Investment of Customer Funds and Funds Held in an Account for Foreign Futures and Foreign Options Transactions, 78776-78803 [2011-31689]
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78776
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
Table of Contents
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING
COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 1 and 30
RIN 3038–AC79
Investment of Customer Funds and
Funds Held in an Account for Foreign
Futures and Foreign Options
Transactions
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Commodity Futures
Trading Commission (Commission or
CFTC) is amending its regulations
regarding the investment of customer
segregated funds subject to Commission
Regulation 1.25 (Regulation 1.25) and
funds held in an account subject to
Commission Regulation 30.7
(Regulation 30.7, and funds subject
thereto, 30.7 funds). Certain
amendments reflect the implementation
of new statutory provisions enacted
under Title IX of the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act. The amendments address: certain
changes to the list of permitted
investments (including the elimination
of in-house transactions), a clarification
of the liquidity requirement, the
removal of rating requirements, and an
expansion of concentration limits
including asset-based, issuer-based, and
counterparty concentration restrictions.
They also address revisions to the
acknowledgment letter requirement for
investment in a money market mutual
fund (MMMF), revisions to the list of
exceptions to the next-day redemption
requirement for MMMFs, the
elimination of repurchase and reverse
repurchase agreements with affiliates,
the application of customer segregated
funds investment limitations to 30.7
funds, the removal of ratings
requirements for depositories of 30.7
funds, the elimination of the option to
designate a depository for 30.7 funds,
and certain technical changes.
DATES: This rule is effective February
17, 2012. All persons shall be in
compliance with this rule not later than
June 18, 2012.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Ananda K. Radhakrishnan, Director,
(202) 418–5188,
aradhakrishnan@cftc.gov, or Jon
DeBord, Special Counsel, (202) 418–
5478, jdebord@cftc.gov, Division of
Clearing and Risk, Commodity Futures
Trading Commission, Three Lafayette
Centre, 1151 21st Street NW.,
Washington, DC 20581.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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SUMMARY:
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I. Background
A. Regulation 1.25
B. Regulation 30.7
C. Advance Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking
D. The Dodd-Frank Act
E. The Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
II. Discussion of the Final Rules
A. Permitted Investments—Regulation 1.25
1. Government Sponsored Enterprise
Securities
2. Commercial Paper and Corporate Notes
or Bonds
3. Foreign Sovereign Debt
4. In-House Transactions
B. General Terms and Conditions
1. Marketability
2. Ratings
3. Restrictions on Instrument Features
4. Concentration Limits
(a) Asset-Based Concentration Limits
(b) Issuer-based Concentration Limits
(c) Counterparty Concentration Limits
C. Money Market Mutual Funds
1. Acknowledgment Letters
2. Next-day Redemption Requirement
D. Repurchase and Reverse Repurchase
Agreements
E. Regulation 30.7
1. Harmonization
2. Ratings
3. Designation as a Depository for 30.7
Funds
4. Technical Amendment
F. Implementation
III. Cost Benefit Considerations
IV. Related Matters
A. Regulatory Flexibility Act
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
Text of Rules
I. Background
A. Regulation 1.25
Under Section 4d 1 of the Commodity
Exchange Act (Act),2 customer
segregated funds may be invested in
obligations of the United States and
obligations fully guaranteed as to
principal and interest by the United
States (U.S. government securities) and
general obligations of any State or of any
political subdivision thereof (municipal
securities). Pursuant to authority under
Section 4(c) of the Act,3 the Commission
substantially expanded the list of
permitted investments by amending
Regulation 1.25 4 in December 2000 to
permit investments in general
obligations issued by any enterprise
sponsored by the United States
(government sponsored enterprise or
GSE debt securities), bank certificates of
17
U.S.C. 6d.
U.S.C. 1 et seq. (2006), as amended by the
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act, Pub. L. 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376
(2010).
3 7 U.S.C. 6(c).
4 17 CFR 1.25. Commission regulations may be
accessed through the Commission’s Web site,
https://www.cftc.gov.
27
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deposit (CDs), commercial paper,
corporate notes,5 general obligations of
a sovereign nation, and interests in
MMMFs.6 In connection with that
expansion, the Commission included
several provisions intended to control
exposure to credit, liquidity, and market
risks associated with the additional
investments, e.g., requirements that the
investments satisfy specified rating
standards and concentration limits, and
be readily marketable and subject to
prompt liquidation.7
The Commission further modified
Regulation 1.25 in 2004 and 2005. In
February 2004, the Commission adopted
amendments regarding repurchase
agreements using customer-deposited
securities and time-to-maturity
requirements for securities deposited in
connection with certain collateral
management programs of derivatives
clearing organizations (DCOs).8 In May
2005, the Commission adopted
amendments related to standards for
investing in instruments with embedded
derivatives, requirements for adjustable
rate securities, concentration limits on
reverse repurchase agreements,
transactions by futures commission
merchants (FCMs) that are also
registered as securities brokers or
dealers (in-house transactions), rating
standards and registration requirements
for MMMFs, an auditability standard for
investment records, and certain
technical changes.9
The Commission has been, and
continues to be, mindful that customer
segregated funds must be invested in a
manner that minimizes their exposure
to credit, liquidity, and market risks
both to preserve their availability to
customers and DCOs and to enable
investments to be quickly converted to
cash at a predictable value in order to
avoid systemic risk. Toward these ends,
Regulation 1.25 establishes a general
prudential standard by requiring that all
permitted investments be ‘‘consistent
with the objectives of preserving
principal and maintaining liquidity.’’ 10
In 2007, the Commission’s Division of
Clearing and Intermediary Oversight
(Division) launched a review of the
nature and extent of investments of
Regulation 1.25 funds and 30.7 funds
5 This category of permitted investment was later
amended to read ‘‘corporate notes or bonds.’’ See
70 FR 28190, 28197 (May 17, 2005).
6 See 65 FR 77993 (Dec. 13, 2000) (publishing
final rules); and 65 FR 82270 (Dec. 28, 2000)
(making technical corrections and accelerating
effective date of final rules from February 12, 2001
to December 28, 2000).
7 Id.
8 69 FR 6140 (Feb. 10, 2004).
9 70 FR 28190.
10 17 CFR 1.25(b).
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(2007 Review) in order to further its
understanding of investment strategies
and practices and to assess whether any
changes to the Commission’s regulations
would be appropriate. As part of this
review, all registered DCOs and FCMs
carrying customer accounts provided
responses to a series of questions. As the
Division was conducting follow-up
interviews with respondents, the market
events of September 2008 occurred and
changed the financial landscape such
that much of the data previously
gathered no longer reflected current
market conditions. However, that data
remains useful as an indication of how
Regulation 1.25 was implemented in a
more stable financial environment.
Additionally, recent events in the
economy have underscored the
importance of conducting periodic
reassessments and, as necessary,
revising regulatory policies to
strengthen safeguards designed to
minimize risk, while retaining an
appropriate degree of investment
flexibility and opportunities for capital
efficiency for DCOs and FCMs investing
customer segregated funds.
B. Regulation 30.7
Regulation 30.7 11 governs an FCM’s
treatment of customer money, securities,
and property associated with positions
in foreign futures and foreign options.
Regulation 30.7 was issued pursuant to
the Commission’s plenary authority
under Section 4(b) of the Act.12 Because
Congress did not expressly apply the
limitations of Section 4d of the Act to
30.7 funds, the Commission historically
has not subjected those funds to the
investment limitations applicable to
customer segregated funds.
The investment guidelines for 30.7
funds are general in nature.13 Although
Regulation 1.25 investments offer a safe
harbor, the Commission does not
currently limit investments of 30.7
funds to permitted investments under
Regulation 1.25. Appropriate
depositories for 30.7 funds currently
include certain financial institutions in
the United States, financial institutions
in a foreign jurisdiction meeting certain
capital and credit rating requirements,
and any institution not otherwise
CFR 30.7.
U.S.C. 6(b).
13 See Commission Form 1–FR–FCM Instructions
at 12–9 (Mar. 2010) (‘‘In investing funds required
to be maintained in separate section 30.7
account(s), FCMs are bound by their fiduciary
obligations to customers and the requirement that
the secured amount required to be set aside be at
all times liquid and sufficient to cover all
obligations to such customers. Regulation 1.25
investments would be appropriate, as would
investments in any other readily marketable
securities.’’).
meeting the foregoing criteria, but
which is designated as a depository
upon the request of a customer and the
approval of the Commission.
C. Advance Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking
In May 2009, the Commission issued
an advance notice of proposed
rulemaking (ANPR) 14 to solicit public
comment prior to proposing
amendments to Regulations 1.25 and
30.7. The Commission stated that it was
considering significantly revising the
scope and character of permitted
investments for customer segregated
funds and 30.7 funds. In this regard, the
Commission sought comments,
information, research, and data
regarding regulatory requirements that
might better safeguard customer
segregated funds. It also sought
comments, information, research, and
data regarding the impact of applying
the requirements of Regulation 1.25 to
investments of 30.7 funds.
The Commission received twelve
comment letters in response to the
ANPR, and it considered those
comments in formulating its proposal.15
Eleven of the 12 letters supported
maintaining the current list of permitted
investments and/or specifically
ensuring that MMMFs remain a
permitted investment. Five of the letters
were dedicated solely to the topic of
MMMFs, providing detailed discussions
of their usefulness to FCMs. Several
letters addressed issues regarding
ratings, liquidity, concentration, and
portfolio weighted average time to
maturity. The alignment of Regulation
30.7 with Regulation 1.25 was viewed as
non-controversial.
The FIA’s comment letter expressed
its view that ‘‘all of the permitted
investments described in Rule 1.25(a)
are compatible with the Commission’s
objectives of preserving principal and
maintaining liquidity.’’ This opinion
was echoed by MF Global, Newedge and
FC Stone. CME asserted that only ‘‘a
small subset of the complete list of
Regulation 1.25 permitted investments
are actually used by the industry.’’ NFA
also wrote that investments in
instruments other than U.S. government
securities and MMMFs are ‘‘negligible,’’
11 17
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14 74
FR 23962 (May 22, 2009).
Commission received comment letters
from CME Group Inc. (CME), Crane Data LLC, The
Dreyfus Corporation (Dreyfus), FCStone Group Inc.
(FCStone), Federated Investors, Inc. (Federated),
Futures Industry Association (FIA), Investment
Company Institute (ICI), MF Global Inc. (MF
Global), National Futures Association (NFA),
Newedge USA, LLC (Newedge), and Treasury
Strategies, Inc.. Two letters were received from
Federated: a July 10, 2009 letter and an August 24,
2009 letter.
15 The
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and recommended that the Commission
eliminate asset classes not ‘‘utilized to
any material extent.’’
D. The Dodd-Frank Act
On July 21, 2010, President Obama
signed the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act
(Dodd-Frank Act).16 Title IX of the
Dodd-Frank Act 17 was enacted in order
to increase investor protection, promote
transparency and improve disclosure.
Section 939A of the Dodd-Frank Act
obligates federal agencies to review their
respective regulations and make
appropriate amendments in order to
decrease reliance on credit ratings. The
Dodd-Frank Act requires the
Commission to conduct this review
within one year after the date of
enactment.18 Included in these rule
amendments are changes to Regulations
1.25 and 30.7 that remove provisions
setting forth credit rating requirements.
Separate rulemakings addressed the
removal of credit ratings from
Commission Regulations 1.49 and
4.24 19 and the removal of Appendix A
to Part 40 (which contains a reference to
credit ratings).20
E. The Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
A Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
(NPRM) was issued by the Commission
on October 26, 2010, having been
considered in conjunction with the
Dodd-Frank rulemaking regarding credit
ratings. The NPRM was published in the
Federal Register on November 3, 2010,
and the comment period closed on
December 3, 2010.21
The Commission invited comments
related to topics covered by Regulations
1.25 and 30.7, including the scope of
permitted investments, liquidity,
marketability, ratings, concentration
limits, portfolio weighted average
maturity requirements, and the
applicability of Regulation 1.25
standards to foreign futures accounts.
The Commission received 32 comment
letters.22
16 See Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act, Pub. L. 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.
17 Pursuant to Section 901 of the Dodd-Frank Act,
Title IX may be cited as the ‘‘Investor Protection
and Securities Reform Act of 2010.’’
18 See Section 939A(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act.
19 See 76 FR 44262 (July 25, 2011).
20 See 75 76 FR 44776 (July 27, 2011).
21 See 75 FR 67642 (Nov. 3, 2010); see also 76 FR
25274 (May 4, 2011) (reopening the comment
period for certain NPRMs until June 3, 2011).
22 Comment letters were received from ADM
Investor Services, Inc. (ADM), Bank of New York
Mellon (BNYM), BlackRock, Inc. (BlackRock),
Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. (BBH), Business
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II. Discussion of the Final Rules
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A. Permitted Investments—Regulation
1.25
In finalizing amendments to
Regulation 1.25, the Commission seeks
to impose requirements on the
investment of customer segregated
funds with the goal of enhancing the
preservation of principal and
maintenance of liquidity consistent with
Section 4d of the Act. The Commission
has endeavored to tailor its amendments
to achieve these goals, while retaining
an appropriate degree of investment
flexibility and opportunities for
attaining capital efficiency for DCOs and
FCMs investing customer segregated
funds.
In issuing these final rules, the
Commission is narrowing the scope of
investment choices in order to eliminate
the potential use of portfolios of
instruments that may pose an
unacceptable level of risk to customer
funds. The Commission seeks to
increase the safety of Regulation 1.25
investments by promoting
diversification.
Below, the Commission details its
decisions regarding the proposals in the
NPRM. The Commission has decided to:
• Retain investments in U.S. agency
obligations, including implicitly backed
GSE debt securities, and impose
limitations on investments in debt
issued by the Federal National Mortgage
Association (Fannie Mae) and the
Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corporation (Freddie Mac);
• Remove corporate debt obligations
not guaranteed by the United States
from the list of permitted investments;
Law Society of the University of Mississippi (BLS),
CME, Committee on the Investment of Employee
Benefit Assets (CIEBA), Dreyfus, Farm Credit
Administration (FCA), Farm Credit Council (Farm
Credit Council), Farr Financial Inc. (Farr Financial),
Federal Farm Credit Banks Funding Corporation
(FFCB), Federal Housing Finance Authority
(FHFA), Federated, Futures and Options
Association (FOA), FIA and International Swaps
and Derivatives Association, Inc. (FIA/ISDA),
International Assets Holding Corporation and
FCStone (INTL/FCStone), ICI, Joint Audit
Committee (JAC), J.P. Morgan Futures Inc. (J.P.
Morgan), LCH.Clearnet Group (LCH), MF Global
and Newedge (MF Global/Newedge),
MorganStanley & Co. (MorganStanley), NFA,
Natural Gas Exchange, Inc. (NGX), Office of Finance
of the Federal Home Loan Banks (FHLB), R.J.
O’Brien and Associates (RJO), and UBS Global
Asset Management (Americas) Inc. (UBS).
Federated sent multiple letters. Federated’s
November 30, 2010 letter will be referred to as
‘‘Federated I,’’ its December 2, 2010 letter will be
referred to as ‘‘Federated II,’’ and Arnold & Porter
LLP’s post-comment period letter on behalf of
Federated, dated March 21, 2011, will be referred
to as ‘‘Federated III.’’ Federated also sent a letter
dated November 8, 2010 and a post-comment
period letter dated February 28, 2011. The letters
from BLS and NGX were received during the
reopened comment period, on May 12, 2011 and
May 31, 2011, respectively.
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• Eliminate foreign sovereign debt as
a permitted investment; and
• Eliminate in-house and affiliate
transactions.
1. Government Sponsored Enterprise
Securities
In the NPRM, the Commission
proposed to amend Regulation
1.25(a)(1)(iii) to expressly add U.S.
government corporation obligations 23 to
GSE debt securities 24 (together, U.S.
agency obligations) and to add the
requirement that the U.S. agency
obligations must be fully guaranteed as
to principal and interest by the United
States. As proposed, all current GSE
debt securities, including that of Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac, would have been
impermissible as Regulation 1.25
investments since no GSE debt
securities have the explicit guarantee of
the U.S. government. The Commission
received 14 comment letters discussing
GSEs. Thirteen of those 14 comment
letters opposed the proposal.
Generally, the arguments focused on
the safety of GSEs, GSEs’ performance
during the financial crisis, and the
detrimental, unintended consequences
of the proposal. In addition, there were
several letters from organizations related
to the Farm Credit System GSE (Farm
Credit System) and FHLB System GSE
(FHLB System) supporting, at a
minimum, the inclusion of their GSE
debt as a permitted Regulation 1.25
investment.
In terms of safety, commenters
expressed the view that GSE debt
securities are sufficiently liquid and that
the U.S. government would not allow a
GSE to fail.25 FFCB remarked that the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC) has retained GSE debt securities
as investments appropriate under SEC
Rule 2a–7 26 (which governs MMMFs).27
In addition to GSEs being safe,
BlackRock noted that ‘‘any changes in
the viability of such entities should be
telegraphed well in advance resulting in
23 See 31 U.S.C. 9101 (defining ‘‘government
corporation’’).
24 GSEs are chartered by Congress but are
privately owned and operated. Securities issued by
GSEs do not have an explicit federal guarantee,
although they are considered by some to have an
‘‘implicit’’ guarantee due to their federal affiliation.
Obligations of U.S. government corporations, such
as the Government National Mortgage Association
(known as GNMA or Ginnie Mae), are explicitly
backed by the full faith and credit of the United
States. Although the Commission is not aware of
any GSE securities that have an explicit federal
guarantee, in the NPRM the Commission concluded
that GSE securities should remain on the list of
permitted investments in the event this status
changes in the future.
25 MF Global/Newedge letter at 4.
26 17 CFR 270.2a–7.
27 FFCB letter at 3.
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minimal disruption to the credit
markets.’’ 28
With respect to Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac, the FHFA’s support of
those GSEs effectively amounts to a
federal guarantee, according to two
commenters.29 As long as the federal
government holds exposure of greater
than 50 percent in Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac, RJO wrote that it believes
that the quality of these issuances is
better than those of any bank or
corporation.30
Commenters averred that the safety of
GSEs is further proven by their stability
during the financial crisis. MF Global/
Newedge, BlackRock and ADM noted
that non-Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac GSEs
performed well during the financial
crisis.31
Limiting investments to only those
agency obligations backed by the full
faith and credit of the U.S. government
would be a mistake because ‘‘none’’
satisfy the requirement, according to the
NFA, or ‘‘only GNMAs’’ satisfy the
requirement, according to ADM.32 The
FHFA wrote that specific criteria for
eligible investments is preferable to
speculation on the actions of third
parties (such as whether the federal
government will or will not bail out a
GSE).33
Several commenters were concerned
that the Commission’s proposal would
have the unintended consequence of
harming the broader market for GSEs, as
investors would question the safety of
such investments.34 The Farm Credit
Council wrote that ‘‘[u]ntil and unless
Congress signals its intention to erode
the federal government’s support of
GSEs, we respectfully request that the
CFTC not amend Regulation 1.25 with
respect to investments in GSEs.’’ 35
Most commenters recommended that
GSE debt securities, including those not
explicitly guaranteed by the U.S.
government, remain permitted
investments to varying extents. There
were a range of recommendations
regarding the debt of Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac. MF Global/Newedge
suggested that GSEs with implicit
guarantees should have a 50 percent
asset-based concentration limit along
28 BlackRock
letter at 6.
letter at 5, J.P. Morgan letter at 1.
30 RJO letter at 5.
31 MF Global/Newedge letter at 5, BlackRock
letter at 6, ADM letter at 3. MF Global cited the
Student Loan Marketing Association, FFCB Federal
Home Loan Banks and Federal Agricultural
Mortgage Corporation as examples of GSEs that
performed well during the financial crisis.
32 NFA letter at 2, ADM letter at 3.
33 FHFA letter at 1.
34 FCA at 2, Farm Credit Council letter at 3, RJO
letter at 4, FFCB letter at 3.
35 Farm Credit Council letter at 1–2.
29 FIA/ISDA
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with a 10 percent issuer-based limit, or,
alternatively, that GSEs meeting specific
outstanding float standards should be
allowed. MF Global/Newedge stated
that, at a minimum, the Commission
should allow FCMs to invest in GSEs
other than Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac.36 CME wrote that highly liquid
GSEs, including those of Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac, should remain as
permitted investments and should have
a 25 percent asset-based concentration
limit.37 RJO recommended that all GSE
securities be permitted, and that, at the
very least, the Commission should
permit investments in Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac until December 31, 2012,
when the government guarantee
expires.38 FIA/ISDA recommended that
investments in GSE securities be
permitted subject to the conditions that
(i) with the exception of ‘‘agency
discount notes,’’ the size of the issuance
is at least $1 billion, (ii) trading in the
securities of such agency remains highly
liquid, (iii) the prices at which the
securities may be traded are publicly
available (through, for example,
Bloomberg or Trace), and (iv)
investments in GSEs are subject to a
maximum of 50 percent asset-based and
15 percent issuer-based concentration
limits.39 BlackRock recommended a 30
percent issuer limitation on GSEs.40
The Farm Credit Council, FHLB, the
FCA, the FFCB and RJO all wrote letters
supporting one or both of the FHLB
System 41 and Farm Credit System debt
securities.42 FHLB stated that the
prohibition on GSEs not explicitly
backed by the full faith and credit of the
federal government is overly broad. In
particular, FHLB noted that FHLB debt
securities performed well throughout
the financial crisis. FHLB stated that it
maintained funding capabilities even
during the most severe periods of
market stress, due to investors’ favorable
views of its debt securities.43 Similarly,
36 MF
Global/Newedge letter at 5.
letter at 3.
38 RJO letter at 5.
39 FIA/ISDA letter at 5.
40 BlackRock at 6.
41 The FHLB System, which is regulated by the
FHFA, comprises an ‘‘Office of Finance’’ and 12
independently-chartered, regional cooperative
Federal Home Loan Banks created by Congress to
provide support for housing finance and
community development through member financial
institutions. The 12 Federal Home Loan Banks issue
debt securities (FHLB debt securities), the proceeds
from which are used to provide liquidity to the
7,900 FHLB member banks through collateralized
loans. See FHLB letter at 1–3.
42 The Farm Credit System comprises five banks
and 87 associations which provide credit and
financial services to farmers, ranchers, and similar
agricultural enterprises by issuing debt (Farm Credit
debt securities) through the FFCB.
43 FHLB letter at 1–3.
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the Farm Credit Council wrote that
Farm Credit debt securities remained
safe during the recent period of market
volatility, and the Farm Credit System
was able to supply much-needed
financial support to farmers, rangers,
harvesters of aquatic products,
agricultural cooperatives, and rural
residents and businesses.44 Farm Credit
discount notes, among other Farm
Credit debt securities, ‘‘have been a
staple in risk-averse investor portfolios
since the [Farm Credit System’s]
inception in 1916 and have proven their
creditworthiness across a range of
market environments.’’ 45 During the
recent crisis, the Farm Credit System
was able to issue and redeem over $400
billion in discount notes annually,
while issuing over $100 billion per year
in longer-maturity debt securities.46 RJO
concurred regarding both GSEs, noting
that the FHLB System and Farm Credit
System experienced minimal, if any,
problems during the crisis.47
CIEBA, which represents 100 of the
country’s largest pension funds, was the
only commenter that backed the
proposal.48
After reviewing the comments, the
Commission has concluded that U.S.
agency obligations should remain
permitted investments. The Commission
acknowledges the fact, mentioned by
several commenters, that most GSE debt
performed well during the most recent
financial crisis.
The Commission believes it
appropriate to include a limitation for
debt issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac, two GSEs which did not perform
well during the recent financial crisis.
Both entities failed and, as a result, have
been operating under the
conservatorship of the FHFA since
September of 2008. As conservator of
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, FHFA has
assumed all powers formerly held by
each entity’s officers, directors, and
shareholders. In addition, FHFA, as
conservator, is authorized to take such
actions as may be necessary to restore
each entity to a sound and solvent
condition and that are appropriate to
preserve and conserve the assets and
property of each entity.49
44 Farm Credit Council letter at 1. Farm Credit
debt securities are regulated by the FCA and
insured by an independent U.S. governmentcontrolled corporation which maintains an
insurance fund of roughly 2 percent of the
outstanding loans. The total outstanding loan
amount was over $3 billion as of the end of 2009.
See Farm Credit Council letter at 2.
45 FFCB letter at 1.
46 Id.
47 RJO letter at 4.
48 CIEBA letter at 3.
49 See 12 U.S.C. 4617(b)(2)(D). The primary goals
of the conservatorships are to help restore
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In consideration of the above
comments, the Commission is amending
Regulation 1.25(a)(1)(iii) by permitting
investments in U.S. agency obligations.
The Commission is adding new
paragraph (a)(3) to include the
limitation that debt issued by Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac are permitted as
long as these entities are operating
under the conservatorship or
receivership of FHFA.
2. Commercial Paper and Corporate
Notes or Bonds
In order to simplify Regulation 1.25
by eliminating rarely-used instruments,
and in light of the credit, liquidity, and
market risks posed by corporate debt
securities, the Commission proposed
amending Regulation 1.25(a)(1)(v)–(vi)
to limit investments in ‘‘commercial
paper’’ 50 and ‘‘corporate notes or
bonds’’ 51 to commercial paper and
corporate notes or bonds that are
federally guaranteed as to principal and
interest under the Temporary Liquidity
Guarantee Program (TLGP) and meet
certain other prudential standards.52
The NPRM supported this proposal by
noting the credit, liquidity and market
risks associated with corporate notes or
bonds and referenced that information
obtained during the 2007 Review
indicated that commercial paper and
corporate notes or bonds were not
widely used by FCMs or DCOs.53
Second, the NPRM provided
background on the TLGP and explained
that TLGP debt would be permissible if:
(1) The size of the issuance is greater
than $1 billion; (2) the debt security is
denominated in U.S. dollars; and (3) the
debt security is guaranteed for its entire
term.54
Seven comment letters discussed
commercial paper and corporate notes
confidence in the entities, enhance their capacity to
fulfill their mission, mitigate the systemic risk that
contributed directly to instability in financial
markets, and maintain Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac’s secondary mortgage market role until their
future is determined through legislation. To these
ends, FHFA’s conservatorship of Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac is directed toward minimizing losses,
limiting risk exposure, and ensuring that Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac price their services to
adequately address their costs and risk.
50 17 CFR 1.25(a)(1)(v).
51 17 CFR 1.25(a)(1)(vi).
52 Commercial paper would remain available as a
direct investment for MMMFs and corporate notes
or bonds would remain available as indirect
investments for MMMFs by means of a repurchase
agreement.
53 The 2007 Review indicated that out of 87 FCM
respondents, only nine held commercial paper and
seven held corporate notes/bonds as direct
investments during the November 30, 2006—
December 1, 2007 period.
54 Debra Kokal, Joint Audit Committee, CFTC
Staff Letter 10–01 [Current Transfer Binder] Comm.
Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) ¶ 31,514 (Jan. 15. 2010) (TLGP
Letter).
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or bonds in a substantive manner. Six of
the comment letters weighed in favor of
retaining commercial paper and
corporate notes or bonds to some
degree. Comments included statements
as to the effects of the proposal, the
safety of these instruments, and the lack
of reliability of the 2007 Commission
review of customer funds investments.
According to three commenters,
limiting commercial paper and
corporate notes or bonds to just those
backed by the TLGP is essentially
eliminating the asset class altogether.55
BlackRock, ADM and RJO asserted that
TLGP debt is not liquid due to the lack
of available supply and therefore might
not be a viable option for investment.56
There was general support for
maintaining corporate notes or bonds as
Regulation 1.25 permitted investments.
