Extension of Interim Final Temporary Rule on Retail Foreign Exchange Transactions, 41671-41678 [2012-17261]
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 136 / Monday, July 16, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
and add paragraphs (1) and (2) as set
forth below.
3. In Category 2:
A. On page 734, in 2B009, remove the
text after ‘‘Related Definitions’’ and add
‘‘N/A’’ in its place.
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Technical Note to read ‘‘TECHNICAL NOTE:
For the purpose of 2B009, machines
combining the function of spin-forming
and flow-forming are regarded as flowforming machines.’’
C. On page 757, in 2E003, in the Notes
to Table on Deposition Techniques, in
note 15, add the word ‘‘are’’ after
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RS,’’, and remove ‘‘License Requirement
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The text to be revised and added is set
forth below:
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Supplement No. 1 to Part 774—The
Commerce Control List
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240.15b12–1T) is extended to July 16,
2013.
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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1C351 Human and zoonotic pathogens and
‘‘toxins’’, as follows (see List of Items
Controlled).
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Related Definitions: (1) For the purposes of
this entry ‘‘immunotoxin’’ is defined as an
antibody-toxin conjugate intended to destroy
specific target cells (e.g., tumor cells) that
bear antigens homologous to the antibody. (2)
For the purposes of this entry ‘‘subunit’’ is
defined as a portion of the ‘‘toxin’’.
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[FR Doc. 2012–17302 Filed 7–13–12; 8:45 am]
Joanne Rutkowski, Branch Chief, Bonnie
Gauch, Senior Special Counsel, and
Leila Bham, Special Counsel, Division
of Trading and Markets, at (202) 551–
5550, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20549.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Commission is extending the expiration
date for Rule 15b12–1T under the
Exchange Act.
I. Discussion
BILLING CODE 1505–01–D
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
17 CFR Part 240
[Release No. 34–67405; File No. S7–30–11]
RIN 3235–AL19
Extension of Interim Final Temporary
Rule on Retail Foreign Exchange
Transactions
Securities and Exchange
Commission.
ACTION: Interim final temporary rule;
extension.
Section 742 of the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act (‘‘Dodd-Frank Act’’) 1 amended the
Commodity Exchange Act (‘‘CEA’’) to
provide that a person for which there is
a Federal regulatory agency,2 including
a broker or dealer (‘‘broker-dealer’’)
registered under section 15(b) (except
pursuant to paragraph (11) thereof) or
15C of the Exchange Act,3 shall not
enter into, or offer to enter into, a
foreign exchange (‘‘forex’’) transaction 4
with a person who is not an ‘‘eligible
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Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010).
U.S.C. 2(c)(2)(E)(i), as amended by § 742(c) of
the Dodd-Frank Act, defines a ‘‘Federal regulatory
agency’’ to mean the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission (‘‘CFTC’’), the Securities and Exchange
Commission, an appropriate Federal banking
agency, the National Credit Union Association, and
the Farm Credit Administration.
3 7 U.S.C. 2(c)(2)(B)(i)(II).
4 7 U.S.C. 2(c)(2)(B)(i)(I). Transactions described
in CEA section 2(c)(2)(B)(i)(I) include ‘‘an
agreement, contract, or transaction in foreign
currency that * * * is a contract of sale of a
commodity for future delivery (or an option on such
a contract) or an option (other than an option
executed or traded on a national securities
exchange registered pursuant to section 6(a) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78f(a)).’’
27
The Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’) is
amending interim final temporary Rule
15b12–1T under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (‘‘Exchange Act’’)
to extend the date on which the rule
will expire from July 16, 2012 to July 16,
2013.
DATES: Effective Date: July 16, 2012. The
expiration date of interim final
temporary Rule 15b12–1T (17 CFR
SUMMARY:
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0A986 Shotgun shells, except buckshot
shotgun shells, and parts.
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AT applies to entire entry. A license is required for items controlled by this entry to North Korea
for anti-terrorism reasons. The Commerce Country Chart is not designed to determine AT licensing requirements for this entry. See § 742.19 of the EAR for additional information.
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41671
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Iraq, North Korea, and Rwanda.
contract participant’’ 5 (‘‘ECP’’) except
pursuant to a rule or regulation of a
Federal regulatory agency allowing the
transaction under such terms and
conditions as the Federal regulatory
agency shall prescribe (‘‘retail forex
rule’’).6 A Federal regulatory agency’s
5 Section 1a(18) of the CEA defines ‘‘eligible
contract participant’’ generally to mean certain
regulated persons; entities that meet a specified
total asset test (e.g., a corporation, partnership,
proprietorship, organization, trust, or other entity
with total assets exceeding $10 million) or an
alternative monetary test coupled with a nonmonetary component (e.g., an entity with a net
worth in excess of $1 million and engaging in
business-related hedging; or certain employee
benefit plans, the investment decisions of which are
made by one of four enumerated types of regulated
entities); and certain governmental entities and
individuals that meet defined thresholds. 7 U.S.C.
2(c)(2)(E)(i). The CFTC has adopted rules further
clarifying the definition of ‘‘eligible contract
participant’’ in the CEA. See 17 CFR 1.3(m). See
also Further Definition of ‘‘Swap Dealer,’’
‘‘Security-Based Swap Dealer,’’ ‘‘Major Swap
Participant,’’ ‘‘Major Security-Based Swap
Participant’’ and ‘‘Eligible Contract Participant,’’
Exchange Act Release No. 66868 (April 27, 2012),
77 FR 30596 (May 23, 2012). Because transactions
that are the subject of this release are commonly
referred to as ‘‘retail forex transactions,’’ this release
uses the term ‘‘retail customer’’ to describe persons
who are not ECPs.
6 See 7 U.S.C. 2(c)(2)(B)(i)(II) and 7 U.S.C.
2(c)(2)(E)(ii)(I). On September 10, 2010, the CFTC
adopted a retail forex rule for persons subject to its
jurisdiction. See Regulation of Off-Exchange Retail
Foreign Exchange Transactions and Intermediaries,
75 FR 55410 (September 10, 2010). The CFTC had
proposed its rules regarding retail forex transactions
prior to the enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act. See
Regulation of Off-Exchange Retail Foreign
Exchange Transactions and Intermediaries, 75 FR
3282 (January 20, 2010). The Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (‘‘FDIC’’) and the Office of
the Comptroller of the Currency (‘‘OCC’’) have
adopted similar rules. See Retail Foreign Exchange
Transactions, 76 FR 40779 (July 12, 2011); Retail
Foreign Exchange Transactions, 76 FR 41375 (July
14, 2011). The Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System (the ‘‘Board’’) has proposed rules
for bank holding companies. See Retail Foreign
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retail forex rule must treat all forex
agreements, contracts, and transactions
and their functional or economic
equivalents, similarly.7 Any retail forex
rule also must prescribe appropriate
requirements with respect to disclosure,
recordkeeping, capital and margin,
reporting, business conduct, and
documentation, and may include such
other standards or requirements as the
Federal regulatory agency determines to
be necessary.8
The prohibition in CEA section
2(c)(2)(B) took effect on July 16, 2011.
