, which establish an
appropriate risk management framework
that, at a minimum, clearly identifies
and documents the range of risks to
which the derivatives clearing
organization is exposed, addresses the
monitoring and management of the
entirety of those risks, and provides a
mechanism for internal audit. The risk
management framework shall be
regularly reviewed and updated as
necessary.
(c) Chief risk officer. A derivatives
clearing organization shall have a chief
risk officer who shall be responsible for
implementing the risk management
framework, including the procedures,
policies and controls described in
paragraph (b) of this section, and for
making appropriate recommendations to
the derivatives clearing organization’s
risk management committee or board of
directors, as applicable, regarding the
derivatives clearing organization’s risk
management functions.
(d) [Reserved]
(e) Measurement of credit exposure. A
derivatives clearing organization shall:
(1) Measure its credit exposure to
each clearing member and mark to
market such clearing member’s open
house and customer positions at least
once each business day; and
(2) Monitor its credit exposure to each
clearing member periodically during
each business day.
(f) Limitation of exposure to potential
losses from defaults. A derivatives
clearing organization, through margin
requirements and other risk control
mechanisms, shall limit its exposure to
potential losses from defaults by its
clearing members to ensure that:
(1) The operations of the derivatives
clearing organization would not be
disrupted; and
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
(2) Non-defaulting clearing members
would not be exposed to losses that
non-defaulting clearing members cannot
anticipate or control.
(g) Margin requirements. (1) General.
Each model and parameter used in
setting initial margin requirements shall
be risk-based and reviewed on a regular
basis.
(2) Methodology and coverage. (i) A
derivatives clearing organization shall
establish initial margin requirements
that are commensurate with the risks of
each product and portfolio, including
any unusual characteristics of, or risks
associated with, particular products or
portfolios, including but not limited to
jump-to-default risk or similar jump
risk.
(ii) A derivatives clearing organization
shall use models that generate initial
margin requirements sufficient to cover
the derivatives clearing organization’s
potential future exposures to clearing
members based on price movements in
the interval between the last collection
of variation margin and the time within
which the derivatives clearing
organization estimates that it would be
able to liquidate a defaulting clearing
member’s positions (liquidation time);
provided, however, that a derivatives
clearing organization shall use:
(A) A minimum liquidation time that
is one day for futures and options;
(B) A minimum liquidation time that
is one day for swaps on agricultural
commodities, energy commodities, and
metals;
(C) A minimum liquidation time that
is five days for all other swaps; or
(D) Such longer liquidation time as is
appropriate based on the specific
characteristics of a particular product or
portfolio; provided further that the
Commission, by order, may establish
shorter or longer liquidation times for
particular products or portfolios.
(iii) The actual coverage of the initial
margin requirements produced by such
models, along with projected measures
of the models’ performance, shall meet
an established confidence level of at
least 99 percent, based on data from an
appropriate historic time period, for:
(A) Each product for which the
derivatives clearing organization uses a
product-based margin methodology;
(B) Each spread within or between
products for which there is a defined
spread margin rate;
(C) Each account held by a clearing
member at the derivatives clearing
organization, by house origin and by
each customer origin; and
(D) Each swap portfolio, including
any portfolio containing futures and/or
options and held in a commingled
PO 00000
Frm 00106
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
account pursuant to § 39.15(b)(2) of this
part, by beneficial owner.
(iv) A derivatives clearing
organization shall determine the
appropriate historic time period based
on the characteristics, including
volatility patterns, as applicable, of each
product, spread, account, or portfolio.
(3) Independent validation. A
derivatives clearing organization’s
systems for generating initial margin
requirements, including its theoretical
models, must be reviewed and validated
by a qualified and independent party,
on a regular basis. Such qualified and
independent parties may be
independent contractors or employees
of the derivatives clearing organization,
but shall not be persons responsible for
development or operation of the systems
and models being tested.
(4) Spread and portfolio margins. (i)
A derivatives clearing organization may
allow reductions in initial margin
requirements for related positions if the
price risks with respect to such
positions are significantly and reliably
correlated. The price risks of different
positions will only be considered to be
reliably correlated if there is a
theoretical basis for the correlation in
addition to an exhibited statistical
correlation. That theoretical basis may
include, but is not limited to, the
following:
(A) The products on which the
positions are based are complements of,
or substitutes for, each other;
(B) One product is a significant input
into the other product(s);
(C) The products share a significant
common input; or
(D) The prices of the products are
influenced by common external factors.
(ii) A derivatives clearing organization
shall regularly review its margin
reductions and the correlations on
which they are based.
(5) Price data. A derivatives clearing
organization shall have a reliable source
of timely price data in order to measure
the derivatives clearing organization’s
credit exposure accurately. A
derivatives clearing organization shall
also have written procedures and sound
valuation models for addressing
circumstances where pricing data is not
readily available or reliable.
(6) Daily review. On a daily basis, a
derivatives clearing organization shall
determine the adequacy of its initial
margin requirements.
(7) Back tests. A derivatives clearing
organization shall conduct back tests, as
defined in § 39.2 of this part, using an
appropriate time period but not less
than the previous 30 days, as follows:
(i) On a daily basis, a derivatives
clearing organization shall conduct back
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
tests with respect to products or swap
portfolios that are experiencing
significant market volatility, to test the
adequacy of its initial margin
requirements, as follows:
(A) For that product if the derivatives
clearing organization uses a productbased margin methodology;
(B) For each spread involving that
product if there is a defined spread
margin rate;
(C) For each account held by a
clearing member at the derivatives
clearing organization that contains a
significant position in that product, by
house origin and by each customer
origin; and
(D) For each such swap portfolio,
including any portfolio containing
futures and/or options and held in a
commingled account pursuant to
§ 39.15(b)(2) of this part, by beneficial
owner.
(ii) On at least a monthly basis, a
derivatives clearing organization shall
conduct back tests to test the adequacy
of its initial margin requirements, as
follows:
(A) For each product for which the
derivatives clearing organization uses a
product-based margin methodology;
(B) For each spread for which there is
a defined spread margin rate;
(C) For each account held by a
clearing member at the derivatives
clearing organization, by house origin
and by each customer origin; and
(D) For each swap portfolio, including
any portfolio containing futures and/or
options and held in a commingled
account pursuant to § 39.15(b)(2) of this
part, by beneficial owner.
(8) Customer margin. (i) Gross margin.
(A) A derivatives clearing organization
shall collect initial margin on a gross
basis for each clearing member’s
customer account(s) equal to the sum of
the initial margin amounts that would
be required by the derivatives clearing
organization for each individual
customer within that account if each
individual customer were a clearing
member.
(B) For purposes of calculating the
gross initial margin requirement for
each clearing member’s customer
account(s), to the extent not inconsistent
with other Commission regulations, a
derivatives clearing organization may
require its clearing members to report
the gross positions of each individual
customer to the derivatives clearing
organization, or it may permit each
clearing member to report the sum of
the gross positions of its customers to
the derivatives clearing organization.
(C) For purposes of this paragraph
(g)(8), a derivatives clearing
organization may rely, and may permit
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
its clearing members to rely, upon the
sum of the gross positions reported to
the clearing members by each domestic
or foreign omnibus account that they
carry, without obtaining information
identifying the positions of each
individual customer underlying such
omnibus accounts.
(D) A derivatives clearing
organization may not, and may not
permit its clearing members to, net
positions of different customers against
one another.
(E) A derivatives clearing organization
may collect initial margin for its
clearing members’ house accounts on a
net basis.
(ii) Customer initial margin
requirements. A derivatives clearing
organization shall require its clearing
members to collect customer initial
margin, as defined in § 1.3 of this
chapter, from their customers, for nonhedge positions, at a level that is greater
than 100 percent of the derivatives
clearing organization’s initial margin
requirements with respect to each
product and swap portfolio. The
derivatives clearing organization shall
have reasonable discretion in
determining the percentage by which
customer initial margins must exceed
the derivatives clearing organization’s
initial margin requirements with respect
to particular products or swap
portfolios. The Commission may review
such percentage levels and require
different percentage levels if the
Commission deems the levels
insufficient to protect the financial
integrity of the clearing members or the
derivatives clearing organization.
(iii) Withdrawal of customer initial
margin. A derivatives clearing
organization shall require its clearing
members to ensure that their customers
do not withdraw funds from their
accounts with such clearing members
unless the net liquidating value plus the
margin deposits remaining in a
customer’s account after such
withdrawal are sufficient to meet the
customer initial margin requirements
with respect to all products and swap
portfolios held in such customer’s
account which are cleared by the
derivatives clearing organization.
(9) Time deadlines. A derivatives
clearing organization shall establish and
enforce time deadlines for initial and
variation margin payments to the
derivatives clearing organization by its
clearing members.
(10) Types of assets. A derivatives
clearing organization shall limit the
assets it accepts as initial margin to
those that have minimal credit, market,
and liquidity risks. A derivatives
clearing organization may take into
PO 00000
Frm 00107
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69439
account the specific risk-reducing
properties that particular assets have in
a particular portfolio. A derivatives
clearing organization may accept letters
of credit as initial margin for futures and
options on futures but shall not accept
letters of credit as initial margin for
swaps.
(11) Valuation. A derivatives clearing
organization shall use prudent valuation
practices to value assets posted as initial
margin on a daily basis.
(12) Haircuts. A derivatives clearing
organization shall apply appropriate
reductions in value to reflect credit,
market, and liquidity risks (haircuts), to
the assets that it accepts in satisfaction
of initial margin obligations, taking into
consideration stressed market
conditions, and shall evaluate the
appropriateness of such haircuts on at
least a quarterly basis.
(13) Concentration limits or charges.
A derivatives clearing organization shall
apply appropriate limitations or charges
on the concentration of assets posted as
initial margin, as necessary, in order to
ensure its ability to liquidate such assets
quickly with minimal adverse price
effects, and shall evaluate the
appropriateness of any such
concentration limits or charges, on at
least a monthly basis.
(14) Pledged assets. If a derivatives
clearing organization permits its
clearing members to pledge assets for
initial margin while retaining such
assets in accounts in the names of such
clearing members, the derivatives
clearing organization shall ensure that
such assets are unencumbered and that
such a pledge has been validly created
and validly perfected in the relevant
jurisdiction.
(h) Other risk control mechanisms—
(1) Risk limits. (i) A derivatives clearing
organization shall impose risk limits on
each clearing member, by house origin
and by each customer origin, in order to
prevent a clearing member from
carrying positions for which the risk
exposure exceeds a specified threshold
relative to the clearing member’s and/or
the derivatives clearing organization’s
financial resources. The derivatives
clearing organization shall have
reasonable discretion in determining:
(A) The method of computing risk
exposure;
(B) The applicable threshold(s); and
(C) The applicable financial resources
under this provision; provided however,
that the ratio of exposure to capital must
remain the same across all capital
levels. The Commission may review
such methods, thresholds, and financial
resources and require the application of
different methods, thresholds, or
financial resources, as appropriate.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69440
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
(ii) A derivatives clearing organization
may permit a clearing member to exceed
the threshold(s) applied pursuant to
paragraph (h)(1)(i) of this section
provided that the derivatives clearing
organization requires the clearing
member to post additional initial margin
that the derivatives clearing
organization deems sufficient to
appropriately eliminate excessive risk
exposure at the clearing member. The
Commission may review the amount of
additional initial margin and require a
different amount of additional initial
margin, as appropriate.
(2) Large trader reports. A derivatives
clearing organization shall obtain from
its clearing members or from a relevant
designated contract market or swap
execution facility, copies of all reports
that are required to be filed with the
Commission by, or on behalf of, such
clearing members pursuant to parts 17
and 20 of this chapter. A derivatives
clearing organization shall review such
reports on a daily basis to ascertain the
risk of the overall portfolio of each large
trader, including futures, options, and
swaps cleared by the derivatives
clearing organization, which are held by
all clearing members carrying accounts
for each such large trader, and shall take
additional actions with respect to such
clearing members, when appropriate, as
specified in paragraph (h)(6) of this
section, in order to address any risks
posed by any such large trader.
(3) Stress tests. A derivatives clearing
organization shall conduct stress tests,
as defined in § 39.2 of this part, as
follows:
(i) On a daily basis, a derivatives
clearing organization shall conduct
stress tests with respect to each large
trader who poses significant risk to a
clearing member or the derivatives
clearing organization, including futures,
options, and swaps cleared by the
derivatives clearing organization, which
are held by all clearing members
carrying accounts for each such large
trader. The derivatives clearing
organization shall have reasonable
discretion in determining which traders
to test and the methodology used to
conduct such stress tests. The
Commission may review the selection of
accounts and the methodology and
require changes, as appropriate.
(ii) On at least a weekly basis, a
derivatives clearing organization shall
conduct stress tests with respect to each
clearing member account, by house
origin and by each customer origin, and
each swap portfolio, including any
portfolio containing futures and/or
options and held in a commingled
account pursuant to § 39.15(b)(2) of this
part, by beneficial owner, under extreme
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
but plausible market conditions. The
derivatives clearing organization shall
have reasonable discretion in
determining the methodology used to
conduct such stress tests. The
Commission may review the
methodology and require changes, as
appropriate.
(4) Portfolio compression. A
derivatives clearing organization shall
make portfolio compression exercises
available, on a regular and voluntary
basis, for its clearing members that clear
swaps, to the extent that such exercises
are appropriate for those swaps that it
clears; provided, however, a derivatives
clearing organization is not required to
develop its own portfolio compression
services, and is only required to make
such portfolio compression exercises
available, if applicable portfolio
compression services have been
developed by a third party.
(5) Clearing members’ risk
management policies and procedures.
(i) A derivatives clearing organization
shall adopt rules that:
(A) Require its clearing members to
maintain current written risk
management policies and procedures,
which address the risks that such
clearing members may pose to the
derivatives clearing organization;
(B) Ensure that it has the authority to
request and obtain information and
documents from its clearing members
regarding their risk management
policies, procedures, and practices,
including, but not limited to,
information and documents relating to
the liquidity of their financial resources
and their settlement procedures; and
(C) Require its clearing members to
make information and documents
regarding their risk management
policies, procedures, and practices
available to the Commission upon the
Commission’s request.
(ii) A derivatives clearing organization
shall review the risk management
policies, procedures, and practices of
each of its clearing members, which
address the risks that such clearing
members may pose to the derivatives
clearing organization, on a periodic
basis and document such reviews.
(6) Additional authority. A derivatives
clearing organization shall take
additional actions with respect to
particular clearing members, when
appropriate, based on the application of
objective and prudent risk management
standards including, but not limited to:
(i) Imposing enhanced capital
requirements;
(ii) Imposing enhanced margin
requirements;
(iii) Imposing position limits;
PO 00000
Frm 00108
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
(iv) Prohibiting an increase in
positions;
(v) Requiring a reduction of positions;
(vi) Liquidating or transferring
positions; and
(vii) Suspending or revoking clearing
membership.
§ 39.14
Settlement procedures.
(a) Definitions—(1) Settlement. For
purposes of this section, ‘‘settlement’’
means:
(i) Payment and receipt of variation
margin for futures, options, and swaps;
(ii) Payment and receipt of option
premiums;
(iii) Deposit and withdrawal of initial
margin for futures, options, and swaps;
(iv) All payments due in final
settlement of futures, options, and
swaps on the final settlement date with
respect to such positions; and
(v) All other cash flows collected from
or paid to each clearing member,
including but not limited to, payments
related to swaps such as coupon
amounts.
(2) Settlement bank. For purposes of
this section, ‘‘settlement bank’’ means a
bank that maintains an account either
for the derivatives clearing organization
or for any of its clearing members,
which is used for the purpose of any
settlement described in paragraph (a)(1)
above.
(b) Daily settlements. Except as
otherwise provided by Commission
order, a derivatives clearing
organization shall effect a settlement
with each clearing member at least once
each business day, and shall have the
authority and operational capacity to
effect a settlement with each clearing
member, on an intraday basis, either
routinely, when thresholds specified by
the derivatives clearing organization are
breached, or in times of extreme market
volatility.
(c) Settlement banks. A derivatives
clearing organization shall employ
settlement arrangements that eliminate
or strictly limit its exposure to
settlement bank risks, including the
credit and liquidity risks arising from
the use of such bank(s) to effect
settlements with its clearing members,
as follows:
(1) A derivatives clearing organization
shall have documented criteria that
must be met by any settlement bank
used by the derivatives clearing
organization or its clearing members,
including criteria addressing the
capitalization, creditworthiness, access
to liquidity, operational reliability, and
regulation or supervision of such
bank(s).
(2) A derivatives clearing organization
shall monitor each approved settlement
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
bank on an ongoing basis to ensure that
such bank continues to meet the criteria
established pursuant to paragraph (c)(1)
of this section.
(3) A derivatives clearing organization
shall monitor the full range and
concentration of its exposures to its own
and its clearing members’ settlement
bank(s) and assess its own and its
clearing members’ potential losses and
liquidity pressures in the event that the
settlement bank with the largest share of
settlement activity were to fail. A
derivatives clearing organization shall
take any one or more of the following
actions, to the extent that any such
action or actions are reasonably
necessary in order to eliminate or
strictly limit such exposures:
(i) Maintain settlement accounts at
one or more additional settlement
banks; and/or
(ii) Approve one or more additional
settlement banks that its clearing
members could choose to use; and/or
(iii) Impose concentration limits with
respect to one or more of its own or its
clearing members’ settlement banks;
and/or
(iv) Take any other appropriate
actions.
(d) Settlement finality. A derivatives
clearing organization shall ensure that
settlements are final when effected by
ensuring that it has entered into legal
agreements that state that settlement
fund transfers are irrevocable and
unconditional no later than when the
derivatives clearing organization’s
accounts are debited or credited;
provided, however, a derivatives
clearing organization’s legal agreements
with its settlement banks may provide
for the correction of errors. A
derivatives clearing organization’s legal
agreements with its settlement banks
shall state clearly when settlement fund
transfers will occur and a derivatives
clearing organization shall routinely
confirm that its settlement banks are
effecting fund transfers as and when
required by such legal agreements.
(e) Recordkeeping. A derivatives
clearing organization shall maintain an
accurate record of the flow of funds
associated with each settlement.
(f) Netting arrangements. A
derivatives clearing organization shall
possess the ability to comply with each
term and condition of any permitted
netting or offset arrangement with any
other clearing organization.
(g) Physical delivery. With respect to
products that are settled by physical
transfers of the underlying instruments
or commodities, a derivatives clearing
organization shall:
(1) Establish rules that clearly state
each obligation that the derivatives
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
clearing organization has assumed with
respect to physical deliveries, including
whether it has an obligation to make or
receive delivery of a physical
instrument or commodity, or whether it
indemnifies clearing members for losses
incurred in the delivery process; and
(2) Ensure that the risks of each such
obligation are identified and managed.
§ 39.15
Treatment of funds.
(a) Required standards and
procedures. A derivatives clearing
organization shall establish standards
and procedures that are designed to
protect and ensure the safety of funds
and assets belonging to clearing
members and their customers.
(b) Segregation of funds and assets.
(1) Segregation. A derivatives clearing
organization shall comply with the
applicable segregation requirements of
section 4d of the Act and Commission
regulations thereunder, or any other
applicable Commission regulation or
order requiring that customer funds and
assets be segregated, set aside, or held
in a separate account.
(2) Commingling of futures, options,
and swaps. (i) Cleared swaps account.