FIA/ISDA wrote that as long as trading
in the relevant security remains highly
liquid, such securities should continue
to be eligible investments under
Regulation 1.25.57 RJO noted that
commercial paper and corporate notes
and bonds (i) have many high quality
names, (ii) have a mature and liquid
secondary market, and (iii) provide
greater diversification than merely
‘‘financial sector’’ bank CDs.58 Further,
RJO averred that high quality corporate
notes or bonds are no different than
those used by prime MMMFs.59 MF
Global/Newedge stated that they were
unaware of any instances of an FCM
unable to meet its obligations under
Regulation 1.25 as a result of investment
losses it suffered involving corporate
notes or commercial paper. They believe
that commercial paper and corporate
notes or bonds should continue to be
permitted; however, to the extent that
there are limitations, they suggest (a)
permitting FCMs to invest only in
corporate notes or commercial paper
issued by entities with a certain
minimum capital level or which meet a
certain float size, or (b) limiting FCM
investments in such instruments to 25
percent of their portfolio and 5 percent
with any one issuer. BlackRock supports
a 25–50 percent asset-based
concentration limit for TLGP debt, but
also notes that a lack of creditworthy
55 BlackRock letter at 6, RJO letter at 6, ADM
letter at 3.
56 By contrast, the Commission found that TLGP
debt that (1) has an issuance size of greater than $1
billion, (2) is denominated in U.S. dollars and (3)
is guaranteed for its entire term, is sufficiently safe
and liquid for use as a Regulation 1.25 investment.
See TLGP Letter.
57 FIA/ISDA letter at 5.
58 RJO letter at 6.
59 RJO letter at 5.
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supply may prevent an FCM from
reaching that limit.60
Commenters rejected the
Commission’s contention that the lack
of investment in commercial paper and
corporate notes or bonds illustrated in
its 2007 Review was dispositive. MF
Global/Newedge suggested that the
investment review is outdated and is
inadequate to justify removing an
important source of revenue for FCMs.61
RJO noted that commercial paper and
corporate notes likely appear to be used
minimally during the relevant period
because investments in such
instruments were not as safe during that
time frame.62
The Commission does not find the
arguments in favor of retaining
corporate notes and bonds to be
persuasive. While the Commission
encourages FCMs and DCOs to increase
or decrease their holdings of certain
permitted instruments depending on
market conditions, the Commission is
following the language of the statute and
its goal of eliminating instruments that
may, during tumultuous markets, tie up
or threaten customer principal. The
Commission recognizes that certain
high-quality paper and notes may be
sufficiently safe. As discussed in
Section I.B.4.(a) of this rulemaking, an
FCM or DCO may invest up to 50
percent of its funds in prime MMMFs,
which may invest in high-quality paper
and notes meeting certain standards. To
the extent that commenters suggested
that the 2007 Report does not accurately
reflect the volume of investment of
customer segregated funds in
commercial paper and corporate notes
or bonds, the Commission believes that
the 2007 Report contains sufficiently
accurate information reflective of the
circumstances at that time.63 Further,
notwithstanding the relative paucity of
investment in such instruments, the
Commission believes that the
investment of customer funds in such
instruments runs counter to the
overarching objective of preserving
principal and maintaining liquidity of
customer funds.
60 BlackRock
letter at 6.
Global/Newedge at 8.
62 RJO letter at 5.
63 While the Commission does not have similar
data reflecting Regulation 1.25 investments from
more recent years, the Commission believes that
investment in commercial paper and corporate
notes or bonds remains minimal. This belief is
supported by a July 21, 2009 letter from NFA, in
response to the ANPR, which averred that
segregated funds were primarily invested in
government securities and MMMFs, while
investments in other instruments were ‘‘negligible.’’
Moreover, the Commission has received no
evidence to contradict its position.
61 MF
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Although the TLGP expires in 2012,
the Commission believes it is useful to
include commercial paper and corporate
notes or bonds that are fully guaranteed
as to principal and interest by the
United States as permitted investments.
This would permit continuing
investment in TLGP debt securities,
even though the Commission has
otherwise eliminated commercial paper
and corporate notes or bonds from the
list of permitted investments. Therefore,
the Commission is adopting the
proposed amendments to Regulation
1.25(a) and (b) that limit the commercial
paper and corporate notes or bonds that
can qualify as permitted investments to
only those guaranteed as to principal
and interest under the TLGP and that
meet the criteria set forth in the
Division’s interpretation.64 The
Commission is amending Regulation
1.25 by (1) amending paragraphs
(a)(1)(v) and (a)(1)(vi) to specify that
commercial paper and corporate notes
or bonds must be federally backed and
(2) inserting new paragraph (b)(2)(vi)
that describes the criteria for federally
backed commercial paper and corporate
notes or bonds.65
3. Foreign Sovereign Debt
Currently, an FCM or DCO may invest
in the sovereign debt of a foreign
country to the extent it has balances in
segregated accounts owed to its
customers (or, in the case of a DCO, to
its clearing member FCMs) denominated
in that country’s currency.66 In the
NPRM, the Commission proposed to
remove foreign sovereign debt as a
permitted investment in the interests of
both simplifying the regulation and
safeguarding customer funds in light of
64 See TLGP Letter; 75 FR 67642, 67645 (Nov. 3,
2010).
65 In the NPRM, the Commission proposed
removing paragraph (b)(3)(iv) (as amended in this
rulemaking, paragraph (b)(2)(iv)) which permits
adjustable rate securities as limited under that
paragraph. As proposed, Regulation 1.25 would
have only permitted corporate and U.S. agency
obligations that had explicit U.S. government
guarantees. However, since the Commission is, for
the most part, retaining the current treatment of
U.S. agency obligations, as described in more detail
in section II.A.1 of this rulemaking, the Commission
has decided not to adopt the proposed removal of
paragraph (b)(3)(iv) (now paragraph (b)(2)(iv)).
66 The inclusion of foreign sovereign debt as a
permitted investment can be traced to an August 7,
2000 comment letter from the Federal Reserve Bank
of Chicago requesting that the Commission allow
FCMs and DCOs to invest non-dollar customer
funds in the foreign sovereign debt of the currency
so denominated. The Commission agreed in its final
rule, explaining that an FCM investing deposits of
foreign currencies would be required to convert the
foreign currencies to a U.S. dollar denominated
asset, and that such conversion would ‘‘increase its
exposure to foreign currency fluctuation risk, unless
it incurred the additional expense of hedging.’’ See
65 FR 78003 (Dec. 13, 2000).
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recent crises experienced by a number
of foreign sovereigns. The Commission
requested comment on whether foreign
sovereign debt should remain, to any
extent, as a permitted investment and, if
so, what requirements or limitations
might be imposed in order to minimize
sovereign risk.
Thirteen comment letters discussed
foreign sovereign debt. Twelve of the 13
suggested retaining foreign sovereign
debt to varying degrees. One comment
letter supported the Commission’s
proposal. As discussed in more detail
below, both the importance of hedging
against foreign currency exposure as
well as the unintended consequences of
the proposal were cited frequently by
commenters as reasons to retain foreign
sovereign debt as a permitted
investment.
Six commenters discussed the need to
mitigate the risks associated with
foreign currency exposure. FIA/ISDA,
MF Global/Newedge, J.P. Morgan, LCH,
NFA and FOA each noted that when a
DCO requires margin deposited in a
foreign currency, an FCM will face a
foreign currency exposure in order to
meet that margin requirement. The FCM
is able to mitigate this exposure by
investing customer funds in foreign
sovereign debt securities denominated
in the relevant currency.67
The benefits of increased
diversification and liquidity were
mentioned by three commenters. FOA
and ADM noted that outside investment
in sovereign debt played a key role,
during the recent financial crisis, in
maintaining liquidity and demand in
such instruments, which, in turn, had a
beneficial impact on pricing and
spreads.68 BlackRock wrote that,
notwithstanding the current limited
investment in foreign sovereign debt,
there are opportunities to add
diversification and liquidity by allowing
such investments.69 FIA/ISDA, FOA
and BlackRock suggested that lack of
use should not disqualify an investment
as long as permitting it would still serve
to preserve principal and maintain
liquidity.70
Several commenters predicted
harmful unintended consequences if the
proposal to remove foreign sovereign
debt as a permitted investment becomes
the final rule. CME suggested that the
implementation of the Dodd-Frank Act
will result in an increase in the amount
of customer funds held by FCMs and an
67 FIA/ISDA
letter at 6, MF Global/Newedge letter
at 5, J.P. Morgan letter at 1, LCH letter at 2, NFA
letter at 3, FOA letter at 4.
68 FOA letter at 2, ADM letter at 2.
69 BlackRock letter at 6.
70 FIA/ISDA letter at 6, FOA letter at 3, BlackRock
letter at 6.
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increase in the number of foreign
customers and foreign-domiciled
clearing members.71 Removing foreign
sovereign debt would limit
diversification, would undermine the
role of non-US sovereign debt, and
would have the unintended
consequence of increasing market
volatility, according to FOA.72 LCH and
FOA predicted that retaliatory action
from foreign jurisdictions also could
occur.73
Most commenters supported retaining
foreign sovereign debt to some degree.
CME and FIA/ISDA suggested that
foreign sovereign debt be retained as a
permitted investment, adding that all
investments must be highly liquid
under the terms of Regulation 1.25, so
risky foreign sovereign debt would not
be permitted.74 LCH recommended that
foreign sovereign debt remain permitted
as an investment, or, at a minimum, that
investments be limited to only high
quality sovereign issuers.75 LCH also
noted that DCOs have conservative
investment policies in place already.76
RJO suggested limiting foreign sovereign
debt to only G–7 issuers, with limits
based upon the margin requirement for
all client positions.77 NGX suggested
that DCOs domiciled outside of the U.S.,
in G–7 countries, be permitted to invest
in their country’s sovereign debt, adding
that not allowing such investments may
be a ‘‘hardship’’ on such DCOs.78 ADM
suggested that G–7 countries serve as a
‘‘safe harbor’’ for Regulation 1.25 foreign
sovereign debt investments.79 One
commenter, CIEBA, backed the
Commission’s proposal without further
explanation.80
The Commission has considered the
comments and has decided to adopt the
proposed amendment, thereby
eliminating foreign sovereign debt from
the list of permitted investments. As
discussed in more detail below, the
Commission believes that, in many
cases, the potential volatility of foreign
sovereign debt in the current economic
environment and the varying degrees of
financial stability of different issuers
make foreign sovereign debt
inappropriate for hedging foreign
currency risk. The Commission also is
not persuaded that foreign sovereign
debt is used with sufficient frequency to
justify the commenters’ claims that
71 CME
letter at 3.
letter at 3.
73 LCH letter at 2, FOA letter at 2–3.
74 CME letter at 3, FIA/ISDA letter at 6.
75 LCH letter at 2.
76 Id.
77 RJO letter at 6.
78 NGX letter at 3.
79 ADM letter at 2.
80 CIEBA letter at 3.
72 FOA
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foreign sovereign debt assists with
diversification of customer fund
investments, and it is not persuaded
that the specter of backlash from other
jurisdictions or increased market
volatility requires a different outcome.
First, while it appreciates the risks of
foreign currency exposure, the
Commission does not believe that
foreign sovereign debt is, in all
situations, a sufficiently safe means for
hedging such risk. Recent global and
regional financial crises have illustrated
that circumstances may quickly change,
negatively impacting the safety of
sovereign debt held by an FCM or DCO.
An FCM or DCO holding troubled
sovereign debt may then be unable to
liquidate such instruments in a timely
manner—and, when it does, it may be
only after a significant mark-down.
Given the choice between an FCM
holding devalued currency, which can
be exchanged for a portion of the
customers’ margin and returned to the
customer immediately, and an FCM
holding illiquid foreign sovereign debt,
which might not be able to be
exchanged for any currency in a timely
manner, the Commission believes that
the former is in the customers’ best
interests. The Commission notes that
FCMs can avoid foreign currency risk by
not accepting collateral that is not
accepted at the DCO or foreign board of
trade, or by providing in its customer
agreement that the customer will bear
any currency exposure.81
Second, the Commission is not
persuaded by commenters’ assertions
that investment in foreign sovereign
debt has increased the diversification of
customer funds in any meaningful way.
The Commission has noted that
investment in foreign sovereign debt
was minimal in the 2007 Review.82 The
Commission has received no data or
evidence from any commenter
suggesting that investment in foreign
sovereign debt has materially increased
since the 2007 Review.
Third, the Commission does not
believe that eliminating foreign
sovereign debt as a permitted
investment of customer funds will cause
the market or jurisdictional problems
claimed by commenters. As discussed
above, no commenter has demonstrated
that foreign sovereign debt is widely
used, so its elimination should not
81 Additionally, the Commission believes that it is
appropriate to note that Regulation 1.25 does not
dictate the collateral that may be accepted by FCMs
from customers or by DCOs from clearing member
FCMs. If FCMs and DCOs so allow, customers and
clearing member FCMs, respectively, may continue
to post foreign currency or foreign sovereign debt
as collateral.
82 75 FR 67642, 67645.
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undermine foreign sovereign debt nor
cause a disruption in the market.
The foregoing points notwithstanding,
the Commission is aware that FCMs and
DCOs have varying collateral
management needs and investment
policies. The Commission also
recognizes that the safety of sovereign
debt issuances of one country may vary
greatly from those of another, and that
investment in certain sovereign debt
might be consistent with the objectives
of preserving principal and maintaining
liquidity, as required by Regulation
1.25.
Therefore, the Commission is
amenable to considering applications
for exemptions with respect to
investment in foreign sovereign debt by
FCMs or DCOs upon a demonstration
that the investment in the sovereign
debt of one or more countries is
appropriate in light of the objectives of
Regulation 1.25 and that the issuance of
an exemption satisfies the criteria set
forth in Section 4(c) of the Act.83
Accordingly, the Commission invites
FCMs and DCOs that seek to invest
customer funds in foreign sovereign
debt to petition the Commission
pursuant to Section 4(c). The
Commission will consider permitting
investments (1) to the extent that the
FCM or DCO has balances in segregated
accounts owed to its customers (or
clearing member FCMs, as the case may
be) in that country’s currency and (2) to
the extent that such sovereign debt
serves to preserve principal and
maintain liquidity of customer funds as
required for all other investments of
customer funds under Regulation 1.25.
Finally, in response to NGX, the
Commission does not agree that foreign
domiciled FCMs and DCOs should be
able to invest in the sovereign debt of
their domicile nation. A compelling
argument has not been presented as to
why this constitutes a ‘‘hardship’’ to
DCOs domiciled outside of the United
States.
4. In-house Transactions
The Commission allowed in-house
transactions as a permitted investment
for the first time in 2005.84 At that time,
the Commission stated that in-house
transactions ‘‘provide the economic
equivalent of repos and reverse repos,’’
and, like repurchase agreements with
third parties, preserve the ‘‘integrity of
the customer segregated account.’’ 85
The Commission further wrote that inhouse transactions should not disrupt
FCMs and DCOs from maintaining
‘‘sufficient value in the account at all
times.’’ 86 In the May 2009 ANPR, the
Commission noted that the recent
events in the economy underscored the
importance of conducting periodic
reassessments and refocused its review
of permitted investments, including inhouse transactions.87
In the NPRM, the Commission
proposed to eliminate in-house
transactions permitted under paragraph
(a)(3) and subject to the requirements of
paragraph (e) of Regulation 1.25. The
Commission noted that ‘‘[r]ecent market
events have * * * increased concerns
about the concentration of credit risk
within the FCM/broker-dealer corporate
entity in connection with in-house
transactions.’’ 88 The Commission
requested comment on the impact of
this proposal on the business practices
of FCMs and DCOs. Specifically, the
Commission requested that commenters
present scenarios in which a repurchase
or reverse repurchase agreement with a
third party could not be satisfactorily
substituted for an in-house transaction.
Six commenters discussed in-house
transactions. Four requested that inhouse transactions be retained to some
extent, while two supported the
Commission’s proposal to eliminate inhouse transactions.
FIA/ISDA, CME, MF Global/Newedge
and MorganStanley recommended that
the Commission allow FCMs to engage
in in-house transactions. FIA/ISDA and
CME suggested that the current terms of
Regulation 1.25(e) should be more than
sufficient to assure that the customer
segregated account and the foreign
futures and foreign options secured
amount are protected in the event of an
FCM bankruptcy.89 MorganStanley
wrote that FCM efficiency relies heavily
on in-house transactions, particularly
when customer margin is not
appropriate for DCO margin. It further
stated that relying entirely on third
party repurchase agreements will
materially increase operational risk in
an area where it is negligible today.90
According to MorganStanley,
Because the in-house transaction can be
effected and recorded through book entries
on the FCM/broker-dealer’s general ledger, it
can be accomplished through automated
internal processes that are subject to a high
level of control. The same is not routinely
true of third-party repurchase arrangements,
which often involve greater time lags than do
in-house transactions between execution and
settlement and also typically require more
7 U.S.C. 6(c).
84 70 FR 28190, 28193.
85 70 FR 28193. See also 70 FR 5577, 5581
(February 3, 2005).
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MorganStanley further noted that, as
with the FCM of Lehman Brothers
Holdings Inc. (Lehman Brothers) in
2008, a third party custodial
arrangement is not without risk.92 MF
Global/Newedge wrote that removing
in-house transactions would not reduce
FCM risk, ‘‘since FCMs would be unable
to enter into and execute such
transactions with and through entities
and personnel with whom they have
created an effective, efficient and liquid
settlement framework.’’ 93
However, RJO stated that in-house
transactions currently do not provide
‘‘protection to the capital base of the
FCM arm of a dually registered
entity.’’ 94 Without ‘‘ring fencing the
capital associated with the separately
regulated business lines,’’ RJO does not
consider in-house transactions to be
satisfactory substitutes for separately
capitalized affiliates or third parties.95
CME and FIA/ISDA support retaining
in-house transactions as they currently
are permitted under Regulation 1.25.
MorganStanley suggested retaining inhouse transactions subject to a
concentration limit of 25 percent of total
assets held in segregation or secured
amount; or if the Commission is
determined to eliminate in-house
transactions, raising the proposed
concentration limit for reverse
repurchase agreements to 25 percent of
total assets held in segregation or
secured amount.96 RJO, for the reasons
noted above, and CIEBA, without
explanation, both support the proposal
to remove in-house transactions from
the list of permitted investments.97
Many commenters to the NPRM
similarly suggest that the benefits of
repurchase and reverse repurchase
agreements can also be realized by inhouse transactions, without any
decrease in safety to customer funds.
The Commission rejects this position.
The Commission believes that in-house
transactions are fundamentally different
than repurchase or reverse repurchase
agreements with third parties. In the
case of a reverse repurchase agreement,
the transaction is similar to a
collateralized loan whereby customer
cash is exchanged for unencumbered
collateral, both of which are housed in
legally separate entities. The agreement
is transacted at arms-length (often by
91 Morgan
Stanley letter at 2.
letter at 3–4.
93 MF Global/Newedge letter at 7.
94 RJO letter at 3.
95 Id.
96 MorganStanley letter at 4.
97 RJO letter at 3, CIEBA letter at 3.
92 MorganStanley
86 70
83 See
manual processing than their in-house
counterparts.91
FR 28190, 28193.
FR 23963, 23964.
88 75 FR 67642, 67646.
89 CME letter at 3, FIA/ISDA letter at 12.
90 MorganStanley letter at 2–3.
87 74
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means of a tri-party repo mechanism),
on a delivery versus payment basis, and
is memorialized by a legally binding
contract. By contrast, in an in-house
transaction, cash and securities are
under common control of the same legal
entity, which presents the potential for
conflicts of interest in the handling of
customer funds that may be tested in
times of crisis. Unlike a repurchase or
reverse repurchase agreement, there is
no mechanism to ensure that an inhouse transaction is done on a delivery
versus payment basis. Furthermore, an
in-house transaction, by its nature, is
transacted within a single entity and
therefore cannot be legally documented,
since an entity cannot contract with
itself (the most one could do to
document such a transaction would be
to make an entry on a ledger or subledger).
Other advocates of in-house
transactions explained that in-house
transactions help them better manage
their balance sheets. For example, if a
firm entered into a repurchase or reverse
repurchase transaction with an
unaffiliated third party, the accounting
of that transaction may cause the
consolidated balance sheet of the firm to
appear larger than if the transaction
occurred in-house. In 2005, the
Commission wrote that in-house
transactions could ‘‘assist an FCM both
in achieving greater capital efficiency
and in accomplishing important risk
management goals, including internal
diversification targets.’’ 98 However, the
purpose of Regulation 1.25 is not to
assist FCMs and DCOs with their
balance sheet maintenance. The purpose
of Regulation 1.25 is to permit FCMs
and DCOs to invest customer funds in
a manner that preserves principal and
maintains liquidity.
The Commission reiterates that
customer segregation is the foundation
of customer protection in the
commodity, futures and swaps markets.
Segregation must be maintained at all
times, pursuant to Section 4d of the Act
and Commission Regulation 1.20,99 and
customer segregated funds must be
invested in a manner which preserves
principal and maintains liquidity in
accordance with Regulation 1.25. As
such, the Commission must be vigilant
in narrowing the scope of Regulation
1.25 if transactions that were once
considered sufficiently safe later prove
to be unacceptably risky. Based on the
concerns outlined above, the
Commission now believes that in-house
transactions present an unacceptable
risk to customer segregated funds under
98 70
99 17
FR 28193; see also 70 FR 5581.
CFR 1.20.
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Regulation 1.25. The final regulation
deletes paragraph (a)(3), as proposed.100
For the removal of doubt, the
Commission wishes to distinguish inhouse transactions from in-house sales
of permitted investments. An in-house
transaction is an exchange of cash or
permitted instruments, held by a dually
registered FCM/broker dealer, for
customer funds. An in-house sale is the
legal purchase of a permitted
investment, which may be owned by a
dually registered FCM/broker-dealer,
with customer funds. Such in-house
sales of permitted investments at fair
market prices are acceptable and are
unaffected by the elimination of inhouse transactions.
In addition, the Commission wishes
to distinguish in-house transactions
from collateral exchanges for the benefit
of the customer. As described above, a
dually registered FCM/broker-dealer
may not engage in in-house
transactions, which are exchanges made
at the discretion of the dually registered
entity. However, a dually registered
FCM/broker-dealer receiving customer
collateral not acceptable at the DCO or
foreign board of trade may exchange
that collateral for acceptable collateral
held by its dually registered brokerdealer to the extent necessary to meet
margin requirements.101
B. General Terms and Conditions
FCMs and DCOs may invest customer
funds only in enumerated permitted
investments ‘‘consistent with the
objectives of preserving principal and
maintaining liquidity.’’102 In
furtherance of this general standard,
paragraph (b) of Regulation 1.25
establishes various specific
requirements designed to minimize
credit, market, and liquidity risk.
Among them are requirements that the
investment be ‘‘readily marketable’’ (a
concept borrowed from SEC
regulations), that it meet specified rating
100 Conversely, transactions that at one point in
time are considered to be unacceptably risky may
later prove to be sufficiently safe. Should any
person, in the future, believe that circumstances
warrant reconsideration of the deletion of paragraph
(a)(3) regarding in-house transactions, such person
may petition the Commission for an amendment in
accordance with the procedures set forth in
Regulation 13.2, 17 CFR 13.2. Such a petition may
include proposed conditions to the listing of inhouse transactions as permitted investments in
order to address the concerns (e.g., concentration of
credit risk within the FCM/broker-dealer corporate
entity, potential for conflicts of interest in handling
customer funds, etc.) that are the basis for the
Commission’s determination to eliminate in-house
transactions as permitted investments at this time.
101 FCMs, whether or not dually registered as
broker-dealers, may also engage in collateral
exchanges for the benefit of customers with
affiliates or third parties.
102 17 CFR 1.25(b).
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requirements, and that it not exceed
specified issuer concentration limits.
The Commission proposed and has
decided to amend these standards to
facilitate the preservation of principal
and maintenance of liquidity by
establishing clear, prudential standards
that further investment quality and
portfolio diversification and to remove
references to credit ratings. The
Commission notes that an investment
that meets the technical requirements of
Regulation 1.25, but does not meet the
overarching prudential standard, cannot
qualify as a permitted investment.
1. Marketability
Regulation 1.25(b)(1) states that
‘‘[e]xcept for interests in money market
mutual funds, investments must be
‘readily marketable’ as defined in
§ 240.15c3–1 of this title.’’ 103 In the
NPRM, the Commission proposed to
remove the ‘‘readily marketable’’
requirement from paragraph (b)(1) of
Regulation 1.25 and substitute in its
place a ‘‘highly liquid’’ standard. The
Commission proposed to define ‘‘highly
liquid’’ as having the ability to be
converted into cash within one business
day, without a material discount in
value. As an alternative, the
Commission offered a calculable
standard, in which an instrument would
be considered highly liquid if there was
a reasonable basis to conclude that,
under stable financial conditions, the
instrument has the ability to be
converted into cash within one business
day, without greater than a one percent
haircut off of its book value.
The Commission requested comment
on whether the proposed definition of
‘‘highly liquid’’ accurately reflected the
industry’s understanding of that term,
and whether the term ‘‘material’’ might
be replaced with a more precise or,
perhaps, even calculable standard. The
Commission welcomed comment on the
ease or difficulty in applying the
proposed or alternative ‘‘highly liquid’’
standards.
Six commenters mentioned the
‘‘highly liquid’’ definition. All six
supported the proposed, but not the
alternative, standard.104 Several noted
that under the alternative standard, even
some Treasuries would likely fall
outside of the scope of permitted
investments. No commenters provided
more precise language than ‘‘material’’
or any calculable option.
Certain commenters requested
additional clarification. FIA/ISDA wrote
103 See 17 CFR 240.15c3–1(c)(11)(i) (SEC
regulation defining ‘‘ready market’’).
104 CME letter at 7, JAC letter at 1–2, FIA/ISDA
letter at 3, Farr Financial letter at 3, RJO letter at
7, BlackRock letter at 6.
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that some liquid securities do not trade
every day and requested that the
Commission confirm that, in
determining whether a security is highly
liquid, an FCM may use, as a reference,
securities that are directly comparable,
particularly for those issuers with many
classes of securities outstanding.105 FIA/
ISDA also asked the Commission to
confirm that FCMs may rely on publicly
available prices as well as third party
pricing vendors such as Bloomberg,
TradeWeb, TRACE, IDCG and MSRB.106
Additionally, JAC requested assurance
that the highly liquid standard will not
be substituted for ‘‘ready market’’ in
other places in Commission regulations,
in the Form 1–FR–FCM instructions, or
for offsets to debit/deficits on 30.7
statements.107
The Commission has considered the
comments received and concludes that
the ‘‘readily marketable’’ standard is no
longer appropriate and should be
removed as it creates an overlapping
and confusing standard when applied in
the context of the express objective of
‘‘maintaining liquidity.’’ While
‘‘liquidity’’ and ‘‘ready market’’ appear
to be interchangeable concepts, they
have distinctly different origins and
uses. The objective of ‘‘maintaining
liquidity’’ is to ensure that investments
can be promptly liquidated in order to
meet a margin call, pay variation
settlement, or return funds to the
customer upon demand. Meanwhile, the
SEC’s ‘‘ready market’’ standard is
intended for a different purpose (which
is to set appropriate haircuts in order to
calculate capital) and is easier to apply
to exchange-traded equity securities
than debt securities. The Commission is
therefore adopting the proposal and
amending the text of Regulation
1.25(b)(1) to delete ‘‘readily marketable’’
and replace it with ‘‘highly liquid,’’
defined as having the ability to be
converted into cash within one business
day, without a material discount in
value.