Beginning on that date, broker-dealers,
including broker-dealers also registered
with the CFTC as futures commission
merchants (‘‘BD–FCMs’’), for which the
Commission is the ‘‘Federal regulatory
agency,’’ were no longer able to engage
in off-exchange retail forex futures and
options transactions with a customer
except pursuant to a retail forex rule
issued by the Commission.9 On July 13,
2011, the Commission adopted interim
final temporary Rule 15b12–1T, which
temporarily permits a broker-dealer to
engage in a ‘‘retail forex business,’’ as
defined in the rule, in compliance with
the Exchange Act, the rules and
regulations thereunder, and the rules of
the self-regulatory organizations of
which the broker-dealer is a member,
insofar as they are applicable to retail
forex transactions.10 We explained at
the time that our action was intended to
preserve potentially beneficial market
practices that, for example, may serve to
minimize a retail customer’s exposure to
the risk of changes in foreign currency
rates in connection with the customer’s
purchase or sale of a security. We also
discussed in the Interim Release that
there may be potentially abusive
practices such as lack of disclosure
about fees and forex pricing, and
insufficient capital or margin
requirements occurring in the retail
forex market, and sought comment on
these practices and steps we should take
to seek to prevent them.11 Rule 15b12–
Exchange Transactions, 76 FR 46652 (August 3,
2011).
7 7 U.S.C. 2(c)(2)(E)(iii)(II).
8 7 U.S.C. 2(c)(2)(E)(iii)(I).
9 See 7 U.S.C. 2(c)(2)(B)(i)(II)(cc) (giving the CFTC
jurisdiction over retail forex transactions with
FCMs that, among other things, are not registered
broker-dealers) and 7 U.S.C. 2(c)(2)(C)(i)(I)(aa). In
addition, a commenter noted that the CFTC ‘‘does
not have jurisdiction over retail foreign exchange
activities conducted by broker-dealers, including
entities that are dually registered as broker-dealers
with the SEC and as futures commission merchants
(‘FCMs’) with the CFTC.’’ SIFMA/ISDA Letter at 1.
10 See Retail Foreign Exchange Transactions,
Exchange Act Release No. 64874 (July 13, 2011), 76
FR 41676 (July 15, 2011) (adopting 17 CFR
240.15b12–1T) (‘‘Interim Release’’).
11 Our Office of Investor Education Advocacy has
published an Investor Bulletin providing
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1T, by its terms and without further
Commission action, would have expired
on July 16, 2012.
The Commission received comments
on the Interim Release, which are
summarized below.12
• Nine commenters asked the
Commission to preserve their ability to
engage in retail forex transactions.13
• One commenter stated that the
Commission should rescind the rule and
allow the ban to take effect or, in the
alternative, to limit the scope of the rule
to a narrowly defined class of forex
transactions, specifically hedging and
the facilitation of settlement of foreign
securities.14 The commenter further
stated that in adopting Rule 15b12–1T,
the Commission did not provide notice
of and opportunity for comment on the
rule, and did not include a ‘‘concrete
assessment or quantification of the
need’’ for the relief granted by this rule.
• Another commenter provided data
on the returns of retail forex accounts at
futures commission merchants and
retail foreign exchange dealers, and
offered recommendations that the
commenter believed would improve
retail forex transactions and identified
areas of retail forex that the commenter
believed warrants further study.15 This
information about retail forex investing, including
information about the risks involved in that trading.
See Investor Bulletin: Foreign Currency Exchange
(Forex) Trading for Individual Investors (July 2011),
available at https://www.sec.gov/investor/alerts/for
extrading.pdf. The CFTC and the North American
Securities Administrators Association also have
published an alert regarding risks of fraud in forex
markets. See Foreign Exchange Currency Fraud:
CFTC/NASAA Investor Alert, available at https://
www.cftc.gov/ConsumerProtection/FraudAwareness
Prevention/ForeignCurrencyTrading/cftcnasaaforex
alert. We recently brought an enforcement action
against the CEO of a purported foreign currency
trading firm alleging fraud by that person. See SEC
v. Jeffery A. Lowrance, et al., Case No. CV–11–3451,
press release, complaint and litigation release,
available at https://www.sec.gov/news/press/2011/
2011-147.htm.
12 The comments are available at https://
www.sec.gov/comments/s7-30-11/s73011.shtml. In
addition to other specific requests for comment, the
Commission requested comment in the Interim
Release as to whether Rule 15b12–1T should be
extended, and if so for how long.
13 See email comments from Raul Gonzalez, dated
July 17, 2011, James Peck, dated July 17, 2011, Bob
Flowers, dated July 17, 2011, James M. Beatty,
dated July 17, 2011, Angela Li, dated July 17, 2011,
Mark A. McDonnell, dated July 21, 2011, Mark
Smith, dated July 23, 2011, John Baur, dated July
27, 2011, and Ronald Covington, dated October 23,
2011.
14 See Letter from Dennis M. Kelleher, President
and CEO, and Stephen W. Hall, Securities
Specialist, Better Markets, Inc. to Ms. Elizabeth
Murphy, Secretary, Commission, dated September
12, 2011 (‘‘Better Markets Letter’’). We understand
the commenter’s reference to transactions entered
into to facilitate the settlement of foreign securities
to mean the conversion trades discussed infra, in
the text accompanying notes 19 and 20.
15 Letter from Justin Hughes, CFA and Managing
Member, Philadelphia Financial Management of
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commenter also suggested that currency
exchange-traded funds (‘‘currency
ETFs’’) would provide an alternative
means for effectively hedging against
currency risk.16
• One commenter provided data from
five large broker-dealers showing that
the notional amount of foreign exchange
conversion trades at those brokerdealers accounts for approximately 90%
of those firms’ foreign exchange
transactions. The firms’ data further
indicated that 99% of customer
accounts have entered into a conversion
trade, though not all trades within an
account may be conversion trades.17
• One group of commenters urged the
Commission to adopt a final rule based
on the approach followed in the interim
final temporary rule, with certain
modifications.18 These commenters
maintained that it is in the best interests
of retail customers to have the
opportunity to conduct forex activity as
part of their broader investing activity,
through their broker-dealers, with the
assistance of personnel who have
expertise in forex.
More recently, in April 2012, a group
of commenters asked the CFTC, as well
as other Federal regulatory agencies
(including the Commission), to take the
view that forex transactions that are
solely incidental to, and that are
initiated for the sole purpose of,
permitting a customer to complete a
transaction in a foreign security, socalled ‘‘conversion trades,’’ are not
prohibited retail forex transactions for
purposes of section 2 of the CEA.19
San Francisco to Ms. Elizabeth Murphy, Secretary,
Commission, dated August 2, 2011 (‘‘Philadelphia
Financial Letter’’). See also letter from P. Georgia
Bullitt, Michael A. Piracci and F. Mindy Lo, Morgan
Lewis to Joseph Furey, Bonnie L. Gauch and Adam
Yonce, Commission, dated July 28, 2011 (‘‘Morgan
Lewis Letter’’).