In order for a derivatives clearing
organization and its clearing members to
commingle customer positions in
futures, options, and swaps, and any
money, securities, or property received
to margin, guarantee or secure such
positions, in an account subject to the
requirements of section 4d(f) of the Act,
the derivatives clearing organization
shall file rules for Commission approval
pursuant to § 40.5 of this chapter. Such
rule submission shall include, at a
minimum, the following:
(A) Identification of the futures,
options, and swaps that would be
commingled, including product
specifications or the criteria that would
be used to define eligible futures,
options, and swaps;
(B) Analysis of the risk characteristics
of the eligible products;
(C) Identification of whether the
swaps would be executed bilaterally
and/or executed on a designated
contract market and/or a swap
execution facility;
(D) Analysis of the liquidity of the
respective markets for the futures,
options, and swaps that would be
commingled, the ability of clearing
members and the derivatives clearing
organization to offset or mitigate the risk
of such futures, options, and swaps in
a timely manner, without compromising
the financial integrity of the account,
and, as appropriate, proposed means for
addressing insufficient liquidity;
PO 00000
Frm 00109
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69441
(E) Analysis of the availability of
reliable prices for each of the eligible
products;
(F) A description of the financial,
operational, and managerial standards
or requirements for clearing members
that would be permitted to commingle
such futures, options, and swaps;
(G) A description of the systems and
procedures that would be used by the
derivatives clearing organization to
oversee such clearing members’ risk
management of any such commingled
positions;
(H) A description of the financial
resources of the derivatives clearing
organization, including the composition
and availability of a guaranty fund with
respect to the futures, options, and
swaps that would be commingled;
(I) A description and analysis of the
margin methodology that would be
applied to the commingled futures,
options, and swaps, including any
margin reduction applied to correlated
positions, and any applicable margin
rules with respect to both clearing
members and customers;
(J) An analysis of the ability of the
derivatives clearing organization to
manage a potential default with respect
to any of the futures, options, or swaps
that would be commingled;
(K) A discussion of the procedures
that the derivatives clearing
organization would follow if a clearing
member defaulted, and the procedures
that a clearing member would follow if
a customer defaulted, with respect to
any of the commingled futures, options,
or swaps in the account; and
(L) A description of the arrangements
for obtaining daily position data with
respect to futures, options, and swaps in
the account.
(ii) Futures account. In order for a
derivatives clearing organization and its
clearing members to commingle
customer positions in futures, options,
and swaps, and any money, securities,
or property received to margin,
guarantee or secure such positions, in
an account subject to the requirements
of section 4d(a) of the Act, the
derivatives clearing organization shall
file with the Commission a petition for
an order pursuant to section 4d(a) of the
Act. Such petition shall include, at a
minimum, the information required
under paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section.
(iii) Commission action. (A) The
Commission may request additional
information in support of a rule
submission filed under paragraph
(b)(2)(i) of this section, and may grant
approval of such rules in accordance
with § 40.5 of this chapter.
(B) The Commission may request
additional information in support of a
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69442
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
petition filed under paragraph (b)(2)(ii)
of this section, and may issue an order
under section 4d of the Act in its
discretion.
(c) Holding of funds and assets. A
derivatives clearing organization shall
hold funds and assets belonging to
clearing members and their customers
in a manner which minimizes the risk
of loss or of delay in the access by the
derivatives clearing organization to such
funds and assets.
(d) Transfer of customer positions. A
derivatives clearing organization shall
have rules providing that the derivatives
clearing organization will promptly
transfer all or a portion of a customer’s
portfolio of positions and related funds
at the same time from the carrying
clearing member of the derivatives
clearing organization to another clearing
member of the derivatives clearing
organization, without requiring the
close-out and re-booking of the
positions prior to the requested transfer,
subject to the following conditions:
(1) The customer has instructed the
carrying clearing member to make the
transfer;
(2) The customer is not currently in
default to the carrying clearing member;
(3) The transferred positions will have
appropriate margin at the receiving
clearing member;
(4) Any remaining positions will have
appropriate margin at the carrying
clearing member; and
(5) The receiving clearing member has
consented to the transfer.
(e) Permitted investments. Funds and
assets belonging to clearing members
and their customers that are invested by
a derivatives clearing organization shall
be held in instruments with minimal
credit, market, and liquidity risks. Any
investment of customer funds or assets
by a derivatives clearing organization
shall comply with § 1.25 of this chapter,
as if all such funds and assets comprise
customer funds subject to segregation
pursuant to section 4d(a) of the Act and
Commission regulations thereunder.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
§ 39.16
Default rules and procedures.
(a) General. A derivatives clearing
organization shall adopt rules and
procedures designed to allow for the
efficient, fair, and safe management of
events during which clearing members
become insolvent or default on the
obligations of such clearing members to
the derivatives clearing organization.
(b) Default management plan. A
derivatives clearing organization shall
maintain a current written default
management plan that delineates the
roles and responsibilities of its board of
directors, its risk management
committee, any other committee that a
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
derivatives clearing organization may
have that has responsibilities for default
management, and the derivatives
clearing organization’s management, in
addressing a default, including any
necessary coordination with, or
notification of, other entities and
regulators. Such plan shall address any
differences in procedures with respect
to highly liquid products and less liquid
products. A derivatives clearing
organization shall conduct and
document a test of its default
management plan at least on an annual
basis.
(c) Default procedures. (1) A
derivatives clearing organization shall
adopt procedures that would permit the
derivatives clearing organization to take
timely action to contain losses and
liquidity pressures and to continue
meeting its obligations in the event of a
default on the obligations of a clearing
member to the derivatives clearing
organization.
(2) A derivatives clearing organization
shall adopt rules that set forth its default
procedures, including:
(i) The derivatives clearing
organization’s definition of a default;
(ii) The actions that the derivatives
clearing organization may take upon a
default, which shall include the prompt
transfer, liquidation, or hedging of the
customer or house positions of the
defaulting clearing member, as
applicable, and which may include, in
the discretion of the derivatives clearing
organization, the auctioning or
allocation of such positions to other
clearing members;
(iii) Any obligations that the
derivatives clearing organization
imposes on its clearing members to
participate in auctions, or to accept
allocations, of the customer or house
positions of the defaulting clearing
member, provided that:
(A) The derivatives clearing
organization shall permit a clearing
member to outsource to a qualified third
party, authority to act in the clearing
member’s place in any auction, subject
to appropriate safeguards imposed by
the derivatives clearing organization;
(B) The derivatives clearing
organization shall permit a clearing
member to outsource to a qualified third
party, authority to act in the clearing
member’s place in any allocations,
subject to appropriate safeguards
imposed by the derivatives clearing
organization; and
(C) Any allocation shall be
proportional to the size of the
participating or accepting clearing
member’s positions in the same product
class at the derivatives clearing
organization;
PO 00000
Frm 00110
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
(iv) The sequence in which the funds
and assets of the defaulting clearing
member and its customers and the
financial resources maintained by the
derivatives clearing organization would
be applied in the event of a default;
(v) A provision that the funds and
assets of a defaulting clearing member’s
customers shall not be applied to cover
losses with respect to a house default;
(vi) A provision that the excess house
funds and assets of a defaulting clearing
member shall be applied to cover losses
with respect to a customer default, if the
relevant customer funds and assets are
insufficient to cover the shortfall; and
(3) A derivatives clearing organization
shall make its default rules publicly
available as provided in § 39.21 of this
part.
(d) Insolvency of a clearing member.
(1) A derivatives clearing organization
shall adopt rules that require a clearing
member to provide prompt notice to the
derivatives clearing organization if it
becomes the subject of a bankruptcy
petition, receivership proceeding, or the
equivalent;
(2) No later than upon receipt of such
notice, a derivatives clearing
organization shall review the continuing
eligibility of the clearing member for
clearing membership; and
(3) No later than upon receipt of such
notice, a derivatives clearing
organization shall take any appropriate
action, in its discretion, with respect to
such clearing member or its house or
customer positions, including but not
limited to liquidation or transfer of
positions, suspension, or revocation of
clearing membership.
§ 39.17
Rule enforcement.
(a) General. Each derivatives clearing
organization shall:
(1) Maintain adequate arrangements
and resources for the effective
monitoring and enforcement of
compliance with the rules of the
derivatives clearing organization and
the resolution of disputes;
(2) Have the authority and ability to
discipline, limit, suspend, or terminate
the activities of a clearing member due
to a violation by the clearing member of
any rule of the derivatives clearing
organization; and
(3) Report to the Commission
regarding rule enforcement activities
and sanctions imposed against clearing
members as provided in paragraph (a)
(2) of this section, in accordance with
§ 39.19(c)(4)(xi) of this part.
(b) Authority to enforce rules. The
board of directors of the derivatives
clearing organization may delegate
responsibility for compliance with the
requirements of paragraph (a) of this
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
section to the risk management
committee, unless the responsibilities
are otherwise required to be carried out
by the chief compliance officer pursuant
to the Act or this part.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
§ 39.18
System safeguards.
(a) Definitions. For purposes of this
section:
Recovery time objective means the
time period within which an entity
should be able to achieve recovery and
resumption of clearing and settlement of
existing and new products, after those
capabilities become temporarily
inoperable for any reason up to or
including a wide-scale disruption.
Relevant area means the metropolitan
or other geographic area within which a
derivatives clearing organization has
physical infrastructure or personnel
necessary for it to conduct activities
necessary to the clearing and settlement
of existing and new products. The term
‘‘relevant area’’ also includes
communities economically integrated
with, adjacent to, or within normal
commuting distance of that
metropolitan or other geographic area.
Wide-scale disruption means an event
that causes a severe disruption or
destruction of transportation,
telecommunications, power, water, or
other critical infrastructure components
in a relevant area, or an event that
results in an evacuation or
unavailability of the population in a
relevant area.
(b) General—(1) Program of risk
analysis. Each derivatives clearing
organization shall establish and
maintain a program of risk analysis and
oversight with respect to its operations
and automated systems to identify and
minimize sources of operational risk
through:
(i) The development of appropriate
controls and procedures; and
(ii) The development of automated
systems that are reliable, secure, and
have adequate scalable capacity.
(2) Resources. Each derivatives
clearing organization shall establish and
maintain resources that allow for the
fulfillment of each obligation and
responsibility of the derivatives clearing
organization in light of the risks
identified pursuant to paragraph (b)(1)
of this section.
(3) Verification of adequacy. Each
derivatives clearing organization shall
periodically verify that resources
described in paragraph (b)(2) of this
section are adequate to ensure daily
processing, clearing, and settlement.
(c) Elements of program. A derivatives
clearing organization’s program of risk
analysis and oversight with respect to
its operations and automated systems,
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
as described in paragraph (b) of this
section, shall address each of the
following categories of risk analysis and
oversight:
(1) Information security;
(2) Business continuity and disaster
recovery planning and resources;
(3) Capacity and performance
planning;
(4) Systems operations;
(5) Systems development and quality
assurance; and
(6) Physical security and
environmental controls.
(d) Standards for program. In
addressing the categories of risk analysis
and oversight required under paragraph
(c) of this section, a derivatives clearing
organization shall follow generally
accepted standards and industry best
practices with respect to the
development, operation, reliability,
security, and capacity of automated
systems.
(e) Business continuity and disaster
recovery. (1) Plan and resources. A
derivatives clearing organization shall
maintain a business continuity and
disaster recovery plan, emergency
procedures, and physical, technological,
and personnel resources sufficient to
enable the timely recovery and
resumption of operations and the
fulfillment of each obligation and
responsibility of the derivatives clearing
organization following any disruption of
its operations.
(2) Responsibilities and obligations.
The responsibilities and obligations
described in paragraph (e)(1) of this
section shall include, without
limitation, daily processing, clearing,
and settlement of transactions cleared.
(3) Recovery time objective. The
derivatives clearing organization’s
business continuity and disaster
recovery plan described in paragraph
(e)(1) of this section, shall have the
objective of, and the physical,
technological, and personnel resources
described therein shall be sufficient to,
enable the derivatives clearing
organization to resume daily processing,
clearing, and settlement no later than
the next business day following the
disruption.
(f) Location of resources; outsourcing.
A derivatives clearing organization may
maintain the resources required under
paragraph (e)(1) of this section either:
(1) Using its own employees as
personnel, and property that it owns,
licenses, or leases (own resources); or
(2) Through written contractual
arrangements with another derivatives
clearing organization or other service
provider (outsourcing).
(i) Retention of responsibility. A
derivatives clearing organization that
PO 00000
Frm 00111
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69443
enters into such a contractual
arrangement shall retain complete
liability for any failure to meet the
responsibilities specified in paragraph
(e) of this section, although it is free to
seek indemnification from the service
provider. The outsourcing derivatives
clearing organization must employ
personnel with the expertise necessary
to enable it to supervise the service
provider’s delivery of the services.
(ii) Testing. The testing referred to in
paragraph (j) of this section shall
include all of the derivatives clearing
organization’s own and outsourced
resources, and shall verify that all such
resources will work effectively together.
(g) Notice of exceptional events. A
derivatives clearing organization shall
notify staff of the Division of Clearing
and Risk promptly of:
(1) Any hardware or software
malfunction, cyber security incident, or
targeted threat that materially impairs,
or creates a significant likelihood of
material impairment, of automated
system operation, reliability, security, or
capacity; or
(2) Any activation of the derivatives
clearing organization’s business
continuity and disaster recovery plan.
(h) Notice of planned changes. A
derivatives clearing organization shall
give staff of the Division of Clearing and
Risk timely advance notice of all:
(1) Planned changes to automated
systems that are likely to have a
significant impact on the reliability,
security, or adequate scalable capacity
of such systems; and
(2) Planned changes to the derivatives
clearing organization’s program of risk
analysis and oversight.
(i) Recordkeeping. A derivatives
clearing organization shall maintain,
and provide to Commission staff
promptly upon request, pursuant to
§ 1.31 of this chapter, current copies of
its business continuity plan and other
emergency procedures, its assessments
of its operational risks, and records of
testing protocols and results, and shall
provide any other documents requested
by Commission staff for the purpose of
maintaining a current profile of the
derivatives clearing organization’s
automated systems.
(j) Testing.—(1) Purpose of testing. A
derivatives clearing organization shall
conduct regular, periodic, and objective
testing and review of:
(i) Its automated systems to ensure
that they are reliable, secure, and have
adequate scalable capacity; and
(ii) Its business continuity and
disaster recovery capabilities, using
testing protocols adequate to ensure that
the derivatives clearing organization’s
backup resources are sufficient to meet
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69444
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
the requirements of paragraph (e) of this
section.
(2) Conduct of testing. Testing shall be
conducted by qualified, independent
professionals. Such qualified,
independent professionals may be
independent contractors or employees
of the derivatives clearing organization,
but shall not be persons responsible for
development or operation of the systems
or capabilities being tested.
(3) Reporting and review. Reports
setting forth the protocols for, and
results of, such tests shall be
communicated to, and reviewed by,
senior management of the derivatives
clearing organization. Protocols of tests
which result in few or no exceptions
shall be subject to more searching
review.
(k) Coordination of business
continuity and disaster recovery plans.
A derivatives clearing organization
shall, to the extent practicable:
(1) Coordinate its business continuity
and disaster recovery plan with those of
its clearing members, in a manner
adequate to enable effective resumption
of daily processing, clearing, and
settlement following a disruption;
(2) Initiate and coordinate periodic,
synchronized testing of its business
continuity and disaster recovery plan
and the plans of its clearing members;
and
(3) Ensure that its business continuity
and disaster recovery plan takes into
account the plans of its providers of
essential services, including
telecommunications, power, and water.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
§ 39.19
Reporting.
(a) General. Each derivatives clearing
organization shall provide to the
Commission the information specified
in this section and any other
information that the Commission deems
necessary to conduct its oversight of a
derivatives clearing organization.
(b) Submission of reports. (1) Unless
otherwise specified by the Commission
or its designee, each derivatives clearing
organization shall submit the
information required by this section to
the Commission electronically and in a
format and manner specified by the
Commission.
(2) Time zones. Unless otherwise
specified by the Commission or its
designee, any stated time in this section
is Central time for information
concerning derivatives clearing
organizations located in that time zone,
and Eastern time for information
concerning all other derivatives clearing
organizations.
(3) Unless otherwise specified by the
Commission or its designee, business
day means the intraday period of time
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
starting at the business hour of 8:15 a.m.
and ending at the business hour of 4:45
p.m., on all days except Saturdays,
Sundays, and Federal holidays.
(c) Reporting requirements. Each
registered derivatives clearing
organization shall provide to the
Commission or other person as may be
required or permitted by this paragraph
the information specified below:
(1) Daily reporting. (i) A report
containing the information specified by
this paragraph (c)(1), which shall be
compiled as of the end of each trading
day and shall be submitted to the
Commission by 10 a.m. on the following
business day:
(A) Initial margin requirements and
initial margin on deposit for each
clearing member, by house origin and
by each customer origin;
(B) Daily variation margin, separately
listing the mark-to-market amount
collected from or paid to each clearing
member, by house origin and by each
customer origin;
(C) All other daily cash flows relating
to clearing and settlement including, but
not limited to, option premiums and
payments related to swaps such as
coupon amounts, collected from or paid
to each clearing member, by house
origin and by each customer origin; and
(D) End-of-day positions for each
clearing member, by house origin and
by each customer origin.
(ii) The report shall contain the
information required by paragraph
(c)(1)(i) of this section for:
(A) All futures positions, and options
positions, as applicable;
(B) All swaps positions; and
(C) All securities positions that are
held in a customer account subject to
section 4d of the Act or are subject to
a cross-margining agreement.
(2) Quarterly reporting. A report of the
derivatives clearing organization’s
financial resources as required by
§ 39.11(f) of this part; provided that,
additional reports may be required by
paragraph (c)(4)(i) of this section or
§ 39.11(f) of this part.
(3) Annual reporting—(i) Annual
report of chief compliance officer. The
annual report of the chief compliance
officer required by § 39.10 of this part.
(ii) Audited financial statements.
Audited year-end financial statements
of the derivatives clearing organization
or, if there are no financial statements
available for the derivatives clearing
organization itself, the consolidated
audited year-end financial statements of
the derivatives clearing organization’s
parent company.
(iii) [Reserved]
(iv) Time of report. The reports
required by this paragraph (c)(3) shall be
PO 00000
Frm 00112
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
submitted concurrently to the
Commission not more than 90 days after
the end of the derivatives clearing
organization’s fiscal year; provided that,
a derivatives clearing organization may
request from the Commission an
extension of time to submit a report,
provided the derivatives clearing
organization’s failure to submit the
report in a timely manner could not be
avoided without unreasonable effort or
expense. Extensions of the deadline will
be granted at the discretion of the
Commission.
(4) Event-specific reporting—(i)
Decrease in financial resources. If there
is a decrease of 25 percent in the total
value of the financial resources
available to satisfy the requirements
under § 39.11(a)(1) of this part, either
from the last quarterly report submitted
under § 39.11(f) of this part or from the
value as of the close of the previous
business day, the derivatives clearing
organization shall report such decrease
to the Commission no later than one
business day following the day the 25
percent threshold was reached. The
report shall include:
(A) The total value of the financial
resources:
(1) As of the close of business the day
the 25 percent threshold was reached,
and
(2) If reporting a decrease in value
from the previous business day, the total
value of the financial resources
immediately prior to the 25 percent
decline;
(B) A breakdown of the value of each
financial resource reported in each of
paragraphs (c)(4)(i)(A)(1) and (2) of this
section, calculated in accordance with
the requirements of § 39.11(d) of this
part, including the value of each
individual clearing member’s guaranty
fund deposit if the derivatives clearing
organization reports guaranty fund
deposits as a financial resource; and
(C) A detailed explanation for the
decrease.