In response to FIA/ISDA’s request for
clarification, when determining whether
a security which does not trade every
day is sufficiently liquid, the
Commission believes that an FCM may
use any data that reasonably provides
evidence of liquidity. However, it is the
Commission’s position that theoretical
pricing data is not enough, on its own,
to establish that a security is highly
liquid. FCMs seeking pricing
information should be able to use
publicly-available as well as third party
pricing vendors. Finally, in response to
105 FIA/ISDA
letter at 3.
106 Id.
107 JAC
letter at 2.
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JAC, the Commission confirms that the
‘‘highly liquid’’ standard is for
Regulation 1.25 purposes only. This
standard will not be substituted for
‘‘ready market’’ elsewhere in
Commission regulations at the present
time.
2. Ratings
Consistent with Section 939A of the
Dodd-Frank Act, the Commission is
amending Regulation 1.25, as proposed,
by removing all references to ratings
requirements.108 Only one commenter
discussed ratings. BlackRock cautioned
that complete removal of ratings criteria
as a risk filter may place undue
responsibility on an FCM or DCO to
complete a thorough risk assessment of
an issuer’s financial strength.109
The Commission notes that the
removal of references to ratings does not
prohibit a DCO or FCM from taking into
account credit ratings as one of many
factors to be considered in making an
investment decision. Rather, the
presence of high ratings is not required
and would not provide a safe harbor for
investments that do not satisfy the
objectives of preserving principal and
maintaining liquidity.
3. Restrictions on Instrument Features
In the NPRM, the Commission
proposed to amend Regulation
1.25(b)(3)(v) (as amended, Regulation
1.25(b)(2)(v)) by restricting CDs to only
those instruments which can be
redeemed at the issuing bank within one
business day, with any penalty for early
withdrawal limited to accrued interest
earned according to its written terms.
Five commenters discussed restrictions
on the instrument features of CDs. Four
suggested that CDs be retained to
varying degrees. One suggested that CDs
be removed from the list of permitted
investments entirely.
On the subject of safety, MF Global/
Newedge asserted that brokered CDs are
preferable to non-brokered CDs. In
support of this conclusion, MF Global/
Newedge pointed out that brokered CDs
receive price quotes, are marked-tomarket every day and have numerous
buyers, while non-brokered CDs have
only one buyer, ‘‘which creates
significant counterparty risk for FCMs
purchasing such products.’’110
ADM and RJO discussed the liquidity
of the market for CDs. ADM suggested
that brokered CDs are liquid despite an
inactive secondary market.111 RJO
averred that non-negotiable CDs were
not intended for institutional size
transactions. RJO also predicted that
this proposal could severely limit the
quantity and quality of banks willing to
accept the proposed stringent limitation
on breakage fees.112
MF Global/Newedge recommended
that brokered CDs remain permitted;
however, if limits are to be imposed,
they recommended (a) that issuers of
brokered CDs meet certain capital
criteria or the CDs meet certain float size
thresholds, or (b) that FCMs be allowed
to invest in brokered CDs up to 50
percent of their portfolio and/or 10
percent with any one issuer.113 MF
Global/Newedge also suggested that the
Commission consider allowing brokered
CDs with puts. Such an instrument may
be traded in the secondary market, but
also may be put back to the issuer.114
Rather than restricting negotiable CDs,
ADM suggested that the Commission
restrict the allowable issuers of CDs
using guidelines that the Commission
sees fit.115 Farr Financial recommended
that brokered CDs be allowed as long as
they generally meet the criteria of
‘‘highly liquid.’’116 Farr Financial also
suggested that the portion of the
proposed rule limiting penalties for
early withdrawal to ‘‘any accrued
interest earned’’ be modified to account
for the standard practices of CD
penalties. For example, Farr Financial
stated that CDs with a term of one year
or less have an early withdrawal penalty
of up to 90 days of simple interest
earned. For CDs with a term of more
than one year, typically the early
withdrawal penalty is up to 180 days of
simple interest. CIEBA recommended
eliminating investments in both
brokered and non-brokered CDs,
without further explanation.117
The Commission is adopting the
proposed amendment to Regulation
1.25(b)(3)(v) (as amended, Regulation
1.25(b)(2)(v)) by restricting CDs to only
110 MF
Global/Newedge letter at 7–8.
letter at 2. According to ADM, the
inactivity of the secondary market for CDs is due
to the fact that most buyers hold CDs to maturity.
Id.
112 RJO letter at 6. However it should be noted
that this proposal does not alter Regulation 1.25
with regard to penalties; therefore the Commission
views this concern as unwarranted.
113 MF Global/Newedge letter at 8.
114 Id.
115 ADM letter at 2.
116 Farr Financial letter at 3.
117 CIEBA letter at 3.
111 ADM
108 Section 939A(a) directs each Federal agency to
review their regulations for references to or
requirements of credit ratings and assessments of
credit-worthiness. Section 939A(b) states, in part,
that ‘‘each such agency shall modify such
regulation * * * to remove any reference to or
requirement of reliance on credit ratings and to
substitute in such regulation such standard of
credit-worthiness as each respective agency shall
determine as appropriate for such regulations.’’ See
75 FR 67254 (Nov. 2, 2010).
109 BlackRock letter at 2.
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those instruments which can be
redeemed at the issuing bank within one
business day, with any penalty for early
withdrawal limited to accrued interest
earned according to its written terms.
The preservation of customer principal
and the maintenance of liquidity are the
two overriding determining factors in
the permissibility of a CD for purposes
of Regulation 1.25.
Customer principal can be threatened
by market fluctuations and early
redemption penalties. Unlike a nonbrokered CD, the purchaser of a
brokered CD cannot, in most instances,
redeem its interest from the issuing
bank. Rather, an investor seeking
redemption prior to a CD’s maturity date
must liquidate the CD in the secondary
market. Depending on the brokered CD
terms (interest rate and duration) and
the current economic conditions, the
market for a given CD can be illiquid
and can result in a significant loss of
principal. Penalties for early redemption
may cut into customer principal unless
such penalties are limited, as they are in
paragraph (b)(2)(v) of Regulation 1.25, to
accrued interest.118
The ability of a CD purchaser to
redeem a CD at the issuing bank within
one day is the second key factor in
determining whether a CD is acceptable
as a Regulation 1.25 investment. As
noted above, the purchaser of a brokered
CD cannot, in most instances, redeem its
interest from the issuing bank. If the
secondary market for a brokered CD is
illiquid, it can prevent FCMs and DCOs
from retrieving customer funds for the
purpose of making margin calls.
In response to MF Global/Newedge’s
request for clarification, the
Commission notes that a brokered CD
with a put option back to the issuing
bank is an acceptable investment,
assuming that the issuing bank obligates
itself to redeem within one business day
and that the strike price for the put is
not less than the original principal
amount of the CD.
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4. Concentration Limits
Regulation 1.25(b)(4) currently sets
forth issuer-based concentration limits
for direct investments, other than
MMMFs, and securities subject to
repurchase or reverse repurchase
agreements and in-house transactions.
In the NPRM, the Commission proposed
to adopt asset-based concentration
limits for direct investments and a
counterparty concentration limit for
reverse repurchase agreements in
addition to amending its issuer-based
concentration limits and rescinding
118 17
CFR 1.25(b)(2)(v).
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concentration limits applied to in-house
transactions.
(a) Asset-Based Concentration Limits
The Commission’s proposed assetbased concentration limits would
restrict the amount of customer funds an
FCM or DCO could hold in any one
class of investments, expressed as a
percentage of total assets held in
segregation.
In the NPRM, the Commission
proposed the following asset-based
limits: No concentration limit (100
percent) for U.S. government securities;
a 50 percent concentration limit for U.S.
agency obligations fully guaranteed as to
principal and interest by the United
States; a 25 percent concentration limit
for TLGP guaranteed commercial paper
and corporate notes or bonds; a 25
percent concentration limit for nonnegotiable CDs; a 10 percent
concentration limit for municipal
securities; and a 10 percent
concentration limit for interests in
MMMFs.
The Commission requested comment
on whether asset-based concentration
limits are an effective means for
facilitating investment portfolio
diversification and whether there are
other methods that should be
considered. The Commission, in
particular, sought opinions on what
alternative asset-based concentration
limit might be appropriate for MMMFs
and, if such asset-based concentration
limit is higher than 10 percent, what
corresponding issuer-based
concentration limit should be adopted.
The Commission also solicited comment
on whether MMMFs should be
eliminated as a permitted investment.119
In discussing whether MMMF
investments satisfy the overall objective
of preserving principal and maintaining
liquidity, the Commission specifically
requested comment on whether changes
in the settlement mechanisms for the triparty repo market might impact an
MMMF’s ability to meet the
requirements of Regulation 1.25.120 The
Commission requested comment on
whether MMMF investments should be
limited to Treasury MMMFs, or to those
MMMFs that have portfolios consisting
only of permitted investments under
Regulation 1.25.121
Eighteen comment letters discussed
MMMFs. The overwhelming majority of
comments focused on the proposed
limitations on MMMFs, which many in
the industry believed to be ‘‘arbitrary
119 Comment request appears in section II.A of the
NPRM. See 75 FR at 67646.
120 Id.
121 Comment request appears in section II.C of the
NPRM. See 75 FR at 67649.
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and unduly severe.’’ 122 According to
Federated, the Dodd-Frank Act
‘‘represents the collective effort of
Congress and the executive branch to
prevent a repetition of the activities
largely confined to the financial services
sector that precipitated the domino
effect of the failure of a large
systemically risky company, such as
Lehman Brothers, that led to the events
at the Reserve Primary Fund.’’ 123
Federated further asserted that unless
the Commission does not believe that
Congress’ ‘‘efforts were successful, the
proposed limitations on [MMMFs] are
unduly restrictive and unwarranted.’’ 124
Commenters discussed a variety of
topics including the safety of MMMFs,
the recent enhancements to SEC Rule
2a–7, a comparison of the safety of
MMMFs to other permitted investments,
the appropriate concentration limits for
MMMFs, and potential problems that
would arise as a result of a 10 percent
concentration limit, among other
comments.
First, commenters stressed that
MMMFs are safe, liquid investments,
comprising roughly $3–4 trillion in
assets 125 and representing
approximately 25 percent of the total
assets in registered investment
companies in the United States.
Commenters noted that only two funds
in the 40-year history of MMMFs have
failed to return $1 per share to investors
(and those funds returned more than 99
cents and 96 cents on the dollar,
respectively).126
According to many of the comment
letters, the recent enhancements to SEC
Rule 2a–7 have made MMMFs even
safer and more prepared to withstand
heavy redemption requests during a
crisis. In this regard, heightened credit
quality and shortened maturity limits
increase liquidity, 127 as does a
requirement that 10 percent of assets be
in cash, Treasuries or securities that
122 ICI
letter at 2.
I letter at 6. The Commission notes
that the Reserve Primary Fund (Reserve Primary)
was an MMMF that satisfied the enumerated
requirements of Regulation 1.25 and at one point
was a $63 billion fund. Reserve Primary’s ‘‘breaking
the buck,’’ in September 2008, called attention to
the risk to principal and potential lack of sufficient
liquidity of any MMMF investment.
124 Federate I letter at 6.
125 Federated estimated $2.8 trillion. Federated I
letter at 2. UBS noted a figure of $3.8 trillion as of
May 2009. UBS letter at 6.
126 Federated I letter at 1, CME letter at 4–5, J.P.
Morgan letter at 1–2, Farr Financial letter at 1, UBS
letter at 2.
127 ICI letter at 4. ICI noted that the weighted
average maturity (WAM) for MMMFs has been
reduced from 90 to 60 days. As a result 60 percent
of MMMFs have a WAM of 45 days or less. In
contrast, more than half of all MMMFs had a WAM
of greater than 45 days prior to the SEC’s
amendments to its Rule 2a–7.
123 Federated
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convert into cash within one day. The
SEC has increased the transparency of
MMMFs by requiring that MMMFs
provide portfolio information, updated
monthly, on their Web sites. In addition,
MMMFs are now required to conduct
periodic stress tests, which examine an
MMMF’s ability to maintain a stable net
asset value under hypothetical market
conditions.128
Second, many commenters compared
the safety of MMMFs to that of one or
more other permitted investments. Six
commenters averred that MMMFs are
safer than Treasuries.129 One
commenter argued that municipal bonds
are less liquid than MMMFs.130 Two
commenters argued that MMMFs were
better investments than TLGP debt.131
Five commenters wrote that MMMFs
compared favorably with CDs.132
Third, many commenters suggested
that a 10 percent MMMF limitation
would cause some inconsonant and
unintended results. CME stated that, in
theory, Regulation 1.25 as proposed
would permit over 50 percent of a
customer funds portfolio to be invested
in TLGP securities, municipal securities
and non-negotiable CDs. In practice,
however, FCMs’ use of these investment
categories is limited.133 ICI wrote that
an incongruity exists where an FCM
may invest all of its assets in a selfmanaged portfolio of Treasuries, but
may only invest 10 percent of its assets
in an MMMF consisting of the same
securities.134 Federated expressed views
similar to those of ICI, writing that
investments in government funds
should not be subject to any
concentration limits. Federated also
recommended that the Commission
require that MMMFs maintain certain
minimum financial thresholds in order
to qualify as a Regulation 1.25
investment. Federated suggested, as
thresholds, that an MMMF should
manage assets of at least $10 billion and
that the MMMF’s management company
should manage assets of at least $50
billion.135 Dreyfus noted that, under the
proposal, an FCM may construct a pool
128 CME letter at 4–5, Federated I letter at 1, FIA/
ISDA letter at 6–8, MF Global/Newedge letter at 6,
J.P. Morgan letter at 1–2, UBS letter at 2–4, Dreyfus
letter at 2, RJO letter at 7–8, INTL/FCStone letter at
2, BlackRock letter at 2–4, ADM letter at 1, BNYM
letter at 2–3, BLS letter at 2.
129 CME letter at 6, Farr Financial letter at 2, ICI
letter at 7, Dreyfus letter at 4, ADM letter at 3,
Federated II letter (Bilson essay at 8).
130 Dreyfus letter at 4.
131 UBS letter at 6, Dreyfus letter at 4.
132 Federated I letter at 1, CME letter at 4–5, MF
Global/Newedge letter at 6, UBS letter at 5, 7,
Dreyfus letter at 4.
133 CME letter at 6.
134 ICI letter at 8.
135 Federated III letter at 2–3.
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of individual securities outside the
constraints of SEC Rule 2a–7 which
would have maturities of longer than
those required of MMMFs. Therefore,
greater interest rate risk might be
associated with a self-managed portfolio
than with the portfolio in an MMMF.136
The decrease in MMMF investment
might lead more funds to be held in
cash in banks (with only $250,000 FDIC
insurance).137 According to Farr
Financial, another possible result of a 10
percent limitation on MMMFs is that
FCMs and DCOs would hold a large
amount of Treasuries, and, in the event
that an FCM or DCO would need to
liquidate such Treasuries, would
experience potential loss in the
secondary market.138 BlackRock wrote
that an overreliance on Treasuries and
government securities would place
portfolios in greater danger due to
changes to interest rates. For example, a
sudden rise in interest rates may
negatively impact the principal
valuation of Treasuries.139 If liquidation
is required during such a circumstance,
FCMs may experience a loss in
principal.140
Fourth, several commenters
highlighted other potential difficulties
that could result from the proposed 10
percent concentration limit, including
issues of diversification, selfmanagement and liquidity. The NFA
warned that by limiting investment in
MMMFs and other instruments, the
Commission risks decreasing
diversification rather than increasing
it.141 Along similar lines, ICI stated that
the average MMMF is more diversified
than the portfolio of bank CDs or
municipal securities that FCMs or DCOs
would be permitted to hold under the
proposed amendments.142
Three commenters discussed the
problems that arise from self-managed
accounts. ICI, Dreyfus and BNYM
suggest that by limiting MMMFs to 10
percent, the Commission would be
forcing FCMs and DCOs to manage 90
percent of their portfolios themselves.
Investments in TLGP debt, CDs and
municipals require asset management
skills that FCMs and DCOs might not
have without hiring an investment
adviser. While some FCMs and DCOs
may be large enough to do this, many
are not—and requiring FCMs to ‘‘go it
alone’’ will cause customer funds to be
136 Dreyfus
letter at 2.
137 As pointed out by Farr Financial, FDIC
insurance passes through to an FCM’s customers.
See Farr Financial letter at 2–3.
138 Farr Financial letter at 2.
139 BlackRock letter at 2, 5.
140 Id.
141 NFA letter at 2.
142 ICI letter at 10.
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at greater risk.143 ADM wrote that
because intraday settlements from
clearing organizations are not known
until 12 noon CST or later, it would be
difficult to maintain sufficient liquid
assets without the use of MMMFs.144
In response to the Commission’s
request for comment on the proposed
changes in the tri-party repo market,
which have not been fully implemented,
ICI wrote that the changes would allow
sellers in tri-party repurchase
agreements to repurchase the
underlying securities later in the
afternoon. Previously, such sellers
would repurchase securities in the
morning using funds borrowed from
their clearing banks. The proposed
changes should not, according to ICI,
adversely affect an MMMF’s ability to
pay redemptions by the end of each day.
Because the repurchases would occur
while the Fedwire system is open,
MMMFs can transfer the proceeds to
their transfer agents to cover daily
redemptions.145
The NPRM also requested comment
on whether, or to what extent, MMMFs
ought to be limited to Treasury funds.
Dreyfus stated that it would not support
such a limitation, as it believes that
Government, prime, and municipal
MMMFs are subject to sufficient risklimiting constraints that merit their
availability to FCMs and DCOs.146
Treasury funds are traditionally smaller
in size and less liquid than prime
MMMFs, according to FIA/ISDA.147 RJO
wrote that because Treasury funds lag
interest rate movements for significant
periods of time, they are likely not
viable options for FCMs in upward
interest rate environments or over long
periods of time.148 Taking a different
position, BlackRock suggested that
Treasury MMMFs should be exempt
from any asset-based limitations
instituted by the Commission.149 In
addition, BlackRock recommended that
the Commission require investment
decision-makers at FCMs to perform
periodic assessments of their MMMF
providers.150
CIEBA would support limiting
MMMFs to only those funds which
invest in securities that would be
permitted investments under Regulation
1.25.151 CIEBA did not include further
discussion or explanation.
143 ICI letter at 6–8, Dreyfus letter at 4, BNYM
letter at 2–3.
144 ADM letter at 1.
145 ICI letter at 12.
146 Dreyfus letter at 2.
147 FIA/ISDA letter at 8.
148 RJO letter at 8.
149 BlackRock letter at 4.
150 BlackRock letter at 2, 5.
151 CIEBA letter at 3.
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As noted above, the Commission
proposed a 10 percent asset-based
concentration limit for investments in
MMMFs. In response to comments, the
Commission has decided to revise the
rule language that was proposed.
Specifically, the Commission will
impose different concentration limits for
investments in Treasury-only funds
than for investments in all other
MMMFs. The Commission also will
distinguish between funds that do not
have both $1 billion in assets and a
management company that has at least
$25 billion in MMMF assets under
management (small MMMFs) and those
that do (large MMMFs). Federated, as
noted above, recommended that asset
thresholds for MMMFs be set at $10
billion and $50 billion, respectively.
However, the Commission believes, at
this time, that such thresholds may
needlessly constrain the pool of
MMMFs available for investment and
result in an unsafe concentration of
customer funds in a limited number of
MMMFs. The modifications to the
proposed rule text discussed below
reflect the Commission’s consideration
of the comments received on the
proposed concentration limit for
investments in MMMFs, in light of the
overarching objective of preserving
principal and maintaining liquidity of
customer funds.
First, an FCM or DCO may invest all
of its customer segregated funds in
Treasury-only MMMFs, subject to the
limitation on investment in small
MMMFs discussed below. The
Commission agrees with commenters
that since an FCM or DCO may invest
all of its funds in Treasuries directly, an
FCM or DCO therefore should be able to
make the same investment indirectly via
an MMMF.
Second, for all other MMMFs, the
Commission believes that a 50 percent
asset-based concentration limit is
appropriate, subject to the limitation on
investment in small MMMFs discussed
below. After considering the views
presented by market participants,
Commission staff and other regulators,
the Commission has determined that a
50 percent asset-based concentration
limit strikes the right balance between
providing FCMs and DCOs with
sufficient Regulation 1.25 investment
options and, at the same time,
encouraging adequate portfolio
diversification.
MMMFs’ portfolio diversification,
administrative ease, and the heightened
prudential standards recently imposed
by the SEC, continue to make them an
attractive investment option. However,
their volatility during the 2008 financial
crisis, which culminated in one fund
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‘‘breaking the buck’’ and many more
funds requiring infusions of capital,
underscores the fact that investments in
MMMFs are not without risk. The
Commission is persuaded to increase
the proposed asset-based concentration
limit for MMMFs, other than Treasuryonly MMMFs, from 10 percent to 50
percent in part by commenters who
noted that MMMFs are safe and liquid
relative to other permitted
investments.152 Commenters were
persistent in reminding the Commission
that, aside from Reserve Primary, no
MMMFs had ‘‘broken the buck’’ during
the 2008 financial crisis and aftermath.
The Commission is also cognizant that
decreasing the number of investment
options might have the unintended
consequence of over-concentrating
customer funds into a small universe of
viable investments. Further, these
concentration limits provide FCMs and
DCOs with the ability to delegate
investment decisions for their entire
portfolio of customer segregated funds
to MMMFs, should the FCMs and DCOs
not wish to make such decisions on
their own.
To the extent that an FCM or DCO
invests customer segregated funds in an
MMMF, subject to the asset-based
concentration limits outlined above, the
FCM or DCO may only invest up to 10
percent of its segregated funds in small
MMMFs. The Commission believes that
distinguishing between small MMMFs
and large MMMFs is a necessary
corollary to increasing the concentration
limits proposed in the NPRM, since
large MMMFs have capital bases better
capable of handling a high volume of
redemption requests in the event of a
market event. To the extent that an FCM
or DCO invests customer segregated
funds in small MMMFs, the 10 percent
asset-based concentration limit in the
final rule is unchanged from the
concentration limit set forth in the
NPRM. However, having considered the
comments received on this issue, the
Commission has determined it
appropriate to elevate the asset-based
concentration limits from what had
been proposed—both for Treasury-only
MMMFs and for all other MMMFs—to
the extent that an FCM or DCO invests
in large MMMFs.
Accordingly, the Commission is
amending Regulation 1.25 by adding
new paragraphs (b)(3)(i)(E)–(G), which
152 Although MMMFs allow FCMs and DCOs to
indirectly invest in instruments which would not
be permitted under Regulation 1.25 as direct
investments, the Commission believes that the
credit quality, maturity limitations and liquidity
required by the SEC make prime MMMFs
acceptable investments, subject to the concentration
limits imposed by paragraph (b)(3).
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78787
implement the changes described above.
The addition of these paragraphs
enables the Commission to increase the
concentration limits originally proposed
without undermining the protection of
customer funds and reduction of
systemic risk, while addressing the
concerns specifically raised in the
comments.
The Commission has concluded that
all other asset-based concentration
limits remain as proposed in the NPRM.
The 50 percent asset-based limitation on
U.S. agency obligations 153 and the 25
percent asset-based limitation on each
of TLGP corporate notes or bonds and
TLGP commercial paper,154 are
consistent with commenter
recommendations. Therefore, the
Commission is amending Regulation
1.25(b)(3)(i), as proposed, to reflect the
asset-based concentration limits
described above.
With respect to the calculation of
concentration limits, ADM wrote that
concentration limits should be
calculated by aggregating Regulation
1.25 funds and 30.7 funds.155 ADM
explained, by way of example, that if
there is a 50 percent concentration limit
for investment X, along with $5 billion
in the segregated account and $1 billion
in the 30.7 account, that the maximum
amount that could be invested in X
would be $3 billion. From this
comment, the Commission concludes
that ADM would like the choice of
investing up to 60 percent of its
segregated account funds in investment
X, as long as that amount, when
combined with the size of the 30.7
account, does not exceed 50 percent of
the cumulative size of the segregated
and 30.7 account. However, the
Commission has determined that
concentration limits are to be calculated
on a fund-by-fund basis. In the example
above, the maximum amount of
segregated funds that could be invested
in X would be $2.5 billion, and the
maximum amount of 30.7 funds that
could be invested in X would be $0.5
billion. ADM presented no compelling
argument as to why the aggregation of
153 See Section II.A.1. CME recommended 25
percent, BlackRock recommended 30 percent, and
FIA/ISDA and MF Global/Newedge both
recommended 50 percent.
154 See Section II.A.2. MF Global/Newedge
recommended 25 percent and BlackRock
recommended 25 percent–50 percent. The
Commission is aware that MF Global/Newedge’s
recommendation was for all corporate notes or
bonds and commercial paper—not merely those
which are TLGP debt. Regardless, such a
recommendation is helpful in establishing a
percentage that will allow for ample investment in
instrument categories while still promoting
diversification.
155 ADM letter at 2.
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funds held in Regulation 1.25 and 30.7
accounts should be permitted.
(b) Issuer-Based Concentration Limits
The Commission proposed to amend
its issuer-based limits for direct
investments to include a 2 percent limit
for an MMMF family of funds,
expressed as a percentage of total assets
held in segregation. Currently, there is
no concentration limit applied to
MMMFs. Under the NPRM, the 25
percent issuer-based limitation for GSEs
(now proposed to be encompassed
within the term ‘‘U.S. agency
obligations’’) and the 5 percent issuerbased limitation for municipal
securities, commercial paper, corporate
notes or bonds, and CDs would remain
in place.
Commenters expressed doubts over
whether issuer-based concentration
limits, on individual or families of
MMMFs, would have a meaningful,
positive effect on the safety of customer
funds. Adverse market conditions
would probably affect all funds,
according to ICI, and therefore issuer
concentration limits would do little to
mitigate these risks.156
BlackRock, ICI and Dreyfus suggested
that limits on family of funds may not
achieve increased safety of customer
funds as each MMMF in a family is
managed on an individual basis and
will not necessarily share risks with
other MMMFs managed by the same
adviser. Dreyfus wrote that it sees ‘‘no
benefit * * * to requiring FCMs to have
to potentially invest in a [prime MMMF]
with one provider and a [government or
Treasury MMMF] with another
provider, on the basis that such an
arrangement is safer than if the FCM
invested in each of these types of funds
with a single provider.’’ 157 BlackRock
also noted that MMMF complexes do
not typically aggregate and publish
consolidated family data on a daily
basis.158
Commenters also questioned the
effectiveness of issuer-based limitations
on individual funds. Dreyfus asserted
that the operations and results of one
fund do not impact the operation and
results of another fund.159 ICI
propounded that similar types of
MMMFs often have common holdings.
Thus, according to ICI, limiting
investments in individual funds will
have a marginal effect on the
diversification of underlying credit
risks.160
156 ICI
letter at 11.
letter at 5. See also ICI letter at 10.