16 See Philadelphia Financial Letter. See also
Better Markets Letter. While certain forex
transactions, in particular portfolio hedges or
currency transactions that are part of a diversified
investment strategy, may have close substitutes in
currency ETFs, currency conversions that facilitate
securities transactions (discussed in more detail
below) may not have such close substitutes.
17 See Morgan Lewis Letter.
18 See Letter from Kenneth E. Bentsen, Jr.,
Executive Vice President Public Policy and
Advocacy, SIFMA and Robert Pickel, Executive
Vice Chairman, ISDA, to Ms. Elizabeth Murphy,
Secretary, Commission, dated October 17, 2011
(‘‘SIFMA/ISDA Letter’’). See also Memorandum
from SIFMA and ISDA to Marc Menchel, Gary
Goldsholle, Matthew Vitek, Rudy Verra, Glen
Garofalo, FINRA, dated February 23, 2012.
19 See Letter from Phoebe A. Papageorgiou, Senior
Counsel, American Bankers Association, and James
Kemp, Managing Director, Global Foreign Exchange
Division, to Thomas J. Curry, Comptroller, OCC,
Robert E. Feldman, Executive Secretary, FDIC,
Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary, the Board, David
Stanwick, Secretary, CFTC, and Elizabeth Murphy,
Secretary, Commission, dated April 18, 2012
(‘‘ABA/GFMA Letter’’).
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These commenters maintain that
Congress did not intend to include
within the scope of the CEA section 2
prohibition currency transactions
effected in connection with securities
transactions, stating that ‘‘[s]uch
transactions do not involve speculation
in the underlying currencies and, to the
contrary, will result in an exchange of
currencies to be used to settle the
relevant securities transactions.’’ 20 We
anticipate that the interpretation will be
addressed in the context of the CFTC’s
and SEC’s joint rulemaking to further
define terms such as ‘‘swap’’ and
‘‘security-based swap’’ under Title VII of
the Dodd-Frank Act (‘‘Products
Definition Release’’).21 We further
anticipate that the rulemaking will be
finalized in the near future and the
CFTC will provide at that time its views
of whether conversion trades are
excluded from the prohibition under
CEA section 2.
The ABA/GFMA Letter and the CFTC
response affect the scope, substance,
and timing of our consideration of
further rulemaking for retail forex
transactions. If the CFTC were to adopt
the interpretation put forth by the ABA/
GFMA, conversion trades, which
commenters have asserted comprise the
overwhelming majority of retail forex
transactions conducted through brokerdealers,22 would not fall within the
scope of the prohibition. The potential
for such interpretation means that
further rulemaking could well confront
a very different set of transactions than
contemplated in April 2012, one
focused not on conversion trades, but
rather on apparently less common and
more diverse retail forex transactions
identified by commenters, such as
hedging transactions and direct
investments.23 It also means that further
rulemaking would need to consider
whether there are classes of conversion
trades not excluded under any final
interpretation that may be adopted by
the CFTC that must be addressed
separately. We expect to consider these
types of transactions and an appropriate
regulatory approach to them in
considering whether and what
permanent rules we should adopt in this
area.
Extending the expiration of Rule
15b12–1T to July 16, 2013 will provide
the Commission additional time to
20 Id.
at 2.
also Further Definition of ‘‘Swap,’’
‘‘Security-Based Swap,’’ and ‘‘Security-Based Swap
Agreement’’; Mixed Swaps; Security-Based Swap
Agreement Recordkeeping, Securities Act Release
No. 9204 (April 29, 2011), 76 FR 29818 (May 23,
2011) (proposing release).
22 See Morgan Lewis Letter.
23 See SIFMA/ISDA Letter (Annex A, Part I).
21 See
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consider carefully these issues. The
extension will help to ensure that we
have sufficient time to take such action
as we may determine appropriate in this
area, particularly in light of the diverse
classes of transactions—beyond the
conversion trades that have been the
focus of comments to date—that any
further rulemaking may need to
consider.24 We recognize that
commenters’ views differed as to
whether and to what extent we should
permit broker-dealers to continue to
engage in some or all retail forex
transactions. As discussed above, some
commenters urged us to permit the
statutory prohibition simply to take
effect, thereby preventing potential
abuses of retail customers by brokerdealers and BD–FCMs. A number of
retail customers asked us to permit them
to have continued access to retail forex
transactions through broker-dealers.
Some commenters stated that we should
make certain revisions to Rule 15b12–
1T, while others favored the rule as
written, stating that existing brokerdealer regulations adequately address
retail forex activities.
In considering commenters’ views, we
believe, on balance, that we should
extend the expiration date of the rule to
permit further assessment by the
Commission in this area, which would
be informed by any potential CFTC
interpretation regarding conversion
trades. Our view is influenced by
investors’ views that we should permit
them to conduct retail forex transactions
with broker-dealers. We also are
mindful that while futures commission
merchants that are not also brokerdealers could continue to engage in
retail forex transactions in compliance
with CFTC rules, a futures commission
merchant that is also a broker-dealer
would be prohibited from engaging in
retail forex transactions if we do not
extend Rule 15b12–1T. For these
reasons, we are extending the expiration
date of Rule 15b12–1T to July 16, 2013
to prevent retail customers who transact
retail forex transactions through a
broker-dealer from being potentially
disadvantaged by the prohibition for
retail forex transactions taking effect.25
Given the limited nature of this
24 If the Commission adopts permanent rules for
retail forex transactions by broker-dealers before
July 16, 2013, the Commission will consider
whether it is appropriate to terminate the
effectiveness of Rule 15b12–1T as part of that
rulemaking.
25 While retail customers could of course open an
account with a futures commission merchant (that
is not also registered as a broker-dealer) to engage
in retail forex transactions, as explained below, this
could create certain inefficiencies and additional
costs. See discussion in the Economic Analysis
section below.
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41673
extension, the pending request for a
CFTC interpretation regarding
conversion trades, the need to further
understand the implications of the
CFTC’s interpretation, and the scope of
comments we are seeking before any
further action is taken, we are not
modifying the interim final temporary
rule other than to extend the expiration
date of Rule 15b12–1T to July 16, 2013.
Absent further action by the
Commission, Rule 15b12–1T as
amended will expire on July 16, 2013 at
11:59 p.m. Eastern Time.
II. Request for Comment
The Commission requests comment
regarding all aspects of the interim final
temporary rule and the current market
practices involving retail forex
transactions, as well as any investor
protection or other concerns that
commenters believe should be
addressed by Commission rulemaking.