(ii) Decrease in ownership equity. No
later than two business days prior to an
event which the derivatives clearing
organization knows or reasonably
should know will cause a decrease of 20
percent or more in ownership equity
from the last reported ownership equity
balance as reported on a quarterly or
audited financial statement required to
be submitted by paragraph (c)(2) or
(c)(3)(ii), respectively, of this section;
but in any event no later than two
business days after such decrease in
ownership equity for events that caused
the decrease about which the
derivatives clearing organization did not
know and reasonably could not have
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
known prior to the event. The report
shall include:
(A) Pro forma financial statements
reflecting the derivatives clearing
organization’s estimated future financial
condition following the anticipated
decrease for reports submitted prior to
the anticipated decrease and current
financial statements for reports
submitted after such a decrease; and
(B) Details describing the reason for
the anticipated decrease or decrease in
the balance.
(iii) Six-month liquid asset
requirement. Immediate notice when a
derivatives clearing organization knows
or reasonably should know of a deficit
in the six-month liquid asset
requirement of § 39.11(e)(2).
(iv) Change in current assets. No later
than two business days after current
liabilities exceed current assets; the
notice shall include a balance sheet that
reflects the derivatives clearing
organization’s current assets and current
liabilities and an explanation as to the
reason for the negative balance.
(v) Request to clearing member to
reduce its positions. Immediate notice,
of a derivatives clearing organization’s
request to a clearing member to reduce
its positions because the derivatives
clearing organization has determined
that the clearing member has exceeded
its exposure limit, has failed to meet an
initial or variation margin call, or has
failed to fulfill any other financial
obligation to the derivatives clearing
organization. The notice shall include:
(A) The name of the clearing member;
(B) The time the clearing member was
contacted;
(C) The number of positions by which
the derivatives clearing organization
requested the reduction;
(D) All products that are the subject
of the request; and
(E) The reason for the request.
(vi) Determination to transfer or
liquidate positions. Immediate notice, of
a determination that any position a
derivatives clearing organization carries
for one of its clearing members must be
liquidated immediately or transferred
immediately, or that the trading of any
account of a clearing member shall be
only for the purpose of liquidation
because that clearing member has failed
to meet an initial or variation margin
call or has failed to fulfill any other
financial obligation to the derivatives
clearing organization. The notice shall
include:
(A) The name of the clearing member;
(B) The time the clearing member was
contacted;
(C) The products that are subject to
the determination;
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
(D) The number of positions that are
subject to the determination; and
(E) The reason for the determination.
(vii) Default of a clearing member.
Immediate notice, upon the default of a
clearing member. An event of default
shall be determined in accordance with
the rules of the derivatives clearing
organization. The notice of default shall
include:
(A) The name of the clearing member;
(B) The products the clearing member
defaulted upon;
(C) The number of positions the
clearing member defaulted upon; and
(D) The amount of the financial
obligation.
(viii) Change in ownership or
corporate or organizational structure.
(A) Reporting requirement. Any
anticipated change in the ownership or
corporate or organizational structure of
the derivatives clearing organization or
its parent(s) that would:
(1) Result in at least a 10 percent
change of ownership of the derivatives
clearing organization,
(2) Create a new subsidiary or
eliminate a current subsidiary of the
derivatives clearing organization, or
(3) Result in the transfer of all or
substantially all of the assets of the
derivatives clearing organization,
including its registration as a derivatives
clearing organization to another legal
entity.
(B) Required information. The report
shall include: a chart outlining the new
ownership or corporate or
organizational structure; a brief
description of the purpose and impact
of the change; and any relevant
agreements effecting the change and
corporate documents such as articles of
incorporation and bylaws. With respect
to a corporate change for which a
derivatives clearing organization
submits a request for approval to
transfer its derivatives clearing
organization registration and open
interest under § 39.3(f) of this part, the
informational requirements of this
paragraph (c)(4)(viii)(B) shall be
satisfied by the derivatives clearing
organization’s compliance with
§ 39.3(f)(3).
(C) Time of report. The report shall be
submitted to the Commission no later
than three months prior to the
anticipated change; provided that the
derivatives clearing organization may
report the anticipated change to the
Commission later than three months
prior to the anticipated change if the
derivatives clearing organization does
not know and reasonably could not have
known of the anticipated change three
months prior to the anticipated change.
In such event, the derivatives clearing
PO 00000
Frm 00113
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69445
organization shall immediately report
such change to the Commission as soon
as it knows of such change.
(D) Confirmation of change report.
The derivatives clearing organization
shall report to the Commission the
consummation of the change no later
than two business days following the
effective date of the change.
(ix) Change in key personnel. No later
than two business days following the
departure, or addition of persons who
are key personnel as defined in
§ 39.1(b), a report that includes, as
applicable, the name of the person who
will assume the duties of the position
on a temporary basis until a permanent
replacement fills the position.
(x) Change in credit facility funding
arrangement. No later than one business
day after a derivatives clearing
organization changes an existing credit
facility funding arrangement it may
have in place, or is notified that such
arrangement has changed, including but
not limited to a change in lender,
change in the size of the facility, change
in expiration date, or any other material
changes or conditions.
(xi) Sanctions. Notice of action taken,
no later than two business days after the
derivatives clearing organization
imposes sanctions against a clearing
member.
(xii) Financial condition and events.
Immediate notice after the derivatives
clearing organization knows or
reasonably should have known of:
(A) The institution of any legal
proceedings which may have a material
adverse financial impact on the
derivatives clearing organization;
(B) Any event, circumstance or
situation that materially impedes the
derivatives clearing organization’s
ability to comply with this part and is
not otherwise required to be reported
under this section; or
(C) A material adverse change in the
financial condition of any clearing
member that is not otherwise required
to be reported under this section.
(xiii) Financial statements material
inadequacies. If a derivatives clearing
organization discovers or is notified by
an independent public accountant of the
existence of any material inadequacy in
a financial statement, such derivatives
clearing organization shall give notice of
such material inadequacy within 24
hours, and within 48 hours after giving
such notice file a written report stating
what steps have been and are being
taken to correct the material
inadequacy.
(xiv) [Reserved]
(xv) [Reserved]
(xvi) System safeguards. A report of:
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69446
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
(A) Exceptional events as required by
§ 39.18(g) of this part; or
(B) Planned changes as required by
§ 39.18(h) of this part.
(5) Requested reporting. (i) Upon
request by the Commission, a
derivatives clearing organization shall
file with the Commission such
information related to its business as a
clearing organization, including
information relating to trade and
clearing details, in the format and
manner specified, and within the time
provided, by the Commission in the
request.
(ii) Upon request by the Commission,
a derivatives clearing organization shall
file with the Commission a written
demonstration, containing such
supporting data, information and
documents, that the derivatives clearing
organization is in compliance with one
or more core principles and relevant
provisions of this part, in the format and
manner specified, and within the time
provided, by the Commission in the
request.
(iii) Upon request by the Commission,
a derivatives clearing organization shall
file with the Commission, for each
customer origin of each clearing
member, the end-of-day gross positions
of each beneficial owner, in the format
and manner specified, and within the
time provided, by the Commission in
the request. Nothing in this paragraph
shall affect the obligation of a
derivatives clearing organization to
comply with the daily reporting
requirements of paragraph (c)(1) of this
section.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
§ 39.20
Recordkeeping.
(a) Requirement to maintain
information. Each derivatives clearing
organization shall maintain records of
all activities related to its business as a
derivatives clearing organization. Such
records shall include, but are not
limited to, records of:
(1) All cleared transactions, including
swaps;
(2) All information necessary to
record allocation of bunched orders for
cleared swaps;
(3) All information required to be
created, generated, or reported under
this part 39, including but not limited
to the results of and methodology used
for all tests, reviews, and calculations in
connection with setting and evaluating
margin levels, determining the value
and adequacy of financial resources,
and establishing settlement prices;
(4) All rules and procedures required
to be submitted pursuant to this part 39
and part 40 of this chapter, including all
proposed changes in rules, procedures
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
or operations subject to § 40.10 of this
chapter; and
(5) Any data or documentation
required by the Commission or by the
derivatives clearing organization to be
submitted to the derivatives clearing
organization by its clearing members, or
by any other person in connection with
the derivatives clearing organization’s
clearing and settlement activities.
(b) Form and manner of maintaining
information. (1) General. The records
required to be maintained by this
chapter shall be maintained in
accordance with the provisions of § 1.31
of this chapter, for a period of not less
than 5 years, except as provided in
paragraph (b)(2) of this section.
(2) Exception for swap data. Each
derivatives clearing organization that
clears swaps must maintain swap data
in accordance with the requirements of
part 45 of this chapter.
§ 39.21
Public information.
(a) General. Each derivatives clearing
organization shall provide to market
participants sufficient information to
enable the market participants to
identify and evaluate accurately the
risks and costs associated with using the
services of the derivatives clearing
organization. In furtherance of this
objective, each derivatives clearing
organization shall have clear and
comprehensive rules and procedures.
(b) Availability of information. Each
derivatives clearing organization shall
make information concerning the rules
and the operating and default
procedures governing the clearing and
settlement systems of the derivatives
clearing organization available to market
participants.
(c) Public disclosure. Each derivatives
clearing organization shall disclose
publicly and to the Commission
information concerning:
(1) The terms and conditions of each
contract, agreement, and transaction
cleared and settled by the derivatives
clearing organization;
(2) Each clearing and other fee that
the derivatives clearing organization
charges its clearing members;
(3) The margin-setting methodology;
(4) The size and composition of the
financial resource package available in
the event of a clearing member default;
(5) Daily settlement prices, volume,
and open interest for each contract,
agreement, or transaction cleared or
settled by the derivatives clearing
organization;
(6) The derivatives clearing
organization’s rules and procedures for
defaults in accordance with § 39.16 of
this part; and
(7) Any other matter that is relevant
to participation in the clearing and
PO 00000
Frm 00114
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
settlement activities of the derivatives
clearing organization.
(d) Publication of information. The
derivatives clearing organization shall
make its rulebook, a list of all current
clearing members, and the information
listed in paragraph (c) of this section
readily available to the general public,
in a timely manner, by posting such
information on the derivatives clearing
organization’s Web site, unless
otherwise permitted by the Commission.
The information required in paragraph
(c)(5) of this section shall be made
available to the public no later than the
business day following the day to which
the information pertains.
§ 39.22
Information sharing.
Each derivatives clearing organization
shall enter into, and abide by the terms
of, each appropriate and applicable
domestic and international informationsharing agreement, and shall use
relevant information obtained from each
such agreement in carrying out the risk
management program of the derivatives
clearing organization.
§ 39.23
Antitrust considerations.
Unless necessary or appropriate to
achieve the purposes of the Act, a
derivatives clearing organization shall
not adopt any rule or take any action
that results in any unreasonable
restraint of trade, or impose any
material anticompetitive burden.
§ 39.24
[Reserved]
§ 39.25
[Reserved]
§ 39.26
[Reserved]
§ 39.27
Legal risk considerations.
(a) Legal authorization. A derivatives
clearing organization shall be duly
organized, legally authorized to conduct
business, and remain in good standing
at all times in the relevant jurisdictions.
If the derivatives clearing organization
provides clearing services outside the
United States, it shall be duly organized
to conduct business and remain in good
standing at all times in the relevant
jurisdictions, and be authorized by the
appropriate foreign licensing authority.
(b) Legal framework. A derivatives
clearing organization shall operate
pursuant to a well-founded, transparent,
and enforceable legal framework that
addresses each aspect of the activities of
the derivatives clearing organization. As
applicable, the framework shall provide
for:
(1) The derivatives clearing
organization to act as a counterparty,
including novation;
(2) Netting arrangements;
(3) The derivatives clearing
organization’s interest in collateral;
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
(4) The steps that a derivatives
clearing organization would take to
address a default of a clearing member,
including but not limited to, the
unimpeded ability to liquidate collateral
and close out or transfer positions in a
timely manner;
(5) Finality of settlement and funds
transfers that are irrevocable and
unconditional when effected (no later
than when a derivatives clearing
organization’s accounts are debited and
credited); and
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
(6) Other significant aspects of the
derivatives clearing organization’s
operations, risk management
procedures, and related requirements.
(c) Conflict of laws. If a derivatives
clearing organization provides clearing
services outside the United States:
(1) The derivatives clearing
organization shall identify and address
any material conflict of law issues. The
derivatives clearing organization’s
contractual agreements shall specify a
choice of law.
PO 00000
Frm 00115
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69447
(2) The derivatives clearing
organization shall be able to
demonstrate the enforceability of its
choice of law in relevant jurisdictions
and that its rules, procedures, and
contracts are enforceable in all relevant
jurisdictions.
Appendix to Part 39—Form DCO
Derivatives Clearing Organization
Application for Registrations
BILLING CODE 6351–01–P
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00116
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
ER08NO11.001
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69448
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00117
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69449
ER08NO11.002
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00118
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
ER08NO11.003
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69450
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00119
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69451
ER08NO11.004
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00120
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
ER08NO11.005
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69452
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00121
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69453
ER08NO11.006
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00122
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
ER08NO11.007
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69454
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00123
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69455
ER08NO11.008
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00124
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
ER08NO11.009
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69456
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00125
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69457
ER08NO11.010
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00126
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
ER08NO11.011
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69458
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00127
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69459
ER08NO11.012
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00128
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
ER08NO11.013
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69460
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00129
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69461
ER08NO11.014
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00130
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
ER08NO11.015
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69462
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00131
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69463
ER08NO11.016
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00132
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
ER08NO11.017
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69464
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00133
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69465
ER08NO11.018
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00134
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
ER08NO11.019
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69466
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00135
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69467
ER08NO11.020
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00136
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
ER08NO11.021
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69468
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00137
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69469
ER08NO11.022
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00138
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
ER08NO11.023
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69470
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
PO 00000
Frm 00139
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69471
ER08NO11.024
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
BILLING CODE 6351–01–C
PART 140—ORGANIZATION,
FUNCTIONS, AND PROCEDURES OF
THE COMMISSION
9. The authority citation for part 140
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 2 and 12a.
10. Amend § 140.94 by revising the
section heading and paragraph (a)(5),
redesignating paragraph (a)(6) as
paragraph (a)(7), revise newly
redesignated paragraph (a)(7), and add
new paragraphs (a)(6) and (a)(8) through
(a)(14) to read as follows:
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
■
§ 140.94 Delegation of authority to the
Director of the Division of Clearing and
Risk.
(a) * * *
(5) All functions reserved to the
Commission in § 5.14 of this chapter;
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
(6) All functions reserved to the
Commission in §§ 39.3(a)(2) and (a)(3) of
this chapter;
(7) All functions reserved to the
Commission in §§ 39.5(b)(2), (b)(3)(ix),
and (d)(3) of this chapter;
(8) All functions reserved to the
Commission in § 39.10(c)(4)(iv) of this
chapter;
(9) All functions reserved to the
Commission in §§ 39.11(b)(1)(vi),
(b)(2)(ii), (c)(1), (c)(2), (f)(1) and (f)(4) of
this chapter;
(10) All functions reserved to the
Commission in § 39.12(a)(5)(i)(B) of this
chapter;
(11) All functions reserved to the
Commission in §§ 39.13(g)(8)(ii),
(h)(1)(i)(C), (h)(1)(ii), (h)(3)(i), (h)(3)(ii),
and (h)(5)(i)(A) of this chapter;
(12) The authority to request
additional information in support of a
rule submission under
§ 39.15(b)(2)(iii)(A) of this chapter and
in support of a petition pursuant to
PO 00000
Frm 00140
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
section 4d of the Act under
§ 39.15(b)(2)(iii)(B) of this chapter;
(13) All functions reserved to the
Commission in §§ 39.19(c)(3)(iv),
(c)(5)(i), (c)(5)(ii), and (c)(5)(iii) of this
chapter; and
(14) All functions reserved to the
Commission in § 39.21(d) of this
chapter.
Issued in Washington, DC, on October 18,
2011, by the Commission.
David A. Stawick,
Secretary of the Commission.
Appendices to Derivatives Clearing
Organization General Provisions and
Core Principles—Commission Voting
Summary and Statements of
Commissioners
Note: The following appendices will not
appear in the Code of Federal Regulations
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
ER08NO11.025
69472
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
Appendix 1—Commission Voting
Summary
On this matter, Chairman Gensler and
Commissioners Dunn and Chilton voted
in the affirmative; Commissioners
Sommers and O’Malia voted in the
negative.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Appendix 2—Statement of Chairman
Gary Gensler
I support the final rulemaking on core
principles for derivatives clearing
organizations (DCOs). Centralized
clearing has been a feature of the U.S.
futures markets since the late-19th
century. Clearinghouses have
functioned both in clear skies and
during stormy times—through the Great
Depression, numerous bank failures,
two world wars, and the 2008 financial
crisis—to lower risk to the economy.
Importantly, centralized clearing
protects banks and their customers from
the risk of either party failing.
When customers don’t clear their
transactions, they take on their dealer’s
credit risk. We have seen over many
decades, however, that banks do fail.
Centralized clearing protects all market
participants by requiring daily mark to
market valuations and requiring
collateral to be posted by both parties so
that both the swap dealer and its
customers are protected if either fails. It
lowers the interconnectedness between
financial entities that helped spread risk
throughout the economy when banks
began to fail in 2008.
Today’s rulemaking will establish
certain regulatory requirements for
DCOs to implement important core
principles that were revised by the
Dodd-Frank Act. We recognize the need
for very robust risk management
standards, particularly as more swaps
are moved into central clearinghouses.
We have incorporated the newest draft
Committee on Payment and Settlement
Systems (CPSS)-International
Organization of Securities Commissions
(IOSCO) standards for central
counterparties into our final rules.
First, the financial resources and risk
management requirements will
strengthen financial integrity and
enhance legal certainty for
clearinghouses. We’re adopting a
requirement that DCOs collect initial
margin on a gross basis for its clearing
member’s customer accounts For
interest rates and financial index swaps,
such as credit default swaps, we are
maintaining, as proposed, a minimum
margin for a five-day liquidation period.
This is consistent with current market
practice, and many commenters
recommended this as a minimum. For
the clearing of physical commodity
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
swaps, such as on energy, metals and
agricultural products, we are requiring
margin that is risk-based but consistent
with current market practice—a
minimum of one day. Maintaining a
minimum five day liquidation period
for interest rates and credit default
swaps is appropriate not only as it is
consistent with current market practice,
but also as these markets are the most
systemically relevant for the
interconnected financial system. History
shows that, in 2008, it took five days
after the failure of Lehman Brothers for
the clearinghouse to transfer Lehman’s
interest rate swaps positions to other
clearing members. These financial
resource requirements, and particularly
the margin requirements, are critical for
safety and soundness as more swaps are
moved into central clearing.
Second, the rulemaking implements
the Dodd-Frank Act’s requirement for
open access to DCOs. The participant
eligibility requirements promote fair
and open access to clearing.