158 BlackRock letter at 4.
159 Dreyfus letter at 5.
160 ICI letter at 10–11.
157 Dreyfus
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Taken as a whole, these arguments,
that concentration limits will not
increase the safety of customer funds,
are untenable. The commenters assert
that neither family-of-funds limits nor
issuer-based limits will increase the
diversification and safety of customer
funds. If believed, this leads to the
conclusion that it would be safer and
more diverse (or at least as safe and
diverse) for an FCM, investing the
maximum amount in MMMFs, to invest
all customer cash in one fund than it
would be for that FCM to invest that
customer cash among five funds in three
families. As such, the Commission is
not persuaded by the arguments.161
The Commission has considered the
comments received on this issue, and is
mindful of the comments and
Commission analysis of the asset-based
concentration limits discussed in the
preceding section. Having considered
the arguments raised, the Commission
has decided to revise the rule language
that was proposed. Specifically, the
Commission has determined that there
will be no family-of-funds or issuerbased concentration limit for MMMFs
that consist entirely of Treasuries, and
a 25 percent family of funds issuerbased limitation as well as a 10 percent
individual fund issuer-based limitation
for all other MMMFs. Investments in
Treasury-only funds are not to be
combined with investments in other
MMMFs for purposes of calculating
either family-of-funds or issuer-based
concentration limits. The increase in the
family of funds issuer-based
concentration limit is related to the
increase in the asset-based
concentration limit and addresses the
recommendations of commenters. The
introduction of the 10 percent
individual fund issuer-based
concentration limit serves to add an
additional layer of diversification and
also aligns with recommendations of
commenters.
(c) Counterparty Concentration Limits
In the NPRM, the Commission
proposed a counterparty concentration
limit of 5 percent of total assets held in
segregation for securities subject to
reverse repurchase agreements. Seven
commenters discussed counterparty
concentration limits. All expressed their
belief that the 5 percent concentration
limit was too low and that such a limit
would greatly increase administrative
risks and costs. Most commenters
favored a 25 percent concentration
161 In response to Dreyfus and ICI’s comment
regarding limits on family of funds, the Commission
believes that a failure of, or a run on, an individual
fund would likely cause a run on other funds in the
family due to investors’ reputational concerns.
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limit, in the event that a concentration
limit was imposed.
FIA/ISDA, LCH, MF Global/Newedge,
J.P. Morgan and RJO expressed similar
views that a 5 percent concentration
limit might actually decrease liquidity
and increase operational and systemic
risk. LCH and MF Global/Newedge
wrote that a counterparty concentration
limit would unnecessarily restrict a very
liquid and secure investment that has
provided flexibility and reasonable
returns to FCMs and their customers.162
According to FIA/ISDA, because
clearing members are often required to
execute and unwind reverse repurchase
agreements intraday and within a brief
period of time, and because DCOs
strictly define the securities they will
accept as collateral, an FCM must
review the securities received under
reverse repurchase transactions to
ensure that they are both eligible for
delivery to the DCO and in compliance
with applicable concentration limits.163
Several commenters observed that
requiring an FCM to effect reverse
repurchase transactions with multiple
counterparties under tight time frames
will substantially increase an FCM’s
operational risk and invite errors.164 By
way of example, INTL/FCStone noted
that it currently has one counterparty
and would potentially need to open 20
reverse repurchase accounts were the
proposed rule enacted.165 Further, two
commenters wrote that a critical factor
to consider is that, in the event of a
counterparty’s default, all amounts are
collateralized with permitted
investments under Regulation 1.25.166
INTL/FCStone 167 and FIA/ISDA 168
recommended a 25 percent counterparty
concentration limit. RJO wrote that
limits are unnecessary—however if a
limit were imposed, RJO recommended
25 percent.169 LCH suggested a 10
percent–20 percent limitation.170 MF
Global/Newedge recommended having
no counterparty limits; however to the
extent that there must be, it
recommended (a) limiting FCM
repurchase and reverse repurchase
transactions to those external
counterparties maintaining a certain
level of capital (such as $50 or $100
162 LCH
letter at 3, MF Global/Newedge letter
at 6.
163 FIA/ISDA
letter at 9–10.
letter at 9–10, MF Global/Newedge
letter at 7, J.P. Morgan letter at 2, LCH letter at 3,
RJO letter at 3.
165 INTL/FCStone at 2.
166 LCH letter at 3, MF Global/Newedge letter
at 7.
167 INTL/FCStone at 2.
168 FIA/ISDA letter at 10.
169 RJO letter at 3.
170 LCH letter at 3.
164 FIA/ISDA
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million) or (b) setting counterparty
concentration limits at 25 percent.171
ADM wrote that it does not believe any
concentration limit is necessary due to
the collateralized nature of the loans.172
However, ADM stated that it would
support only allowing certain collateral,
such as Treasuries and GSEs, in
repurchase transactions.173
As noted above, the Commission
proposed a 5 percent counterparty
concentration limit in the NPRM.
Having considered the comments
submitted in response to the proposal,
the Commission has determined that a
25 percent counterparty concentration
limit is appropriate.
The Commission continues to believe
that counterparty concentration limits
are necessary for safeguarding customer
funds. Under current rules, an FCM or
DCO could have 100 percent of its
segregated funds subject to one reverse
repurchase agreement. The obvious
concern in such a scenario is the credit
risk of the counterparty. This credit risk,
while concentrated, is significantly
mitigated by the fact that in exchange
for cash, the FCM or DCO is holding
Regulation 1.25-permitted securities of
equivalent or greater value. However, a
default by the counterparty would put
pressure on the FCM or DCO to convert
such securities into cash immediately
and would exacerbate the market risk to
the FCM or DCO, given that a decrease
in the value of the security or an
increase in interest rates could result in
the FCM or DCO realizing a loss. Even
though the market risk would be
mitigated by asset-based and issuerbased concentration limits, a situation
of this type could seriously jeopardize
an FCM or DCO’s overall ability to
preserve principal and maintain
liquidity with respect to customer
funds.
The Commission is persuaded to
increase the limit, from the proposed
level of 5 percent in the NPRM to 25
percent, primarily due to comments
expressing concern about the
administrative costs and burdens of a
low counterparty concentration limit.
Whereas a 5 percent limitation would
require an FCM reverse-repurchasing all
of its customer cash to have 20
counterparties, a 25 percent limitation
decreases the number of counterparties
to four. Further, 25 percent is in line
with commenter recommendations,
which ranged from 10 to 25 percent.174
171 MF
Global/Newedge letter at 7.
letter at 2.
172 ADM
173 Id.
174 As noted above, certain commenters wished to
have no counterparty concentration limits, a
position with which the Commission does not
agree.
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C. Money Market Mutual Funds
The Commission has decided to make
two technical amendments to paragraph
(c) of Regulation 1.25. First, the
Commission is clarifying the
acknowledgment letter requirement
under paragraph (c)(3); and second, the
Commission is revising and clarifying
the exceptions to the next-day
redemption requirement under
paragraph (c)(5)(ii).
1. Acknowledgment Letters
In the NPRM, the Commission sought
to clarify that the intent of Regulation
1.25(c)(3) is to require that an FCM or
DCO obtain an acknowledgment letter
from a party that has substantial control
over a fund’s assets and has the
knowledge and authority to facilitate
redemption and payment or transfer of
the customer segregated funds invested
in shares of the MMMF. The
Commission concluded that in many
circumstances, the fund sponsor, the
investment adviser, or fund manager
would satisfy this requirement. The
Commission also proposed to remove
the current language in Regulation
1.25(c)(3) relating to the issuer of the
acknowledgment letter when the shares
of the fund are held by the fund’s
shareholder servicing agent. This
revision was designed to eliminate any
confusion as to whether the
acknowledgment letter requirement is
applied differently based on the
presence or absence of a shareholder
servicing agent.
The Commission requested comment
on whether the proposed standard for
entities that may sign an
acknowledgment letter is appropriate
and whether there are other entities that
could serve as examples. The
Commission requested comment on
whether removal of the ‘‘shareholder
servicing agent’’ language helps clarify
the intent of Regulation 1.25(c)(3).
Three commenters discussed this
proposal. CME, BBH and FIA/ISDA
support the proposal, and FIA/ISDA and
BBH had additional comments and
suggested changes as well.175
BBH and FIA/ISDA requested that the
Commission confirm that, in those
circumstances in which an FCM
deposits customer funds with a bank or
other depository and thereafter instructs
the bank to invest such customer funds
in an MMMF, the bank is the
appropriate entity from which the FCM
should obtain the acknowledgment
letter.176 BBH explained that such
settlement banks are ‘‘universally
175 CME letter at 7, FIA/ISDA letter at 13, BBH
letter at 2.
176 BBH letter at 2, FIA/ISDA letter at 13.
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recognized, both by regulation and
standard contractual terms, as an entity
that exercises legitimate control and
authority over assets deposited both
directly with it or held in an account at
a third party depository or fund.’’ 177
The Commission is amending
Regulation 1.25(c)(3) to reflect that an
FCM or DCO must obtain an
acknowledgment letter from a party that
has substantial control over MMMF
shares purchased with customer
segregated funds and has the knowledge
and authority to facilitate redemption
and payment or transfer of the customer
segregated funds invested in shares of
the MMMF and is removing the current
language in Regulation 1.25(c)(3)
relating to the issuer of the
acknowledgment letter when the shares
of the fund are held by the fund’s
shareholder servicing agent. In response
to FIA/ISDA and BBH, the Commission
agrees that when an FCM deposits
customer funds in a bank or other
depository and thereafter instructs the
depository to invest such customer
funds in an MMMF, the
acknowledgment letter may come from
the depository if it is acting as a
custodian for the fund shares owned by
the FCM or DCO. The Commission
therefore clarifies in the rule text that a
‘‘depository acting as custodian for fund
shares’’ is an appropriate entity to issue
an acknowledgment letter.
2. Next-Day Redemption Requirement
Regulation 1.25(c) requires that ‘‘[a]
fund shall be legally obligated to redeem
an interest and to make payment in
satisfaction thereof by the business day
following a redemption request.’’ 178
This ‘‘next-day redemption’’
requirement is a significant feature of
Regulation 1.25 and is meant to ensure
adequate liquidity.179 Regulation
1.25(c)(5)(ii) lists four exceptions to the
next-day redemption requirement, and
incorporates by reference the emergency
conditions listed in Section 22(e) of the
Investment Company Act (Section
22(e)).180 The Commission has, on
occasion, fielded questions from FCMs
regarding Regulation 1.25(c)(5),
particularly because the exceptions
listed in paragraph (c)(5)(ii) overlap
with some of those appearing in Section
22(e).
177 BBH
letter at 2.
CFR 1.25(c)(5)(i).
179 See 70 FR 5585 (noting that ‘‘[t]he
Commission believes the one-day liquidity
requirement for investments in MMMFs is
necessary to ensure that the funding requirements
of FCMs will not be impeded by a long liquidity
time frame’’).
180 15 U.S.C. 80a–22(e).
178 17
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In order to expressly incorporate SEC
Rule 22e–3 into the permitted
exceptions for purposes of clarity, and
to otherwise clarify the existing
exceptions to the next-day redemption
requirement, the Commission proposed
to amend paragraph (c)(5)(ii) of
Regulation 1.25 by more closely aligning
the language of that paragraph with the
language in Section 22(e) and
specifically including a reference to
Rule 22e–3. The Commission proposed
to include, as an appendix to the rule
text (Regulation 1.25 Appendix), safe
harbor language that could be used by
MMMFs to ensure that their
prospectuses comply with Regulation
1.25(c)(5).
The Commission requested comment
on all aspects of its proposed
amendments to the provisions regarding
MMMFs in paragraph (c) of Regulation
1.25. The Commission sought comment
specifically on any proposed regulatory
language that commenters believe
requires further clarification. In
addition, commenters were invited to
submit views on the usefulness and
substance of the proposed safe harbor
language contained in the proposed
Regulation 1.25 Appendix.
Only one commenter, ICI, mentioned
this aspect of the NPRM. ICI supported
this proposal to clarify exemptions from
next-day redemption and to include safe
harbor language.181 Therefore, the
Commission amends paragraph (c)(5)(ii)
of Regulation 1.25 by more closely
aligning the language of that paragraph
with the language in Section 22(e) and
specifically including a reference to
Rule 22e–3. The Commission is also
adding the Regulation 1.25 Appendix to
the rule text, in order to provide
MMMFs with safe harbor language to
ensure that their prospectuses comply
with Regulation 1.25(c)(5).
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D. Repurchase and Reverse Repurchase
Agreements
The Commission proposed
specifically eliminating repurchase and
reverse repurchase transactions with
affiliate counterparties. Repurchase and
reverse repurchase transactions are
functionally similar to collateralized
loans, whereby cash is exchanged for
unencumbered collateral. In the NPRM,
the Commission explained its view that
the concentration of credit risk increases
the likelihood that the default of one
party could exacerbate financial strains
and lead to the default of its affiliate.
The Commission used the example of
Bear Stearns Companies, Inc. (Bear
181 ICI
letter at 11.
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Stearns) in 2008 182 to illustrate that
even possession and control of liquid
securities may be insufficient to
alleviate concerns relating to
transactions with financially troubled
affiliated counterparties.
The Commission received four
comment letters discussing this topic.
CME and FIA/ISDA both suggested that
FCMs have much greater certainty and
are exposed to substantially less
counterparty risk to the extent that they
enter into transactions with affiliates.183
FIA/ISDA stated that funds held in
affiliate accounts are at no greater risk
in the event of a default than they
would be in the event of a default of a
non-affiliate. In both cases, the
requirements of Regulation 1.25(d) are
the same. Further, FIA/ISDA wrote that
the Bear Stearns example used by the
Commission in the NPRM relates to
Bear Stearns’ abilities to enter into
agreements with third parties, not its
affiliates.184 RJO noted that affiliates
should be judged as acceptable if the
affiliate meets or exceeds the capital
base or some other methodology
deemed satisfactory for adding an armslength counterparty.185 MF Global/
Newedge wrote that removing
repurchase agreements with affiliates
would not reduce FCM risk, ‘‘since
FCMs would be unable to enter into and
execute such transactions with and
through entities and personnel with
whom they have created an effective,
efficient and liquid settlement
framework.’’ 186
The Commission is not persuaded by
these comments. In particular, while the
Commission acknowledges that
affiliates have a legal status that may
distinguish such transactions from inhouse transactions, the concentration of
credit risk and the potential for conflicts
of interest during times of crisis remain
significant concerns. Indeed, the
Commission’s reference to Bear Stearns
in the preamble was intended to serve
as an illustration of how an elevated
concentration of credit risk may
produce broad, unforeseen
consequences.
182 See SEC Press Release No. 2008–46, ‘‘Answers
to Frequently Asked Investor Questions Regarding
the Bear Stearns Companies, Inc.’’ (Mar. 18, 2008),
available at https://www.sec.gov/news/press/2008/
2008-46.htm (noting that rumors of liquidity
problems at Bear Stearns caused their
counterparties to become concerned, creating a
‘‘crisis of confidence’’ which led to the
counterparties’ ‘‘unwilling[ness] to make secured
funding available to Bear Stearns on customary
terms’’).
183 CME letter at 3, FIA/ISDA letter at 9–11.
184 FIA/ISDA letter at 10–11.
185 RJO letter at 4.
186 MF Global/Newedge letter at 7.
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Further, as discussed in the NPRM,
the interest of consistency of the
regulation weighs in favor of
disallowing repurchase agreements
between affiliates. The Commission
finds it incongruous that an investment
in the debt instrument of an affiliate
(effectively a collateralized loan
between affiliates) could be prohibited
by paragraph (b)(6) while a repurchase
agreement between affiliates (which is
the functional equivalent of a short-term
collateralized loan between affiliates)
could be allowed.
Finally, the Commission believes that
firms engage in repurchase agreements
with affiliates for purposes of balance
sheet maintenance. Repurchase
agreements with affiliates may cause a
consolidated balance sheet to appear
smaller than it would if the same
transaction occurred with an
unaffiliated third party because such
transactions, while they may appear on
sub-ledgers, are typically eliminated on
the consolidated balance sheet. While
FCMs and DCOs may prefer to use such
transactions to manage their balance
sheets, as mentioned in the context of
in-house transactions in Section II.A.4
of this release, the purpose of
Regulation 1.25 is not to assist FCMs
and DCOs with managing their balance
sheets. Rather, the purpose of
Regulation 1.25 is to permit FCMs and
DCOs to invest customer funds in a
manner that preserves principal and
maintains liquidity. Because of the
concerns expressed above, particularly
with respect to the potential for
conflicts of interest, the Commission
believes that the interests of protecting
customer funds are best served by
eliminating repurchase agreements with
affiliates. Therefore, the Commission is
amending paragraph (d) as proposed.187
E. Regulation 30.7
1. Harmonization
In the NPRM, the Commission
proposed to harmonize Regulation 30.7
with the investment limitations of
Regulation 1.25 by adding new
paragraph (g) to Regulation 30.7. As
noted above, the Commission had not
previously restricted investments of
30.7 funds to the permitted investments
under Regulation 1.25, although
Regulation 1.25 limitations can be used
as a safe harbor for such investments.188
187 See supra n. 100 (discussing petition
procedures set forth in Regulation 13.2, 17 CFR
13.2).
188 See Commission Form 1–FR–FCM Instructions
at 12–9 (Mar. 2010) (‘‘In investing funds required
to be maintained in separate section 30.7
account(s), FCMs are bound by their fiduciary
obligations to customers and the requirement that
the secured amount required to be set aside be at
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The Commission now believes that it is
appropriate to align the investment
standards of Regulation 30.7 with those
of Regulation 1.25 because many of the
same prudential concerns arise with
respect to both segregated customer
funds and 30.7 funds. Such a limitation
should increase the safety of 30.7 funds
and provide clarity for the FCMs, DCOs,
and designated self-regulatory
organizations. Two comment letters,
from JAC and FIA/ISDA discussed this
subject and both supported the
amendment.
2. Ratings
In the NPRM, the Commission
proposed to remove all rating
requirements from Regulation 30.7. This
amendment is required by Section 939A
of the Dodd-Frank Act and further
reflects the Commission’s views on the
unreliability of ratings as currently
administered and its interest in aligning
Regulation 30.7 with Regulation 1.25.189
The Commission requested comment on
this proposal including whether there
existed any sound alternatives to credit
ratings.
One comment letter, from FIA/ISDA,
discussed the topic and supported the
proposal. No comments provided an
alternative to credit ratings. As
proposed, the Commission is removing
paragraph (c)(1)(ii)(B) of Regulation 30.7
as it views a nationally recognized
statistical rating organization (NRSRO)
rating as unreliable to gauge the safety
of a depository institution for 30.7
funds. This change also serves to align
Regulation 30.7 with Regulation 1.25 on
the topic of NRSROs.
3. Designation as a Depository for 30.7
Funds
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As proposed, the Commission will no
longer allow a customer to request that
a bank or trust company located outside
the United States be designated as a
depository for 30.7 funds. Previously,
under Regulation 30.7(c)(1)(ii)(C), a
bank or trust company that did not
otherwise meet the requirements of
paragraph (c)(1)(ii) could still be
designated as an acceptable depository
by request of its customer and with the
approval of the Commission. However,
the Commission never allowed a bank
or trust company located outside the
United States to be a depository through
all times liquid and sufficient to cover all
obligations to such customers. Regulation 1.25
investments would be appropriate, as would
investments in any other readily marketable
securities.’’).
189 See supra Section II.B.2 regarding the
Commission’s policy decision to remove references
to credit ratings from Regulation 1.25 and other
regulations.
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these means, and has decided that it is
appropriate to require that all
depositories meet the regulatory capital
requirement under paragraph
(c)(1)(ii)(A).
FIA/ISDA and ADM both supported
this amendment in their comment
letters. Based on the foregoing, the
Commission is amending Regulation
30.7, as proposed, by deleting paragraph
(c)(1)(ii)(C).
4. Technical Amendments
JAC recommended reinserting
‘‘foreign board of trade’’ in Regulation
30.7(c)(1), believing it was inadvertently
omitted in February of 2003.190 The
Commission agrees that the February
2003 Federal Register final rule notice
contained a clear administrative error,
and to address that administrative error,
the Commission is reinserting ‘‘[t]he
clearing organization of any foreign
board of trade’’ in the rule text as new
paragraph (c)(1)(v) and renumbering
subsequent paragraphs accordingly.191
F. Implementation.
RJO, FIA/ISDA, CME, JAC and NFA
suggest a phased implementation period
of 180 days.192 The Commission has
determined to allow an implementation
period of 180 days following the
publication of the final rules.
III. Cost Benefit Considerations
Section 15(a) of the Act requires the
Commission to consider the costs and
benefits of its action before
promulgating a regulation.193 In
particular, 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
190 JAC
letter at 2.
to 2003, Regulation 30.7(c) permitted an
FCM to maintain 30.7 funds in, among other
depositories, ‘‘[t]he clearing organization of any
foreign board of trade.’’ ‘‘Foreign Futures and
Foreign Options Transactions,’’ 52 FR 28980, 29000
(Aug. 5, 1987). In 2002, the Commission requested
comment, in an NPRM, on whether the list of
depositories enumerated in Regulation 30.7(c)
should be expanded. ‘‘Denomination of Customer
Funds and Location of Depositories,’’ 67 FR 52641,
52645 (Aug. 13, 2002). The Commission determined
it appropriate to expand the list; however, in
publishing the final rule, the Commission
inadvertently failed to include ‘‘[t]he clearing
organization of any foreign board of trade’’ on the
list. See ‘‘Denomination of Customer Funds and
Location of Depositories,’’ 68 FR 5545, 5550 (Feb.
4, 2003) (‘‘Rule 30.7 will be amended to provide
that the funds of foreign futures or options
customers may, in addition to those depositories
already enumerated * * *.’’ (emphasis added)).
The technical amendment set forth in this notice
corrects that administrative error.
192 CME letter at 7, JAC letter at 3, FIA/ISDA letter
at 13, NFA letter at 3, RJO letter at 3.
193 7 U.S.C. 19(a).
191 Prior
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78791
of futures markets; (3) price discovery;
(4) sound risk management practices;
and (5) other public interest
considerations. The Commission may in
its discretion give greater weight to any
one of the five enumerated areas,
depending upon the nature of the
regulatory action.
Section 4d of the Act 194 limits the
investment of customer segregated
funds to obligations of the United States
and obligations fully guaranteed as to
principal and interest by the United
States (U.S. government securities), and
general obligations of any State or of any
political subdivision thereof (municipal
securities). The Commission has
exercised its authority to grant exempt
relief under Section 4(c) of the Act to
permit additional investments beyond
those prescribed in Section 4d.
Regulation 1.25 sets out the list of
permissible investments, which the
Commission has expanded substantially
over the years.195 As detailed in the
discussion above, the final rules narrow
the scope of investment choices in order
to reduce risk and to increase the safety
of Regulation 1.25 investments,
consistent with the statute. Further,
certain changes to the rule relating to
the elimination of credit ratings are
mandated by Section 939A of the DoddFrank Act.
FCMs currently hold over $170 billion
in segregated customer funds and $40
billion in funds held subject to
Regulation 30.7.196 The funds are held
as performance bond for the purpose of
meeting margin calls and Commission
regulations allow these funds to be
invested by the FCMs and DCOs in
enumerated investments subject to
various restrictions. Through this
rulemaking, the Commission has
determined that certain investments are
no longer permitted as they may not
adequately meet the statute’s paramount
goal of protecting customer funds.
The Commission recognizes that
restricting the type and form of
permitted investments could result in
certain FCMs and DCOs earning less
income from their investments of
customer funds. The Commission is
unable to determine the magnitude of
such income reduction, if any, because
information was not provided to allow
the Commission to estimate any such
income reduction. No commenter
provided information about the
composition of the portfolio in which
customer segregated funds are invested.
194 7
U.S.C. 6(d).
U.S.C. 6(c).
196 Based on CFTC data as of April 30, 2011. See
CFTC Web site, Market Reports, Financial Data for
FCMs at https://www.cftc.gov/MarketReports/
FinancialDataforFCMs/index.htm.
195 7
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As noted above, the list of permitted
investments under the rules,
notwithstanding the restrictions
instituted herein, still represent a
significantly wider selection of
investment options than those permitted
by the Act. Further, in most cases, the
amended rules allow for investment in
many of the same instruments as
previously permitted, subject to assetbased and issuer-based concentration
limits.
In issuing these final rules, the
Commission has considered the costs
and benefits of each aspect of the rules,
as well as alternatives to them. In
addition, the Commission has evaluated
comments received regarding costs and
benefits in response to its proposal.197
Where quantification has not been
reasonably estimable due to lack of
necessary underlying information, the
Commission has considered the costs
and benefits of the final rules in
197 The commenters cost/benefit concerns fall in
two categories, summarized below with the
Commission’s corresponding response.
• Potentially reduced investment income may
cause increases in customer fee. Some public
commenters suggested that a loss of investment
income on customer segregated funds and those
funds held pursuant to Regulation 30.7 potentially
attributable to the rules’ investment choice
limitations, might incentivize FCMs and DCOs to
raise customer fees to make up for reduced
investment income. No objective evidence was
provided to predict the likelihood of this speculated
outcome. The Commission believes that the
corresponding benefit—i.e., substantially reduced
risk and greater protection of customer segregated
funds—justifies this speculative cost, particularly
given that the purpose of the segregated funds is not
investment income, but customer fund protection.
Moreover, as discussed herein, two factors mitigate
the magnitude of concern for the significance of any
such a potential income reduction. First, under the
final rules, most asset classes are still available to
managers and are only subject to concentration
limits. All other types of investments remain
permitted, including Treasuries, municipals, other
U.S. agency obligations, foreign sovereign debt and
MMMFs. Second, the comment letters do not
specify how extensively FCMs and DCOs actually
directly invest in those assets classes the rules will
exclude. Rather, comments expressing that
limitations on direct investments in MMMFs would
occasion extra cost and additional investment
expertise, suggest that FCMs and DCOs have
eschewed investment in these products, at least to
some degree.
• Potentially increased portfolio management
costs. Multiple commenters focused on the
additional expense FCMs and DCOs might incur to
acquire additional investment staff and expertise
needed to manage portfolios under the new rules.
Particular areas of concern related to the investment
process in light of the removal of credit ratings from
that process and portfolio management subject to
the percentage limitations with regard to asset-type,
issuer, and counterparty. Removal of credit ratings
is not within Commission discretion. Moreover, the
Commission believes the burden of on-boarding and
risk managing additional counterparties, as well as
the tracking of investments across more issuers, are
offset by the benefit of increased portfolio
diversification and more limited exposure to large
credit and counterparty risk profiles.
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qualitative terms.198 Generally, as
discussed more specifically below with
respect to the CEA section 15(a) factors,
the Commission believes that the
restrictions on segregated customer
funds and Regulation 30.7 fund
investments promote important benefits.
These include greater security for
customer funds and enhanced stability
for the financial system as a whole.
A discussion of the costs and benefits
of this rule and the relevant comments
is set out immediately below. The
remainder of this Section III considers
the costs and benefits of this rule under
Section 15(a) of the CEA, organized by
(i) impact on each class of permitted
investment, (ii) certain other limitations
on permitted investments, and (iii)
Regulation 30.7.
Municipal Securities
Municipal securities are permitted
investments pursuant to the Act. For the
reasons discussed above, the final rule
restricts the percentage of total customer
segregated funds that may be held by an
FCM or DCO in municipal securities to
10 percent. This is in addition to the 5
percent limitation of total customer
segregated funds that previously existed
for the investment in the municipal
securities of any individual issuer.
The Commission has determined that
the overall benefits of the concentration
limitations for municipal securities and
the resultant portfolio risk reductions—
as compared to those without such
limitations—are compelling,
notwithstanding any related costs.