The Commission particularly requests
comment from broker-dealers, including
BD–FCMs, that are currently engaged or
plan to engage in a retail forex business,
retail customers that engage in forex
transactions, and ECPs. The
Commission welcomes information
from all affected parties about the
current scope and nature of retail forex
transactions. This information, together
with input from market participants and
other regulators, as well as comments
received on the Interim Release, will
help inform the Commission’s
consideration of the appropriate
regulatory framework, if any, for retail
forex transactions before or beyond the
expiration of the interim final temporary
rule.
The Commission seeks comment on
the need for further Commission
rulemaking, should the CFTC determine
that certain conversion trades are not
subject to the CEA prohibition with
respect to retail forex transactions.26 We
specifically seek to better understand
the other types of retail forex
transactions in which broker-dealers
may engage, such as forex transactions
to hedge portfolio currency risk or to
diversify a portfolio, that would not be
excluded from the prohibition under
section 2 of the CEA by the requested
interpretation. We also request
information about what mechanisms
broker-dealers use currently to comply
with existing disclosure, recordkeeping,
capital and margin, reporting, business
conduct and documentation rules with
respect to each type of retail forex
transaction in which they engage. What
policies and procedures and supervisory
controls, for example, have broker26 See
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dealers implemented to address those
transactions? We also seek comment on
what mechanisms broker-dealers use
currently to comply with other existing
regulatory requirements with respect to
retail forex transactions.
If commenters believe further
rulemaking is needed, please explain
why, and provide us with a discussion
of the types of transactions for which
rules are needed and the circumstances
under which such transactions are
entered into. If commenters believe
further rulemaking is not needed, please
explain why not. The Commission seeks
comment on the extent to which brokerdealers’ retail forex activities may be
affected, and any impact on retail
customers of broker-dealers, in the event
the Commission does not adopt any
further rules in this area.
The Commission also seeks comment
on the retail forex activities of BD–
FCMs, and whether the Commission
should adopt tailored rules for these
intermediaries. We seek comment on
the nature of BD–FCM retail forex
activities, including the type of
transactions in which they engage, and
which part of the dually registered
entity may engage in these activities or
transactions. We also request comment
on the mechanisms BD–FCMs use
currently to comply with existing
disclosure, recordkeeping, capital and
margin, reporting, business conduct and
documentation rules with respect to
each type of retail forex transaction in
which they engage. In connection with
this specific request for comment,
please identify whether the relevant
requirements are Exchange Act Rules,
CEA Rules, or rules of a particular selfregulatory organization (‘‘SRO’’) of
which the BD–FCM is a member. The
Commission also seeks comment on the
extent to which the retail forex activities
of BD–FCMs may be affected, and any
impact on retail customers of BD–FCMs,
in the event the Commission does not
adopt any further rules in this area.
Some commenters have suggested that
if broker-dealers were prohibited from
engaging in retail forex activities,
currency ETFs would be a reasonable
substitute for broker-dealer customers
seeking to hedge their currency
exposures.27 The Commission requests
comment on whether and how currency
ETFs could meet the needs of retail
customers in this regard. The
Commission also requests information
about how currency ETFs (and any
other financial product or service that
commenters believe could serve as a
substitute for forex) could be used more
27 See Philadelphia Financial Letter at 8, and
Better Markets Letter at 3.
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generally to meet the risk mitigation and
any other needs of retail customers that
currently are addressed using retail
forex transactions. Would currency
ETFs (or other financial products) hedge
currency risks in connection with
foreign securities transactions in the
same manner or differently than retail
forex transactions? How would the
transaction and other costs associated
with currency ETFs and retail forex
transactions compare? We further seek
comment on what the associated
benefits and costs would be of retail
customers using currency ETFs or some
other product or service, as a substitute
for retail forex. We also seek comment
on the liquidity of such alternative
products or services, the ease or
difficulty of accessing and using those
products or services, and any additional
risks involved in using those products
or services.
The Commission also seeks comment
on whether Rule 15b12–1T should be
extended beyond July 16, 2013, and if
so, why and for how long, or whether
it should be adopted as a final rule.
III. Economic Analysis
A. Introduction
Section 3(f) of the Exchange Act
requires the Commission, whenever it
engages in rulemaking under the
Exchange Act and is required to
consider or determine whether an action
is necessary or appropriate in the public
interest, to consider, in addition to the
protection of investors, whether the
action would promote efficiency,
competition and capital formation.28 In
addition, Section 23(a)(2) of the
Exchange Act requires the Commission,
when making rules under the Exchange
Act, to consider the impact such rules
would have on competition.29 Section
23(a)(2) of the Exchange Act prohibits
the Commission from adopting any rule
that would impose a burden on
competition not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Exchange Act.30
We understand that under the current
regulatory regime, retail customers
typically enter into foreign exchange
transactions with broker-dealers for a
number of reasons. Industry participants
have told us that the most common
transaction is a foreign exchange
conversion trade, in which a currency
trade is made in connection with a
foreign securities transaction.31
15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
15 U.S.C. 78w(a)(2).
30 See id.
31 Morgan Lewis Letter. As explained above, the
ABA/GFMA Letter requests an interpretation that
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28 See
29 See
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Commenters have also told us that retail
customers enter into forex transactions
with broker-dealers as part of a hedging
strategy. For instance, retail customers
may engage in forex transactions
through broker-dealers in order to hedge
currency risk in securities or in a
portfolio generally held in the
customer’s brokerage account; they may
also engage in these transactions in
order to obtain exposure to foreign
markets as part of their investment
strategy.32
Congress prohibited the retail forex
transactions described in CEA section 2
except pursuant to rules adopted by the
relevant Federal regulatory agencies
allowing the transactions. As we noted
in the Interim Release, some of these
transactions, in particular hedging
transactions and securities conversion
trades, may be beneficial to investors.33
At the same time, as discussed in the
Interim Release, the Commission is
aware of potentially abusive practices
that may be occurring in the retail forex
market. Such practices may include, for
example, lack of disclosure about fees
and forex pricing, and insufficient
capital or margin requirements.34
As discussed above, on April 18,
2012, a group of commenters asked the
CFTC, as well as other Federal
regulatory agencies (including the
Commission), to take the view that forex
transactions that are solely incidental to,
and are initiated for the sole purpose of,
permitting a client to complete a
transaction in a foreign security,
through ‘‘conversion trades,’’ would not
be subject to the retail forex prohibition
under section 2 of the CEA.35 An
interpretation by the CFTC that
conversion trades are not subject to the
statutory prohibition could significantly
affect the costs and benefits of any
action by the Commission with regard to
retail forex transactions going forward.
Commenters have stated that conversion
trades comprise the vast majority of
retail forex transactions engaged in by
broker-dealers,36 but also note that there
are other types of forex transactions in
which broker-dealers engage with retail
customers.37 Because the request for the
interpretation is still pending, however,
the Commission will continue to
consider conversion trades as retail
forex transactions that would be
would exclude conversion trades from the
prohibition under CEA section 2.