Importantly, the rule addresses how a
futures commission merchant can
become a member of a DCO. The rule
promotes more inclusiveness while
allowing DCO to scale a member’s
participation and risk based upon its
capital. This improves competition that
will benefit end-users of swaps, while
protecting DCOs’ ability manage risk.
Third, the reporting requirements will
ensure that the Commission has the
information it needs to monitor DCO
compliance with the Commodity
Exchange Act and Commission
regulations.
Fourth, the rules formalize the DCO
application procedures to bring about
greater uniformity and transparency in
the application process and facilitate
greater efficiency and consistency in
processing applications.
These reforms will both lower risk in
the financial system and strengthen the
market by making many of the processes
more efficient and consistent.
Appendix 3—Statement of
Commissioner Jill Sommers
The final rules adopted by the
Commission today for derivatives
clearing organizations (DCOs) will
implement a key component of the
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank)
to facilitate centralized clearing of both
exchange-traded and over-the-counter
swaps. While I fully support the
centralized clearing of swaps, I
reluctantly cannot support the final
DCO rules.
In my opinion, the rules are
needlessly prescriptive, internally
inconsistent, and depart from the
PO 00000
Frm 00141
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69473
Commission’s time-tested principlesbased oversight regime, with little to no
explanation of the costs and benefits of
doing so, or even a rationale other than
an overarching belief that prescriptive
rules will increase legal certainty and
prevent a race to the bottom by
competing clearinghouses. A few
examples will illustrate my point.
Rule 39.11(a)(1) requires a DCO to
maintain sufficient financial resources
to cover a default by its largest clearing
member. Rule 39.11(a)(2) requires a
DCO to maintain sufficient financial
resources to cover its operating costs for
a period of at least one year. Rules
39.11(b)(1) and (b)(2) list the types of
financial resources deemed sufficiently
liquid to meet the requirements of Rules
39.11(a)(1) and (a)(2). The preamble to
the rules states that letters of credit are
not an acceptable financial resource for
purposes of Rules 39.11(a)(1) or (a)(2),
but may be allowed on a case-by-case
basis. Letters of credit are also banned
for purposes of Rule 39.11(e)(1) (cash
obligations), and Rule 39.11(e)(3)
(guaranty fund obligations), neither of
which allow for a case-by-case
determination. When it comes to initial
margin, letters of credit are allowed for
futures and options without
qualification, but banned for swaps.
These distinctions, in my opinion, are
not legally or factually justifiable. The
ability to draw on safe, liquid assets is
critical in all of the situations described
above. We should treat letters of credit
the same way unless there is a
compelling reason not to. This is
especially true given the fact that
banning their use as initial margin for
swaps will have the perverse,
unintended consequence of
disincentivizing voluntary clearing by
commercial end-users who support their
swaps positions using letters of credit—
a result that is directly at odds with the
goals of Dodd-Frank.
Another example can be found in
Rule 39.13(g)(2)(ii), which establishes a
one-day minimum liquidation time for
calculating initial margin for futures and
options, a one-day minimum liquidation
time for swaps on agricultural, metal,
and energy commodities, and a five-day
minimum liquidation time for all other
swaps. In the cost-benefit analysis, the
Commission states that ‘‘using only one
criterion—i.e., the characteristic of the
commodity underlying a swap—to
determine liquidation time could result
in less-than-optimal margin
calculations.’’ The Commission goes on
to describe the complex nature of
calculating appropriate margin levels,
which includes the ability to assess
quantitative factors such as the risk
characteristics of the instrument traded,
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
69474
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
its historical price volatility and
liquidity in the relevant market, as well
as ‘‘expert judgment as to the extent to
which such characteristics and data may
be an accurate predictor of future
market behavior with respect to such
instruments, and [the application of]
such judgment to the quantitative
results.’’ We then explain that the
Commission is not capable of
determining the risk characteristics,
price volatility and market liquidity of
even a sample of swaps for purposes of
determining an appropriate liquidation
time for specific swaps.
In the face of our admitted inability to
determine appropriate liquidation times
for particular swaps, we are picking a
one-day time for some, based on the
underlying commodity, and a five-day
time for all others, even though this
‘‘could result in less-than-optimal
margin calculations.’’ This defies
common sense.
The only reason we give for
eliminating the long-standing discretion
of the acknowledged experts, i.e., the
DCOs, to determine the appropriate
liquidation times for the transactions
they clear is to prevent a feared race to
the bottom by DCOs who will compete
to clear swaps in the future. We
acknowledge, however, that DCOs have
used reasonable and prudent judgment
in establishing liquidation times in the
past, including DCOs that currently
compete in the swaps clearing space.
The Commission gives no reason for its
belief that there may be a race to the
bottom if we do not establish this less
than ideal methodology. Nor does the
Commission acknowledge the existence
of other safeguards in the rules that give
us strong tools for policing a potential
race to the bottom.
With the passage of Dodd-Frank,
Congress gave the Commission broad
authority to regulate swap transactions,
swap markets and swap market
participants. I do not believe, however,
that Congress intended for the
Commission to strip DCOs of the
flexibility to determine the manner in
which they comply with core
principles, as we have done with these
rules. Our registered DCOs have a strong
track record of prudent risk
management, including during the
financial crisis, and there is no reason
to believe they will not continue to use
their expert judgment in a responsible
fashion. Moreover, unnecessary and
inflexible rules, such as these, will
prevent DCOs from quickly adapting to
changing market conditions for no
apparent benefit. I therefore dissent.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
Appendix 4—Statement of
Commissioner Scott O’Malia
Today, the Commission approved a
final rulemaking on the operation of
derivatives clearing organizations (each,
a ‘‘DCO’’).289 Of the Dodd-Frank
rulemakings that the Commission has so
far undertaken, this rulemaking is
among the most important. I have been
a strong proponent of clearing. In the
aftermath of the Enron crisis, I
witnessed first-hand how the creation of
ClearPort ameliorated counterparty
credit fears in the energy merchant
markets and restored liquidity to those
markets. I am certain that clearing will
similarly benefit the swaps market,290
particularly by significantly expanding
execution on electronic platforms,
thereby increasing price transparency
and discovery. Moreover, as we have
seen in the 2008 financial crisis,
clearing has the potential to mitigate
systemic risk, by ensuring that swap
counterparties—not hardworking
American taxpayers—post collateral to
support their exposures.
The main goal of this final rulemaking
is to ensure that clearing contributes to
the integrity of the United States
financial system by, among other things,
allowing entities other than the largest
dealer banks to offer clearing services to
commercial and financial end-users. I
fully support this goal. However, in an
attempt to achieve this goal, this
rulemaking abandons the principlesbased regulatory regime which
permitted DCOs to perform so
admirably in the 2008 financial crisis.
Instead, the final rulemaking sets forth
a series of prescriptive requirements. I
disagree with this approach. DCO risk
management poses complex and
multidimensional challenges. One DCO
may have a significantly different risk
profile than another. Consequently, each
DCO must have sufficient discretion to
match requirements to risks. The role of
the Commission is to oversee the
exercise of such discretion, not to
prevent such exercise.291
289 Derivatives Clearing Organizations (to be
codified at 17 CFR pts. 1, 21, 39, and 140), available
at: https://www.cftc.gov/PressRoom/Events/
opaevent_cftcdoddfrank101811 (the ‘‘DCO Final
Rule’’).
290 See Kathryn Chen et al., An Analysis of CDS
Transactions: Implications for Public Reporting,
Federal Reserve Bank of New York Staff Report no.
517 (September 2011), available at: https://
www.newyorkfed.org/research/staff_reports/
sr517.pdf (stating that ‘‘[c]learing-eligible products
within our sample traded on more days and had
more intraday transactions than non-clearing
eligible products’’).
291 See section 3(b) of the Commodity Exchange
Act (CEA), 7 U.S.C. 5(b) (stating that ‘‘[i]t is the
purpose of this Act to serve the public interests
* * * through a system of effective self-regulation
of trading facilities, clearing systems, market
PO 00000
Frm 00142
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Additionally, I am mindful of the cost
of clearing and want to ensure that such
cost does not constitute a barrier to
entry. Certain provisions in this final
rulemaking may impose substantial
costs without corresponding benefits.
Such provisions may discourage market
participants from executing transactions
subject to mandatory clearing, even if
they need such transactions to
prudently hedge risks, or from clearing
on a voluntary basis. By creating
perverse incentives to keep risk outside
of the regulatory framework, and to
leave it within our commercial and
financial enterprises, the DCO rules
undermine a fundamental purpose of
the Dodd-Frank Act—namely, the
expansion of clearing.
I will elaborate on each concern in
turn.
Participant Eligibility: One-Size Does
Not Fit All
This final rulemaking prohibits a DCO
from requiring more than $50 million in
capital from any entity seeking to
become a swaps clearing member. This
number makes a great headline, mainly
because it is so low. It also sends an
unequivocal message to DCOs that have
clearing members that are primarily
dealer banks. However, in adopting and
interpreting this requirement, the
Commission may unwisely limit the
range of legitimate actions that DCOs
can take to manage their counterparty
risks. By imposing such limitations, the
Commission is introducing costs to
clearing that it fails to detail and
explore.
Let me be plain. I oppose
anticompetitive behavior. However, an
entity with $50 million in capitalization
may not be an appropriate clearing
member for every DCO. The $50 million
threshold prevents DCOs from engaging
in anticompetitive behavior but also
prohibits DCOs from taking legitimate,
risk-reducing actions. Instead of
adopting this prescriptive requirement,
the Commission should have provided
principles-based guidance to DCOs on
the other components of fair and open
access, such as the standard for less
restrictive participation
requirements.292 By taking a more
principles-based approach, the
Commission could have been in greater
accord with international regulators,
one of which explicitly cautioned
against the $50 million threshold.293
participants and market professionals under the
oversight of the Commission.’’).
292 The DCO Final Rule, supra note 289, at 387–
388 (to be codified at 17 CFR 39.12(a)(1)).
293 See letter, dated March 21, 2011, from the
United Kingdom Financial Services Authority
(‘‘FSA’’), available at https://comments.cftc.gov/
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
Basis for the $50 Million?
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
How did the Commission determine
that the $50 million threshold is
appropriate? It is not really evident from
the notice of proposed rulemaking.294 In
the final rulemaking, the Commission
states that the $50 million threshold was
derived from the fact that most
registered futures commission
merchants (‘‘FCMs’’) that are currently
DCO clearing members have at least $50
million in capital.295
The final rulemaking, however, does
not answer a number of questions that
are crucial to determining whether the
$50 million threshold is appropriate for
all swap transactions. These questions
include, without limitation: What types
of products do the referenced FCMs
currently clear? Are there differences
between the capital distributions of
FCMs that clear different products? If
so, what are such differences?
The answers to these questions are
important because FCMs may need
different amounts of capital to support
their exposures to different products.
Assume, for example, that the average
capitalization of FCMs clearing
agricultural futures is $50 million.
Further assume that an FCM has $50
million in capital, and is seeking to
become a clearing member. The
Commission may reasonably conclude
that such FCM would have the
resources to clear agricultural futures. It
may also reasonably conclude that such
FCM would have the resources to clear
agricultural swaps that have the same
terms and conditions as agricultural
futures. The Commission cannot
reasonably conclude, however, that
such FCM would have the resources to
clear credit default swaps.
By not setting forth the answers to
questions such as these, the final
rulemaking creates the impression that
the $50 million threshold is arbitrary,
and renders vulnerable its conclusion
that the threshold ‘‘captures firms that
the Commission believes have the
financial, operational, and staffing
resources to participate in clearing
PublicComments/CommentList.aspx?id=957
(stating that ‘‘whilst capital thresholds or other
participation eligibility threshold limitations may
be a potential tool to help ensure fair and open
access to [central counterparties (‘‘CCPs’’)], to
impose them on clearing arrangements for products
that have complex or unique characteristics could
lead to increased risk to the system in the short to
medium term.’’)
294 See Risk Management Requirements for
Derivatives Clearing Organizations, 76 FR 3698,
3791 (Jan. 20, 2011).
295 See the DCO Final Rule, supra note 289, at 83
to 84 (further stating that ‘‘of 126 FCMs, 63
currently have capital above $50 million and most
FCMs with capital below that amount are not
clearing members.’’).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
swaps without posing an unacceptable
level of risk to a DCO.’’ 296
Anticompetitive behavior? Or
legitimate, risk-reducing action?
The final rulemaking recognizes that
DCOs may increase capital requirements
for legitimate, risk-reducing reasons. In
fact, the final rulemaking requires a
DCO to ‘‘set forth capital requirements
that * * * appropriately match capital
to risk.’’ 297 Further, the final
rulemaking mandates DCOs to ‘‘require
clearing members to have access to
sufficient financial resources to meet
obligations arising from participation in
the [DCO] in extreme but plausible
market conditions.’’ 298 The final
rulemaking states that a DCO ‘‘may
permit such financial resources to
include, without limitation, a clearing
member’s capital.’’ 299
The final rulemaking, however,
provides little insight on how the
Commission intends to differentiate
between (i) a required risk-based
increase in capital requirements and (ii)
an illegitimate attempt to circumvent
the $50 million threshold to squash
competition. To use an example
grounded in reality—ICE Clear Credit
recently lowered its minimum capital
requirement for clearing members to
$100 million. However, it added a
requirement that clearing members hold
excess net capital equal to 5 percent of
their segregated customer funds. Upon
learning about the additional
requirement, at least two existing FCMs
complained that it violates fair and open
access.300 The final rulemaking gives
very little guidance on the criteria that
the Commission will apply in
adjudicating a dispute such as this. The
preamble to the final rulemaking simply
states: ‘‘A DCO may not * * * [enact]
some additional financial requirement
296 Id.
at 83.
at 388 (to be codified at 17 CFR
39.12(a)(2)(ii)) (further stating that ‘‘[c]apital
requirements shall be scalable to risks posed by
clearing members’’.).
298 Id. (to be codified at 17 CFR 39.12(a)(2)(i)).
299 Id. Additionally, the notice of proposed
rulemaking states: ‘‘Proposed §§ 39.12(a)(2)(ii) and
39.12(a)(2)(iii), considered together, would require
a DCO to admit any person to clearing membership
for the purpose of clearing swaps, if the person had
$50 million in capital, but would permit a DCO to
require each clearing member to hold capital
proportional to its risk exposure. Thus, if a clearing
member’s risk exposure were to increase in a nonlinear manner, the DCO could increase the clearing
member’s corresponding scalable capital
requirement in a non-linear manner.’’ 76 FR at
3701.
300 See Matthew Leising, ‘‘ICE Clear Credit’s
Member Rules Too Exclusive, Small Firms Say,’’
Bloomberg, Aug. 9, 2011, available at: https://
www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-08-09/ice-clearcredit-s-member-rules-too-exclusive-small-firmssay.html.
297 Id.
PO 00000
Frm 00143
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69475
that effectively renders the $50 million
threshold meaningless for some
potential clearing members.’’ It further
states that such a requirement would
violate the other components of fair and
open access, such as ‘‘§ 39.12(a)(1)(i)
(less restrictive alternatives), or
§ 39.12(a)(1)(iii) (exclusion of certain
types of firms).’’ 301 This vague
statement provides no legal certainty or
bright lines for DCOs and potential
clearing members to follow.
If I were running a DCO, I would be
extremely confused. On the one hand,
the final rulemaking requires me to
match capital requirements to risk. On
the other hand, the preamble suggests
that I cannot increase capital
requirements (or any other financial
requirement), if that would prohibit
some entities with $50 million in
capitalization from becoming clearing
members. How should I resolve this
conundrum?
Hidden Costs
If a DCO took a narrow interpretation
of the reference to financial
requirements in the preamble, then it
has only one alternative: (i) Admit any
entity with $50 million in capital as a
clearing member and (ii) impose strict
risk limits.302 How strict could such
limits be? To lend some context to this
$50 million threshold, a recent report
from the staff of the Federal Reserve
Bank of New York observed that $50
million tended to be the notional value
of one single transaction in a credit
default swap index with relatively high
liquidity.303
Assuming that the Commission does
not require the DCO to increase its risk
limits,304 where does this situation
leave the DCO? The DCO would need to
incur the cost of (i) evaluating
applications from all entities with $50
million in capital, (ii) operationally
connecting to such entities, and (iii)
potentially defending itself against
claims from such entities that the risk
limits or financial requirements are too
stringent. The DCO may pass on such
costs to clearing members, which may
pass on such costs to commercial and
financial end-users. In the meantime,
such entities, when admitted, may be
unable to clear any significant volume
301 The
DCO Final Rule, supra note 289, at 85–
86.
302 The final rulemaking requires DCOs to impose
risk limits on clearing members. See id. at 399 to
400 (to be codified at 17 CFR 39.13(h)(1)).
303 See supra note.
304 See the DCO Final Rule, supra note 289, at 399
to 400 (to be codified at 17 CFR 39.13(h)(1)(i)(C))
(stating that ‘‘[t]he Commission may review such
methods, thresholds, and financial resources and
require the application of different methods,
thresholds, or financial resources, as appropriate.’’).
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69476
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
of transactions, for themselves or for
customers, especially in asset classes
such as credit default swaps. Under this
scenario, rather than leading to fair and
open access, the $50 million threshold
may actually impede access to clearing
by commercial and financial end-users,
because the threshold would increase
their costs without introducing
meaningful competition among FCMs
offering clearing services.
If, on the other hand, a DCO took a
more aggressive interpretation of the
reference to financial requirements in
the preamble, then it may have other
alternatives to mitigate risks that
admitting an entity with $50 million in
capital may introduce. For example, it
may increase margin requirements. It
may also increase guaranty fund
contributions for all clearing members,
in proportion to their clearing activity.
In other words, a DCO may increase the
overall cost of clearing in order to
compensate for the risks of having lesser
capitalized new clearing members.
What are the potential effects of such
increases? It is difficult to determine
from our cost-benefit analysis. The
analysis does not identify increases in
margin or guaranty fund contributions
as potential costs, much less attempt to
quantify such costs.305 However, if the
increases in costs are significant, and if
such increases apply to a wide range of
clearing members (because the DCO
fears being accused of unjustified
discrimination),306 then such increases
would most definitely influence
whether commercial and financial
entities voluntarily clear or even enter
into hedges in the first place.
305 Interestingly, the preamble notes that at least
two commenters agreed that a DCO may
legitimately use such increases to moderate the risk
of a member with only $50 million in capital.
Specifically, the preamble states: ‘‘Newedge
commented that the proposed rule should not
increase risk to a DCO because a DCO can mitigate
risk by, among other things, imposing position
limits, stricter margin requirements, or stricter
default deposit requirements on lesser capitalized
clearing members.’’ The preamble also states: ‘‘J.P.
Morgan, however, commented that a cap on a
member’s minimum capital requirement would not
impact the systemic stability of a DCO as long as
* * * DCOs hold a sufficient amount of margin and
funded default guarantee funds.’’ Id. at 80 to 82. It
is therefore unclear why the cost-benefit analysis
did not address the potential for such increases.
306 See id. at 387 (to be codified at 17 CFR
39.12(a)(1)(iii)) (stating that ‘‘[a] derivatives clearing
organization shall not exclude or limit clearing
membership of certain types of market participants
unless the derivatives clearing organization can
demonstrate that the restriction is necessary to
address credit risk or deficiencies in the
participants’ operational capabilities that would
prevent them from fulfilling their obligations as
clearing members.’’ The regulation contains no
further detail regarding what type of demonstration
would be sufficient.).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
Principles-Based Regulation Is a Better
Solution
I propose a simple solution that
would have addressed the confusion
and hidden costs resulting from the $50
million threshold. The Commission
should have eliminated the threshold.