(1) Protection of Market Participants and
the Public
The public has a strong interest in the
stability of the nation’s financial system,
a goal of the Dodd-Frank Act. The new
asset-based concentration limitation for
municipal securities will protect market
participants and the public by limiting
losses to customer segregated funds in
the event of a crisis in the municipal
bond markets.
The Commission believes that such
restrictions are appropriate and will
benefit the public and market
participants by safeguarding customer
funds.
(2) Efficiency, Competitiveness and
Financial Integrity of the Markets
The Commission believes that this
rule promotes market efficiency,
198 In the NPRM, the Commission invited the
public ‘‘to submit any data or other information that
may have quantifying or qualifying the costs and
benefits of the Proposal with their comment
letters.’’ The Commission received no such
quantitative data or information with respect to
these rules.
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competitiveness and financial integrity
in an important way. Imposing portfolio
concentration limits lowers the risk of
FCMs and DCOs suffering losses and/or
being unable to liquidate assets to meet
margin calls. This type of liquidity loss
may operate to undermine market
integrity and public confidence in the
absence of this rule. While there may be
some potential for ‘‘forced sale’’ losses
for FCMs and DCOs on investments that
may now be subject to restrictions, the
Commission cannot gauge the
magnitude and believes that it has taken
measures appropriate to the
circumstances to mitigate any potential
costs. More specifically, the
Commission is not in a position to
know, with any precision, the portfolio
holdings of FCMs and DCOs with
respect to municipal securities, nor can
the Commission predict the prevailing
market conditions if FCMs and DCOs
must sell municipal securities.
Consequently, the Commission cannot
quantify this cost. Further, as mentioned
above, the Commission does not believe
that FCMs or DCOs invest heavily in
municipal securities, so ‘‘forced sales,’’
if necessary, should be of little impact.
However, to reduce any potential
impact, slight though it may be, the
rules allow for a 180 day phase-in
period, giving FCMs and DCOs ample
time to adjust their portfolios to the
extent necessary to comply with the
regulations. Since municipal securities
remain eligible investments for FCMs
and DCOs and may be held either
directly or indirectly through
MMMFs,199 the Commission believes
that any potential impact on municipal
securities markets generally also should
be mitigated. Accordingly, the
Commission believes that the significant
benefits of having portfolios less
concentrated in municipal securities
justify any cost, as mitigated under the
rules.
(3) Price Discovery
The Commission has considered the
restrictions on municipal securities and
has determined that the final rules
should not have an impact on price
discovery.
(4) Sound Risk Management Practices
As previously noted, the rules
enhance risk management practices by
reducing vulnerability to municipal
securities defaults by the introduction of
additional investment restrictions in the
199 These investments, of course, remain subject
to the ‘‘highly liquid’’ requirement in these rules.
To be a permitted investment, a municipal security
must have the ability to be converted into cash
within one business day, without a material
discount in value.
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form of asset-based concentration limits.
However, given that the list of permitted
investments remains relatively
unchanged and that there is believed to
be little investment in municipal
securities at this time, there should be
little or no additional resources required
to comply with the final rule and the
existing risk management strategies and
systems should be largely unaffected.
(5) Other Public Interest Considerations
The greatest potential impact of this
rule on public interest considerations
stem from the increased stability of the
financial system as a whole. The
inclusion of asset-based concentration
limits for municipal securities
contributes to financial stability by
encouraging sound investment strategies
for customer segregated funds. For
FCMs and DCOs, the expenses
associated with managing within these
limitations and the potential for reduced
investment return opportunities are
costs. As discussed above, municipal
securities are not a widely used
investment, however. Further, as a
general matter, FCMs and DCOs still
have a great deal of flexibility and the
Commission believes that any added
expense associated with a more active
management of the investment
portfolios should be minor relative to
the benefits fostered.
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U.S. Agency Obligations
U.S. agency obligations will continue
to be permitted investments pursuant to
the Commission’s authority under
Section 4(c), subject to certain
restrictions under the rules. In addition
to the existing 25 percent limitation on
the securities of any single U.S. agency
being held with customer segregated
funds, the new rules limit this asset
class in aggregate to 50 percent of the
total customer segregated funds held by
the FCM or DCO. The rules also
condition investment in debt issued by
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac only while
these entities are operating under the
conservatorship or receivership of the
FHFA.
(1) Protection of Market Participants and
the Public
In response to concerns regarding the
safety of GSE debt securities,
highlighted by the 2008 failures of both
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, these
additional restrictions are designed to
protect market participants and the
public from the excessive risk that
concentrated investment in these assets
might present. The reduction of credit
risk and the portfolio diversification
requirements set forth by the
amendment will provide greater
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security for customer funds, and
ultimately to the FCMs and DCOs that
rely on those funds.
(2) Efficiency, Competitiveness and
Financial Integrity of the Markets
The Commission believes that this
rule promotes market efficiency,
competitiveness and financial integrity
in an important way. Imposing portfolio
concentration limits lowers the risk the
risk of FCMs and DCOs suffering losses
and/or being unable to liquidate assets
to meet margin calls. This type of
liquidity loss may operate to undermine
market integrity and public confidence
in the absence of this rule.
While there may be some potential for
‘‘forced sale’’ losses for FCMs and DCOs
on investments that may now be subject
to restrictions, the Commission cannot
gauge the magnitude and believes that it
has taken measures appropriate to the
circumstances to mitigate any potential
costs. More specifically, the
Commission is not in a position to
know, with any precision, the portfolio
holdings of FCMs and DCOs with
respect to U.S. agency obligations, nor
can the Commission predict the
prevailing market conditions if FCMs
and DCOs must sell U.S. agency
obligations. Consequently, the
Commission cannot quantify this cost.
However, to reduce any potential cost,
the rules contemplate a 180 day
implementation period, giving FCMs
and DCOs ample time to liquidate
portfolios to the extent necessary to
comply with the regulations. Since
investments in U.S. agency obligations
remain available for indirect investment
through MMMFs, the Commission
believes any impact on the markets for
U.S. agency obligations generally also
should be mitigated. Accordingly, the
Commission believes that the significant
potential benefits of having portfolios
less concentrated in U.S. agency
obligations justify any cost, as mitigated
under the rules.
(3) Price Discovery
The Commission has considered the
restrictions on U.S. agency obligations
and has determined that the final rules
should not have an impact on price
discovery.
(4) Sound Risk Management Procedures
The greatest costs relative to sound
risk management procedures have been
mentioned previously. The introduction
of additional investment restrictions for
U.S. agency obligations in the form of
asset-based and issuer-based
concentration limits may require FCMs
and DCOs to enhance their investment
management and portfolio monitoring
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78793
resources. However, given that
investments in U.S. agency
obligations—including GSE debt
securities—are currently permitted, the
risk management strategies and systems
should largely be in place already.
The Commission continues to believe
that the overall benefits of the
restrictions and concentration limits on
U.S. agency obligations, as compared to
those based on a regulatory standard
without such limitations, are
compelling, notwithstanding attendant
costs of the restrictions and
concentration limits. By limiting the
concentration of an FCM’s or DCO’s
investment in U.S. agency obligations,
the Commission is encouraging a
diverse portfolio that is more likely to
withstand a crisis in the GSE debt
securities market or a failure of one or
more GSEs.
(5) Other Public Interest Considerations
The greatest potential effect of this
rule on public interest considerations
stem from the implications of these
rules on the overall stability of the
financial system. The inclusion of assetbased and issuer-based limits on U.S.
agency obligations contributes to
financial stability by reducing
concentration risk for funds held in
customer segregated accounts. For FCMs
and DCOs, the expenses associated with
administration and the potential for lost
upside investment opportunities are
costs. However, as discussed above,
notwithstanding the limitations on U.S.
agency obligations, FCMs and DCOs still
have a great deal of flexibility to invest
in such instruments and the added
expense associated with a more active
management of the investment
portfolios should be minor relative to
the benefits fostered.
Certificates of Deposit
CDs will continue to be permitted
investments pursuant to the
Commission’s authority under Section
4(c), subject to certain restrictions under
the rules. In addition to the current
issuer-based limitation of 5 percent, the
new rules impose a 25 percent assetbased limitation. The rules also
condition investment in CDs to those
that are redeemable at the issuing bank
within one day, or are brokered CDs that
have embedded put options.
(1) Protection of Market Participants and
the Public
This rulemaking continues to allow
CDs as a permitted investment for FCMs
and DCOs while ensuring that such
instruments adequately preserve the
customers’ principal and maintain
liquidity. The costs of this rulemaking
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include the administrative costs of
moving from non-permitted CDs to
permitted CDs (or other permitted
investments) and potential lost upside
investment opportunities from the
inability to invest in non-permitted CDs.
The Commission is unable to determine
the reduction in income, if any, because
it does not know the composition of the
portfolio in which customer segregated
funds are invested. The Commission
believes that there is a strong benefit in
creating a framework for CDs in which
such instruments must be able to be
redeemed, within one business day, at
the issuing bank, however. The
Commission believes that any cost
brought about by this amendment is
justified by a more diversified risk
structure as a result of concentration
limits. Further, given the availability of
indirect investment in CDs generally
through MMMFs, any income loss
resulting from these limitations should
be minor.
Like other asset types, FCMs and
DCOs may need additional resources
and expertise, and incur the related
expense, to manage a portfolio subject to
the percentage limitations of the rules
with regard to asset-type and issuer.
With sizeable allowances for MMMFs,
FCMs and DCOs will be able to continue
to leverage the expertise of fund
managers and access indirect
investment in otherwise restricted asset
types.
(2) Efficiency, Competitiveness and
Financial Integrity of the Markets
The Commission believes that this
rule promotes financial integrity in an
important way. Imposing portfolio
concentration limits lowers the risk of
FCMs and DCOs suffering losses and/or
being unable to liquidate assets to meet
margin calls. This type of liquidity loss
may operate to undermine market
integrity and public confidence in the
absence of this rule.
While there may be some potential for
‘‘forced sale’’ losses for FCMs and DCOs
on CDs now subject to restrictions, the
Commission cannot gauge the
magnitude and believes that it has taken
measures appropriate to the
circumstances to mitigate any potential
costs. More specifically, the
Commission is not in a position to
know, with any precision, the portfolio
holdings of FCMs and DCOs with
respect to CDs, nor can the Commission
predict the prevailing market conditions
if FCMs and DCOs must sell CDs.
Consequently, the Commission cannot
quantify this cost. However, to reduce
any potential cost, the rules contemplate
a 180 day implementation period, giving
FCMs and DCOs ample time to liquidate
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portfolios to the extent necessary to
comply with the regulations. Since CDs
remain eligible investments for FCMs
and DCOs and may be held either
directly or indirectly through MMMFs,
the Commission believes that any
potential impact on CD markets
generally also should be mitigated.
Accordingly, the Commission believes
that the significant potential benefits of
having portfolios less concentrated in
CDs justify any cost, as mitigated under
the rules.
(3) Price Discovery
The Commission has reviewed the
restrictions on CDs and determined that
the final rules should not have an
impact on price discovery.
(4) Sound Risk Management Procedures
The greatest costs relative to sound
risk management procedures have been
mentioned previously. The introduction
of additional investment restrictions to
CDs in the form of asset-based
concentration limits may require FCMs
and DCOs to enhance their investment
management and portfolio monitoring
resources. However, the risk
management strategies and systems
should largely be in place already.
The Commission believes that the
overall benefits of the concentration
limitations and other restrictions on CDs
and the resultant reductions in risk to
portfolios, as compared to those based
on a regulatory framework without such
limitations, mitigate the costs.
(5) Other Public Interest Considerations
The greatest potential impact of this
rule on public interest considerations
stem from the implications of these
rules on the stability of the financial
system as a whole. The inclusion of
asset-based limitations on CDs, as well
as the restriction that all CDs must be
redeemable at the issuing bank,
contributes to financial stability by
reducing concentration risk for funds
held in customer segregated accounts.
For FCMs and DCOs, the expenses
associated with managing to these
limitations on CDs and the potential for
reduced upside investment return on
CD investments are costs. However, as
discussed above, notwithstanding these
limitations, FCMs and DCOs may still
invest directly in CDs and may invest
indirectly through MMMFs. The added
expense associated with a more active
management of the investment
portfolios should be minor relative to
the benefits fostered.
Commercial Paper and Corporate Debt
Some commercial paper and
corporate notes or bonds will continue
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to be permitted investments pursuant to
the Commission’s authority under
Section 4(c), subject to certain
restrictions under the rules. In addition
to the existing 5 percent limitation on
the securities of any single issuer of
such instruments being held with
customer segregated funds, the new
rules limit these asset classes in
aggregate to 25 percent, respectively, of
the total customer segregated assets held
by the FCM or DCO. The rules also
restrict investment in commercial paper
and corporate notes or bonds to those
that are federally guaranteed as to
principal and interest under the TLGP.
(1) Protection of Market Participants and
the Public
The lack of liquidity that impacted
these markets during the recent
financial crisis, and which necessitated
the federal guarantee under TLGP,
highlights the concerns of permitting
FCMs and DCOs unrestricted
investment of customer funds in these
assets. The limits imposed by this rule
will protect customer funds from being
invested in concentrated pools of
unrated commercial paper and
corporate notes or bonds. While the
requirement that these instruments be
guaranteed by TLGP may, in effect,
severely limit investment in these
instruments by FCMs and DCOs, the
actual costs of this limitation for FCMs
and DCOs are unclear, given that there
is little data evidencing the extent of
their use as an investment option, and
the fact that indirect investment is still
permitted through the use of MMMFs.
Like other asset types, FCMs and
DCOs may need additional resources
and expertise, and incur the related
expense, to manage a portfolio of TLGP
corporate notes or bonds and/or
commercial paper subject to the
percentage limitations of the rules and
the TLGP restrictions. With sizeable
allowances for MMMFs, FCMs and
DCOs will be able to continue to
leverage the expertise of fund managers
and access indirect investment in
otherwise restricted asset types.
(2) Efficiency, Competitiveness and
Financial Integrity of the Markets
The Commission believes that this
rule promotes financial integrity in an
important way. Imposing portfolio
concentration limits lowers the risk of
FCMs and DCOs suffering losses and/or
being unable to liquidate assets to meet
margin calls. This type of liquidity loss
may operate to undermine market
integrity and public confidence in the
absence of this rule.
While there may be some potential for
‘‘forced sale’’ losses for FCMs and DCOs
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on commercial paper and corporate debt
now subject to restrictions, the
Commission cannot gauge the
magnitude and believes that it has taken
measures appropriate to the
circumstances to mitigate any potential
costs. More specifically, the
Commission is not in a position to
know, with any precision, the portfolio
holdings of FCMs and DCOs with
respect to commercial paper and
corporate debt, nor can the Commission
predict the prevailing market conditions
if FCMs and DCOs must sell commercial
paper and corporate debt. Consequently,
the Commission cannot quantify this
cost. However, to reduce any potential
cost, the rules contemplate a 180 day
implementation period, giving FCMs
and DCOs ample time to liquidate
portfolios to the extent necessary to
comply with the regulations. Since
investments in commercial paper and
corporate debt remain available for
indirect investment through MMMFs,
the Commission believes any impact on
commercial paper and corporate debt
markets also should be mitigated.
Accordingly, the Commission believes
that the significant potential benefits of
having portfolios less concentrated in
commercial paper and corporate debt
justify any cost, as mitigated under the
rule.
emcdonald on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
(3) Price Discovery
The Commission has reviewed the
restrictions on commercial paper and
corporate notes or bonds and
determined that the final rules should
not have an impact on price discovery.
(4) Sound Risk Management Procedures
The greatest costs relative to sound
risk management procedures have been
mentioned previously. The introduction
of additional investment restrictions in
the form of asset-based concentration
limits and the TLGP restriction may
require FCMs and DCOs to enhance
their investment management and
portfolio monitoring resources.
However, the risk management
strategies and systems should largely be
in place already.
The Commission believes that the
overall benefits of the concentration
limits and TLGP restrictions on
commercial paper and corporate notes
or bonds, and the resultant reductions
in risk to portfolios, as compared to
those based on a regulatory framework
without such limitations, are
compelling, notwithstanding attendant
costs of the restrictions and
concentration limits. By adding
restrictions and increasing
diversification through concentration
limits, customer segregated funds
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should be better protected in the event
of a crisis in the broader financial
market.
(5) Other Public Interest Considerations
The greatest potential impact of this
rule on public interest considerations
stem from the implications of these
rules for the stability of the financial
system as a whole. The inclusion of
asset-based limits on commercial paper
and corporate notes or bonds, as well as
the exclusion of corporate instruments
that are not guaranteed by the TLGP,
will contribute to financial stability by
increasing the safety of funds in
customer segregated accounts. For FCMs
and DCOs, the expenses associated with
managing these limitations and the
potential for reduced upside investment
opportunities are costs. However, as
discussed above, notwithstanding the
limitations on commercial paper and
corporate notes or bonds, FCMs and
DCOs still have a great deal of flexibility
and the added expense associated with
a more active management of the
investment portfolios should be minor
relative to the benefits fostered.
Foreign Sovereign Debt
Foreign sovereign debt is eliminated
as a permitted investment in this
rulemaking. However, the Commission
invites FCMs or DCOs to request an
exemption pursuant to the
Commission’s authority under Section
4(c), allowing them to invest in foreign
sovereign debt: (1) To the extent that the
FCM or DCO has balances in segregated
accounts owed to its customers (or
clearing member FCMs, as the case may
be) in that country’s currency; and (2) to
the extent that investment in such
foreign sovereign debt would serve to
preserve principal and maintain
liquidity of customer funds, as required
by Regulation 1.25. Upon an appropriate
demonstration, the Commission has
noted that it may be amenable to
granting such an exemption.
(1) Protection of Market Participants and
the Public
The recent sovereign debt crises
highlight the concerns of permitting
FCMs and DCOs to invest customer
funds in foreign sovereign debt. The
restriction of this investment class will
protect customer funds from being
invested in risky or illiquid foreign
sovereign debt. While this rule
eliminates investment in these
instruments by FCMs and DCOs, the
actual costs of this restriction on FCMs
and DCOs are unquantifiable, in large
part because the extent to which DCOs
invest in foreign sovereign debt is
uncertain.
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78795
Certain commenters argued that
investment in foreign sovereign debt is
necessary to hedge currency risk, and a
prohibition on doing so may be costly.
While the Commission recognizes that
the restriction may impose costs, such
costs are mitigated by the ability of an
entity to seek an exemption from the
Commission. Further, in a scenario
where a market event has caused a
currency devaluation and/or the
illiquidity of a country’s sovereign debt,
the Commission believes that
customers’ best interests are served by
an FCM holding a devalued currency,
which (albeit devalued) can be
delivered immediately to the customer
as opposed to an illiquid foreign
sovereign debt issuance, which may not
be able to be exchanged for any
currency in a reasonably short
timeframe.
(2) Efficiency, Competitiveness and
Financial Integrity of the Markets
The Commission believes that this
rule promotes financial integrity in an
important way. Eliminating
unpredictable and potentially risky
instruments lowers the risk of FCMs and
DCOs suffering losses and/or being
unable to liquidate assets to meet
margin calls. This type of liquidity loss
may operate to undermine market
integrity and public confidence in the
absence of this rule.
While there may be some potential for
‘‘forced sale’’ losses for FCMs and DCOs
on foreign sovereign debt now
prohibited, the Commission cannot
quantify any such losses and believes
that through the exemption process
under Section 4(c), it has mitigated any
such potential costs. Moreover, the
Commission is not in a position to
know, with any precision, the portfolio
holdings of FCMs and DCOs with
respect to foreign sovereign debt, nor
can the Commission predict the
prevailing market conditions if FCMs
and DCOs must sell such instruments.
Consequently, the Commission cannot
quantify this cost. However, to mitigate
any such potential cost, the rules
contemplate a 180-day implementation
period, giving FCMs and DCOs ample
time to liquidate portfolios to the extent
necessary to comply with the
regulations and/or allowing FCMs and
DCOs the opportunity to request an
exemption.
(3) Price Discovery
The Commission does not believe that
the restrictions on foreign sovereign
debt will have an impact on price
discovery.
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
(4) Sound Risk Management Procedures
The restriction on foreign sovereign
debt is intended to require an FCM or
DCO to protect against currency
exposure in a way that fosters sound
risk management, particularly the
protection of customer funds.
(5) Other Public Interest Considerations
The prohibition on investment in
foreign sovereign debt will contribute to
financial stability by increasing the
safety of funds in customer segregated
accounts. For FCMs and DCOs, any
expense associated with the elimination
of foreign sovereign debt is a cost.
However, as discussed above,
notwithstanding the elimination of this
investment class, the Commission
believes that the benefits to the public
and market participants of this
provision of the rule are significant.
emcdonald on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Money Market Mutual Funds
MMMF investments will continue to
be permitted pursuant to the
Commission’s authority under Section
4(c), albeit with some restrictions. First,
an FCM or DCO may invest all of its
customer segregated funds in Treasuryonly MMMFs, but for all other MMMFs,
as discussed below, the Commission
believes that a 50 percent asset-based
concentration is appropriate. In
addition, an FCM or DCO may invest up
to 10 percent of its assets in segregation
in funds that do not have both $1 billion
in assets and a management company
that has at least $25 billion in MMMF
assets under management (small
MMMFs), while, subject to the caveats
described above, an FCM or DCO may
invest up to 50 percent of its assets in
segregation in funds that do (large
MMMFs).
In arriving at these concentration
limits, in addition to its own staff
research, the Commission took into
consideration information presented in
meetings with the market participants,
comment letters and discussions with
other regulators. The Commission
decided to allow investment without
asset- or issuer-based limitations for
Treasury-only MMMFs due to the fact
that Regulation 1.25 allows direct
investments entirely in Treasuries.
Indirect investment in Treasuries via a
Treasury-only MMMF is essentially the
risk equivalent of a direct investment in
Treasuries, while allowing an FCM or
DCO the administrative ease of
delegating the management of its
portfolio to a MMMF. The Commission
decided upon a 50 percent asset-based
concentration limit for large prime
MMMFs, as it remains concerned that,
in another crisis, a run on a prime
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MMMF may threaten both the liquidity
and principal of customer segregated
funds. After weighing the information
described above, the Commission
determined that a 50 percent asset-based
limitation struck the right balance
between providing FCMs and DCOs
with sufficient Regulation 1.25
investment options and, at the same
time, encouraging adequate portfolio
diversification. The issuer-based
limitation reflects the view that the
Commission seeks to protect FCMs and
DCOs from runs on particular funds and
families of funds. As a necessary
corollary for increasing the asset-based
concentration limits, the Commission
decided to implement the fund and
fund family size requirements in order
to ensure that MMMFs invested in
heavily by FCMs and DCOs were large
enough to handle a high volume of
redemption requests while still allowing
for limited investment in small
MMMFs.
Finally, the Commission notes that
these restrictions are such that an FCM
could invest all of its customer funds in
MMMFs, by, as examples, investing
entirely in a large Treasury-only MMMF
or by investing 50 percent of its funds
in large prime MMMFs (spread out
among five individual funds and three
fund families) and 50 percent in a large
Treasury-only MMMF. The Commission
believes that this should alleviate the
concerns of FCMs that expressed, in
their comment letters, a reluctance to
manage their own portfolios and instead
wished to delegate those responsibilities
entirely to fund managers.
(1) Protection of Market Participants and
the Public
The recent financial crisis exposed
the risks attendant to MMMFs—in
particular, their susceptibility to runs.
Though only one fund broke the buck,
many others were supported by their
sponsors and/or affiliates during the
crisis. In response, the SEC has made a
number of changes to Rule 2a–7 to
address the risks inherent in MMMFs.
The changes are aimed at reducing the
perceived credit and liquidity risks of
the MMMFs’ underlying portfolios.
However, as the President’s Working
Group on Financial Markets has noted,
systemic risks remain in the MMMF
market, notwithstanding the SEC’s
recent reforms.200 Absent further
changes in the way MMMF shares are
valued, redeemed and/or supported
200 President’s Working Group on Financial
Markets, Money Market Fund Reform Options, at
16–18 (2010). The full report may be accessed at
https://www.treasury.gov/press-center/pressreleases/Documents/10.21%20PWG%20Report%20
Final.pdf.
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Frm 00022
Fmt 4701
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through private or public sector
guarantees, future runs on MMMFs
cannot be ruled out.
The minimum $1 billion asset
requirement for individual fund and $25
billion asset requirement for family of
funds of large MMMFs are designed to
ensure that customer funds are typically
invested in sufficiently large funds with
diversified portfolios of holdings that
are better positioned to withstand
unexpected redemptions requests.
Limited investment in small MMMFs
was retained from the NPRM in order to
provide flexibility for FCMs and DCOs
and to promote diversification. The new
asset-based concentration limitations for
non-Treasury MMMFs in aggregate, by
family and by individual fund will
provide additional protection for
customer segregated funds in the event
of both runs on MMMFs generally, and
more targeted runs that may affect a
specific family of funds or an individual
fund. The portfolio diversification
requirements set forth by the
amendment will provide greater
security for customer funds, and
ultimately to the FCMs and DCOs that
rely on those funds.
Individual FCMs and DCOs may need
additional resources and expertise, and
incur the related expense, to manage a
portfolio subject to the percentage
limitations of the rules with regard to
asset-type, issuer and size. However,
with sizeable allowances for MMMFs,
FCMs and DCOs will be able to continue
to leverage the expertise of fund
managers. The Commission notes that
under this rule, an FCM or DCO is able
to invest all of their customer segregated
funds in one or more MMMFs.
Therefore, FCMs or DCOs not wishing to
manage their portfolios may delegate
entirely to MMMF managers.
(2) Efficiency, Competitiveness and
Financial Integrity of the Markets
The Commission believes that this
rule promotes financial integrity in an
important way. Imposing portfolio
concentration limits lowers the risk of
FCMs and DCOs suffering losses and/or
being unable to liquidate assets to meet
margin calls. This type of liquidity loss
may operate to undermine market
integrity and public confidence in the
absence of this rule.
While there may be some potential for
‘‘forced sale’’ losses for FCMs and DCOs
on MMMFs that are above the
concentration limits or not meet the
asset requirements, the Commission
cannot gauge the magnitude and
believes that it has taken measures
appropriate to the circumstances to
mitigate any potential costs. More
specifically, the Commission is not in a
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position to know, with any precision,
the portfolio holdings of FCMs and
DCOs with respect to MMMFs, nor can
the Commission predict the prevailing
market conditions if FCMs and DCOs
must sell MMMFs. Consequently, the
Commission cannot quantify this cost.
However, to reduce any potential cost,
the rules contemplate a 180 day
implementation period, giving FCMs
and DCOs ample time to liquidate
portfolios to the extent necessary to
comply with the regulations. Since
investments in MMMFs remain
available, the Commission believes any
impact on MMMF markets generally
also should be mitigated. Accordingly,
the Commission believes that the
significant potential benefits of having
portfolios less concentrated in a small
number of MMMFs justify any cost, as
mitigated under the rules.
active management of the MMMF
portfolio should be minor.
Other Investment Limitations
The final rules also include other
limitations and restrictions on those
investments that are permitted for
customer segregated funds by FCMs and
DCOs, including the elimination of inhouse transactions and repurchase
agreements with affiliates as well as a 25
percent counterparty concentration
limit on repurchase agreements.