32 SIFMA/ISDA Letter at 4, Annex A at 1–2.
33 See Interim Release at 41684.
34 See id.
35 See ABA/GFMA Letter.
36 See Morgan Lewis Letter.
37 See SIFMA/ISDA Letter, Annex A.
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prohibited but for Rule 15b12–1T, for
purposes of our economic analysis.
Extending Rule 15b12–1T maintains
the regulatory framework that currently
exists for broker-dealers, and does not
create any new regulatory obligations.
Furthermore, the rule preserves the
ability of broker-dealers to provide,
among other services, hedging and
conversion trades to retail customers
while the Commission considers what
further appropriate steps to take, if
any.38
The Commission has previously
considered and discussed in the Interim
Release its economic analysis of Rule
15b12–1T.39 The Commission solicited
comment on its economic analysis in
the Interim Release, and received one
comment that addressed but did not
support its economic analysis.40 As
stated in the Interim Release, we
adopted Rule 15b12–1T as an interim
final temporary rule to allow the
existing regulatory framework for retail
forex transactions to continue for a
defined period, to avoid potentially
unintended consequences from brokerdealers immediately discontinuing their
retail forex business, and to provide the
Commission sufficient time to
determine the appropriate regulatory
framework regarding retail forex
transactions.41 Furthermore, investors
who commented on the rule asked the
Commission to preserve their ability to
engage in retail forex transaction
through their broker-dealers. In
addition, we included an economic
analysis of the rule in the Interim
Release.42
As mentioned above, based on data a
commenter provided of five brokerdealers, in terms of notional amount,
foreign exchange conversion trades
would account for approximately 90%
of foreign exchange transactions done
through broker-dealers, and 99% of all
broker-dealer customer accounts are
involved in conversion trades, though
not all trades within an account may be
conversions.43 Commenters have told us
that certain forex transactions,
particularly certain portfolio hedges,
may have close substitutes in currency
38 To the extent that conversion trades are not
excluded from the prohibition in CEA section 2,
extension of the Rule 15b12–1T would also have
the benefit of allowing customers to continue to
engage in those transactions as part of their
brokerage activities while the Commission
considers any further action.
39 For a detailed description of the costs and
benefits of Rule 15b12–1T, see also Interim Release
at 41684.
40 Better Markets Letter. But see SIFMA/ISDA
Letter.
41 See Interim Release at 48683.
42 See id. at 41684.
43 Morgan Lewis Letter.
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ETFs.44 It does not appear that currency
ETFs would necessarily function as
effectively in mitigating the currency
risk of particular securities transactions,
because the precise timing and amount
of a securities transaction may not be
readily matched to a currency ETF, as
conversion trades are customer-specific
and typically designed to facilitate
particular securities transactions,
whereas currency ETFs generally are
designed to provide broad exposure to
exchange rate movements. The contracts
used to complete forex conversions do
have close substitutes in exchangetraded currency futures, as both involve
the exchange of currency at a future
date. However, as with currency ETFs,
the precise timing and amount of a
securities transaction may not be easily
matched to exchange-traded futures
contracts, which have standardized
maturity dates and notional amounts.
Off-exchange forwards, on the other
hand, can be easily customized to match
a particular transaction. Additionally,
exchange-traded futures are not as
effective at mitigating risks between the
trade and settlement dates, since markto-market margin requirements expose
the investor to additional cash flow risk.
The Commission understands that
conversion trades can be replicated at
futures commission merchants.
However, as a practical matter, this
would require the customer to maintain
multiple accounts, which could increase
transaction costs and reduce efficiency
relative to conversion trades performed
within a broker-dealer.
B. Alternatives Considered
The Commission considered certain
alternatives to extending Rule 15b12–
1T. One alternative would be to let Rule
15b12–1T expire on its original
expiration date, and so preclude brokerdealers from engaging in certain types of
retail forex business other than,
potentially, conversion trades, at least
until such time as the Commission were
to adopt final rules in this area. The
benefit of this alternative would be that
the abuses Congress sought to address
through Dodd-Frank Act Section 724
would be addressed through this
complete prohibition. The cost of this
alternative would be that an outright
prohibition on retail forex activity
would interfere with certain business
activities engaged in by broker-dealers
that are potentially beneficial for their
customers, in particular the potential
benefit to customers relating to
conversion trades. We note in this
alternative approach, retail customers of
44 See Philadelphia Financial Letter. See also
Better Markets Letter.
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broker-dealers would be required to
open an account with a futures
commission merchant or other financial
service provider merely to engage in
currency transactions intended to
mitigate risks in connection with
brokerage transactions in foreign
securities. While this shifting to services
to another intermediary would impose
additional costs, retail customers may,
however, benefit from the protection of
rules to which those intermediaries are
subject.45
The Commission has not adopted this
alternative at this time for the reasons
discussed above, and in particular
because of concerns that we not disrupt
potentially beneficial market practices,
such as conversion trades that may
serve to minimize a retail customer’s
exposure to the risk of changes in
foreign currency rates in connection
with the customer’s purchase or sale of
a security. In addition, we have not
adopted this alternative because the
CFTC’s interpretation regarding
conversion trades is not yet settled.
The Commission also considered
adopting Rule 15b12–1T as a final,
permanent rule. While the direct costs
and benefits of this alternative would be
minimal (as it would simply continue
the existing regulatory requirements for
broker-dealers engaging in retail forex
transactions), it nevertheless could have
broader impacts on the markets given
that other regulators have now adopted
or proposed final rules with various
specific requirements relating to retail
forex that impose different requirements
on market intermediaries than those the
Commission imposes on broker-dealers
under Rule 15b12–1T.46 The lack of
comparable rules across the various
intermediaries engaging in a retail forex
business could lead to regulatory
arbitrage or regulatory gaps. The
Commission is considering alternatives,
including proposing rules pertaining to
retail forex that are more tailored than
Rule 15b12–1T and that would be more
closely aligned with those of the other
regulators but has deferred a
determination pending the resolution by
the CFTC of the pending request in the
ABA/GFMA Letter concerning the
treatment of conversion trades.
C. Benefits
Rule 15b12–1T was designed to
preserve retail customers’ access to the
forex markets through broker-dealers
and so promote efficiency by, for
example, permitting retail customers to
continue to enter into forex transactions
in connection with trades in foreign
45 See
supra note 6.