The threshold adds no value to the other
components of fair and open access.307
Given that the final rulemaking
rightfully requires a DCO to properly
manage its risks, one or more DCOs
would inevitably impose some sort of
financial requirement that would
prevent entities with $50 million (or
more) in capital from directly
participating in clearing. At that point,
the Commission would not be able to
opine on such a requirement without
looking to the other components of fair
and open access. As a result, it would
have served the Commission well to
have focused in the first instance on
setting forth principles-based guidance
on such components.308 Moreover,
principles-based guidance would have
brought the Commission into greater
accord with certain international
regulators,309 current international
standards on CCP regulation,310 as well
307 In
legal parlance, the $50 million threshold is
neither necessary nor sufficient to determining
whether a DCO has violated fair and open access.
The threshold is not necessary because a DCO can
set an even lower minimum capital requirement
and still violate fair and open access if another
requirement ‘‘excludes or limits clearing
membership of certain types of market
participants.’’ Id. (to be codified at 17 CFR
39.12(a)(1)(iii)). The threshold is not sufficient
because, even if the DCO accepts all entities with
$50 million in capital as clearing members, the
Commission may still hold that DCO violated fair
and open access if it imposes ‘‘some additional
financial requirement that effectively renders the
$50 million threshold meaningless.’’ Id. at 85–86.
308 In such guidance, the Commission could have
detailed the information that a DCO would need to
provide in order to demonstrate that it could not
adopt a less restrictive participation requirement
without materially increasing its own risk. The
Commission could have also discussed the weight
that DCOs should accord to a particular level of
capitalization, depending on whether the relevant
clearing member (i) engages in businesses other
than the intermediation of futures or swaps, or (ii)
participates at multiple DCOs rather than one DCO.
309 See supra note. I note that the Commission
and FSA share jurisdiction over three DCOs
clearing swaps—namely, LCH.Clearnet Limited, ICE
Clear Europe Limited, and CME Clearing Europe.
How the Commission and FSA will resolve
conflicting regulation remains to be seen.
310 See Bank for International Settlements’
Committee on Payment and Settlement Systems and
Technical Committee of the International
Organization of Securities Commissions (‘‘CPSS–
IOSCO’’), ‘‘Recommendations for Central
Counterparties,’’ CPSS Publ’n No. 64 (November
2004), available at: https://www.bis.org/publ/
cpss64.pdf (the ‘‘CPSS–IOSCO Recommendations’’).
Section 4.2.2 of the CPSS–IOSCO
Recommendations state: ‘‘To reduce the likelihood
of a participant’s default and to ensure timely
performance by the participant, a CCP should
establish rigorous financial requirements for
PO 00000
Frm 00144
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
as the proposed revisions to such
standards.311
Costs Without Benefits: Minimum
Liquidation Time Requirements
I have consistently highlighted that
our rulemakings are interconnected and
that the Commission has an obligation
to analyze the cost impact across
rulemakings. In this instance, I am
concerned about the relationship
between this final rulemaking and our
proposal interpreting core principle 9
for designated contract markets (DCMs),
which may be finalized in the future.312
Although this relationship may result in
significant costs for the market, this
final rulemaking fails to disclose such
costs.
Specifically, this final rulemaking
requires a DCO to calculate margin
using different minimum liquidation
times for different products. A DCO
must calculate margin for (i) futures
based on a one-day minimum
liquidation time, (ii) agricultural,
energy, and metals swaps based on a
one-day minimum liquidation time, and
(iii) all other swaps based on a five-day
minimum liquidation time.313
No Policy Basis for Minimum
Liquidation Times
As a preliminary matter, this final
rulemaking creates the impression that
these requirements are arbitrary, like the
$50 million threshold. Although the
final rulemaking characterizes these
requirements as ‘‘prudent,’’ it sets forth
participation. Participants are typically required to
meet minimum capital standards. Some CCPs
impose more stringent capital requirements if
exposures of or carried by a participant are large or
if the participant is a clearing participant. Capital
requirements for participation may also take
account of the types of products cleared by a CCP.
In addition to capital requirements, some CCPs
impose standards such as a minimum credit rating
or parental guarantees.’’
311 See CPSS–IOSCO, ‘‘Principles for financial
market infrastructures: Consultative report,’’ CPSS
Publ’n No. 94 (March 2011), available at: https://
www.bis.org/publ/cpss94.pdf (the ‘‘CPSS–IOSCO
Consultation’’). The CPSS–IOSCO Consultation,
which CPSS–IOSCO has not adopted as final, does
not set forth any requirement or suggestion that
resembles the $50 million threshold. Instead, the
Consultation, like the Recommendations,
emphasizes the importance of ‘‘risk-based’’ CCP
participation criteria that are not unduly
discriminatory. Specifically, Section 3.16.6 of the
CPSS–IOSCO Consultation states: ‘‘Participation
requirements based solely on a participant’s size are
typically insufficiently related to risk and deserve
careful scrutiny.’’ Whereas the Consultation may
have intended to comment on restrictively high
CCP participation requirements, the same logic
applies to restrictively low CCP participation
requirements. Neither are risk-based.
312 See Core Principles and Other Requirements
for Designated Contract Markets, 75 FR 80572 (Dec.
22, 2010).
313 See the DCO Core Principles, supra note 289,
at 393–394 (to be codified at 17 CFR 39.13(g)(2)(ii)).
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
no justification for this
characterization.314 According to the
final rulemaking, DCOs should consider
at least five factors in establishing
minimum liquidation times for its
products, including trading volume,
open interest, and predictable
relationships with highly liquid
products.315 In setting forth such
factors, the Commission is holding
DCOs to a higher standard than it holds
itself. The final rulemaking presents no
evidence that the Commission
considered any of the five factors in
determining minimum liquidation
times.316
Negative Implications for Competition
More importantly, when these
requirements are juxtaposed against our
proposal interpreting DCM core
principle 9, the potential of these
requirements to disrupt already
established futures markets becomes
apparent. In the proposal, which is
entitled Core Principles and Other
Requirements for Designated Contract
Markets, the Commission proposed, in a
departure from previous interpretations
of DCM core principle 9, to prohibit a
DCM from listing any contract for
trading unless an average of 85 percent
or greater of the total volume of such
contract is traded on the centralized
market, as calculated over a twelve (12)
month period.317 If the Commission
finalizes such proposal, then DCMs may
need to delist hundreds of futures
contracts.318 Financial contracts may be
314 See
id. at 126–127.
to the final rulemaking, such
factors are: ‘‘(i) Average daily trading volume in a
product; (ii) average daily open interest in a
product; (iii) concentration of open interest; (iv)
availability of a predictable basis relationship with
a highly liquid product; and (v) availability of
multiple market participants in related markets to
take on positions in the market in question.’’ Id. at
129.
316 Instead of considering the five factors, the
Commission appears to have simply codified the
minimum liquidations times that certain DCOs
currently use for swaps. For example, the
Commission justifies setting a minimum liquidation
time of five days for swaps referencing non-physical
commodities as follows: ‘‘The longer liquidation
time, currently five days for credit default swaps at
ICE Clear Credit LLC and CME, and for interest rate
swaps at LCH and CME, is based on their
assessment of the higher risk associated with these
products.’’ Id. at 127–128. Given that this
justification appears to focus on credit default
swaps and interest rate swaps, it is unclear how the
Commission concluded that a five-day minimum
liquidation time is appropriate for swaps that
reference financial commodities but are neither
credit default swaps nor interest rate swaps.
317 75 FR at 80616.
318 According to information that I have received
from one DCM, the proposal would force
conversion of 628 futures and options contracts to
swap contracts. Moreover, according to the OffMarket Volume Study (May-2010 through July2010) prepared by Commission staff, the proposal
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
315 According
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
affected, along with contracts in
agricultural commodities, energy
commodities, and metals.
According to the proposal, DCMs may
convert delisted futures contracts to
swap contracts.319 However, if the
futures contracts reference financial
commodities, then this final rulemaking
would require that a DCO margin such
swap contracts using a minimum
liquidation time of five days instead of
one day for futures. If nothing
substantive about the contracts change
other than their characterization (i.e.,
futures to swaps), then how can the
Commission justify such a substantial
increase in minimum liquidation time
and margin? An increase of this
magnitude may well result in a chilling
of activity in the affected contracts.
Such chilling would be an example of
the type of market disruption that the
CEA was intended to avoid.
I believe this has severe implications
for competition. As commenters to the
DCM proposal noted, market
participants generally execute new
futures contracts outside the DCM
centralized market until the contracts
attract sufficient liquidity. Attracting
such liquidity may take years.320 Let us
assume that an established DCM already
lists a commercially viable futures
contract on a financial commodity that
meets the 85 percent threshold. Even
without the DCM proposal and this final
rulemaking, a DCM seeking to compete
by listing a futures contract with the
same terms and conditions already faces
an uphill battle. Now with the DCM
proposal, the competitor DCM would
have to also face the constant threat of
being required to convert the futures
contract into a swap contract.
With this final rulemaking, the
competitor DCM (or a competitor swap
execution facility (SEF)) faces the
additional threat that, by virtue of such
conversion, the contract would be
margined using a five-day minimum
liquidation time. In contrast, the
incumbent futures contract—which may
have the same terms and conditions as
would force conversion of approximately 493
futures and options contracts. See Off-Market
Volume Study, available at: https://www.cftc.gov/
LawRegulation/DoddFrankAct/Rulemakings/
DF_12_DCMRules/index.htm.
319 See 75 FR at 80589–90.
320 See letter, dated February 22, 2011, from
NYSE Liffe U.S., available at: https://
comments.cftc.gov/PublicComments/
ViewComment.aspx?id=27910&SearchText=. See
also letter, dated February 22, 2011, from ELX
Futures, L.P., available at: https://comments.cftc.gov/
PublicComments/
ViewComment.aspx?id=27873&SearchText=. See
further letter, dated February 22, 2011, from Eris
Exchange, LLC, available at: https://
comments.cftc.gov/PublicComments/
ViewComment.aspx?id=27853&SearchText=.
PO 00000
Frm 00145
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69477
the new ‘‘swap’’ contract—would still
be margined using a one-day minimum
liquidation time. It is difficult to
imagine a DCM (or a competitor SEF)
willing to compete given the twin
Swords of Damocles that it would need
to confront. By dissuading such
competition, this final rulemaking and
the DCM proposal undermine the
‘‘responsible innovation and fair
competition among boards of trade’’ that
the CEA was intended to promote.321
Some may argue that this final
rulemaking would not have the negative
effects that I articulated because it
explicitly permits the Commission to
establish, either sua sponte or upon
DCO petition, longer or shorter
liquidation times for particular products
or portfolios.322 I would argue that
requiring market participants, during
the pendency of such a petition, to pay
margin calculated using a five-day
minimum liquidation time would likely
cause a substantial number of market
participants to withdraw from the
market, thereby chilling activity—
perhaps irrevocably—in the contract. I
would further argue that the additional
cost that (i) a DCM would incur to
persuade a DCO to file a petition with
the Commission and (ii) a DCM or DCO
would incur to prepare such a petition,
when coupled with the possibility that
the Commission may deny such
petition, would likely deter a DCM from
seeking to compete with an incumbent
futures contract. After all, the
Commission may take a long time to
consider any DCO petition. For
example, the Commission took
approximately two years to approve a
petition to reduce the minimum
liquidation time for certain contracts on
the Dubai Mercantile Exchange from
two days to one day.323 Thus, this
power to petition the Commission for
relief may be of little value to offset the
likely stifling of competition.
Return to Principles-Based Regulation
What should the Commission have
done to avoid market disruption and a
curtailment in competition? Again, the
Commission should have retained a
principles-based regime, and should
have permitted each DCO to determine
the appropriate minimum liquidation
time for its products, using the five
factors articulated above. Determining
321 See
section 3(b) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 5(b).
the DCO Final Rule, supra note 289, at 394
(to be codified at 17 CFR 39.13(g)(2)(ii)(D)).
323 The petition is available at: https://
www.cftc.gov/PressRoom/PressReleases/pr5724-09.
The petition was filed on July 28, 2009. The
Commission issued an order granting the petition
on September 16, 2011. The order does not appear
on the Commission Web site.
322 See
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69478
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
appropriate margin requirements
involves quantitative and qualitative
expertise. Such expertise resides in the
DCOs and not in the Commission. In its
cost-benefit analysis, the final
rulemaking admits as much.324
Returning to a principles-based regime
would have also better aligned with
current international standards on CCP
regulation,325 as well as the revisions to
such standards.326
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
The ‘‘Race to the Bottom’’ Argument
Simply Cannot Withstand Scrutiny
Some may argue that, by not imposing
minimum liquidation times, the
324 See the DCO Final Rule, supra note 289, at
315–316 (stating that ‘‘[i]n addition to the
liquidation time frame, the margin requirements for
a particular instrument depend upon a variety of
characteristics of the instrument and the markets in
which it is traded, including the risk characteristics
of the instrument, its historical price volatility, and
liquidity in the relevant market. Determining such
margin requirements does not solely depend upon
such quantitative factors, but also requires expert
judgment as to the extent to which such
characteristics and data may be an accurate
predictor of future market behavior with respect to
such instruments, and applying such judgment to
the quantitative results * * * Determining the risk
characteristics, price volatility, and market liquidity
of even a sample for purposes of determining a
liquidation time specifically for such instrument
would be a formidable task for the Commission to
undertake and any results would be subject to a
range of uncertainty.’’).
325 See supra note 310. With respect to minimum
liquidation times, Section 4.4.3 of the CPSS–IOSCO
Recommendations simply state: ‘‘Margin
requirements impose opportunity costs on CCP
participants. So, a CCP needs to strike a balance
between greater protection for itself and higher
opportunity costs for its participants. For this
reason, margin requirements are not designed to
cover price risk in all market conditions.
Nonetheless, a CCP should estimate the interval
between the last margin collection before default
and the liquidation of positions in a particular
product, and hold sufficient margin to cover
potential losses over that interval in normal market
conditions.’’
326 See also supra note 311. Like the CPSS–
IOSCO Recommendations, the CPSS–IOSCO
Consultation also advocates a principles-based
model for estimating minimum liquidation times.
Section 3.6.7 of the CPSS–IOSCO Consultation
states: ‘‘A CCP should select an appropriate closeout period for each product cleared by the CCP, and
document the close-out periods and related analysis
for each product type. A CCP should base its closeout period upon historical price and liquidity data
when developing its initial margin methodology.
Historical data should include the worst events that
occurred in the selected time period for the product
cleared as well as simulated data projections that
would capture potential events outside of the
historical data. In certain instances, a CCP may
need to determine margin levels using a shorter
historical period to reflect better new or current
volatility in the market. Conversely, a CCP may
need to determine margin levels based on a longer
period in order to reflect past volatility. The closeout period should be set based on anticipated closeout times in stressed market conditions. Close-out
periods should be set on a product-specific basis,
as less-liquid products might require significantly
longer close-out periods. A CCP should also
consider and address position concentrations,
which can lengthen close-out timeframes and add
to price volatility during close outs.’’
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
Commission may enable a ‘‘race to the
bottom,’’ where DCOs would compete
by offering the lowest margin. As a
conceptual matter, given that the
Commission has not demonstrated that
the minimum liquidation times that it
has decided to mandate are ‘‘prudent,’’
it cannot demonstrate that the one-day
or five-day period would prevent a
‘‘race to the bottom.’’ 327 As an empirical
matter, the Commission must have
decided that DCOs currently competing
to clear interest rate swaps and credit
default swaps have not entered into a
‘‘race to the bottom,’’ because the final
rulemaking codifies the existing fiveday minimum liquidation time that
such competing DCOs voluntarily
adopted.328
Finally, the Commission has more
effective tools to prevent any ‘‘race to
the bottom.’’ First, this final rulemaking
requires a DCO to determine the
adequacy of its initial margin
requirements on a daily basis.329
Second, this final rulemaking requires a
DCO to conduct back testing of its initial
margin requirements on a daily or
monthly basis.330 Third, this final
rulemaking requires a DCO to stress test
its default resources at least once a
month, and to report to the Commission
the results of such stress testing at least
once every fiscal quarter.331 Fourth, the
Commission has the ability to
independently back test and stress test
DCO initial margin requirements.332
327 The Commission acknowledged as much in its
cost-benefit analysis. The analysis states: ‘‘The
Commission anticipates that using only one
criterion—i.e., the characteristic of the commodity
underlying a swap—to determine liquidation time
could result in less-than-optimal margin
calculations. For some products, a five-day
minimum may prove to be excessive and tie up
more funds than are strictly necessary for risk
management purposes. For other products, a oneday or even a five-day period may be insufficient
and expose a DCO and market participants to
additional risk.’’ The DCO Final Rule, supra note
289, at 315.
328 Id. at 127 to 128 (stating ‘‘ * * * the final rule
provides that the minimum liquidation time for
swaps based on certain physical commodities, i.e.,
agricultural commodities, energy, and metals, is one
day. For all other swaps, the minimum liquidation
time is five days. This distinction is based on the
differing risk characteristics of these product groups
and is consistent with existing requirements that
reflect the risk assessments DCOs have made over
the course of their experience clearing these types
of swaps. The longer liquidation time, currently five
days for credit default swaps at ICE Clear Credit,
LLC, and CME, and for interest rate swaps at LCH
and CME, is based on their assessment of the higher
risk associated with these products.’’).
329 Id. at 396 (to be codified at 17 CFR
39.13(g)(6)).
330 Id. at 396–397 (to be codified at 17 CFR
39.13(g)(7)).
331 Id. at 383–387 (to be codified at 17 CFR
39.11(c)(1) and (f)).
332 See United States Commodity Futures Trading
Commission, International Monetary Fund—
PO 00000
Frm 00146
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Consequently, the Commission would
be able to detect any ‘‘race to the
bottom’’ that would cause any DCO to
have insufficient initial margin to cover
its risks.
Cost-Benefit Analysis: We Can Do Better
I have always emphasized that the
Commission must engage in more
rigorous cost-benefit analyses of its
rulemakings. At various points in my
speeches and writings, I have urged the
Commission to (i) focus on the
economic effects of its rulemakings,
both cumulative and incremental, (ii)
quantify the costs and benefits of its
rulemakings, both cumulative and
incremental, and (iii) better justify the
choice of a prescriptive requirement
when a less-costly and equally effective
principles-based alternative is available.
Only by engaging in more rigorous costbenefit analyses would the Commission
fulfill the mandates of two Executive
Orders 333 and render our rulemakings
less vulnerable to legal challenge.334
I have read the cost-benefit analysis in
this final rulemaking with great interest.
I can confirm that such analysis is
longer than previous analyses.
Unfortunately, increased length does
not ensure an improvement in analysis
and content.
Financial Sector Assessment Program: SelfAssessment of IOSCO Objectives and Principles of
Securities Regulation, August 2009, available at:
https://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/
international/standards-codes/Documents/
Securities%20CFTC%20Self%20Assessment%208–
28–09.pdf (the ‘‘FSAP Assessment’’) (describing the
capabilities of the Risk Surveillance Group within
the Division of Clearing and Risk (formerly known
as the Division of Clearing and Intermediary
Oversight): ‘‘After identifying traders or FCMs at
risk, the RSG estimates the magnitude of the risk.