(5) Other Public Interest Considerations
(1) Protection of Market Participants and
the Public
As stated above, the guiding
investment principle for customer funds
is that investments are liquid and
preserve principal. The lessons of the
recent financial crisis highlighted the
contagion that can occur in the financial
markets from a single failure or default.
As such, the new rules are designed to
broadly spread counterparty risk, such
that customer funds are protected and
may be liquidated quickly,
notwithstanding select failures in the
marketplace. In-house transactions and
repurchase agreements with affiliates
have been eliminated due to the
conflicts of interest that can arise during
periods of crisis, the concentration risk
associated with engaging in such
transactions within an FCM-broker
dealer entity (in the case of an in-house
transaction) and within an affiliate
structure (in the case of a repurchase
agreements with affiliates), among other
reasons. The 25 percent counterpartyconcentration limit has been introduced
to ensure that an FCM or DCO does not
have all of its customer funds subject to
the risk profile of a single counterparty.
The greatest potential benefit of this
rule on public interest considerations
stem from the implications of these
rules on the stability of the financial
system as a whole. The inclusion of
asset-based concentration limitations on
non-Treasury MMMFs, placing
limitations on families of funds and on
individual funds, and allowing only
limited investment in funds not meeting
certain asset limits contributes to
financial stability by promoting the
diversification of investment for funds
held in customer segregated accounts.
For FCMs and DCOs, the expenses
associated with managing their MMMF
investments and the potential for lost
upside investment opportunities are
costs. However, as discussed above,
notwithstanding the limitations on the
permitted investments, FCMs and DCOs
may still invest all customer segregated
funds in a portfolio of MMMFs, and the
added expense associated with a more
(2) Efficiency, Competitiveness and
Financial Integrity of the Markets
The Commission believes that these
additional limitations promote financial
integrity in an important way. By
broadly spreading counterparty risk and
enhancing customer fund protections
and liquidity, the risk of FCMs and
DCOs suffering losses and/or being
unable to liquidate assets to meet
margin calls is decreased. This type of
liquidity loss may operate to undermine
market integrity and public confidence
in the absence of this rule.
Moreover, to the extent there are
potential costs noted below, offsetting
benefits justify them. Any decrease in
efficiency resulting from the elimination
of in-house transactions and repurchase
agreements with affiliates need be
considered in light of the benefits of the
increased certainty of arms-length
transactions between two legally
distinct, unaffiliated parties. And, a
(3) Price Discovery
The final rules should not have an
impact on price discovery.
(4) Sound Risk Management Procedures
emcdonald on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
The greatest costs relative to sound
risk management procedures have been
mentioned previously. The introduction
of additional investment restrictions on
MMMFs in the form of asset-based and
issuer-based concentration limits may
require FCMs and DCOs to enhance
their investment management and
portfolio monitoring resources.
However, to the extent that FCMs and
DCOs had invested in MMMFs
previously, the risk management
strategies and systems should largely be
in place already.
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78797
crucial benefit offsets the administrative
costs associated with having five
counterparties rather than one: Reduced
counterparty risk.
(3) Price Discovery
The final rules should not have an
impact on price discovery.
(4) Sound Risk Management Procedures
There may be additional expense
associated with the on-boarding and risk
managing additional counterparties, but
the scale of this additional burden does
not appear large and is justified by the
benefits of improved counterparty
concentration limits.
(5) Other Public Interest Considerations
The greatest potential impact of this
rule on public interest considerations
stem from the increased stability of the
financial system as a whole. The
inclusion of counterparty concentration
limits, in particular, contributes to
financial stability by reducing risk for
funds held in customer segregated
accounts.
Regulation 30.7
The Commission has decided to
harmonize Regulation 30.7 with the
investment limitations of Regulation
1.25. The Commission had not
previously restricted investments of
30.7 funds to the permitted investments
under Regulation 1.25. The Commission
now believes that it is appropriate to
align the investment standards given the
similar prudential concerns that arise
with respect to both segregated
customer funds and 30.7 funds. The
Commission has also removed the credit
ratings requirements for depositories of
30.7 funds and eliminated the option of
customers to designate, with the
permission of the Commission, a
depository not otherwise meeting the
standards to be a depository of 30.7
funds.
(1) Protection of Market Participants and
the Public
The public has a strong interest in the
stability of the nation’s financial system,
a goal of the Dodd-Frank Act. Applying
Regulation 1.25 standards to 30.7 funds
will better insulate them against the
negative shocks of future financial
crises, thereby enhancing protection to
market participants and the public.
Also, no benefit justifies applying a
different standard for 30.7 funds than
for segregated customer funds. FCMs
and DCOs traditionally have used
Regulation 1.25 as a safe harbor for 30.7
funds; accordingly, there is no basis to
anticipate material additional expense
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as a result of extending these
requirements to 30.7 funds.
The removal of credit ratings from
Regulation 30.7 was necessitated by
Section 939A of the Dodd-Frank Act
and is in line with the Commission’s
removal of credit ratings under
Regulation 1.25. The removal of the
designation option for depositories
stemmed from the fact that the
Commission had never entertained such
a request and from the belief that a
depository should meet the capital
requirements for depositories in order to
hold 30.7 funds.
(2) Efficiency, Competitiveness and
Financial Integrity of the Markets
The investments made with 30.7
funds generally have been similar to
those made under Regulation 1.25.
Accordingly, the Commission believes
that harmonization of Regulation 30.7
with Regulation 1.25 promotes financial
integrity in the same important ways
and relative to less significant cost as
discussed in the above. Specifically,
imposition of the restrictions discussed
above with respect to Regulation 1.25
asset classes lowers the risk of FCMs
and DCOs suffering losses and/or being
unable to liquidate assets to meet
margin calls. This type of liquidity loss
may operate to undermine market
integrity and public confidence in the
absence of this rule.
The Commission does not expect the
removal of credit ratings to have a
significant impact on choice of
depositories for 30.7 funds. The
Commission expects the elimination of
the designation option to have no
impact, since it has never been used.
emcdonald on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
(3) Price Discovery
The final rules regarding Regulation
30.7 should not have an impact on price
discovery.
(4) Sound Risk Management Procedures
As mentioned above, most FCMs and
DCOs have used Regulation 1.25 as a
safe harbor for 30.7 funds. As such, the
incremental costs associated with
applying the additional investment
restrictions in the form of asset-based
and issuer-based concentration limits
should not be substantial. The risk
management strategies and systems
should largely be in place already, and
will now be applied to 30.7 funds.
The Commission believes that the
overall benefits of applying Regulation
1.25 standards to 30.7 funds, as
compared to those based on a regulatory
framework without such limitations,
justify the less significant costs. By
adding restrictions and increasing
diversification through concentration
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limits, 30.7 funds should be better
protected in the event of a crisis in the
broader financial market. The removal
of credit ratings for depositories and the
removal of the designation option
should not have a significant impact on
risk management practices because
depositories must still meet the capital
requirements in order to qualify under
Regulation 30.7 and, as mentioned, no
depositories have ever qualified through
designation. The only cost associated
with the former would be the
administrative cost of moving funds
from one depository to another, in the
event that a previously qualifying
depository now no longer qualifies.
(5) Other Public Interest Considerations
The greatest potential impact of this
rule on public interest considerations
stem from the implications of these
rules for the stability of the financial
system as a whole. The application of
Regulation 1.25 standards to 30.7 funds
will contribute to financial stability by
reducing concentration risk for 30.7
funds. For FCMs and DCOs, the
expenses associated with managing
these limitations and the potential for
lost upside investment opportunities are
costs. However, as discussed above, the
added expense associated with a more
active management of the investment
portfolios should be minor.
IV. Related Matters
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA) imposes certain requirements on
federal agencies (including the
Commission) in connection with their
201 5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.
FR 18618 (Apr. 30, 1982).
203 Id. at 18619.
204 66 FR 45604, 45609 (Aug. 29, 2001).
202 47
Frm 00024
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Lists of Subjects
17 CFR Part 1
Brokers, Commodity futures,
Consumer protection, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
17 CFR Part 30
Commodity futures, Consumer
protection, Currency, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
In consideration of the foregoing and
pursuant to the authority contained in
the Commodity Exchange Act, in
particular, Sections 4d, 4(c), and 8a(5)
thereof, 7 U.S.C. 6d, 6(c) and 12a(5),
respectively, the Commission hereby
amends Chapter I of Title 17 of the Code
of Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 1—GENERAL REGULATIONS
UNDER THE COMMODITY EXCHANGE
ACT
1. The authority citation for part 1 is
revised to read as follows:
■
A. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act
(RFA) 201 requires federal agencies, in
promulgating rules, to consider the
impact of those rules on small
businesses. The rule amendments
contained herein will affect FCMs and
DCOs. The Commission has previously
established certain definitions of ‘‘small
entities’’ to be used by the Commission
in evaluating the impact of its rules on
small entities in accordance with the
RFA.202 The Commission has previously
determined that registered FCMs 203 and
DCOs 204 are not small entities for the
purpose of the RFA. Accordingly,
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b), the
Chairman, on behalf of the Commission,
certifies that the final rules will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
PO 00000
conducting or sponsoring any collection
of information as defined by the PRA.
The final rules do not require a new
collection of information on the part of
any entities subject to the rule
amendments. Accordingly, for purposes
of the PRA, the Commission certifies
that these rule amendments,
promulgated in final form, do not
impose any new reporting or
recordkeeping requirements.
Sfmt 4700
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
the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act, Pub. L. 111–203,
124 Stat. 1376 (2010).
2. Section 1.25 is revised to read as
follows:
■
§ 1.25
Investment of customer funds.
(a) Permitted investments. (1) Subject
to the terms and conditions set forth in
this section, a futures commission
merchant or a derivatives clearing
organization may invest customer
money in the following instruments
(permitted investments):
(i) Obligations of the United States
and obligations fully guaranteed as to
principal and interest by the United
States (U.S. government securities);
(ii) General obligations of any State or
of any political subdivision thereof
(municipal securities);
(iii) Obligations of any United States
government corporation or enterprise
sponsored by the United States
government (U.S. agency obligations);
(iv) Certificates of deposit issued by a
bank (certificates of deposit) as defined
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in section 3(a)(6) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, or a domestic
branch of a foreign bank that carries
deposits insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation;
(v) Commercial paper fully
guaranteed as to principal and interest
by the United States under the
Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program
as administered by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (commercial
paper);
(vi) Corporate notes or bonds fully
guaranteed as to principal and interest
by the United States under the
Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program
as administered by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (corporate notes
or bonds); and
(vii) Interests in money market mutual
funds.
(2)(i) In addition, a futures
commission merchant or derivatives
clearing organization may buy and sell
the permitted investments listed in
paragraphs (a)(1)(i) through (vii) of this
section pursuant to agreements for
resale or repurchase of the instruments,
in accordance with the provisions of
paragraph (d) of this section.
(ii) A futures commission merchant or
a derivatives clearing organization may
sell securities deposited by customers as
margin pursuant to agreements to
repurchase subject to the following:
(A) Securities subject to such
repurchase agreements must be ‘‘highly
liquid’’ as defined in paragraph (b)(1) of
this section.
(B) Securities subject to such
repurchase agreements must not be
‘‘specifically identifiable property’’ as
defined in § 190.01(kk) of this chapter.
(C) The terms and conditions of such
an agreement to repurchase must be in
accordance with the provisions of
paragraph (d) of this section.
(D) Upon the default by a
counterparty to a repurchase agreement,
the futures commission merchant or
derivatives clearing organization shall
act promptly to ensure that the default
does not result in any direct or indirect
cost or expense to the customer.
(3) Obligations issued by the Federal
National Mortgage Association or the
Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Association are permitted while these
entities operate under the
conservatorship or receivership of the
Federal Housing Finance Authority with
capital support from the United States.
(b) General terms and conditions. A
futures commission merchant or a
derivatives clearing organization is
required to manage the permitted
investments consistent with the
objectives of preserving principal and
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maintaining liquidity and according to
the following specific requirements:
(1) Liquidity. Investments must be
‘‘highly liquid’’ such that they have the
ability to be converted into cash within
one business day without material
discount in value.
(2) Restrictions on instrument
features. (i) With the exception of
money market mutual funds, no
permitted investment may contain an
embedded derivative of any kind,
except as follows:
(A) The issuer of an instrument
otherwise permitted by this section may
have an option to call, in whole or in
part, at par, the principal amount of the
instrument before its stated maturity
date; or
(B) An instrument that meets the
requirements of paragraph (b)(2)(iv) of
this section may provide for a cap, floor,
or collar on the interest paid; provided,
however, that the terms of such
instrument obligate the issuer to repay
the principal amount of the instrument
at not less than par value upon maturity.
(ii) No instrument may contain
interest-only payment features.
(iii) No instrument may provide
payments linked to a commodity,
currency, reference instrument, index,
or benchmark except as provided in
paragraph (b)(2)(iv) of this section, and
it may not otherwise constitute a
derivative instrument.
(iv)(A) Adjustable rate securities are
permitted, subject to the following
requirements:
(1) The interest payments on variable
rate securities must correlate closely
and on an unleveraged basis to a
benchmark of either the Federal Funds
target or effective rate, the prime rate,
the three-month Treasury Bill rate, the
one-month or three-month LIBOR rate,
or the interest rate of any fixed rate
instrument that is a permitted
investment listed in paragraph (a)(1) of
this section;
(2) The interest payment, in any
period, on floating rate securities must
be determined solely by reference, on an
unleveraged basis, to a benchmark of
either the Federal Funds target or
effective rate, the prime rate, the threemonth Treasury Bill rate, the one-month
or three-month LIBOR rate, or the
interest rate of any fixed rate instrument
that is a permitted investment listed in
paragraph (a)(1) of this section;
(3) Benchmark rates must be
expressed in the same currency as the
adjustable rate securities that reference
them; and
(4) No interest payment on an
adjustable rate security, in any period,
can be a negative amount.
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(B) For purposes of this paragraph, the
following definitions shall apply:
(1) The term adjustable rate security
means, a floating rate security, a
variable rate security, or both.
(2) The term floating rate security
means a security, the terms of which
provide for the adjustment of its interest
rate whenever a specified interest rate
changes and that, at any time until the
final maturity of the instrument or the
period remaining until the principal
amount can be recovered through
demand, can reasonably be expected to
have market value that approximates its
amortized cost.
(3) The term variable rate security
means a security, the terms of which
provide for the adjustment of its interest
rate on set dates (such as the last day of
a month or calendar quarter) and that,
upon each adjustment until the final
maturity of the instrument or the period
remaining until the principal amount
can be recovered through demand, can
reasonably be expected to have a market
value that approximates its amortized
cost.
(v) Certificates of deposit must be
redeemable at the issuing bank within
one business day, with any penalty for
early withdrawal limited to any accrued
interest earned according to its written
terms.
(vi) Commercial paper and corporate
notes or bonds must meet the following
criteria:
(A) The size of the issuance must be
greater than $1 billion;
(B) The instrument must be
denominated in U.S. dollars; and
(C) The instrument must be fully
guaranteed as to principal and interest
by the United States for its entire term.
(3) Concentration—(i) Asset-based
concentration limits for direct
investments. (A) Investments in U.S.
government securities shall not be
subject to a concentration limit.
(B) Investments in U.S. agency
obligations may not exceed 50 percent
of the total assets held in segregation by
the futures commission merchant or
derivatives clearing organization.
(C) Investments in each of commercial
paper, corporate notes or bonds and
certificates of deposit may not exceed 25
percent of the total assets held in
segregation by the futures commission
merchant or derivatives clearing
organization.
(D) Investments in municipal
securities may not exceed 10 percent of
the total assets held in segregation by
the futures commission merchant or
derivatives clearing organization.
(E) Subject to paragraph (b)(3)(i)(G) of
this section, investments in money
market mutual funds comprising only
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U.S. government securities shall not be
subject to a concentration limit.
(F) Subject to paragraph (b)(3)(i)(G) of
this section, investments in money
market mutual funds, other than those
described in paragraph (b)(3)(i)(E) of
this section, may not exceed 50 percent
of the total assets held in segregation by
the futures commission merchant or
derivatives clearing organization.
(G) Investments in money market
mutual funds comprising less than $1
billion in assets and/or which have a
management company comprising less
than $25 billion in assets, may not
exceed 10 percent of the total assets
held in segregation by the futures
commission merchant or derivatives
clearing organization.
(ii) Issuer-based concentration limits
for direct investments. (A) Securities of
any single issuer of U.S. agency
obligations held by a futures
commission merchant or derivatives
clearing organization may not exceed 25
percent of total assets held in
segregation by the futures commission
merchant or derivatives clearing
organization.
(B) Securities of any single issuer of
municipal securities, certificates of
deposit, commercial paper, or corporate
notes or bonds held by a futures
commission merchant or derivatives
clearing organization may not exceed
5 percent of total assets held in
segregation by the futures commission
merchant or derivatives clearing
organization.
(C) Interests in any single family of
money market mutual funds described
in paragraph (b)(3)(i)(F) of this section
may not exceed 25 percent of total
assets held in segregation by the futures
commission merchant or derivatives
clearing organization.
(D) Interests in any individual money
market mutual fund described in
paragraph (b)(3)(i)(F) of this section may
not exceed 10 percent of total assets
held in segregation by the futures
commission merchant or derivatives
clearing organization.
(E) For purposes of determining
compliance with the issuer-based
concentration limits set forth in this
section, securities issued by entities that
are affiliated, as defined in paragraph
(b)(5) of this section, shall be aggregated
and deemed the securities of a single
issuer. An interest in a permitted money
market mutual fund is not deemed to be
a security issued by its sponsoring
entity.
(iii) Concentration limits for
agreements to repurchase—(A)
Repurchase agreements. For purposes of
determining compliance with the assetbased and issuer-based concentration
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limits set forth in this section, securities
sold by a futures commission merchant
or derivatives clearing organization
subject to agreements to repurchase
shall be combined with securities held
by the futures commission merchant or
derivatives clearing organization as
direct investments.
(B) Reverse repurchase agreements.
For purposes of determining compliance
with the asset-based and issuer-based
concentration limits set forth in this
section, securities purchased by a
futures commission merchant or
derivatives clearing organization subject
to agreements to resell shall be
combined with securities held by the
futures commission merchant or
derivatives clearing organization as
direct investments.
(iv) Treatment of customer-owned
securities. For purposes of determining
compliance with the asset-based and
issuer-based concentration limits set
forth in this section, securities owned
by the customers of a futures
commission merchant and posted as
margin collateral are not included in
total assets held in segregation by the
futures commission merchant, and
securities posted by a futures
commission merchant with a derivatives
clearing organization are not included
in total assets held in segregation by the
derivatives clearing organization.
(v) Counterparty concentration limits.
Securities purchased by a futures
commission merchant or derivatives
clearing organization from a single
counterparty, subject to an agreement to
resell to that counterparty, shall not
exceed 25 percent of total assets held in
segregation by the futures commission
merchant or derivatives clearing
organization.
(4) Time-to-maturity. (i) Except for
investments in money market mutual
funds, the dollar-weighted average of
the time-to-maturity of the portfolio, as
that average is computed pursuant to
§ 270.2a–7 of this title, may not exceed
24 months.
(ii) For purposes of determining the
time-to-maturity of the portfolio, an
instrument that is set forth in
paragraphs (a)(1)(i) through (vii) of this
section may be treated as having a oneday time-to-maturity if the following
terms and conditions are satisfied:
(A) The instrument is deposited solely
on an overnight basis with a derivatives
clearing organization pursuant to the
terms and conditions of a collateral
management program that has become
effective in accordance with § 39.4 of
this chapter;
(B) The instrument is one that the
futures commission merchant owns or
has an unqualified right to pledge, is not
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subject to any lien, and is deposited by
the futures commission merchant into a
segregated account at a derivatives
clearing organization;
(C) The derivatives clearing
organization prices the instrument each
day based on the current mark-to-market
value; and
(D) The derivatives clearing
organization reduces the assigned value
of the instrument each day by a haircut
of at least 2 percent.
(5) Investments in instruments issued
by affiliates. (i) A futures commission
merchant shall not invest customer
funds in obligations of an entity
affiliated with the futures commission
merchant, and a derivatives clearing
organization shall not invest customer
funds in obligations of an entity
affiliated with the derivatives clearing
organization. An affiliate includes
parent companies, including all entities
through the ultimate holding company,
subsidiaries to the lowest level, and
companies under common ownership of
such parent company or affiliates.
(ii) A futures commission merchant or
derivatives clearing organization may
invest customer funds in a fund
affiliated with that futures commission
merchant or derivatives clearing
organization.
(6) Recordkeeping. A futures
commission merchant and a derivatives
clearing organization shall prepare and
maintain a record that will show for
each business day with respect to each
type of investment made pursuant to
this section, the following information:
(i) The type of instruments in which
customer funds have been invested;
(ii) The original cost of the
instruments; and
(iii) The current market value of the
instruments.
(c) Money market mutual funds. The
following provisions will apply to the
investment of customer funds in money
market mutual funds (the fund).
(1) The fund must be an investment
company that is registered under the
Investment Company Act of 1940 with
the Securities and Exchange
Commission and that holds itself out to
investors as a money market fund, in
accordance with § 270.2a–7 of this title.
(2) The fund must be sponsored by a
federally-regulated financial institution,
a bank as defined in section 3(a)(6) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, an
investment adviser registered under the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940, or a
domestic branch of a foreign bank
insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation.
(3) A futures commission merchant or
derivatives clearing organization shall
maintain the confirmation relating to
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the purchase in its records in
accordance with § 1.31 and note the
ownership of fund shares (by book-entry
or otherwise) in a custody account of
the futures commission merchant or
derivatives clearing organization in
accordance with § 1.26. The futures
commission merchant or the derivatives
clearing organization shall obtain the
acknowledgment letter required by
§ 1.26 from an entity that has substantial
control over the fund shares purchased
with customer segregated funds and has
the knowledge and authority to facilitate
redemption and payment or transfer of
the customer segregated funds. Such
entity may include the fund sponsor or
depository acting as custodian for fund
shares.
(4) The net asset value of the fund
must be computed by 9 a.m. of the
business day following each business
day and made available to the futures
commission merchant or derivatives
clearing organization by that time.
(5)(i) General requirement for
redemption of interests. A fund shall be
legally obligated to redeem an interest
and to make payment in satisfaction
thereof by the business day following a
redemption request, and the futures
commission merchant or derivatives
clearing organization shall retain
documentation demonstrating
compliance with this requirement.
(ii) Exception. A fund may provide for
the postponement of redemption and
payment due to any of the following
circumstances:
(A) For any period during which there
is a non-routine closure of the Fedwire
or applicable Federal Reserve Banks;
(B) For any period:
(1) During which the New York Stock
Exchange is closed other than
customary week-end and holiday
closings; or
(2) During which trading on the New
York Stock Exchange is restricted;
(C) For any period during which an
emergency exists as a result of which:
(1) Disposal by the company of
securities owned by it is not reasonably
practicable; or
(2) It is not reasonably practicable for
such company fairly to determine the
value of its net assets;
(D) For any period as the Securities
and Exchange Commission may by
order permit for the protection of
security holders of the company;
(E) For any period during which the
Securities and Exchange Commission
has, by rule or regulation, deemed that:
(1) Trading shall be restricted; or
(2) An emergency exists; or
(F) For any period during which each
of the conditions of § 270.22e–3(a)(1)
through (3) of this title are met.
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(6) The agreement pursuant to which
the futures commission merchant or
derivatives clearing organization has
acquired and is holding its interest in a
fund must contain no provision that
would prevent the pledging or
transferring of shares.
(7) The Appendix to this section sets
forth language that will satisfy the
requirements of paragraph (c)(5) of this
section.
(d) Repurchase and reverse
repurchase agreements. A futures
commission merchant or derivatives
clearing organization may buy and sell
the permitted investments listed in
paragraphs (a)(1)(i) through (vii) of this
section pursuant to agreements for
resale or repurchase of the securities
(agreements to repurchase or resell),
provided the agreements to repurchase
or resell conform to the following
requirements:
(1) The securities are specifically
identified by coupon rate, par amount,
market value, maturity date, and CUSIP
or ISIN number.
(2) Permitted counterparties are
limited to a bank as defined in section
3(a)(6) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, a domestic branch of a foreign
bank insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, a securities
broker or dealer, or a government
securities broker or government
securities dealer registered with the
Securities and Exchange Commission or
which has filed notice pursuant to
section 15C(a) of the Government
Securities Act of 1986.
(3) A futures commission merchant or
derivatives clearing organization shall
not enter into an agreement to
repurchase or resell with a counterparty
that is an affiliate of the futures
commission merchant or derivatives
clearing organization, respectively. An
affiliate includes parent companies,
including all entities through the
ultimate holding company, subsidiaries
to the lowest level, and companies
under common ownership of such
parent company or affiliates.
(4) The transaction is executed in
compliance with the concentration limit
requirements applicable to the securities
transferred to the customer segregated
custodial account in connection with
the agreements to repurchase referred to
in paragraphs (b)(3)(iii)(A) and (B) of
this section.
(5) The transaction is made pursuant
to a written agreement signed by the
parties to the agreement, which is
consistent with the conditions set forth
in paragraphs (d)(1) through (13) of this
section and which states that the parties
thereto intend the transaction to be
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78801
treated as a purchase and sale of
securities.
(6) The term of the agreement is no
more than one business day, or reversal
of the transaction is possible on
demand.
(7) Securities transferred to the
futures commission merchant or
derivatives clearing organization under
the agreement are held in a safekeeping
account with a bank as referred to in
paragraph (d)(2) of this section, a
derivatives clearing organization, or the
Depository Trust Company in an
account that complies with the
requirements of § 1.26.
(8) The futures commission merchant
or the derivatives clearing organization
may not use securities received under
the agreement in another similar
transaction and may not otherwise
hypothecate or pledge such securities,
except securities may be pledged on
behalf of customers at another futures
commission merchant or derivatives
clearing organization. Substitution of
securities is allowed, provided,
however, that:
(i) The qualifying securities being
substituted and original securities are
specifically identified by date of
substitution, market values substituted,
coupon rates, par amounts, maturity
dates and CUSIP or ISIN numbers;
(ii) Substitution is made on a
‘‘delivery versus delivery’’ basis; and
(iii) The market value of the
substituted securities is at least equal to
that of the original securities.
(9) The transfer of securities to the
customer segregated custodial account
is made on a delivery versus payment
basis in immediately available funds.
The transfer of funds to the customer
segregated cash account is made on a
payment versus delivery basis. The
transfer is not recognized as
accomplished until the funds and/or
securities are actually received by the
custodian of the futures commission
merchant’s or derivatives clearing
organization’s customer funds or
securities purchased on behalf of
customers. The transfer or credit of
securities covered by the agreement to
the futures commission merchant’s or
derivatives clearing organization’s
customer segregated custodial account
is made simultaneously with the
disbursement of funds from the futures
commission merchant’s or derivatives
clearing organization’s customer
segregated cash account at the custodian
bank. On the sale or resale of securities,
the futures commission merchant’s or
derivatives clearing organization’s
customer segregated cash account at the
custodian bank must receive same-day
funds credited to such segregated
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account simultaneously with the
delivery or transfer of securities from
the customer segregated custodial
account.
(10) A written confirmation to the
futures commission merchant or
derivatives clearing organization
specifying the terms of the agreement
and a safekeeping receipt are issued
immediately upon entering into the
transaction and a confirmation to the
futures commission merchant or
derivatives clearing organization is
issued once the transaction is reversed.