46 Id.
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securities, as part of their brokerage
activities until such time as the
Commission allows Rule 15b12–1T to
expire or adopts final, permanent rules
in this area. Without the Commission
acting to extend Rule 15b12–1T, brokerdealers would be required to exit certain
types of retail forex business, which
could require retail customers to engage
in forex transactions through a futures
commission merchant or other service
provider. This could be economically
inefficient. In particular, to the extent
that access to the foreign exchange
markets through broker-dealers provides
hedging and conversion opportunities
for foreign investments, economic
benefits may accrue to retail
customers.47 To the extent that the
CFTC takes the view that some or all
conversion trades remain subject to the
retail forex prohibition, and as noted in
the Interim Release, the benefits of these
trades may not be as easily or efficiently
replicated outside of the brokerdealer.48 Furthermore, by continuing to
preserve a channel for broker-dealers’
retail customers to access forex
transactions through broker-dealers, the
extension of the interim final temporary
rule will continue to prevent any loss of
competition in the retail forex market
that could result if broker-dealers were
required to exit the business. Moreover,
extending the term of the rule will
likely, for the period of the extended
term, maintain the status quo for brokerdealers with respect to other regulated
intermediaries offering retail forex
services, whose regulators have adopted
(or have proposed to adopt) rules
targeted to retail forex with which those
intermediaries must comply.49
Extending the term of the rule would
not necessarily promote competition
between broker-dealers and the other
regulated intermediaries, as brokerdealers would continue to offer retail
forex services under Rule 15b12–1T
which, in general, imposes requirements
that arguably could be viewed as less
burdensome than those that have
become (or are proposed to become)
applicable to other regulated
intermediaries. Competition among
broker-dealers would most likely not be
affected by extending the term of the
rule.
Because the regulatory requirements
for broker-dealers operating in the retail
forex market will remain unchanged,
extending the expiration date of Rule
15b12–1T will impose no new burden
on competition. Similarly, since the rule
preserves an existing regulatory
47 See
Interim Release at 41684.
48 See id.
49 See supra note 6.
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structure, the Commission does not
expect that extending the term of the
rule would result in any potential
impairment of the capital formation
process.
D. Costs
Because Rule 15b12–1T preserves the
regulatory regime that had been in place
prior to the effective date of Section
742(c) of the Dodd-Frank Act, the
extension of the rule imposes no new
regulatory burdens beyond those that
already existed for broker-dealers
engaged in a retail forex business. The
Commission recognizes that brokerdealers will face regulatory costs and
requirements associated with operating
in the retail forex market, but these costs
and requirements are those they already
shouldered from engaging in the
business.50 As discussed above and in
the Interim Release, the Commission is
aware of potentially abusive practices
that may be occurring in the retail forex
market. To the extent that such practices
continue, customers may bear the costs
associated with these abuses. We are
monitoring potential fraud involved in
forex within our jurisdiction,52 and our
staff has also alerted investors to the
risks of retail forex trading.53 The
Commission believes, on balance, that
the cost of market disruption that may
occur if the Commission does not
extend Rule 15b12–1T, particularly with
respect to conversion transactions that
may not be easily replicated outside of
the broker-dealer,54 justifies the cost of
maintaining the current regulatory
regime while the Commission considers
proposing rules in light of additional
developments, including the recent
request for the CFTC’s interpretation
regarding conversion trades.55
50 As described in the Interim Release, these costs
include costs related to disclosure, recordkeeping
and documentation, capital and margin, reporting,
and business conduct. A broker-dealer that
currently engages in forex transactions with retail
customers, for example, incurs costs associated
with establishing, maintaining, and implementing
policies and procedures to comply with regulatory
requirements; preparing disclosure documents;
establishing and maintaining forex-related business
records; and preparing filings with the Commission,
which may include legal and accounting fees.
Interim Release at 41684.
52 For instance, we recently brought an
enforcement action against the CEO of a purported
foreign currency trading firm, alleging fraud by that
person. See SEC v. Jeffery A. Lowrance, et al., Case
No. CV–11–3451, press release, complaint and
litigation release, available at https://www.sec.gov/
news/press/2011/2011-147.htm.
53 See Investor Bulletin: Foreign Currency
Exchange (Forex) Trading for Individual Investors
(July 2011), available at https://www.sec.gov/
investor/alerts/forextrading.pdf.
54 See Interim Release at 41684.
55 Id.
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E. Conclusion
Because the extension of Rule 15b12–
1T will not affect the regulatory
requirements for broker-dealers
operating in the retail forex market, this
extension will impose no new burden
on competition. Similarly, because the
rule’s extension does not alter the
existing regulatory structure, the
Commission does not expect any
potential impairment of the capital
formation process. To the extent that
potentially abusive practices continue
in the retail forex market, the market
will continue to bear the costs
associated with any such abuses and the
resultant inefficient provision of
services across the market. Because
extending Rule 15b12–1T does not alter
the existing regulatory structure or
regime, the Commission does not expect
any potential impairment of the capital
formation process, especially as the
rule’s extension allows retail customers
to continue to have access through
broker-dealers to hedging transactions,
conversion trades, and other forex
transactions, without the need to shift
business and open new accounts at
other market intermediaries.
IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
Rule 15b12–1T does not impose any
new ‘‘collection of information’’
requirements within the meaning of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(‘‘PRA’’),56 or create any new filing,
reporting, recordkeeping, or disclosure
reporting requirements for brokerdealers that are or plan to be engaged in
a retail forex business. In the Interim
Release, the Commission requested
comment on its conclusion that there
are no collections of information.57 The
Commission received no comments
relating to the PRA analysis.
Accordingly, the Commission maintains
its PRA analysis set forth in the Interim
Release for purposes of this extension.
V. Other Matters
A. Administrative Procedure Act
The Administrative Procedure Act
generally requires an agency to publish
notice of a proposed rulemaking in the
Federal Register.58 This requirement
does not apply, however, if the agency
‘‘for good cause finds * * * that notice
and public procedure are impracticable,
unnecessary, or contrary to the public
interest.’’ 59 The Administrative
Procedure Act also generally requires
that an agency publish an adopted rule
56 44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
Interim Release at 41683–84.
58 See 5 U.S.C. 553(b).
59 Id.
57 See
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in the Federal Register 30 days before
it becomes effective.60 This
requirement, however, does not apply if
the agency finds good cause for making
the rule effective sooner.61 The
Commission finds that there is good
cause to extend the expiration date of
Rule 15b12–1T to July 16, 2013, without
notice and comment and not to delay
the effective date of the extension. The
Commission further finds that notice
and solicitation of comment on the
extension is impracticable, unnecessary,
or contrary to the public interest.62
As discussed above, on April 18,
2012, a group of commenters asked the
CFTC, as well as other Federal
regulatory agencies (including the
Commission), to find that forex
transactions that are solely incidental to,
and are initiated for the sole purpose of,
permitting a client to complete a
transaction in a foreign security, socalled ‘‘conversion trades,’’ would not
be subject to the retail forex prohibition
under section 2 of the CEA.63 We
anticipate that the CFTC will address
this request in the context of the
Products Definition Release. An
interpretation by the CFTC that
conversion trades are not subject to the
statutory prohibition could affect the
need for, or the extent and reach of, any
Commission rulemaking for retail forex
transactions generally. Commenters
have stated that conversion trades
comprise the vast majority of retail forex
transactions engaged in by brokerdealers,64 and permitting conversion
trades by broker-dealers was one of the
reasons we adopted Rule 15b12–1T.65
As we previously have noted, there are
other types of forex transactions brokerdealers engage in which may be
potentially beneficial for retail
customers, such as using forex to hedge
portfolio currency risk or to provide
portfolio diversification.66 The potential
CFTC interpretation means that further
rulemaking could well confront a very
different set of transactions than
contemplated in April 2012, one
focused not on conversion trades, but
rather on these other types of forex
transactions. It also means that further
rulemaking would need to consider
whether there are classes of conversion
trades not excluded under any final
interpretation that may be adopted by
the CFTC that must be addressed
60 See
5 U.S.C. 553(d).
61 Id.
62 See
5 U.S.C. 553(b) and (d).
63 See ABA/GFMA Letter.
64 See Morgan Lewis Letter.
65 See Interim Release at 41684.
66 See id. See also SIFMA/ISDA Letter (Annex A,
Part I).