The SRM system enables RSG staff to calculate the
current performance bond requirement for any
trader or FCM. This amount is generally designed
to cover approximately 99% of potential one-day
moves * * * SRM also enables RSG staff to conduct
stress tests. RSG staff can determine how much a
position would lose in a variety of circumstances
such as extreme market moves. This is a
particularly important tool with respect to option
positions. As noted, the non-linear nature of
options means that the loss resulting from a given
price change may be many multiples greater for an
option position than for a futures position in the
same market. Moreover, the complexity of option
positions can result in situations where the greatest
loss does not correspond to the most extreme price
move.’’).
The FSAP Assessment also describes the ability
of the RSG to check DCO stress testing of its default
resources: ‘‘The RSG compares the risk posed by the
largest clearing member to a DCO’s financial
resource package. The RSG analyzes not only the
size of the DCO package but also its composition.
In the event of a default, a DCO must have access
to sufficient liquidity to meet its obligations as a
central counterparty on very short notice.’’
333 See Exec. Order No. 13,563, 76 Fed. Reg. 3821
(Jan. 21, 2011); Exec. Order No. 13,579, 76 Fed. Reg.
41,587 (July 14, 2011).
334 See, e.g., Business Roundtable and the United
States Chamber of Commerce vs. SEC, No. 10–1305,
2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 14988 (July 22, 2011).
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Although I have numerous concerns
with the cost-benefit analysis, my
primary concern relates to its failure to
attempt meaningful quantification. In
multiple places in the cost-benefit
analysis, the Commission concludes
that the costs of a particular requirement
are difficult or impossible to estimate. In
certain instances, the statement may be
accurate. If the Commission truly cannot
quantify the costs in those instances,
then that fact alone should cause the
Commission to proceed with caution if
it is going to abandon the existing
principles-based regime. In other
instances, however, I find the statement
to be puzzling, given the capabilities
and expertise of the Risk Surveillance
Group (‘‘RSG’’) and the DCO Review
Group (‘‘DRG’’) in our Division of
Clearing and Risk (formerly known as
the Division of Clearing and
Intermediary Oversight).
I would like to highlight two such
instances where the Commission has
not utilized its own data to quantify the
costs associated with its policy
decisions. First, with respect to the
minimum liquidation time
requirements, the Commission states
that ‘‘it is not feasible to estimate or
quantify these costs reliably.’’ The
Commission justifies such conclusion
by stating that (i) ‘‘reliable data is not
available for many swaps that prior to
the Dodd-Frank Act were executed in
unregulated markets,’’ and (ii) it would
be too difficult for the Commission to
estimate margin using either a one-day
or five-day minimum liquidation time
for any particular product.335 Whereas
these statements may be accurate for
certain swaps, they are not accurate for
futures contracts currently listed on a
DCM that will be converted to swap
contracts under the pending DCM
proposal. However potentially
incomplete, the Off-Market Volume
Study (May 2010 through July 2010)
accompanying the DCM proposal
entitled Core Principles and Other
Requirements for Designated Contract
Markets 336 demonstrates that the
Commission has the ability to identify at
least a sample of the futures contracts
that may be potentially converted to
swap contracts. It is true that the DCO
usually impounds the minimum
liquidation time in the risk arrays that
it uses to calculate margin, and the RSG
335 See the DCO Final Rule, supra note 289, at
315–316.
336 See supra note 318. The Off-Market Volume
Survey does not include contracts listed on new
DCMs, such as NYSE Liffe U.S., ELX Futures, L.P.,
or Eris Exchange, LLC. However, the existence of
such survey is proof that the Commission has the
ability to identify contracts that DCM core principle
9 may affect.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:29 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 223001
cannot change such risk arrays easily.
However, the RSG can ask the DCO to
provide the assumptions underlying the
risk arrays, including the minimum
liquidation time (usually one day). Then
the RSG can modify such assumptions
to estimate margin calculations using a
five-day minimum liquidation time.337
Would these calculations be imperfect?
Yes. However, any attempt, even an
imperfect one, undertaken by the
Commission to understand the cost of
our rulemakings or to justify our policy
decisions is better than no attempt at all.
Another instance that I would like to
highlight pertains to letters of credit.
This final rulemaking prohibits DCOs
from accepting letters of credit as (i)
initial margin for swaps contracts (but
not futures contracts) or (ii) as guarantee
fund contributions. In the cost-benefit
analysis, the Commission states that, ‘‘it
is not possible to estimate or quantify
[the] cost’’ of the prohibition.338 In
response to questions from me and
certain of my colleagues, however, the
DRG prepared a memorandum on the
use of letters of credit as initial margin.
Although this memorandum is nonpublic, it is part of the administrative
record for this final rulemaking. This
memorandum details, among other
things: (i) the number and identity of
certain DCOs accepting and/or holding
letters of credit as initial margin; (ii) the
percentage of total initial margin on
deposit across all DCOs that letters of
credit constitute; and (iii) the potential
disproportionate impact on energy and
agricultural end-users of disallowing
letters of credit. Whereas the
memorandum may focus on the use of
letters of credit as initial margin for
futures contracts, the Commission
proposal for DCM core principle 9 may
force conversion of numerous energy
and agricultural futures contracts into
swaps contracts. Yet, the cost-benefit
analysis contains none of the
information in the memorandum, even
in aggregate and anonymous form. In
the interests of transparency, the
Commission should have found a way
to share this information with the
public.
The Commission (or its predecessor)
has regulated the futures markets since
the 1930s. The Commission has
overseen DCOs clearing swaps since at
least 2001. We can do better than this.
If the Commission needs to re-propose
a rulemaking to provide quantitative
estimates of its costs and benefits, so be
it. Given the foundational nature of this
rulemaking, as well as other
rulemakings that are forthcoming, it is
more important for the Commission to
achieve the most reasonable balance
between costs and benefits, rather than
to finish the rulemaking fast.
International Coordination: We Must Do
Better.
In closing, I would mention my strong
desire for the Commission to ensure that
its policies do not create disadvantages
for United States businesses and that
our rules comport with international
standards. It is becoming increasingly
clear that the schedule for financial
reform is converging among the G–20
nations. It is less clear that the
substantive policies underlying
financial reform are experiencing the
same convergence. We must be more
cognizant of the effects of such lack of
convergence on dually-registered
entities, and the incentives created by
such divergence for regulatory arbitrage.
This final rulemaking illustrates the
inconsistent approach that the
Commission has taken towards
international coordination to date. First,
although the final rulemaking notes that
the CPSS–IOSCO Recommendations
embody the current international
standards on CCP regulation, the final
rulemaking does not attempt to comport
with the CPSS–IOSCO
Recommendations.339 Instead, the final
rulemaking attempts to comport with
the CPSS–IOSCO Consultation, which
has not been finalized.340 In general,
both the CPSS–IOSCO
Recommendations and the CPSS–
IOSCO Consultation are less
prescriptive than the final rulemaking.
Second, while the final rulemaking
does note the rare instance where its
prescriptive requirements comport with
the CPSS–IOSCO Consultation,341 it
does not reveal where its prescriptive
requirements depart from the CPSS–
IOSCO Consultation. For example, as I
stated above, the CPSS–IOSCO
Consultation actually sets forth
principles-based considerations for
participant eligibility and margin
calculation.
Finally, the final rulemaking states
that the Commission will review a
number of its provisions after CPSS and
IOSCO finish their work, which is likely
to occur in 2012. Whereas I support
such a review, the statement begs the
following questions: What legal
certainty are these regulations offering
339 See
supra note 310.
supra note 311.
341 See, e.g., id. at 132 (stating that requiring
DCOs to calibrate margin to cover price movements
at a 99 percent confidence interval accords with
Principle 6 of the CPSS–IOSCO Consultation).
340 See
337 See supra note 332. See pages 252 to 268 of
the FSAP Assessment for a full description of the
capabilities of the RSG.
338 The DCO Final Rule, supra note 289, at 344.
PO 00000
Frm 00147
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
69479
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
69480
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
DCOs, clearing members, and market
participants if the Commission changes
such regulations in 2012? Also, what are
the implications of requiring DCOs to
incur costs to comport with prescriptive
requirements now when the
Commission might change such
requirements next year? If changes are
foreseeable, shouldn’t the Commission
adopt a phasing or delayed
implementation plan to allow the
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:03 Nov 07, 2011
Jkt 226001
international coordination process to
reach completion before our rules and
their costs become effective? If, in the
alternative, the Commission will not be
influenced by international standards,
what are the costs of such nonconvergence?
As we are finalizing foundational
rulemakings, we can no longer rely on
an inconsistent approach. We need to
PO 00000
Frm 00148
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
produce a more coherent plan for
international coordination.
Conclusion
Due to the above concerns, I
respectfully dissent from the decision of
the Commission to approve this final
rulemaking for publication in the
Federal Register.
[FR Doc. 2011–27536 Filed 11–7–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6351–01–P
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 216 (Tuesday, November 8, 2011)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 69334-69480]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-27536]
[[Page 69333]]
Vol. 76
Tuesday,
No. 216
November 8, 2011
Part II
Commodity Futures Trading Commission
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
17 CFR Parts 1, 21, 39 et al.
Derivatives Clearing Organization General Provisions and Core
Principles; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 76 , No. 216 / Tuesday, November 8, 2011 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 69334]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 1, 21, 39, and 140
RIN 3038-AC98
Derivatives Clearing Organization General Provisions and Core
Principles
AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (Commission) is
adopting final regulations to implement certain provisions of Title VII
and Title VIII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act) governing derivatives clearing
organization (DCO) activities. More specifically, the regulations
establish the regulatory standards for compliance with DCO Core
Principles A (Compliance), B (Financial Resources), C (Participant and
Product Eligibility), D (Risk Management), E (Settlement Procedures), F
(Treatment of Funds), G (Default Rules and Procedures), H (Rule
Enforcement), I (System Safeguards), J (Reporting), K (Recordkeeping),
L (Public Information), M (Information Sharing), N (Antitrust
Considerations), and R (Legal Risk) set forth in Section 5b of the
Commodity Exchange Act (CEA). The Commission also is updating and
adding related definitions; adopting implementing rules for DCO chief
compliance officers (CCOs); revising procedures for DCO applications
including the required use of a new Form DCO; adopting procedural rules
applicable to the transfer of a DCO registration; and adding
requirements for approval of DCO rules establishing a portfolio
margining program for customer accounts carried by a futures commission
merchant (FCM) that is also registered as a securities broker-dealer
(FCM/BD). In addition, the Commission is adopting certain technical
amendments to parts 21 and 39, and is adopting certain delegation
provisions under part 140.
DATES: The rules will become effective January 9, 2012. DCOs must
comply with Sec. Sec. 39.11; 39.12; 39.13 (except for 39.13(g)(8)(i));
and 39.14 by May 7, 2012; with Sec. Sec. 39.10(c); 39.13(g)(8)(i);
39.18; 39.19; and 39.20 by November 8, 2012; and all other provisions
of these rules by January 9, 2012.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Phyllis P. Dietz, Deputy Director,
(202) 418-5449, pdietz@cftc.gov; John C. Lawton, Deputy Director, (202)
418-5480, jlawton@cftc.gov; Robert B. Wasserman, Chief Counsel, (202)
418-5092, rwasserman@cftc.gov; Eileen A. Donovan, Associate Director,
(202) 418-5096, edonovan@cftc.gov; Jonathan Lave, Special Counsel,
(202) 418-5983, jlave@cftc.gov, Division of Clearing and Risk; and
Jacob Preiserowicz, Special Counsel, (202) 418-5432,
jpreiserowicz@cftc.gov, Division of Swap Dealer and Intermediary
Oversight, Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Three Lafayette
Centre, 1155 21st Street NW., Washington, DC 20581; and Julie A. Mohr,
Deputy Director, (312) 596-0568, jmohr@cftc.gov; and Anne C. Polaski,
Special Counsel, (312) 596-0575, apolaski@cftc.gov, Division of
Clearing and Risk, Commodity Futures Trading Commission, 525 West
Monroe Street, Chicago, Illinois 60661.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act
B. Title VIII of the Dodd-Frank Act
C. Regulatory Framework for DCOs
II. Part 1 Amendments--Definitions
III. Part 39 Amendments--General Provisions
A. Scope
B. Definitions
C. Procedures for Registration
D. Procedures for Implementing DCO Rules and Clearing New
Products
E. Reorganization of Part 39
F. Technical Amendments
IV. Part 39 Amendments--Core Principles
A. Compliance with Core Principles
B. Financial Resources
C. Participant and Product Eligibility
D. Risk Management
E. Settlement Procedures
F. Treatment of Funds
G. Default Rules and Procedures
H. Rule Enforcement
I. System Safeguards
J. Reporting
K. Recordkeeping
L. Public Information
M. Information Sharing
N. Antitrust Considerations
O. Legal Risk Considerations
P. Special Enforcement Authority for SIDCOs
V. Part 140 Amendments--Delegations of Authority
VI. Effective Dates
VII. Section 4(c)
VIII. Consideration of Costs and Benefits
IX. Related Matters
A. Regulatory Flexibility Act
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
I. Background
A. Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act
On July 21, 2010, President Obama signed the Dodd-Frank Act.\1\
Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act \2\ amended the CEA \3\ to establish a
comprehensive statutory framework 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 rigorous recordkeeping and real-time
reporting regimes; and (4) enhancing the Commission's rulemaking and
enforcement authorities with respect to all registered entities and
intermediaries subject to the Commission's oversight.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act, Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010). The text of the
Dodd-Frank Act may be accessed at https://www.cftc.gov/LawRegulation/OTCDERIVATIVES/index.htm.
\2\ Pursuant to Section 701 of the Dodd-Frank Act, Title VII may
be cited as the ``Wall Street Transparency and Accountability Act of
2010.''
\3\ 7 U.S.C. 1 et seq.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 725(c) of the Dodd-Frank Act amended Section 5b(c)(2) of
the CEA, which sets forth core principles with which a DCO must comply
in order to be registered and to maintain registration as a DCO.
The core principles were added to the CEA by the Commodity Futures
Modernization Act of 2000 (CFMA).\4\ The Commission did not adopt
implementing rules and regulations, but instead promulgated guidance
for DCOs on compliance with the core principles.\5\ Under Section
5b(c)(2) of the CEA, as amended by the Dodd-Frank Act, Congress
expressly confirmed that the Commission may adopt implementing rules
and regulations pursuant to its rulemaking authority under Section
8a(5) of the CEA.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000, Public Law
106-554, 114 Stat. 2763 (2000).
\5\ See 66 FR 45604 (Aug. 29, 2001) (adopting 17 CFR part 39,
app. A).
\6\ Section 8a(5) of the CEA authorizes the Commission to
promulgate such regulations ``as, in the judgment of the Commission,
are reasonably necessary to effectuate any of the provisions or to
accomplish any of the purposes of [the CEA].'' 7 U.S.C. 12a(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In light of Congress's explicit affirmation of the Commission's
authority to adopt regulations to implement the core principles, the
Commission has chosen to adopt regulations (which have the force of
law) rather than guidance (which does not have the force of law). By
issuing regulations, the Commission expects to increase legal certainty
for DCOs, clearing members, and market participants, and prevent DCOs
from lowering risk management standards for competitive reasons and
taking on more risk than is prudent. The imposition of legally
enforceable standards provides
[[Page 69335]]
assurance to market participants and the public that DCOs are meeting
minimum risk management standards. This can serve to increase market
confidence which, in turn, can increase open interest and free up
resources that market participants might otherwise hold in order to
compensate for weaker DCO risk management practices. Regulatory
standards also can reduce search costs that market participants would
otherwise incur in determining that DCOs are managing risk effectively.
B. Title VIII of the Dodd-Frank Act
Section 802(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act states that the purpose of
Title VIII is to mitigate systemic risk in the financial system and
promote financial stability. Section 804 authorizes the Financial
Stability Oversight Council (FSOC) to designate entities involved in
clearing and settlement as systemically important.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ See 76 FR 44763 (July 27, 2011) (FSOC authority to designate
financial market utilities as systemically important; final rule).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 805(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act allows the Commission to
prescribe regulations for those DCOs that the Council has determined
are systemically important (SIDCOs). The Commission proposed heightened
requirements for SIDCO financial resources and system safeguards for
business continuity and disaster recovery.
Section 807(c) of the Dodd-Frank Act provides the Commission with
special enforcement authority over SIDCOs, which the Commission
proposed to codify in its regulations.
C. Regulatory Framework for DCOs
The Commission, now responsible for regulating swaps markets as
well as futures markets, has undertaken an unprecedented rulemaking
initiative to implement the Dodd-Frank Act. As part of this initiative,
the Commission has issued a series of eight proposed rulemakings that,
together, would establish a comprehensive regulatory framework for the
clearing and settlement activities of DCOs. Through these proposed
regulations, the Commission sought to enhance legal certainty for DCOs,
clearing members, and market participants, to strengthen the risk
management practices of DCOs, and to promote financial integrity for
swaps and futures markets.
In this notice of final rulemaking, the Commission is adopting
regulations to implement 15 DCO core principles: A (Compliance), B
(Financial Resources), C (Participant and Product Eligibility),\8\ D
(Risk Management), E (Settlement Procedures), F (Treatment of Funds), G
(Default Rules and Procedures), H (Rule Enforcement), I (System
Safeguards), J (Reporting), K (Recordkeeping), L (Public Information),
M (Information Sharing), N (Antitrust Considerations), and R (Legal
Risk).\9\ In addition, the Commission is adopting regulations to
implement the CCO provisions of Section 725 of the Dodd-Frank Act.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ The Commission is reserving for a future final rulemaking
certain proposed amendments relating to participant and product
eligibility. See 76 FR 13101 (Mar. 10, 2011) (requirements for
processing, clearing, and transfer of customer positions (Straight-
Through Processing)); and 76 FR 45730 (Aug. 1, 2011) (customer
clearing documentation and timing of acceptance for clearing
(Customer Clearing)).
\9\ The Commission is reserving for a future final rulemaking
regulations to implement DCO Core Principles O (Governance Fitness
Standards) and Q (Composition of Governing Boards) (76 FR 722 (Jan.
6, 2011) (Governance)); and Core Principle P (Conflicts of Interest)
(75 FR 63732 (Oct. 18, 2010) (Conflicts of Interest)).
\10\ See Section 5b(i) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C 7a-1(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The final rules adopted herein were proposed in five separate
notices of proposed rulemaking.\11\ Each proposed rulemaking was
subject to an initial 60-day public comment period and a re-opened
comment period of 30 days.\12\ After the second comment period ended,
the Commission informed the public that it would continue to accept and
consider late comments and did so until August 25, 2011. The Commission
received a total of approximately 119 comment letters directed
specifically at the proposed rules, in addition to many other comments
applicable to the Dodd-Frank Act rulemaking initiative more
generally.\13\ The Chairman and Commissioners, as well as Commission
staff, participated in numerous meetings with representatives of DCOs,
FCMs, trade associations, public interest groups, traders, and other
interested parties. In addition, the Commission has consulted with
other U.S. financial regulators including the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System and Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ See 76 FR 13101 (Mar. 10, 2011) (Straight-Through
Processing); 76 FR 3698 (Jan. 20, 2011) (Core Principles C, D, E, F,
G, and I (Risk Management)); 75 FR 78185 (Dec. 15, 2010) (Core
Principles J, K, L, and M (Information Management)); 75 FR 77576
(Dec. 13, 2010) (Core Principles A, H, N, and R (General
Regulations)); and 75 FR 63113 (Oct. 14, 2010) (Core Principle B
(Financial Resources)).