(11) The transactions effecting the
agreement are recorded in the record
required to be maintained under § 1.27
of investments of customer funds, and
the securities subject to such
transactions are specifically identified
in such record as described in paragraph
(d)(1) of this section and further
identified in such record as being
subject to repurchase and reverse
repurchase agreements.
(12) An actual transfer of securities to
the customer segregated custodial
account by book entry is made
consistent with Federal or State
commercial law, as applicable. At all
times, securities received subject to an
agreement are reflected as ‘‘customer
property.’’
(13) The agreement makes clear that,
in the event of the bankruptcy of the
futures commission merchant or
derivatives clearing organization, any
securities purchased with customer
funds that are subject to an agreement
may be immediately transferred. The
agreement also makes clear that, in the
event of a futures commission merchant
or derivatives clearing organization
bankruptcy, the counterparty has no
right to compel liquidation of securities
subject to an agreement or to make a
priority claim for the difference between
current market value of the securities
and the price agreed upon for resale of
the securities to the counterparty, if the
former exceeds the latter.
(e) Deposit of firm-owned securities
into segregation. A futures commission
merchant shall not be prohibited from
directly depositing unencumbered
securities of the type specified in this
section, which it owns for its own
account, into a segregated safekeeping
account or from transferring any such
securities from a segregated account to
its own account, up to the extent of its
residual financial interest in customers’
segregated funds; provided, however,
that such investments, transfers of
securities, and disposition of proceeds
from the sale or maturity of such
securities are recorded in the record of
investments required to be maintained
by § 1.27. All such securities may be
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segregated in safekeeping only with a
bank, trust company, derivatives
clearing organization, or other registered
futures commission merchant.
Furthermore, for purposes of §§ 1.25,
1.26, 1.27, 1.28, and 1.29, investments
permitted by § 1.25 that are owned by
the futures commission merchant and
deposited into such a segregated
account shall be considered customer
funds until such investments are
withdrawn from segregation.
Appendix to § 1.25—Money Market
Mutual Fund Prospectus Provisions
Acceptable for Compliance With
Section 1.25(c)(5)
Upon receipt of a proper redemption
request submitted in a timely manner and
otherwise in accordance with the redemption
procedures set forth in this prospectus, the
[Name of Fund] will redeem the requested
shares and make a payment to you in
satisfaction thereof no later than the business
day following the redemption request. The
[Name of Fund] may postpone and/or
suspend redemption and payment beyond
one business day only as follows:
a. For any period during which there is a
non-routine closure of the Fedwire or
applicable Federal Reserve Banks;
b. For any period (1) during which the New
York Stock Exchange is closed other than
customary week-end and holiday closings or
(2) during which trading on the New York
Stock Exchange is restricted;
c. For any period during which an
emergency exists as a result of which (1)
disposal of securities owned by the [Name of
Fund] is not reasonably practicable or (2) it
is not reasonably practicable for the [Name of
Fund] to fairly determine the net asset value
of shares of the [Name of Fund];
d. For any period during which the
Securities and Exchange Commission has, by
rule or regulation, deemed that (1) trading
shall be restricted or (2) an emergency exists;
e. For any period that the Securities and
Exchange Commission, may by order permit
for your protection; or
f. For any period during which the [Name
of Fund,] as part of a necessary liquidation
of the fund, has properly postponed and/or
suspended redemption of shares and
payment in accordance with federal
securities laws.
PART 30—FOREIGN FUTURES AND
FOREIGN OPTIONS TRANSACTIONS
3. The authority citation for part 30
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1a, 2, 6, 6c, and 12a,
unless otherwise noted.
4. In § 30.7, revise paragraph (c) and
add paragraph (g) to read as follows:
■
§ 30.7 Treatment of foreign futures or
foreign options secured amount.
*
*
*
*
*
(c)(1) The separate account or
accounts referred to in paragraph (a) of
this section must be maintained under
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Sfmt 4700
an account name that clearly identifies
them as such, with any of the following
depositories:
(i) A bank or trust company located in
the United States;
(ii) A bank or trust company located
outside the United States that has in
excess of $1 billion of regulatory capital;
(iii) A futures commission merchant
registered as such with the Commission;
(iv) A derivatives clearing
organization;
(v) The clearing organization of any
foreign board of trade;
(vi) A member of any foreign board of
trade; or
(vii) Such member or clearing
organization’s designated depositories.
(2) Each futures commission merchant
must obtain and retain in its files for the
period provided in § 1.31 of this chapter
an acknowledgment from such
depository that it was informed that
such money, securities or property are
held for or on behalf of foreign futures
and foreign options customers and are
being held in accordance with the
provisions of these regulations.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) Each futures commission merchant
that invests customer funds held in the
account or accounts referred to in
paragraph (a) of this section must invest
such funds pursuant to the requirements
of § 1.25 of this chapter.
Issued in Washington, DC, on December 5,
2011 by the Commission.
David A. Stawick,
Secretary of the Commission.
Appendices to Investment of Customer
Funds and Funds Held in an Account
for Foreign Futures and Foreign
Options Transactions—Commission
Voting Summary and Statements of
Commissioners
Note: The following appendices will not
appear in the Code of Federal Regulations.
Appendix 1—Commission Voting
Summary
On this matter, Chairman Gensler,
Commissioners Sommers, Chilton, O’Malia
and Wetjen voted in the affirmative; no
Commissioner voted in the negative.
Appendix 2—Statement of Chairman
Gary Gensler
I support the final rule to enhance
customer protections regarding where
derivatives clearing organizations (DCOs) and
futures commission merchants (FCMs) can
invest customer funds. I believe that this rule
is critical for the safeguarding of customer
money.
The Commodity Exchange Act in section
4d(a)(2) prescribes that customer funds can
only be placed in a set list of permitted
investments. From 2000 to 2005, the
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Commission granted exemptions to this list,
loosening the rules for the investment of
customer funds. These exemptions allowed
FCMs to invest customer funds in AAA-rated
sovereign debt, as well as to lend customer
money to another side of the firm through
repurchase agreements.
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This rule prevents such in-house lending
through repurchase agreements. I believe
there is an inherent conflict of interest
between parts of a firm doing these
transactions. The rule also would limit an
FCM’s ability to invest customer money in
foreign sovereign debt.
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78803
In addition, this rule fulfills a Dodd-Frank
requirement that the CFTC remove all
reliance on credit ratings from its regulations.
[FR Doc. 2011–31689 Filed 12–16–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 243 (Monday, December 19, 2011)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 78776-78803]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-31689]
[[Page 78775]]
Vol. 76
Monday,
No. 243
December 19, 2011
Part III
Commodity Futures Trading Commission
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17 CFR Parts 1 and 30
Investment of Customer Funds and Funds Held in an Account for Foreign
Futures and Foreign Options Transactions; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 76 , No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2011 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 78776]]
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COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 1 and 30
RIN 3038-AC79
Investment of Customer Funds and Funds Held in an Account for
Foreign Futures and Foreign Options Transactions
AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (Commission or CFTC)
is amending its regulations regarding the investment of customer
segregated funds subject to Commission Regulation 1.25 (Regulation
1.25) and funds held in an account subject to Commission Regulation
30.7 (Regulation 30.7, and funds subject thereto, 30.7 funds). Certain
amendments reflect the implementation of new statutory provisions
enacted under Title IX of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act. The amendments address: certain changes to the
list of permitted investments (including the elimination of in-house
transactions), a clarification of the liquidity requirement, the
removal of rating requirements, and an expansion of concentration
limits including asset-based, issuer-based, and counterparty
concentration restrictions. They also address revisions to the
acknowledgment letter requirement for investment in a money market
mutual fund (MMMF), revisions to the list of exceptions to the next-day
redemption requirement for MMMFs, the elimination of repurchase and
reverse repurchase agreements with affiliates, the application of
customer segregated funds investment limitations to 30.7 funds, the
removal of ratings requirements for depositories of 30.7 funds, the
elimination of the option to designate a depository for 30.7 funds, and
certain technical changes.
DATES: This rule is effective February 17, 2012. All persons shall be
in compliance with this rule not later than June 18, 2012.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ananda K. Radhakrishnan, Director,
(202) 418-5188, aradhakrishnan@cftc.gov, or Jon DeBord, Special
Counsel, (202) 418-5478, jdebord@cftc.gov, Division of Clearing and
Risk, Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Three Lafayette Centre,
1151 21st Street NW., Washington, DC 20581.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. Regulation 1.25
B. Regulation 30.7
C. Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
D. The Dodd-Frank Act
E. The Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
II. Discussion of the Final Rules
A. Permitted Investments--Regulation 1.25
1. Government Sponsored Enterprise Securities
2. Commercial Paper and Corporate Notes or Bonds
3. Foreign Sovereign Debt
4. In-House Transactions
B. General Terms and Conditions
1. Marketability
2. Ratings
3. Restrictions on Instrument Features
4. Concentration Limits
(a) Asset-Based Concentration Limits
(b) Issuer-based Concentration Limits
(c) Counterparty Concentration Limits
C. Money Market Mutual Funds
1. Acknowledgment Letters
2. Next-day Redemption Requirement
D. Repurchase and Reverse Repurchase Agreements
E. Regulation 30.7
1. Harmonization
2. Ratings
3. Designation as a Depository for 30.7 Funds
4. Technical Amendment
F. Implementation
III. Cost Benefit Considerations
IV. Related Matters
A. Regulatory Flexibility Act
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
Text of Rules
I. Background
A. Regulation 1.25
Under Section 4d \1\ of the Commodity Exchange Act (Act),\2\
customer segregated funds may be invested in obligations of the United
States and obligations fully guaranteed as to principal and interest by
the United States (U.S. government securities) and general obligations
of any State or of any political subdivision thereof (municipal
securities). Pursuant to authority under Section 4(c) of the Act,\3\
the Commission substantially expanded the list of permitted investments
by amending Regulation 1.25 \4\ in December 2000 to permit investments
in general obligations issued by any enterprise sponsored by the United
States (government sponsored enterprise or GSE debt securities), bank
certificates of deposit (CDs), commercial paper, corporate notes,\5\
general obligations of a sovereign nation, and interests in MMMFs.\6\
In connection with that expansion, the Commission included several
provisions intended to control exposure to credit, liquidity, and
market risks associated with the additional investments, e.g.,
requirements that the investments satisfy specified rating standards
and concentration limits, and be readily marketable and subject to
prompt liquidation.\7\
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\1\ 7 U.S.C. 6d.
\2\ 7 U.S.C. 1 et seq. (2006), as amended by the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, Pub. L. 111-203, 124
Stat. 1376 (2010).
\3\ 7 U.S.C. 6(c).
\4\ 17 CFR 1.25. Commission regulations may be accessed through
the Commission's Web site, https://www.cftc.gov.
\5\ This category of permitted investment was later amended to
read ``corporate notes or bonds.'' See 70 FR 28190, 28197 (May 17,
2005).
\6\ See 65 FR 77993 (Dec. 13, 2000) (publishing final rules);
and 65 FR 82270 (Dec. 28, 2000) (making technical corrections and
accelerating effective date of final rules from February 12, 2001 to
December 28, 2000).
\7\ Id.
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The Commission further modified Regulation 1.25 in 2004 and 2005.
In February 2004, the Commission adopted amendments regarding
repurchase agreements using customer-deposited securities and time-to-
maturity requirements for securities deposited in connection with
certain collateral management programs of derivatives clearing
organizations (DCOs).\8\ In May 2005, the Commission adopted amendments
related to standards for investing in instruments with embedded
derivatives, requirements for adjustable rate securities, concentration
limits on reverse repurchase agreements, transactions by futures
commission merchants (FCMs) that are also registered as securities
brokers or dealers (in-house transactions), rating standards and
registration requirements for MMMFs, an auditability standard for
investment records, and certain technical changes.\9\
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\8\ 69 FR 6140 (Feb. 10, 2004).
\9\ 70 FR 28190.
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The Commission has been, and continues to be, mindful that customer
segregated funds must be invested in a manner that minimizes their
exposure to credit, liquidity, and market risks both to preserve their
availability to customers and DCOs and to enable investments to be
quickly converted to cash at a predictable value in order to avoid
systemic risk. Toward these ends, Regulation 1.25 establishes a general
prudential standard by requiring that all permitted investments be
``consistent with the objectives of preserving principal and
maintaining liquidity.'' \10\
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\10\ 17 CFR 1.25(b).
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In 2007, the Commission's Division of Clearing and Intermediary
Oversight (Division) launched a review of the nature and extent of
investments of Regulation 1.25 funds and 30.7 funds
[[Page 78777]]
(2007 Review) in order to further its understanding of investment
strategies and practices and to assess whether any changes to the
Commission's regulations would be appropriate. As part of this review,
all registered DCOs and FCMs carrying customer accounts provided
responses to a series of questions. As the Division was conducting
follow-up interviews with respondents, the market events of September
2008 occurred and changed the financial landscape such that much of the
data previously gathered no longer reflected current market conditions.
However, that data remains useful as an indication of how Regulation
1.25 was implemented in a more stable financial environment.
Additionally, recent events in the economy have underscored the
importance of conducting periodic reassessments and, as necessary,
revising regulatory policies to strengthen safeguards designed to
minimize risk, while retaining an appropriate degree of investment
flexibility and opportunities for capital efficiency for DCOs and FCMs
investing customer segregated funds.
B. Regulation 30.7
Regulation 30.7 \11\ governs an FCM's treatment of customer money,
securities, and property associated with positions in foreign futures
and foreign options. Regulation 30.7 was issued pursuant to the
Commission's plenary authority under Section 4(b) of the Act.\12\
Because Congress did not expressly apply the limitations of Section 4d
of the Act to 30.7 funds, the Commission historically has not subjected
those funds to the investment limitations applicable to customer
segregated funds.
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\11\ 17 CFR 30.7.
\12\ 7 U.S.C. 6(b).
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The investment guidelines for 30.7 funds are general in nature.\13\
Although Regulation 1.25 investments offer a safe harbor, the
Commission does not currently limit investments of 30.7 funds to
permitted investments under Regulation 1.25. Appropriate depositories
for 30.7 funds currently include certain financial institutions in the
United States, financial institutions in a foreign jurisdiction meeting
certain capital and credit rating requirements, and any institution not
otherwise meeting the foregoing criteria, but which is designated as a
depository upon the request of a customer and the approval of the
Commission.
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\13\ See Commission Form 1-FR-FCM Instructions at 12-9 (Mar.
2010) (``In investing funds required to be maintained in separate
section 30.7 account(s), FCMs are bound by their fiduciary
obligations to customers and the requirement that the secured amount
required to be set aside be at all times liquid and sufficient to
cover all obligations to such customers. Regulation 1.25 investments
would be appropriate, as would investments in any other readily
marketable securities.'').
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C. Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
In May 2009, the Commission issued an advance notice of proposed
rulemaking (ANPR) \14\ to solicit public comment prior to proposing
amendments to Regulations 1.25 and 30.7. The Commission stated that it
was considering significantly revising the scope and character of
permitted investments for customer segregated funds and 30.7 funds. In
this regard, the Commission sought comments, information, research, and
data regarding regulatory requirements that might better safeguard
customer segregated funds. It also sought comments, information,
research, and data regarding the impact of applying the requirements of
Regulation 1.25 to investments of 30.7 funds.
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\14\ 74 FR 23962 (May 22, 2009).
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The Commission received twelve comment letters in response to the
ANPR, and it considered those comments in formulating its proposal.\15\
Eleven of the 12 letters supported maintaining the current list of
permitted investments and/or specifically ensuring that MMMFs remain a
permitted investment. Five of the letters were dedicated solely to the
topic of MMMFs, providing detailed discussions of their usefulness to
FCMs. Several letters addressed issues regarding ratings, liquidity,
concentration, and portfolio weighted average time to maturity. The
alignment of Regulation 30.7 with Regulation 1.25 was viewed as non-
controversial.
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\15\ The Commission received comment letters from CME Group Inc.
(CME), Crane Data LLC, The Dreyfus Corporation (Dreyfus), FCStone
Group Inc. (FCStone), Federated Investors, Inc. (Federated), Futures
Industry Association (FIA), Investment Company Institute (ICI), MF
Global Inc. (MF Global), National Futures Association (NFA), Newedge
USA, LLC (Newedge), and Treasury Strategies, Inc.. Two letters were
received from Federated: a July 10, 2009 letter and an August 24,
2009 letter.
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The FIA's comment letter expressed its view that ``all of the
permitted investments described in Rule 1.25(a) are compatible with the
Commission's objectives of preserving principal and maintaining
liquidity.'' This opinion was echoed by MF Global, Newedge and FC
Stone. CME asserted that only ``a small subset of the complete list of
Regulation 1.25 permitted investments are actually used by the
industry.'' NFA also wrote that investments in instruments other than
U.S. government securities and MMMFs are ``negligible,'' and
recommended that the Commission eliminate asset classes not ``utilized
to any material extent.''
D. The Dodd-Frank Act
On July 21, 2010, President Obama signed the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act).\16\ Title IX of
the Dodd-Frank Act \17\ was enacted in order to increase investor
protection, promote transparency and improve disclosure.
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\16\ See Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act, Pub. L. 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.
\17\ Pursuant to Section 901 of the Dodd-Frank Act, Title IX may
be cited as the ``Investor Protection and Securities Reform Act of
2010.''
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Section 939A of the Dodd-Frank Act obligates federal agencies to
review their respective regulations and make appropriate amendments in
order to decrease reliance on credit ratings. The Dodd-Frank Act
requires the Commission to conduct this review within one year after
the date of enactment.\18\ Included in these rule amendments are
changes to Regulations 1.25 and 30.7 that remove provisions setting
forth credit rating requirements. Separate rulemakings addressed the
removal of credit ratings from Commission Regulations 1.49 and 4.24
\19\ and the removal of Appendix A to Part 40 (which contains a
reference to credit ratings).\20\
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\18\ See Section 939A(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act.
\19\ See 76 FR 44262 (July 25, 2011).
\20\ See 75 76 FR 44776 (July 27, 2011).
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E. The Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
A Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) was issued by the Commission
on October 26, 2010, having been considered in conjunction with the
Dodd-Frank rulemaking regarding credit ratings. The NPRM was published
in the Federal Register on November 3, 2010, and the comment period
closed on December 3, 2010.\21\
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\21\ See 75 FR 67642 (Nov. 3, 2010); see also 76 FR 25274 (May
4, 2011) (reopening the comment period for certain NPRMs until June
3, 2011).
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The Commission invited comments related to topics covered by
Regulations 1.25 and 30.7, including the scope of permitted
investments, liquidity, marketability, ratings, concentration limits,
portfolio weighted average maturity requirements, and the applicability
of Regulation 1.25 standards to foreign futures accounts. The
Commission received 32 comment letters.\22\
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\22\ Comment letters were received from ADM Investor Services,
Inc. (ADM), Bank of New York Mellon (BNYM), BlackRock, Inc.
(BlackRock), Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. (BBH), Business Law
Society of the University of Mississippi (BLS), CME, Committee on
the Investment of Employee Benefit Assets (CIEBA), Dreyfus, Farm
Credit Administration (FCA), Farm Credit Council (Farm Credit
Council), Farr Financial Inc. (Farr Financial), Federal Farm Credit
Banks Funding Corporation (FFCB), Federal Housing Finance Authority
(FHFA), Federated, Futures and Options Association (FOA), FIA and
International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. (FIA/ISDA),
International Assets Holding Corporation and FCStone (INTL/FCStone),
ICI, Joint Audit Committee (JAC), J.P. Morgan Futures Inc. (J.P.
Morgan), LCH.Clearnet Group (LCH), MF Global and Newedge (MF Global/
Newedge), MorganStanley & Co. (MorganStanley), NFA, Natural Gas
Exchange, Inc. (NGX), Office of Finance of the Federal Home Loan
Banks (FHLB), R.J. O'Brien and Associates (RJO), and UBS Global
Asset Management (Americas) Inc. (UBS). Federated sent multiple
letters. Federated's November 30, 2010 letter will be referred to as
``Federated I,'' its December 2, 2010 letter will be referred to as
``Federated II,'' and Arnold & Porter LLP's post-comment period
letter on behalf of Federated, dated March 21, 2011, will be
referred to as ``Federated III.'' Federated also sent a letter dated
November 8, 2010 and a post-comment period letter dated February 28,
2011. The letters from BLS and NGX were received during the reopened
comment period, on May 12, 2011 and May 31, 2011, respectively.
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[[Page 78778]]
II. Discussion of the Final Rules
A. Permitted Investments--Regulation 1.25
In finalizing amendments to Regulation 1.25, the Commission seeks
to impose requirements on the investment of customer segregated funds
with the goal of enhancing the preservation of principal and
maintenance of liquidity consistent with Section 4d of the Act. The
Commission has endeavored to tailor its amendments to achieve these
goals, while retaining an appropriate degree of investment flexibility
and opportunities for attaining capital efficiency for DCOs and FCMs
investing customer segregated funds.
In issuing these final rules, the Commission is narrowing the scope
of investment choices in order to eliminate the potential use of
portfolios of instruments that may pose an unacceptable level of risk
to customer funds. The Commission seeks to increase the safety of
Regulation 1.25 investments by promoting diversification.
Below, the Commission details its decisions regarding the proposals
in the NPRM. The Commission has decided to:
Retain investments in U.S. agency obligations, including
implicitly backed GSE debt securities, and impose limitations on
investments in debt issued by the Federal National Mortgage Association
(Fannie Mae) and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie
Mac);
Remove corporate debt obligations not guaranteed by the
United States from the list of permitted investments;
Eliminate foreign sovereign debt as a permitted
investment; and
Eliminate in-house and affiliate transactions.
1. Government Sponsored Enterprise Securities
In the NPRM, the Commission proposed to amend Regulation
1.25(a)(1)(iii) to expressly add U.S. government corporation
obligations \23\ to GSE debt securities \24\ (together, U.S. agency
obligations) and to add the requirement that the U.S. agency
obligations must be fully guaranteed as to principal and interest by
the United States. As proposed, all current GSE debt securities,
including that of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, would have been
impermissible as Regulation 1.25 investments since no GSE debt
securities have the explicit guarantee of the U.S. government. The
Commission received 14 comment letters discussing GSEs. Thirteen of
those 14 comment letters opposed the proposal.
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\23\ See 31 U.S.C. 9101 (defining ``government corporation'').
\24\ GSEs are chartered by Congress but are privately owned and
operated. Securities issued by GSEs do not have an explicit federal
guarantee, although they are considered by some to have an
``implicit'' guarantee due to their federal affiliation. Obligations
of U.S. government corporations, such as the Government National
Mortgage Association (known as GNMA or Ginnie Mae), are explicitly
backed by the full faith and credit of the United States. Although
the Commission is not aware of any GSE securities that have an
explicit federal guarantee, in the NPRM the Commission concluded
that GSE securities should remain on the list of permitted
investments in the event this status changes in the future.
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Generally, the arguments focused on the safety of GSEs, GSEs'
performance during the financial crisis, and the detrimental,
unintended consequences of the proposal. In addition, there were
several letters from organizations related to the Farm Credit System
GSE (Farm Credit System) and FHLB System GSE (FHLB System) supporting,
at a minimum, the inclusion of their GSE debt as a permitted Regulation
1.25 investment.
In terms of safety, commenters expressed the view that GSE debt
securities are sufficiently liquid and that the U.S. government would
not allow a GSE to fail.\25\ FFCB remarked that the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) has retained GSE debt securities as
investments appropriate under SEC Rule 2a-7 \26\ (which governs
MMMFs).\27\ In addition to GSEs being safe, BlackRock noted that ``any
changes in the viability of such entities should be telegraphed well in
advance resulting in minimal disruption to the credit markets.'' \28\
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\25\ MF Global/Newedge letter at 4.
\26\ 17 CFR 270.2a-7.
\27\ FFCB letter at 3.
\28\ BlackRock letter at 6.
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With respect to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the FHFA's support of
those GSEs effectively amounts to a federal guarantee, according to two
commenters.\29\ As long as the federal government holds exposure of
greater than 50 percent in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, RJO wrote that
it believes that the quality of these issuances is better than those of
any bank or corporation.\30\
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\29\ FIA/ISDA letter at 5, J.P. Morgan letter at 1.
\30\ RJO letter at 5.
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Commenters averred that the safety of GSEs is further proven by
their stability during the financial crisis. MF Global/Newedge,
BlackRock and ADM noted that non-Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac GSEs performed
well during the financial crisis.\31\
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\31\ MF Global/Newedge letter at 5, BlackRock letter at 6, ADM
letter at 3. MF Global cited the Student Loan Marketing Association,
FFCB Federal Home Loan Banks and Federal Agricultural Mortgage
Corporation as examples of GSEs that performed well during the
financial crisis.
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Limiting investments to only those agency obligations backed by the
full faith and credit of the U.S. government would be a mistake because
``none'' satisfy the requirement, according to the NFA, or ``only
GNMAs'' satisfy the requirement, according to ADM.\32\ The FHFA wrote
that specific criteria for eligible investments is preferable to
speculation on the actions of third parties (such as whether the
federal government will or will not bail out a GSE).\33\
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\32\ NFA letter at 2, ADM letter at 3.
\33\ FHFA letter at 1.
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Several commenters were concerned that the Commission's proposal
would have the unintended consequence of harming the broader market for
GSEs, as investors would question the safety of such investments.\34\
The Farm Credit Council wrote that ``[u]ntil and unless Congress
signals its intention to erode the federal government's support of
GSEs, we respectfully request that the CFTC not amend Regulation 1.25
with respect to investments in GSEs.'' \35\
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\34\ FCA at 2, Farm Credit Council letter at 3, RJO letter at 4,
FFCB letter at 3.
\35\ Farm Credit Council letter at 1-2.
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Most commenters recommended that GSE debt securities, including
those not explicitly guaranteed by the U.S. government, remain
permitted investments to varying extents. There were a range of
recommendations regarding the debt of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. MF
Global/Newedge suggested that GSEs with implicit guarantees should have
a 50 percent asset-based concentration limit along
[[Page 78779]]
with a 10 percent issuer-based limit, or, alternatively, that GSEs
meeting specific outstanding float standards should be allowed. MF
Global/Newedge stated that, at a minimum, the Commission should allow
FCMs to invest in GSEs other than Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.\36\ CME
wrote that highly liquid GSEs, including those of Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac, should remain as permitted investments and should have a
25 percent asset-based concentration limit.\37\ RJO recommended that
all GSE securities be permitted, and that, at the very least, the
Commission should permit investments in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
until December 31, 2012, when the government guarantee expires.\38\
FIA/ISDA recommended that investments in GSE securities be permitted
subject to the conditions that (i) with the exception of ``agency
discount notes,'' the size of the issuance is at least $1 billion, (ii)
trading in the securities of such agency remains highly liquid, (iii)
the prices at which the securities may be traded are publicly available
(through, for example, Bloomberg or Trace), and (iv) investments in
GSEs are subject to a maximum of 50 percent asset-based and 15 percent
issuer-based concentration limits.\39\ BlackRock recommended a 30
percent issuer limitation on GSEs.\40\
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\36\ MF Global/Newedge letter at 5.
\37\ CME letter at 3.
\38\ RJO letter at 5.
\39\ FIA/ISDA letter at 5.
\40\ BlackRock at 6.