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separately. Accordingly, if the CEA is
interpreted so that certain conversion
trades would not be prohibited, we
would want to consider what, if
anything, we believe is appropriate with
respect to proposing and adopting a
permanent rule in this area in light of
the diverse classes of transactions—
beyond the conversion trades that have
been the focus of comments to date—
that any such rule may need to consider.
Accordingly, in view of these very
recent developments, the Commission
has determined that it would be
impracticable to publish notice of the
proposed extension.
In making this finding of good
cause,67 the Commission has decided to
maintain the current regulatory regime
in order to avoid disruption for
investors engaging in retail forex
transactions through broker-delaers,
until such time as the Commission
makes any final decision with regard to
permanent rulemaking in this area, in
light of any potential interpretation by
the CFTC. In particular, the Commission
considered that not extending the
expiration date, or allowing the
extension to be delayed, would cause
disruption to the markets and
potentially harm investors, as retail
forex transactions, including conversion
trades, would, as of July 16, 2012, the
original expiration date of Rule 15b12–
1T, be prohibited. For the same reasons,
the Commission finds good cause not to
delay the effective date of this extension
for 30 days.
In the event that the Commission
determines to propose a permanent rule
to replace Rule 15b12–1T, the
Commission will provide notice and
solicit comment on that proposal.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Certification
In the Interim Release, the
Commission certified that pursuant to 5
U.S.C. 605(b), Rule 15b12–1T would not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
As explained in the Interim Release,
although Rule 15b12–1T applies to
broker-dealers that may engage in retail
forex transactions, which may include
small businesses, any costs or regulatory
burdens incurred as a result of the rule
are the same as those incurred by small
broker-dealers prior to the effective date
67 This finding also satisfies the requirements of
5 U.S.C. 808(2), allowing the rules to become
effective notwithstanding the requirement of 5
U.S.C. 801 (if a federal agency finds that notice and
public comment are ‘‘impractical, unnecessary or
contrary to the public interest,’’ a rule ‘‘shall take
effect at such time as the federal agency
promulgating the rule determines’’).
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41677
of Section 742 of the Dodd-Frank Act.68
We also noted that the rule would
impose no new regulatory obligations,
costs, or burdens on such brokerdealers. Thus, there would not be a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. In
the Interim Release, we requested
comment on our conclusion that Rule
15b12–1T should not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The
Commission received no comments
addressing this issue. In light of this, as
well as the fact that we are making no
change to Rule 15b12–1T apart from
extending its expiration date, we hereby
certify pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b) that
extending Rule 15b12–1T will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
VI. Statutory Authority and Text of
Rule and Amendment
Pursuant to section 2(c)(2) of the
Commodity Exchange Act, as well as the
Exchange Act as amended, the
Commission is amending Exchange Act
Rule 15b12–1T.
List of Subjects in 17 CFR Part 240
Brokers, Consumer protection,
Currency, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
In accordance with the foregoing, the
Securities and Exchange Commission is
amending Title 17, chapter II, of the
Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
Text of the Rule and Amendment
PART 240—GENERAL RULES AND
REGULATIONS, SECURITIES
EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
1. The general authority citation for
Part 240 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77c, 77d, 77g, 77j,
77s, 77z–2, 77z–3, 77eee, 77ggg, 77nnn,
77sss, 77ttt, 78c, 78d, 78e, 78f, 78g, 78i, 78j,
78j–1, 78k, 78k–1, 78l, 78m, 78n, 78n–1, 78o,
78o–4, 78p, 78q, 78s, 78u–5, 78w, 78x, 78ll,
78mm, 80a–20, 80a–23, 80a–29, 80a–37, 80b–
3, 80b–4, 80b–11, and 7201 et. seq.; 18 U.S.C.
1350; 12 U.S.C. 5221(e)(3); and 7 U.S.C.
2(c)(2)(E), unless otherwise noted.
*
*
*
§ 240.15b12–1T
*
*
[Amended]
2. Revise paragraph (d) of
§ 240.15b12–1T to read as follows:
■
§ 240.15b12–1T Brokers or dealers
engaged in a retail forex business.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) This section will expire and no
longer be effective on July 16, 2013.
Dated: July 11, 2012.
68 See
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By the Commission.
Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2012–17261 Filed 7–13–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security
Administration
29 CFR Part 2550
RIN 1210–AB54
Amendment Relating to Reasonable
Contract or Arrangement Under
Section 408(b)(2)—Fee Disclosure/Web
Page
Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Labor.
ACTION: Direct final rule.
AGENCY:
This document revises the
mailing address and web-based
submission procedures for filing certain
notices under the Department of Labor
(Department) Employee Benefits
Security Administration’s fiduciarylevel fee disclosure regulation under
section 408(b)(2) of the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974
(ERISA). Responsible plan fiduciaries of
employee pension benefit plans must
file these notices with the Department to
obtain relief from ERISA’s prohibited
transaction provisions that otherwise
may apply when a covered service
provider to the plan fails to disclose
information in accordance with the
regulation’s requirements.
DATES: This amendment to the 408(b)(2)
regulation is effective September 14,
2012, without further action or notice,
unless significant adverse comment is
received by August 15, 2012. If
significant adverse comment is received,
the Department will publish a timely
withdrawal of this amendment in the
Federal Register.
ADDRESSES: Written comments may be
submitted to the addresses specified
below. All comments will be made
available to the public. Warning: Do not
include any personally identifiable
information (such as name, address, or
other contact information) or
confidential business information that
you do not want publicly disclosed. All
comments may be posted on the Internet
and can be retrieved by most Internet
search engines. Comments may be
submitted anonymously.
Comments, identified by RIN 1210–
AB54, may be submitted by one of the
following methods:
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SUMMARY:
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• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Email: e-ORI@dol.gov.
• Mail or Hand Delivery: Office of
Regulations and Interpretations,
Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Room N–5655, U.S.
Department of Labor, 200 Constitution
Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20210,
Attention: RIN 1210–AB54; Class
Exemption Notice—Web Submission.