\12\ See 76 FR 25274 (May 4, 2011) (extending or re-opening
comment periods for multiple Dodd-Frank proposed rulemakings); see
also 76 FR 16587 (Mar. 24, 2011) (re-opening 30-day comment period
for reporting requirement with clause omitted in the notice of
proposed rulemaking).
\13\ Comment files for each proposed rulemaking can be found on
the Commission Web site, www.cftc.gov.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission is mindful of the benefits of harmonizing its
regulatory framework with that of its counterparts in foreign
countries. The Commission has therefore monitored global advisory,
legislative, and regulatory proposals, and has consulted with foreign
regulators in developing the proposed and final regulations for DCOs.
The Commission is of the view that each DCO should be afforded an
appropriate level of discretion in determining how to operate its
business within the legal framework established by the CEA, as amended
by the Dodd-Frank Act. At the same time, the Commission recognizes that
specific, bright-line regulations may be necessary to facilitate DCO
compliance with a given core principle and, ultimately, to protect the
integrity of the U.S. derivatives clearing system. Accordingly, in
developing the proposed regulations and in finalizing the regulations
adopted herein, taking into consideration public comments and views
expressed by U.S. and foreign regulators, the Commission has endeavored
to strike an appropriate balance between establishing general
prudential standards and specific requirements.
In determining the scope and content of the final rules, the
Commission has taken into account concerns raised by commenters
regarding the implications of specific rules for smaller versus larger
DCOs, DCOs that do not clear customer positions versus those with a
traditional customer model, clearinghouses that are registered as both
a DCO and a securities clearing agency, and clearinghouses that operate
in foreign jurisdictions as well as in the United States. The
Commission addresses these issues in its discussion of specific rule
provisions, below.
The Commission has carefully considered the costs and benefits
associated with each proposed rule, with particular attention to public
comments. For the reasons discussed in this notice of final rulemaking,
in the analyses of specific rule provisions as well as in the formal
cost-benefit analysis, the Commission has determined that the final
rules appropriately balance the costs and benefits associated with
oversight and supervision of DCOs pursuant to the CEA, as amended by
the Dodd-Frank Act.
The Commission is herein adopting regulations to implement the core
principles applicable to DCOs, to implement CCO requirements
established under the Dodd-Frank Act, and to update the regulatory
framework for DCOs to reflect standards and practices that have evolved
over the past decade since the enactment of the
[[Page 69336]]
CFMA. The Commission is largely adopting final rules as proposed,
although there are a number of proposed provisions that, upon further
consideration in light of comments received, the Commission has
determined to either revise or decline to adopt. In the discussion
below, the Commission highlights topics of particular interest to
commenters and discusses comment letters that are representative of the
views expressed on those topics. The discussion does not explicitly
respond to every comment submitted; rather, it addresses the most
significant issues raised by the proposed rulemakings and it analyzes
those issues in the context of specific comments.
The final rules include a number of technical revisions to the
proposed rule text, intended variously to clarify certain provisions,
standardize terminology within part 39, conform terminology to that
used in other parts of the Commission's rules, and more precisely state
regulatory standards and requirements. These are non-substantive
changes. For example, the proposed DCO rules used the terms
``contract'' and ``product'' interchangeably, and some provisions used
the statutory language ``contracts, agreements and transactions'' to
refer to the products subject to Commission regulation. In the final
rules adopted herein, the Commission has revised the terminology to
uniformly refer to ``products,'' which encompasses contracts,
agreements, and transactions, except where the language of the rule
codifies statutory language. In those cases, the rule text is
unchanged.
For easy reference and for purposes of clarification, in this
notice of final rulemaking the Commission is publishing the complete
part 39 as currently adopted. This means that certain longstanding
rules that are not being amended (e.g., Sec. 39.8 (formerly designated
as Sec. 39.7, fraud in connection with the clearing of transactions of
a DCO), and rules recently adopted (Sec. 39.5, review of swaps for
Commission determination on clearing requirement) are being re-
published along with the newly-adopted rules. Rules that have been
proposed but not yet adopted in final form are identified in part 39 as
``reserved.''
II. Part 1 Amendments--Definitions
The Commission proposed to amend the definitions of ``clearing
member,'' ``clearing organization,'' and ``customer'' found in Sec.
1.3 of its regulations to conform the definitions with the terminology
and substantive provisions of the CEA, as amended by the Dodd-Frank
Act. The Commission also proposed to add to Sec. 1.3, definitions for
``clearing initial margin,'' ``customer initial margin,'' ``initial
margin,'' ``margin call,'' ``spread margin,'' and ``variation margin.''
ISDA commented that the margin definitions are appropriate for
futures and cleared derivatives, but less readily applicable in the
uncleared OTC derivatives context. It suggested that the definitions
should expressly provide that they apply only to cleared transactions.
The Commission notes that some of the definitions by their terms
already apply only to cleared trades, e.g., ``clearing initial
margin.'' Other terms, however, have applicability to both cleared and
uncleared trades, e.g., ``initial margin.'' \14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ See Section 4s of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 6s.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission proposed to define ``spread margin'' as ``reduced
initial margin that takes into account correlations between certain
related positions held in a single account.'' Better Markets commented
that the definition of ``spread margin'' omits key characteristics of
netting initial margin which are needed to precisely define spread
margin. Better Markets proposed to define it as ``initial margin
relating to two positions in a single account that has been reduced
from the aggregate initial margin otherwise applicable to the two
positions by application of an algorithm that measures statistical
correlations between the historic price movements of the two
positions.'' The Commission is adopting the definition of ``spread
margin'' as proposed because it believes that Better Markets'
definition adds unnecessary details that could have the unintended
effect of imposing substantive margin methodology requirements in a
definition.
In light of proposed rulemakings issued after the Commission
proposed the definition of ``customer; commodity customer; swap
customer,'' the Commission is making certain technical
modifications.\15\ First, instead of placing the definition in Sec.
1.3, which serves as the general definition section for all of the
Commission's regulations, this definition is being moved to Sec. 39.2,
which sets forth definitions applicable only to regulations found in
part 39 or as otherwise explicitly provided. This accommodates the need
for further consideration of other proposals before a global definition
is adopted, while satisfying the need for a definition for purposes of
part 39 as adopted herein. Second, the Commission has made certain
technical changes to the rule text in connection with the definition's
redesignation in 39.2 and to conform phraseology when incorporating by
reference definitions that appear in the CEA and Sec. 1.3. These
changes include limiting the term to ``customer,'' because the terms
``commodity customer'' and ``swap customer'' are not used in Part 39.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ See 76 FR 33818 (June 9, 2011) (Protection of Cleared Swaps
Customer Contracts and Collateral; Conforming Amendments to the
Commodity Broker Bankruptcy Provisions); 76 FR 33066 (June 7, 2011)
(Adaptation of Regulations to Incorporate Swaps).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission is adopting the other definitions as proposed.
III. Part 39 Amendments--General Provisions
A. Scope--Sec. 39.1
As originally proposed, Sec. 39.1 included an updated statement of
scope and definitions applicable to other provisions in part 39. The
Commission later revised proposed Sec. 39.1 to include only the
statement of scope. The Commission did not receive any comments on the
statement of scope, which was updated to include references to the
definition of ``derivatives clearing organization'' in newly-renumbered
Section 1(a)(15) of the CEA and Sec. 1.3(d) of the Commission's
regulations. The Commission is adopting Sec. 39.1 as proposed.
B. Definitions--Sec. 39.2
The Commission proposed definitions of the terms ``back test,''
``compliance policies and procedures,'' ``customer account '' or
``customer origin,'' ``house account'' or ``house origin,'' ``key
personnel,'' ``stress test,'' and ``systemically important derivatives
clearing organization.'' The definitions set forth in proposed Sec.
39.2 would apply specifically to provisions contained in part 39 and
such other rules as may explicitly cross-reference these definitions.
The Commission is adopting the definitions as proposed, with the
exceptions discussed below.
CME Group, Inc. (CME) commented that the proposed definition of
``compliance policies and procedures'' was too broad. That definition
was proposed as an adjunct to the proposed rules for a DCO's CCO. The
Commission is not adopting a definition of ``compliance policies and
procedures,'' as it has concluded that a DCO's compliance policies and
procedures will likely encompass a limited, self-evident body of
documents, and a regulatory definition could invite more scrutiny than
is necessary or helpful to the DCO or the Commission.
The Commission proposed to define ``stress test'' as ``a test that
compares the impact of a potential price move, change
[[Page 69337]]
in option volatility, or change in other inputs that affect the value
of a position, to the financial resources of a [DCO], clearing member,
or large trader to determine the adequacy of such financial
resources.'' Better Markets, Inc. (Better Markets) expressed the view
that a stress test can only be useful if it tests unprecedented
circumstances of illiquidity, and that basing the test on historic
price data would make it meaningless. In response to this comment, the
Commission is modifying the definition in one respect. The word
``extreme'' is being inserted after the word ``potential'' to make
clear that a stress test does not include typical events. The
Commission further addresses Better Markets' concerns in its discussion
of stress tests in Sec. 39.13(h)(3).\16\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ See discussion of stress tests in section IV.D.7.c, below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission proposed to define the term ``systemically important
derivatives clearing organization'' to mean ``a financial market
utility that is a derivatives clearing organization registered under
Section 5b of the Act (7 U.S.C. 7a-1), which has been designated by the
Financial Stability Oversight Council to be systemically important.''
The Options Clearing Corporation (OCC) submitted a comment on this
definition in connection with the Commission's proposed Sec. 40.10
(special certification procedures for submission of certain risk-
related rules by SIDCOs).\17\ OCC pointed out that, under this proposed
definition, a DCO could be a SIDCO even if the Commission were not its
Supervisory Agency pursuant to Section 803(8) of the Dodd-Frank Act.
The Commission, recognizing that some DCOs like OCC may be regulated by
more than one federal agency, is adopting a revised definition to
clarify that the term ``systemically important derivatives clearing
organization'' means a ``financial market utility that is a derivatives
clearing organization registered under Section 5b of the Act, which has
been designated by the Financial Stability Oversight Council to be
systemically important and for which the Commission acts as the
Supervisory Agency pursuant to Section 803(8) of the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act.'' \18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ See 76 FR 44776 at 44783-84 (July 27, 2011) (Provisions
Common to Registered Entities; final rule).
\18\ See id. for further discussion of this topic.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission also is making a technical change to the definition
of ``customer account or customer origin.'' The proposed definition
would provide, in part, that ``[a] customer account is also a futures
account, as that term is defined by Sec. 1.3(vv) of this chapter.'' The
Commission is removing this reference and defining ``customer account
or customer origin'' to mean ``a clearing member account held on behalf
of customers, as that term is defined in this section, and which is
subject to section 4d(a) or section 4d(f) of the Act.'' This clarifies
that the term encompasses both customer futures accounts and customer
cleared swaps accounts, respectively.
Similarly, the Commission is making a technical revision to the
term ``house account or house origin'' to delete the proposed reference
to proprietary accounts, which are currently defined in Sec. 1.3(y)
only in terms of futures and options (not swaps). The term ``house
account or house origin'' is now defined as a ``clearing member account
which is not subject to section 4d(a) or 4d(f) of the Act.''
In connection with the proposal to adopt a definitions section
designated as Sec. 39.2, the Commission proposed to rescind the
existing Sec. 39.2, which exempted DCOs from all Commission
regulations except those explicitly enumerated in the exemption. This
action would result in clarifying the applicability of Sec. 1.49
(denomination of customer funds and location of depositories) to DCOs
and, insofar as the rule exempted DCOs from regulations relating to DCO
governance and conflicts of interest, those regulations are expected to
themselves be replaced by rules to implement DCO Core Principles O
(Governance Fitness Standards), P (Conflicts of Interest), and Q
(Composition of Governing Boards).\19\ The Commission did not receive
any comments on the proposed rescission of the exemption provided by
existing Sec. 39.2 and is herein rescinding that exemption, as
proposed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ See 76 FR 722 (Jan. 6, 2011) (Governance); and 75 FR 63732
(Oct. 18, 2010) (Conflicts of Interest).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Procedures for Registration as a DCO--Sec. 39.3
The Commission proposed several revisions to its procedures for DCO
registration, including the elimination of the 90-day expedited review
period and the required use of an application form, proposed Form DCO.
The Commission is adopting Sec. 39.3 as proposed, and is adopting the
Form DCO with the revisions discussed below.
1. Form DCO
The Commission proposed to revise appendix A to part 39,
``Application Guidance and Compliance with Core Principles,'' by
removing the existing guidance and substituting the Form DCO in its
place. An application for DCO registration would consist of the
completed Form DCO, which would include all applicable exhibits, and
any supplemental information submitted to the Commission.
CME commented that the proposed Form DCO would require the
applicant to create and submit to the Commission a large number of
documents. It questioned why certain documents were necessary and
whether Commission staff would be able to meaningfully review all of
the materials within the 180-day timeframe contemplated in the proposed
regulations.
The Commission is adopting the Form DCO as proposed, except for the
modifications discussed below. The Commission notes that the Form DCO
standardizes and clarifies the information that the Commission has
required from DCO applicants in the past and the Form DCO Exhibit
Instructions, in an effort to reduce the burden on applicants, state
that ``If any Exhibit requires information that is related to, or may
be duplicative of, information required to be included in another
Exhibit, Applicant may summarize such information and provide a cross-
reference to the Exhibit that contains the required information.''
Based on the Commission's experience with the DCO registration process
over the past decade, it believes that its staff can meaningfully
review the required information within the 180-day time frame. In
addition, the Commission believes that by standardizing informational
requirements, the Form DCO will allow the Commission to process
applications more quickly and efficiently. This will benefit applicants
as well as free Commission staff to handle other regulatory matters.
CME specifically questioned whether, as part of the Form DCO cover
sheet, applicants should be required to identify and list ``all outside
service providers and consultants, including accountants and legal
counsel.'' This comment mischaracterizes the information required by
the Form DCO, which requires contact information for enumerated outside
service providers (Certified Public Accountant, legal counsel, records
storage or management, business continuity/disaster recovery) and
``other'' outside service providers ``such as consultants, providing
services related to this application.'' Such contact information is
helpful to the Commission staff in processing the application and
making a determination as to whether the applicant has obtained the
services it needs to effectively
[[Page 69338]]
operate as a DCO.\20\ Nonetheless, in response to CME's comments and in
order to clarify the scope of requesting contact information for ``any
other outside service providers,'' the Commission has decided to revise
section 12.e. of the Form DCO cover sheet to provide for contact
information for any ``Professional consultant providing services
related to this application.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ This requirement focuses on outside services ``related to
this application.'' Similarly, if the applicant intends to use the
services of an outside service provider (including services of its
clearing members or market participants), to enable it to comply
with any of the core principles, the applicant must submit as
exhibit A-10 all agreements entered into or to be entered into
between the applicant and the outside service provider, and
identify: (1) The services that will be provided; (2) the staff who
will provide the services; and (3) the core principles addressed by
such arrangement. This exhibit does not require that the applicant
submit information and documentation related to all outside service
providers. Rather, the requirement is directed at contractual
arrangements related to compliance with the core principles, i.e.,
the DCO's core business functions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CME commented that proposed exhibit A-1, which would require the
applicant to produce a chart demonstrating in detail how its rules,
procedures, and policies address each DCO core principle, is not
necessary. The Commission believes exhibit A-1 is necessary because it
will provide a clear picture of which rules, procedures, and policies
address each DCO core principle. The chart will greatly assist
Commission staff in tracking and evaluating the materials supplied by
the applicant and should reduce the need for staff to seek follow-up
clarifications from the applicant. Again, this will also reduce the
costs to the applicant.
CME commented that the Commission has not explained its reasons for
requiring an applicant to supply ``telephone numbers, mobile phone
numbers and email addresses of all officers, managers, and directors of
the DCO,'' as provided in proposed exhibit A-6. The Commission notes
that the exhibit A-6 instructions request contact and other information
for ``current officers, directors, governors, general partners, LLC
managers, and members of all standing committees.'' The exhibit is not
directed at ``all managers'' or ``all directors,'' but rather at those
persons who are in key decision-making positions (for example, key
personnel, directors serving on a board of directors and a manager or
managing member of a DCO organized in the form of a limited liability
corporation). The purpose of obtaining contact information is to enable
the Commission to start building an emergency contact database.
CME commented that proposed exhibit A-7 would require the applicant
to list all jurisdictions where the applicant and its affiliates are
doing business, and the registration status of the applicant and its
affiliates. CME questioned the Commission's need for such information
with respect to affiliates of the applicant. The Commission believes
that such information is necessary because it allows the Commission to
develop a more complete understanding of the applicant's entire
corporate organizational structure including potential financial
commitments and regulatory obligations of the applicant's affiliates
inclusive of its parent organization.
CME commented that proposed exhibit B-3, which would require the
applicant to provide proof that each of its physical locations meets
all building and fire codes, and that it has running water and a
heating, ventilation and air conditioning system, and adequate office
technology, is not necessary. The Commission believes that it is
important for an applicant to demonstrate that it has a physical
presence capable of supporting clearing and settlement services and is
not a ``shoestring'' operation. Typically, Commission staff will
conduct a site visit to an applicant's headquarters and other
facilities, and one of the purposes of such visits is to evaluate the
suitability of the applicant's physical facilities. Site visits,
however, are conducted after a DCO application is deemed to be
materially complete, and there are instances when it might not be
feasible to conduct a site visit. Accordingly, at a minimum, a
narrative statement discussing the applicant's physical facilities and
office technology must be submitted to the Commission as part of the
application package so that staff can complete its initial review for
``adequate * * * operational resources'' under Core Principle B.
In response to CME's comments, the Commission has decided to revise
exhibit B-3 to require the following:
(3) A narrative statement demonstrating the adequacy of
Applicant's physical infrastructure to carry out business
operations, which includes a principal executive office (separate
from any personal dwelling) with a U.S. street address (not merely a
post office box number). For its principal executive office and
other facilities Applicant plans to occupy in carrying out its DCO
functions, a description of the space (e.g., location and square
footage), use of the space (e.g., executive office, data center),
and the basis for Applicant's right to occupy the space (e.g.,
lease, agreement with parent company to share leased space).
(4) A narrative statement demonstrating the adequacy of the
technological systems necessary to carry out Applicant's business
operations, including a description of Applicant's information
technology and telecommunications systems and a timetable for full
operability.
CME questioned the value of proposed exhibits C-1(9) and C-2(5),
which would, respectively, require an applicant to provide a list of
current and prospective clearing members, and to forecast expected
volumes and open interest at launch date, six months, and one year
thereafter. The Commission believes that this information is important
because it would enable the Commission to understand the nature and
level of the DCO's expected start-up activities and to appropriately
evaluate whether the applicant has adequate resources to manage the
expected volume of business.
CME questioned the benefits of what it termed the ``incredibly
burdensome'' requirements of proposed exhibit D-2(b)(3), which would
require an applicant to explain why a particular margin methodology was
chosen over other potentially suitable methodologies, and to include a
comparison of margin levels that would have been generated by using
such other potential methodologies. To address CME's comment, the
Commission is revising exhibit D-2(b)(3) to require an explanation of
whether other margining methodologies were considered and, if so,
explain why they were not chosen. This information will be sufficient
in the first instance and, when evaluating an applicant's proposed
margin methodology, Commission staff can request additional information
if needed to complete its review for compliance with Core Principle D
and Sec. 39.13 (risk management).