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The Farm Credit Council, FHLB, the FCA, the FFCB and RJO all wrote
letters supporting one or both of the FHLB System \41\ and Farm Credit
System debt securities.\42\ FHLB stated that the prohibition on GSEs
not explicitly backed by the full faith and credit of the federal
government is overly broad. In particular, FHLB noted that FHLB debt
securities performed well throughout the financial crisis. FHLB stated
that it maintained funding capabilities even during the most severe
periods of market stress, due to investors' favorable views of its debt
securities.\43\ Similarly, the Farm Credit Council wrote that Farm
Credit debt securities remained safe during the recent period of market
volatility, and the Farm Credit System was able to supply much-needed
financial support to farmers, rangers, harvesters of aquatic products,
agricultural cooperatives, and rural residents and businesses.\44\ Farm
Credit discount notes, among other Farm Credit debt securities, ``have
been a staple in risk-averse investor portfolios since the [Farm Credit
System's] inception in 1916 and have proven their creditworthiness
across a range of market environments.'' \45\ During the recent crisis,
the Farm Credit System was able to issue and redeem over $400 billion
in discount notes annually, while issuing over $100 billion per year in
longer-maturity debt securities.\46\ RJO concurred regarding both GSEs,
noting that the FHLB System and Farm Credit System experienced minimal,
if any, problems during the crisis.\47\
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\41\ The FHLB System, which is regulated by the FHFA, comprises
an ``Office of Finance'' and 12 independently-chartered, regional
cooperative Federal Home Loan Banks created by Congress to provide
support for housing finance and community development through member
financial institutions. The 12 Federal Home Loan Banks issue debt
securities (FHLB debt securities), the proceeds from which are used
to provide liquidity to the 7,900 FHLB member banks through
collateralized loans. See FHLB letter at 1-3.
\42\ The Farm Credit System comprises five banks and 87
associations which provide credit and financial services to farmers,
ranchers, and similar agricultural enterprises by issuing debt (Farm
Credit debt securities) through the FFCB.
\43\ FHLB letter at 1-3.
\44\ Farm Credit Council letter at 1. Farm Credit debt
securities are regulated by the FCA and insured by an independent
U.S. government-controlled corporation which maintains an insurance
fund of roughly 2 percent of the outstanding loans. The total
outstanding loan amount was over $3 billion as of the end of 2009.
See Farm Credit Council letter at 2.
\45\ FFCB letter at 1.
\46\ Id.
\47\ RJO letter at 4.
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CIEBA, which represents 100 of the country's largest pension funds,
was the only commenter that backed the proposal.\48\
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\48\ CIEBA letter at 3.
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After reviewing the comments, the Commission has concluded that
U.S. agency obligations should remain permitted investments. The
Commission acknowledges the fact, mentioned by several commenters, that
most GSE debt performed well during the most recent financial crisis.
The Commission believes it appropriate to include a limitation for
debt issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, two GSEs which did not
perform well during the recent financial crisis. Both entities failed
and, as a result, have been operating under the conservatorship of the
FHFA since September of 2008. As conservator of Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac, FHFA has assumed all powers formerly held by each entity's
officers, directors, and shareholders. In addition, FHFA, as
conservator, is authorized to take such actions as may be necessary to
restore each entity to a sound and solvent condition and that are
appropriate to preserve and conserve the assets and property of each
entity.\49\
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\49\ See 12 U.S.C. 4617(b)(2)(D). The primary goals of the
conservatorships are to help restore confidence in the entities,
enhance their capacity to fulfill their mission, mitigate the
systemic risk that contributed directly to instability in financial
markets, and maintain Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac's secondary
mortgage market role until their future is determined through
legislation. To these ends, FHFA's conservatorship of Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac is directed toward minimizing losses, limiting risk
exposure, and ensuring that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac price their
services to adequately address their costs and risk.
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In consideration of the above comments, the Commission is amending
Regulation 1.25(a)(1)(iii) by permitting investments in U.S. agency
obligations. The Commission is adding new paragraph (a)(3) to include
the limitation that debt issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are
permitted as long as these entities are operating under the
conservatorship or receivership of FHFA.
2. Commercial Paper and Corporate Notes or Bonds
In order to simplify Regulation 1.25 by eliminating rarely-used
instruments, and in light of the credit, liquidity, and market risks
posed by corporate debt securities, the Commission proposed amending
Regulation 1.25(a)(1)(v)-(vi) to limit investments in ``commercial
paper'' \50\ and ``corporate notes or bonds'' \51\ to commercial paper
and corporate notes or bonds that are federally guaranteed as to
principal and interest under the Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program
(TLGP) and meet certain other prudential standards.\52\
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\50\ 17 CFR 1.25(a)(1)(v).
\51\ 17 CFR 1.25(a)(1)(vi).
\52\ Commercial paper would remain available as a direct
investment for MMMFs and corporate notes or bonds would remain
available as indirect investments for MMMFs by means of a repurchase
agreement.
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The NPRM supported this proposal by noting the credit, liquidity
and market risks associated with corporate notes or bonds and
referenced that information obtained during the 2007 Review indicated
that commercial paper and corporate notes or bonds were not widely used
by FCMs or DCOs.\53\ Second, the NPRM provided background on the TLGP
and explained that TLGP debt would be permissible if: (1) The size of
the issuance is greater than $1 billion; (2) the debt security is
denominated in U.S. dollars; and (3) the debt security is guaranteed
for its entire term.\54\
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\53\ The 2007 Review indicated that out of 87 FCM respondents,
only nine held commercial paper and seven held corporate notes/bonds
as direct investments during the November 30, 2006--December 1, 2007
period.
\54\ Debra Kokal, Joint Audit Committee, CFTC Staff Letter 10-01
[Current Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut. L. Rep. (CCH) ] 31,514 (Jan.
15. 2010) (TLGP Letter).
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Seven comment letters discussed commercial paper and corporate
notes
[[Page 78780]]
or bonds in a substantive manner. Six of the comment letters weighed in
favor of retaining commercial paper and corporate notes or bonds to
some degree. Comments included statements as to the effects of the
proposal, the safety of these instruments, and the lack of reliability
of the 2007 Commission review of customer funds investments.
According to three commenters, limiting commercial paper and
corporate notes or bonds to just those backed by the TLGP is
essentially eliminating the asset class altogether.\55\ BlackRock, ADM
and RJO asserted that TLGP debt is not liquid due to the lack of
available supply and therefore might not be a viable option for
investment.\56\
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\55\ BlackRock letter at 6, RJO letter at 6, ADM letter at 3.
\56\ By contrast, the Commission found that TLGP debt that (1)
has an issuance size of greater than $1 billion, (2) is denominated
in U.S. dollars and (3) is guaranteed for its entire term, is
sufficiently safe and liquid for use as a Regulation 1.25
investment. See TLGP Letter.
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There was general support for maintaining corporate notes or bonds
as Regulation 1.25 permitted investments. FIA/ISDA wrote that as long
as trading in the relevant security remains highly liquid, such
securities should continue to be eligible investments under Regulation
1.25.\57\ RJO noted that commercial paper and corporate notes and bonds
(i) have many high quality names, (ii) have a mature and liquid
secondary market, and (iii) provide greater diversification than merely
``financial sector'' bank CDs.\58\ Further, RJO averred that high
quality corporate notes or bonds are no different than those used by
prime MMMFs.\59\ MF Global/Newedge stated that they were unaware of any
instances of an FCM unable to meet its obligations under Regulation
1.25 as a result of investment losses it suffered involving corporate
notes or commercial paper. They believe that commercial paper and
corporate notes or bonds should continue to be permitted; however, to
the extent that there are limitations, they suggest (a) permitting FCMs
to invest only in corporate notes or commercial paper issued by
entities with a certain minimum capital level or which meet a certain
float size, or (b) limiting FCM investments in such instruments to 25
percent of their portfolio and 5 percent with any one issuer. BlackRock
supports a 25-50 percent asset-based concentration limit for TLGP debt,
but also notes that a lack of creditworthy supply may prevent an FCM
from reaching that limit.\60\
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\57\ FIA/ISDA letter at 5.
\58\ RJO letter at 6.
\59\ RJO letter at 5.
\60\ BlackRock letter at 6.
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Commenters rejected the Commission's contention that the lack of
investment in commercial paper and corporate notes or bonds illustrated
in its 2007 Review was dispositive. MF Global/Newedge suggested that
the investment review is outdated and is inadequate to justify removing
an important source of revenue for FCMs.\61\ RJO noted that commercial
paper and corporate notes likely appear to be used minimally during the
relevant period because investments in such instruments were not as
safe during that time frame.\62\
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\61\ MF Global/Newedge at 8.
\62\ RJO letter at 5.
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The Commission does not find the arguments in favor of retaining
corporate notes and bonds to be persuasive. While the Commission
encourages FCMs and DCOs to increase or decrease their holdings of
certain permitted instruments depending on market conditions, the
Commission is following the language of the statute and its goal of
eliminating instruments that may, during tumultuous markets, tie up or
threaten customer principal. The Commission recognizes that certain
high-quality paper and notes may be sufficiently safe. As discussed in
Section I.B.4.(a) of this rulemaking, an FCM or DCO may invest up to 50
percent of its funds in prime MMMFs, which may invest in high-quality
paper and notes meeting certain standards. To the extent that
commenters suggested that the 2007 Report does not accurately reflect
the volume of investment of customer segregated funds in commercial
paper and corporate notes or bonds, the Commission believes that the
2007 Report contains sufficiently accurate information reflective of
the circumstances at that time.\63\ Further, notwithstanding the
relative paucity of investment in such instruments, the Commission
believes that the investment of customer funds in such instruments runs
counter to the overarching objective of preserving principal and
maintaining liquidity of customer funds.
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\63\ While the Commission does not have similar data reflecting
Regulation 1.25 investments from more recent years, the Commission
believes that investment in commercial paper and corporate notes or
bonds remains minimal. This belief is supported by a July 21, 2009
letter from NFA, in response to the ANPR, which averred that
segregated funds were primarily invested in government securities
and MMMFs, while investments in other instruments were
``negligible.'' Moreover, the Commission has received no evidence to
contradict its position.
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Although the TLGP expires in 2012, the Commission believes it is
useful to include commercial paper and corporate notes or bonds that
are fully guaranteed as to principal and interest by the United States
as permitted investments. This would permit continuing investment in
TLGP debt securities, even though the Commission has otherwise
eliminated commercial paper and corporate notes or bonds from the list
of permitted investments. Therefore, the Commission is adopting the
proposed amendments to Regulation 1.25(a) and (b) that limit the
commercial paper and corporate notes or bonds that can qualify as
permitted investments to only those guaranteed as to principal and
interest under the TLGP and that meet the criteria set forth in the
Division's interpretation.\64\ The Commission is amending Regulation
1.25 by (1) amending paragraphs (a)(1)(v) and (a)(1)(vi) to specify
that commercial paper and corporate notes or bonds must be federally
backed and (2) inserting new paragraph (b)(2)(vi) that describes the
criteria for federally backed commercial paper and corporate notes or
bonds.\65\
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\64\ See TLGP Letter; 75 FR 67642, 67645 (Nov. 3, 2010).
\65\ In the NPRM, the Commission proposed removing paragraph
(b)(3)(iv) (as amended in this rulemaking, paragraph (b)(2)(iv))
which permits adjustable rate securities as limited under that
paragraph. As proposed, Regulation 1.25 would have only permitted
corporate and U.S. agency obligations that had explicit U.S.
government guarantees. However, since the Commission is, for the
most part, retaining the current treatment of U.S. agency
obligations, as described in more detail in section II.A.1 of this
rulemaking, the Commission has decided not to adopt the proposed
removal of paragraph (b)(3)(iv) (now paragraph (b)(2)(iv)).
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3. Foreign Sovereign Debt
Currently, an FCM or DCO may invest in the sovereign debt of a
foreign country to the extent it has balances in segregated accounts
owed to its customers (or, in the case of a DCO, to its clearing member
FCMs) denominated in that country's currency.\66\ In the NPRM, the
Commission proposed to remove foreign sovereign debt as a permitted
investment in the interests of both simplifying the regulation and
safeguarding customer funds in light of
[[Page 78781]]
recent crises experienced by a number of foreign sovereigns. The
Commission requested comment on whether foreign sovereign debt should
remain, to any extent, as a permitted investment and, if so, what
requirements or limitations might be imposed in order to minimize
sovereign risk.
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\66\ The inclusion of foreign sovereign debt as a permitted
investment can be traced to an August 7, 2000 comment letter from
the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago requesting that the Commission
allow FCMs and DCOs to invest non-dollar customer funds in the
foreign sovereign debt of the currency so denominated. The
Commission agreed in its final rule, explaining that an FCM
investing deposits of foreign currencies would be required to
convert the foreign currencies to a U.S. dollar denominated asset,
and that such conversion would ``increase its exposure to foreign
currency fluctuation risk, unless it incurred the additional expense
of hedging.'' See 65 FR 78003 (Dec. 13, 2000).
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Thirteen comment letters discussed foreign sovereign debt. Twelve
of the 13 suggested retaining foreign sovereign debt to varying
degrees. One comment letter supported the Commission's proposal. As
discussed in more detail below, both the importance of hedging against
foreign currency exposure as well as the unintended consequences of the
proposal were cited frequently by commenters as reasons to retain
foreign sovereign debt as a permitted investment.
Six commenters discussed the need to mitigate the risks associated
with foreign currency exposure. FIA/ISDA, MF Global/Newedge, J.P.
Morgan, LCH, NFA and FOA each noted that when a DCO requires margin
deposited in a foreign currency, an FCM will face a foreign currency
exposure in order to meet that margin requirement. The FCM is able to
mitigate this exposure by investing customer funds in foreign sovereign
debt securities denominated in the relevant currency.\67\
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\67\ FIA/ISDA letter at 6, MF Global/Newedge letter at 5, J.P.
Morgan letter at 1, LCH letter at 2, NFA letter at 3, FOA letter at
4.
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The benefits of increased diversification and liquidity were
mentioned by three commenters. FOA and ADM noted that outside
investment in sovereign debt played a key role, during the recent
financial crisis, in maintaining liquidity and demand in such
instruments, which, in turn, had a beneficial impact on pricing and
spreads.\68\ BlackRock wrote that, notwithstanding the current limited
investment in foreign sovereign debt, there are opportunities to add
diversification and liquidity by allowing such investments.\69\ FIA/
ISDA, FOA and BlackRock suggested that lack of use should not
disqualify an investment as long as permitting it would still serve to
preserve principal and maintain liquidity.\70\
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\68\ FOA letter at 2, ADM letter at 2.
\69\ BlackRock letter at 6.
\70\ FIA/ISDA letter at 6, FOA letter at 3, BlackRock letter at
6.
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Several commenters predicted harmful unintended consequences if the
proposal to remove foreign sovereign debt as a permitted investment
becomes the final rule. CME suggested that the implementation of the
Dodd-Frank Act will result in an increase in the amount of customer
funds held by FCMs and an increase in the number of foreign customers
and foreign-domiciled clearing members.\71\ Removing foreign sovereign
debt would limit diversification, would undermine the role of non-US
sovereign debt, and would have the unintended consequence of increasing
market volatility, according to FOA.\72\ LCH and FOA predicted that
retaliatory action from foreign jurisdictions also could occur.\73\
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\71\ CME letter at 3.
\72\ FOA letter at 3.
\73\ LCH letter at 2, FOA letter at 2-3.
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Most commenters supported retaining foreign sovereign debt to some
degree. CME and FIA/ISDA suggested that foreign sovereign debt be
retained as a permitted investment, adding that all investments must be
highly liquid under the terms of Regulation 1.25, so risky foreign
sovereign debt would not be permitted.\74\ LCH recommended that foreign
sovereign debt remain permitted as an investment, or, at a minimum,
that investments be limited to only high quality sovereign issuers.\75\
LCH also noted that DCOs have conservative investment policies in place
already.\76\ RJO suggested limiting foreign sovereign debt to only G-7
issuers, with limits based upon the margin requirement for all client
positions.\77\ NGX suggested that DCOs domiciled outside of the U.S.,
in G-7 countries, be permitted to invest in their country's sovereign
debt, adding that not allowing such investments may be a ``hardship''
on such DCOs.\78\ ADM suggested that G-7 countries serve as a ``safe
harbor'' for Regulation 1.25 foreign sovereign debt investments.\79\
One commenter, CIEBA, backed the Commission's proposal without further
explanation.\80\
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\74\ CME letter at 3, FIA/ISDA letter at 6.
\75\ LCH letter at 2.
\76\ Id.
\77\ RJO letter at 6.
\78\ NGX letter at 3.
\79\ ADM letter at 2.
\80\ CIEBA letter at 3.
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The Commission has considered the comments and has decided to adopt
the proposed amendment, thereby eliminating foreign sovereign debt from
the list of permitted investments. As discussed in more detail below,
the Commission believes that, in many cases, the potential volatility
of foreign sovereign debt in the current economic environment and the
varying degrees of financial stability of different issuers make
foreign sovereign debt inappropriate for hedging foreign currency risk.
The Commission also is not persuaded that foreign sovereign debt is
used with sufficient frequency to justify the commenters' claims that
foreign sovereign debt assists with diversification of customer fund
investments, and it is not persuaded that the specter of backlash from
other jurisdictions or increased market volatility requires a different
outcome.
First, while it appreciates the risks of foreign currency exposure,
the Commission does not believe that foreign sovereign debt is, in all
situations, a sufficiently safe means for hedging such risk. Recent
global and regional financial crises have illustrated that
circumstances may quickly change, negatively impacting the safety of
sovereign debt held by an FCM or DCO. An FCM or DCO holding troubled
sovereign debt may then be unable to liquidate such instruments in a
timely manner--and, when it does, it may be only after a significant
mark-down. Given the choice between an FCM holding devalued currency,
which can be exchanged for a portion of the customers' margin and
returned to the customer immediately, and an FCM holding illiquid
foreign sovereign debt, which might not be able to be exchanged for any
currency in a timely manner, the Commission believes that the former is
in the customers' best interests. The Commission notes that FCMs can
avoid foreign currency risk by not accepting collateral that is not
accepted at the DCO or foreign board of trade, or by providing in its
customer agreement that the customer will bear any currency
exposure.\81\
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\81\ Additionally, the Commission believes that it is
appropriate to note that Regulation 1.25 does not dictate the
collateral that may be accepted by FCMs from customers or by DCOs
from clearing member FCMs. If FCMs and DCOs so allow, customers and
clearing member FCMs, respectively, may continue to post foreign
currency or foreign sovereign debt as collateral.
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Second, the Commission is not persuaded by commenters' assertions
that investment in foreign sovereign debt has increased the
diversification of customer funds in any meaningful way. The Commission
has noted that investment in foreign sovereign debt was minimal in the
2007 Review.\82\ The Commission has received no data or evidence from
any commenter suggesting that investment in foreign sovereign debt has
materially increased since the 2007 Review.
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\82\ 75 FR 67642, 67645.
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Third, the Commission does not believe that eliminating foreign
sovereign debt as a permitted investment of customer funds will cause
the market or jurisdictional problems claimed by commenters. As
discussed above, no commenter has demonstrated that foreign sovereign
debt is widely used, so its elimination should not
[[Page 78782]]
undermine foreign sovereign debt nor cause a disruption in the market.
The foregoing points notwithstanding, the Commission is aware that
FCMs and DCOs have varying collateral management needs and investment
policies. The Commission also recognizes that the safety of sovereign
debt issuances of one country may vary greatly from those of another,
and that investment in certain sovereign debt might be consistent with
the objectives of preserving principal and maintaining liquidity, as
required by Regulation 1.25.
Therefore, the Commission is amenable to considering applications
for exemptions with respect to investment in foreign sovereign debt by
FCMs or DCOs upon a demonstration that the investment in the sovereign
debt of one or more countries is appropriate in light of the objectives
of Regulation 1.25 and that the issuance of an exemption satisfies the
criteria set forth in Section 4(c) of the Act.\83\ Accordingly, the
Commission invites FCMs and DCOs that seek to invest customer funds in
foreign sovereign debt to petition the Commission pursuant to Section
4(c). The Commission will consider permitting investments (1) to the
extent that the FCM or DCO has balances in segregated accounts owed to
its customers (or clearing member FCMs, as the case may be) in that
country's currency and (2) to the extent that such sovereign debt
serves to preserve principal and maintain liquidity of customer funds
as required for all other investments of customer funds under
Regulation 1.25.
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\83\ See 7 U.S.C. 6(c).
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Finally, in response to NGX, the Commission does not agree that
foreign domiciled FCMs and DCOs should be able to invest in the
sovereign debt of their domicile nation. A compelling argument has not
been presented as to why this constitutes a ``hardship'' to DCOs
domiciled outside of the United States.
4. In-house Transactions
The Commission allowed in-house transactions as a permitted
investment for the first time in 2005.\84\ At that time, the Commission
stated that in-house transactions ``provide the economic equivalent of
repos and reverse repos,'' and, like repurchase agreements with third
parties, preserve the ``integrity of the customer segregated account.''
\85\ The Commission further wrote that in-house transactions should not
disrupt FCMs and DCOs from maintaining ``sufficient value in the
account at all times.'' \86\ In the May 2009 ANPR, the Commission noted
that the recent events in the economy underscored the importance of
conducting periodic reassessments and refocused its review of permitted
investments, including in-house transactions.\87\
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\84\ 70 FR 28190, 28193.
\85\ 70 FR 28193. See also 70 FR 5577, 5581 (February 3, 2005).
\86\ 70 FR 28190, 28193.
\87\ 74 FR 23963, 23964.
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In the NPRM, the Commission proposed to eliminate in-house
transactions permitted under paragraph (a)(3) and subject to the
requirements of paragraph (e) of Regulation 1.25. The Commission noted
that ``[r]ecent market events have * * * increased concerns about the
concentration of credit risk within the FCM/broker-dealer corporate
entity in connection with in-house transactions.'' \88\ The Commission
requested comment on the impact of this proposal on the business
practices of FCMs and DCOs. Specifically, the Commission requested that
commenters present scenarios in which a repurchase or reverse
repurchase agreement with a third party could not be satisfactorily
substituted for an in-house transaction.
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\88\ 75 FR 67642, 67646.
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Six commenters discussed in-house transactions. Four requested that
in-house transactions be retained to some extent, while two supported
the Commission's proposal to eliminate in-house transactions.
FIA/ISDA, CME, MF Global/Newedge and MorganStanley recommended that
the Commission allow FCMs to engage in in-house transactions. FIA/ISDA
and CME suggested that the current terms of Regulation 1.25(e) should
be more than sufficient to assure that the customer segregated account
and the foreign futures and foreign options secured amount are
protected in the event of an FCM bankruptcy.\89\ MorganStanley wrote
that FCM efficiency relies heavily on in-house transactions,
particularly when customer margin is not appropriate for DCO margin. It
further stated that relying entirely on third party repurchase
agreements will materially increase operational risk in an area where
it is negligible today.\90\ According to MorganStanley,
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\89\ CME letter at 3, FIA/ISDA letter at 12.
\90\ MorganStanley letter at 2-3.
Because the in-house transaction can be effected and recorded
through book entries on the FCM/broker-dealer's general ledger, it
can be accomplished through automated internal processes that are
subject to a high level of control. The same is not routinely true
of third-party repurchase arrangements, which often involve greater
time lags than do in-house transactions between execution and
settlement and also typically require more manual processing than
their in-house counterparts.\91\
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\91\ Morgan Stanley letter at 2.
MorganStanley further noted that, as with the FCM of Lehman Brothers
Holdings Inc. (Lehman Brothers) in 2008, a third party custodial
arrangement is not without risk.\92\ MF Global/Newedge wrote that
removing in-house transactions would not reduce FCM risk, ``since FCMs
would be unable to enter into and execute such transactions with and
through entities and personnel with whom they have created an
effective, efficient and liquid settlement framework.'' \93\
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\92\ MorganStanley letter at 3-4.
\93\ MF Global/Newedge letter at 7.
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However, RJO stated that in-house transactions currently do not
provide ``protection to the capital base of the FCM arm of a dually
registered entity.'' \94\ Without ``ring fencing the capital associated
with the separately regulated business lines,'' RJO does not consider
in-house transactions to be satisfactory substitutes for separately
capitalized affiliates or third parties.\95\
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\94\ RJO letter at 3.
\95\ Id.
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CME and FIA/ISDA support retaining in-house transactions as they
currently are permitted under Regulation 1.25. MorganStanley suggested
retaining in-house transactions subject to a concentration limit of 25
percent of total assets held in segregation or secured amount; or if
the Commission is determined to eliminate in-house transactions,
raising the proposed concentration limit for reverse repurchase
agreements to 25 percent of total assets held in segregation or secured
amount.\96\ RJO, for the reasons noted above, and CIEBA, without
explanation, both support the proposal to remove in-house transactions
from the list of permitted investments.\97\
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\96\ MorganStanley letter at 4.
\97\ RJO letter at 3, CIEBA letter at 3.
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Many commenters to the NPRM similarly suggest that the benefits of
repurchase and reverse repurchase agreements can also be realized by
in-house transactions, without any decrease in safety to customer
funds. The Commission rejects this position. The Commission believes
that in-house transactions are fundamentally different than repurchase
or reverse repurchase agreements with third parties. In the case of a
reverse repurchase agreement, the transaction is similar to a
collateralized loan whereby customer cash is exchanged for unencumbered
collateral, both of which are housed in legally separate entities. The
agreement is transacted at arms-length (often by
[[Page 78783]]
means of a tri-party repo mechanism), on a delivery versus payment
basis, and is memorialized by a legally binding contract. By contrast,
in an in-house transaction, cash and securities are under common
control of the same legal entity, which presents the potential for
conflicts of interest in the handling of customer funds that may be
tested in times of crisis. Unlike a repurchase or reverse repurchase
agreement, there is no mechanism to ensure that an in-house transaction
is done on a delivery versus payment basis. Furthermore, an in-house
transaction, by its nature, is transacted within a single entity and
therefore cannot be legally documented, since an entity cannot contract
with itself (the most one could do to document such a transaction would
be to make an entry on a ledger or sub-ledger).
Other advocates of in-house transactions explained that in-house
transactions help them better manage their balance sheets. For example,
if a firm entered into a repurchase or reverse repurchase transaction
with an unaffiliated third party, the accounting of that transaction
may cause the consolidated balance sheet of the firm to appear larger
than if the transaction occurred in-house. In 2005, the Commission
wrote that in-house transactions could ``assist an FCM both in
achieving greater capital efficiency and in accomplishing important
risk management goals, including internal diversification targets.''
\98\ However, the purpose of Regulation 1.25 is not to assist FCMs and
DCOs with their balance sheet maintenance. The purpose of Regulation
1.25 is to permit FCMs and DCOs to invest customer funds in a manner
that preserves principal and maintains liquidity.
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\98\ 70 FR 28193; see also 70 FR 5581.
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The Commission reiterates that customer segregation is the
foundation of customer protection in the commodity, futures and swaps
markets. Segregation must be maintained at all times, pursuant to
Section 4d of the Act and Commission Regulation 1.20,\99\ and customer
segregated funds must be invested in a manner which preserves principal
and maintains liquidity in accordance with Regulation 1.25. As such,
the Commission must be vigilant in narrowing the scope of Regulation
1.25 if transactions that were once considered sufficiently safe later
prove to be unacceptably risky. Based on the concerns outlined above,
the Commission now believes that in-house transactions present an
unacceptable risk to customer segregated funds under Regulation 1.25.
The final regulation deletes paragraph (a)(3), as proposed.\100\
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\99\ 17 CFR 1.20.
\100\ Conversely, transactions that at one point in time are
considered to be unacceptably risky may later prove to be
sufficiently safe. Should any person, in the future, believe that
circumstances warrant reconsideration of the deletion of paragraph
(a)(3) regarding in-house transactions, such person may petition the
Comm