The Commission proposed to require use of the Form DCO by a
registered DCO when requesting an amendment to its DCO registration
order. CME and Minneapolis Grain Exchange, Inc. (MGEX) suggested that
the Form DCO be modified so that a currently registered DCO would not
have to expend as much time and resources to complete an amendment
request as a new applicant for DCO registration, unless there are
extenuating circumstances. In response to this suggestion, the
Commission is revising the Form DCO General Instructions to clarify
that if the Form DCO is being filed as an amendment to a pending
application for registration or for the purpose of amending an existing
registration order, the applicant need only submit the information and
exhibits relevant to the application
[[Page 69339]]
amendment or request for an amended registration order.
CME also noted that a DCO applicant would be required to represent
that its Form DCO submission is true, correct, and complete. It
suggested that the Commission modify this language so that the
applicant is required to certify that, ``to the best of its
knowledge,'' its Form DCO submission is true, correct, and complete
``in all material respects.'' The Commission is revising the language
as suggested by CME, in recognition of the fact that some of the
information contained in the exhibits may have been provided by third
parties and there is a limit to the reach of an applicant's due
diligence with respect to such information.
In addition to the above changes, the Commission has made non-
substantive editorial changes to the Form DCO for purposes of internal
consistency and conformity with the Form SDR for swap data repositories
(SDRs) and proposed Form DCM and Form SEF for designated contract
markets (DCMs) and swap execution facilities (SEFs), respectively.\21\
The Commission also has made changes to Form DCO to remove references
to proposed regulations that remain pending.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ See 76 FR 54538 (Sept. 1, 2011) (SDRs: Registration
Standards, Duties and Core Principles; final rule); 75 FR 80572
(Dec. 22, 2010) (Core Principles and Other Requirements for
Designated Contract Markets); 76 FR 1214 (Jan. 7, 2011) (Core
Principles and Other Requirements for Swap Execution Facilities).
\22\ For example, the Commission has removed the specific cross-
references located in exhibit P to Form DCO to the proposed
conflicts of interest rules, 75 FR 63732 (Oct. 18, 2010) (Conflicts
of Interest), and replaced such references with a description of the
required information. When the Commission finalizes such proposed
rules, the Commission intends to make technical changes to the Form
DCO to include cross-references to such final rules where, in the
opinion of the Commission, doing so will facilitate compliance with
the Form DCO, the CEA and/or Commission regulations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Request for Transfer of Registration and Open Interest--Sec.
39.3(h)
The Commission proposed Sec. 39.3(h) to clarify the procedures
that a DCO must follow when requesting the transfer of its DCO
registration and positions comprising open interest for clearing and
settlement, in anticipation of a corporation change.\23\ The Commission
received a comment from OCC suggesting that a request to transfer a
DCO's registration and open interest should be published in the Federal
Register for public comment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ As a technical matter, the Commission is removing proposed
Sec. 39.3(g)(1) and adopting proposed Sec. 39.3(h) as Sec.
39.3(f); proposed Sec. 39.3(g)(1) was a typographical error which
repeats a delegation of authority already provided by Sec.
39.3(b)(2)(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission recognizes the value of public comment, but it has
determined not to formalize the public comment process through
publication in the Federal Register. This procedure could unnecessarily
delay the review process and completion of the transfer, and the
Commission believes that posting the request on its Web site, which it
currently does for DCO registration applications, will provide an
opportunity for public comment without potential delay.
3. Technical Amendments
The Commission proposed a set of technical amendments to Sec. 39.3
to update filing procedures, to conform various provisions to reflect
the elimination of the 90-day expedited review period for DCO
applications, and to correct terminology in the delegation provisions
of Sec. 39.3(g). The Commission did not receive any comments on the
proposed technical amendments and the Commission is adopting the
amendments as proposed.
D. Procedures for Implementing DCO Rules and Clearing New Products--
Sec. 39.4
1. Acceptance of Certain New Products for Clearing--Sec. 39.4(c)(2)
The Commission proposed a technical amendment to existing Sec.
39.4(c)(2), which would require a DCO to certify to the Commission the
terms and conditions of new over-the-counter (OTC) products that it
intended to clear. The Commission proposed removing the reference to
new products ``not traded on a designated contract market or a
registered derivatives transaction execution facility'' and inserting a
reference to new products ``not traded on a designated contract market
or a registered swap execution facility.'' The proposed provision would
retain the reference to filing the terms and conditions of the new
product ``pursuant to the procedures of Sec. 40.2 of this chapter.''
Since proposing that technical amendment, the Commission has
adopted a new Sec. 39.5 (review of swaps for Commission determination
on clearing requirement) \24\ and revisions to Sec. 40.2 (listing
products for trading by certification).\25\ As a result, a DCO seeking
to clear new products that are not traded on a designated contract
market or swap execution facility must submit to the Commission the
terms and conditions of the product pursuant to the procedures of Sec.
39.5, not Sec. 40.2. The Commission is therefore adopting a technical
revision to conform Sec. 39.4(c)(2) to the current procedural
requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ See 76 FR 44464, at 44473-44474 (July 26, 2011) (Process
for Review of Swaps for Mandatory Clearing; final rule).
\25\ See 76 FR 44776 (July 27, 2011) (Provisions Common to
Registered Entities; final rule).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Holding Securities in a Futures Portfolio Margining Account--Sec.
39.4(e)
The CEA, as amended by Section 713 of the Dodd-Frank Act, permits,
pursuant to an exemption, rule or regulation, futures and options on
futures to be held in a portfolio margining account that is carried as
a securities account and approved by the SEC.\26\ Reciprocally, the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (SEA), as amended by Section 713 of the
Dodd-Frank Act, permits, pursuant to an exemption, rule, or regulation,
cash and securities to be held in a portfolio margining account that is
carried as a futures account and approved by the Commission.\27\ Those
provisions of the CEA and SEA further require consultation between the
Commission and the SEC in drafting implementing regulations. As a first
step toward meeting this goal, proposed Sec. 39.4(e) would establish
the procedural requirements applicable to a DCO seeking approval for a
futures portfolio margining account program.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ Section 4d(h) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 6d(h).
\27\ Section 15(c)(3)(C) of the SEA, 15 U.S.C. 78o(c)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
OCC, Newedge USA, LLC (Newedge), New York Portfolio Clearing, LLC
(NYPC), and MetLife Inc. urged the Commission to propose rules that
would permit portfolio margining, not just establish procedural
requirements. The Commission agrees that it should propose substantive
portfolio margining rules, but it must move forward on proposing
substantive rules with the SEC's participation.
Accordingly, the Commission is adopting the procedural requirements
as proposed and anticipates consulting with the SEC in the future to
determine the substantive requirements it would impose in approving a
futures portfolio margining program and, additionally, in granting an
exemption under Section 4(c) of the CEA to permit futures and options
on futures to be held in a securities portfolio margining account. The
Dodd-Frank Act does not set a deadline for these actions, and the
Commission believes that it is important to give this matter due
consideration, both in terms of consultation with the SEC and, more
broadly, in obtaining industry views on the topic before
[[Page 69340]]
proposing substantive regulations or other guidance.
E. Reorganization of Part 39
With the adoption of regulations relating to implementation of the
core principles and other provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act, the
Commission is reorganizing part 39 of its regulations into two
subparts, with a new appendix.
Subpart A, ``General Provisions Applicable to Derivatives Clearing
Organizations'' contains Sec. Sec. 39.1 through 39.8, which are
general provisions including procedural requirements for DCO
applications and other activities such as transfer of a DCO
registration, clearing of new products, and submission of swaps for a
mandatory clearing determination. Subpart A also includes pre-existing
provisions regarding enforceability and fraud in connection with
clearing transactions on a DCO.\28\ Subpart B, ``Compliance with Core
Principles,'' contains Sec. Sec. 39.9 through 39.27, which are rules
that implement the core principles under Section 5b of the CEA, as
amended by the Dodd-Frank Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ As part of the reorganization of Part 39, Sec. 39.6
(Enforceability) is being redesignated as Sec. 39.7 and Sec. 39.7
(Fraud in connection with the clearing of transactions on a
derivatives clearing organization) is being redesignated as Sec.
39.8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed above, the Commission is replacing appendix A
``Application Guidance and Compliance with Core Principles,'' with a
new appendix to part 39, ``Form DCO Derivatives Clearing Organization
Application for Registration.''
F. Technical Amendments
With the objective of listing all DCO reporting requirements in a
new Sec. 39.19, the Commission proposed redesignating Sec. 39.5(a)
and (b) (information relating to DCOs) as proposed Sec. Sec.
39.19(c)(5)(i) and (ii), respectively, in substantially the same form.
The Commission also proposed removing Sec. 39.5(c) (large trader
reporting by DCOs), redesignating Sec. 39.5(d) (special calls) as
Sec. 21.04 (and current Sec. 21.04 as Sec. 21.05), and adding Sec.
21.06, which would delegate authority under Sec. 21.04 to the Director
of the Division of Clearing and Risk.
The Commission did not receive any comments on these proposals.
Therefore, the Commission is adopting these revisions as proposed,
except for non-substantive changes to Sec. Sec. 39.19(c)(5)(i) and
(c)(5)(ii) to clarify the language.\29\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ After these technical amendments were proposed, the
Commission adopted a final rule governing the process for review of
swaps for mandatory clearing. That rule was designated as Sec.
39.5, and the former Sec. 39.5 was redesignated as Sec. 39.8. See
76 FR at 44473 (July 26, 2011) (Process for Review of Swaps for
Mandatory Clearing; final rule). In connection with adoption of the
technical amendments described above, the provisions regarding fraud
in connection with the clearing of transactions on a DCO (former
Sec. 39.7) are now redesignated as Sec. 39.8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
IV. Part 39 Amendments--Compliance With Core Principles
Proposed Sec. 39.9 would establish the scope of the rules
contained in subpart B of part 39, stating that all provisions of
subpart B apply to DCOs. The Commission did not receive any comments on
the statement of scope, and the Commission is adopting Sec. 39.9 as
proposed.
A. Core Principle A--Compliance With Core Principles--Sec. 39.10
1. Core Principle A
Core Principle A,\30\ as amended by the Dodd-Frank Act, requires a
DCO to comply with each core principle set forth in Section 5b(c)(2) of
the CEA and any requirement that the Commission may impose by rule or
regulation pursuant to Section 8a(5) of the CEA. Core Principle A also
provides a DCO with reasonable discretion to establish the manner by
which it complies with each core principle. Proposed Sec. Sec.
39.10(a) and 39.10(b) would codify these provisions, respectively. The
Commission received no comments on these proposed rules and is adopting
the rules as proposed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ Section 5b(c)(2)(A) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 7a-1(c)(2)(A).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Designation of a Chief Compliance Officer--Sec. 39.10(c)(1)
Section 725(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act added a new paragraph (i) to
Section 5b of the CEA to require each DCO to designate an individual as
its CCO, responsible for the DCO's compliance with the CEA and
Commission regulations and the filing of an annual compliance
report.\31\ In proposed Sec. 39.10(c), the Commission set forth
implementing requirements that would largely track the language of
Section 5b(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ See Section 5b(i) of the CEA; 7 U.S.C. 7a-1(b)(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the introductory provision of proposed Sec. 39.10(c)(1),
each DCO would be required to appoint a CCO with ``the full
responsibility and authority to develop and enforce in consultation
with the board of directors or the senior officer, appropriate
compliance policies and procedures, as defined in Sec. 39.1(b), to
fulfill the duties set forth in the Act and Commission regulations.''
As previously noted, the Commission is not adopting the definition of
``compliance policies and procedures'' included in proposed Sec.
39.1(b).
CME commented that the text of the Dodd-Frank Act does not require
a CCO to ``enforce'' compliance policies and procedures and it
suggested that Sec. 39.10 should not do so. According to CME, it is
important to separate the functions of monitoring and advising on
compliance issues from what it considers ``senior management
functions'' of enforcing and supervising compliance policies.
The Commission believes that Congress intended that the CCO have
the full responsibility and authority to enforce compliance in
consultation with the board of directors or the senior officer. Given
the specified duties of the CCO set forth in Section 5b(i)(2), the
Commission finds ample support for this interpretation and is adopting
the rule as proposed.
First, one definition of the term ``enforce'' is ``to ensure
observance of laws and rules,'' \32\ and among the CCO duties set forth
by the Dodd-Frank Act is the requirement that the CCO ``ensure
compliance.'' \33\ Second, Section 5b(i)(2)(C) requires a CCO to
``resolve any conflicts of interest that may arise'' in consultation
with the board of the DCO or the senior officer of the DCO. This duty
clearly indicates that the CCO is more than just an advisor to
management and must have the ability to enforce compliance with the CEA
and Commission regulations. The authority to resolve conflicts of
interest is more an enforcement function than an audit function.
Finally, Section 5b(i)(2)(D) requires the CCO to ``be responsible for
administering each policy.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ See https://www.websters-online-dictionary.org/definitions/enforce.
\33\ See Section 5b(i)(2)(E) of the CEA, 7 U.S.C. 7a-
1(b)(i)(2)(E), which requires the CCO to ``ensure compliance with
this Act (including regulations) relating to agreements, contracts,
or transactions, including each rule prescribed by the Commission
under this section.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While the CEA does not explicitly use the word ``enforce,'' the
Commission believes that the use of this word in Sec. 39.10(c)(1) is
appropriate to capture the meaning of Section 5b(i)(2)(C), i.e., that
CCOs must have the authority to fulfill their statutory and regulatory
obligations. Moreover, it is consistent with the statutory directive
for the CCO to ensure compliance with the CEA. These considerations are
particularly important given that the CCO of a DCO has unique
responsibilities in connection with the DCO's critical role in
providing financial integrity to derivatives markets. In particular, a
CCO must have the ability to effectively address rules and practices
that could compromise compliance with fair and open access requirements
(Core Principle C), risk management
[[Page 69341]]
requirements (Core Principle D), and financial resource requirements
(Core Principle B).
The Commission, however, recognizes that the term ``enforce'' could
imply that the DCO's CCO must have direct supervisory authority over
employees not otherwise in his or her direct chain of command, or that
the CCO has independent authority to discipline employees or terminate
employment to facilitate compliance with the CEA and the Commission's
regulations. To avoid confusion, the Commission herein clarifies that
the term ``enforce,'' as used in Sec. 39.10(c)(1), is not intended to
include the authority to supervise employees not in the CCO's direct
chain of command, or the authority to terminate employment or
discipline employees for conduct that results in noncompliance. The
Commission notes that a DCO is not precluded from conferring such
authority on its CCO; however, such action would be at the DCO's
discretion and is not required by Sec. 39.10(c)(1).\34\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ See further discussion of a CCO's duties in section IV.A.7,
below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Individuals Qualifying To Serve as a CCO--Sec. 39.10(c)(1)(i)
Proposed Sec. 39.10(c)(1)(i) would require a DCO to designate an
individual with the background and skills appropriate for fulfilling
the responsibilities of the CCO position. The Commission asked whether
additional qualifications should be imposed and, in particular, whether
the Commission should restrict the CCO position from being held by an
attorney who represents the DCO or its board of directors, such as an
in-house or general counsel. The Commission explained that the
rationale for such a restriction would be based on concern that the
interests of representing the DCO's board of directors or management
could be in conflict with the duties of the CCO. Related to this, the
Commission specifically sought comment on whether there is a need for a
regulation requiring the DCO to insulate a CCO from undue pressure and
coercion. It further asked if it is necessary to adopt rules to address
the potential conflict between and among compliance interests,
commercial interests, and ownership interests of a DCO and, if there is
no need for such rules, requested comment on how such potential
conflicts would be addressed.
CME, OCC, MGEX, and the Kansas City Board of Trade Clearing
Corporation (KCC) commented that additional restrictions should not be
imposed. MGEX commented that smaller DCOs will need to maximize the
utility of each employee. It also argued that there is little risk if a
CCO serves as in-house counsel because attorneys have additional
ethical duties which can complement the duties and obligations of a
CCO. According to MGEX, if a conflict arose, the attorney could step
out of one or both of the roles.
Better Markets commented that there is potential conflict between a
CCO and in-house counsel because in-house counsel is an advocate for
the DCO or its board of directors regarding any controversy that may
relate to regulatory compliance, while a CCO's duty is to ensure
compliance. It suggested that the Commission prohibit a CCO from
serving as in-house counsel.
The Commission is adopting Sec. 39.10(c)(1)(i) as proposed. The
Commission has considered prohibiting a CCO from working in the DCO's
legal department or serving as general counsel, consistent with the
Commission's approach to the CCO of an SDR.\35\ However, in response to
public comments and in light of the fact that all currently registered
DCOs have some form of compliance program already in place, with one or
more staff members assigned to carry out compliance officer functions,
the Commission has determined that the potential costs of hiring
additional staff to satisfy such requirement could result in imposing
an unnecessary burden on DCOs, particularly smaller ones. The
Commission recognizes, however, that a conflict of interest could
compromise a CCO's ability to effectively fulfill his or her
responsibilities as a CCO. The Commission therefore expects that as
soon as any conflict of interest becomes apparent, a DCO would
immediately implement a back-up plan for reassignment or other measures
to address the conflict and ensure that the CCO's duties can be
performed without compromise.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ See 76 FR 54538 (Sept. 1, 2011) (SDRs: Registration
Standards, Duties and Core Principles; final rule).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
MGEX and KCC also recommended that the Commission should permit the
Chief Regulatory Officer to function as the CCO. Presumably, the
commenters are referring to circumstances in which a DCO (which
typically would not have a Chief Regulatory Officer) is also registered
as a DCM (which typically would have a Chief Regulatory Officer). The
Commission notes that the rule does not prohibit the person serving as
CCO from also serving as the Chief Regulatory Officer.
4. CCO Reporting Structure--Sec. 39.10(c)(1)(ii)
Section 5b(i)(2)(A) of the CEA requires that a CCO report directly
to the board of directors or the senior officer of the DCO.\36\
Proposed Sec. 39.10(c)(1)(ii) would codify this requirement. The
proposed rule also would require the board of directors or the senior
officer to approve the compensation of the CCO.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ 7 U.S.C. 7a-1(i)(2)(A).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the notice of proposed rulemaking, the Commission sought comment
as to the degree of flexibility that should be provided in the
reporting structure of the CCO. Specifically, the Commission requested
comment on: (i) Whether it would be more appropriate for a CCO to
report to the senior officer or the board of directors; (ii) as between
the senior officer or board of directors, which generally is a stronger
advocate of compliance matters within an organization; and (iii)
whether the proposed rules allow for sufficient flexibility with regard
to a DCO's business structure.
CME, MGEX, and KCC commented that the proposed rules would provide
DCOs with the appropriate degree of flexibility. CME, however, believes
it would be ``logical'' for a CCO to report to the senior officer, and
that the board of directors should oversee implementation of compliance
policies and ensure that compliance issues are resolved effectively and
expeditiously by the senior officer with the assistance of the CCO.
MGEX noted that each DCO may have a different business and reporting
structure and believes that rigid rules may hinder the effectiveness
and independence of the CCO.
Better Markets observed that, in the past, businesses have placed
financial interes