Comments received by the
Department of Labor may be posted
without change to https://www.
regulations.gov and https://www.dol.gov/
ebsa, and will be made available for
public inspection at the Public
Disclosure Room, N–1513, Employee
Benefits Security Administration, 200
Constitution Avenue NW., Washington,
DC 20210.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Allison Wielobob, Office of Regulations
and Interpretations, Employee Benefits
Security Administration, (202) 693–
8500. This is not a toll-free number.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Background
On February 3, 2012, the Department
published a final regulation under
ERISA section 408(b)(2) (the ‘‘408(b)(2)
regulation’’), requiring that certain
service providers to pension plans
disclose information about the service
providers’ compensation and potential
conflicts of interest.1 These disclosure
requirements were established to
provide guidance for compliance with a
statutory exemption from ERISA’s
prohibited transaction provisions. If the
disclosure requirements of the 408(b)(2)
regulation are not satisfied, a prohibited
provision of services under ERISA
section 406(a)(1)(C) will occur, with
consequences for both the responsible
plan fiduciary and the covered service
provider. However, paragraph (c)(1)(ix)
of the final regulation exempts a
responsible plan fiduciary from the
prohibited transaction restrictions, if the
fiduciary takes certain specified steps
upon discovery of a disclosure failure.
Among other steps, the responsible plan
fiduciary must make a written request to
the covered service provider for the
undisclosed information. If the covered
service provider does not comply with
this request within 90 days, the
responsible plan fiduciary must so
notify the Department.
The final 408(b)(2) regulation, in
paragraph (c)(1)(ix)(F), provides two
alternative methods for submitting such
notices to the Department. Responsible
PO 00000
1 77
FR 5632 (Feb. 3, 2012).
Frm 00016
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
plan fiduciaries may send notices to the
following address: U.S. Department of
Labor, Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Office of Enforcement,
200 Constitution Ave. NW., Suite 600,
Washington, DC 20210. Alternatively,
notices may be sent electronically to
OE-DelinquentSPnotice@dol.gov. The
direct final rule published today, and
described below, amends these
submission procedures to reflect a new
mailing address and to provide for
electronic submission through the
Department’s Web site.
B. Overview of Amendment to 408(b)(2)
Regulation
The direct final rule being published
today as part of this notice amends 29
CFR 2550.408b–2(c)(1)(ix)(F) to revise
the mailing address and enhance the
web-based submission procedure for
responsible plan fiduciaries to file
required notices under the regulation’s
fiduciary class exemption provision.
Fiduciaries may continue to send paper
notices to the Department; however, a
dedicated post office box has been
established to replace the original
mailing address. The new mailing
address is: U.S. Department of Labor,
Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Office of Enforcement,
P.O. Box 75296, Washington, DC 20013.
Further, effective September 14, 2012,
the Department is eliminating the
previously available email address (OEDelinquentSPnotice@dol.gov). Instead,
pursuant to instructions that will be
separately provided by the Department,
responsible plan fiduciaries who wish
to submit notices electronically will be
able to do so through a dedicated link
on the Department’s Web site, at www.
dol.gov/ebsa/regs/
feedisclosurefailurenotice.html. This
Web page will include clear instructions
for how to submit the required
notification and will provide immediate
confirmation to responsible plan
fiduciaries that the notice has been
received by the Department.
The Department believes that the new
web submission procedure will benefit
both responsible plan fiduciaries and
the Department and, therefore, does not
anticipate any significant adverse
comment on this amendment. The
submission process will be easier for
responsible plan fiduciaries, because the
Web page will include clear instructions
and will assist responsible plan
fiduciaries by ensuring that they include
all of the information required by the
regulation’s notice provision. Plan
fiduciaries, especially for small plans,
will be more easily able to take
advantage of the relief provided by the
408(b)(2) regulation’s class exemption
E:\FR\FM\16JYR1.SGM
16JYR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 136 (Monday, July 16, 2012)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 41671-41678]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-17261]
=======================================================================
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
17 CFR Part 240
[Release No. 34-67405; File No. S7-30-11]
RIN 3235-AL19
Extension of Interim Final Temporary Rule on Retail Foreign
Exchange Transactions
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.
ACTION: Interim final temporary rule; extension.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'') is
amending interim final temporary Rule 15b12-1T under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (``Exchange Act'') to extend the date on which the
rule will expire from July 16, 2012 to July 16, 2013.
DATES: Effective Date: July 16, 2012. The expiration date of interim
final temporary Rule 15b12-1T (17 CFR 240.15b12-1T) is extended to July
16, 2013.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Joanne Rutkowski, Branch Chief, Bonnie
Gauch, Senior Special Counsel, and Leila Bham, Special Counsel,
Division of Trading and Markets, at (202) 551-5550, Securities and
Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE., Washington, DC 20549.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Commission is extending the expiration
date for Rule 15b12-1T under the Exchange Act.
I. Discussion
Section 742 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act (``Dodd-Frank Act'') \1\ amended the Commodity Exchange
Act (``CEA'') to provide that a person for which there is a Federal
regulatory agency,\2\ including a broker or dealer (``broker-dealer'')
registered under section 15(b) (except pursuant to paragraph (11)
thereof) or 15C of the Exchange Act,\3\ shall not enter into, or offer
to enter into, a foreign exchange (``forex'') transaction \4\ with a
person who is not an ``eligible contract participant'' \5\ (``ECP'')
except pursuant to a rule or regulation of a Federal regulatory agency
allowing the transaction under such terms and conditions as the Federal
regulatory agency shall prescribe (``retail forex rule'').\6\ A Federal
regulatory agency's
[[Page 41672]]
retail forex rule must treat all forex agreements, contracts, and
transactions and their functional or economic equivalents,
similarly.\7\ Any retail forex rule also must prescribe appropriate
requirements with respect to disclosure, recordkeeping, capital and
margin, reporting, business conduct, and documentation, and may include
such other standards or requirements as the Federal regulatory agency
determines to be necessary.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010).
\2\ 7 U.S.C. 2(c)(2)(E)(i), as amended by Sec. 742(c) of the
Dodd-Frank Act, defines a ``Federal regulatory agency'' to mean the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (``CFTC''), the Securities and
Exchange Commission, an appropriate Federal banking agency, the
National Credit Union Association, and the Farm Credit
Administration.
\3\ 7 U.S.C. 2(c)(2)(B)(i)(II).
\4\ 7 U.S.C. 2(c)(2)(B)(i)(I). Transactions described in CEA
section 2(c)(2)(B)(i)(I) include ``an agreement, contract, or
transaction in foreign currency that * * * is a contract of sale of
a commodity for future delivery (or an option on such a contract) or
an option (other than an option executed or traded on a national
securities exchange registered pursuant to section 6(a) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78f(a)).''
\5\ Section 1a(18) of the CEA defines ``eligible contract
participant'' generally to mean certain regulated persons; entities
that meet a specified total asset test (e.g., a corporation,
partnership, proprietorship, organization, trust, or other entity
with total assets exceeding $10 million) or an alternative monetary
test coupled with a non-monetary component (e.g., an entity with a
net worth in excess of $1 million and engaging in business-related
hedging; or certain employee benefit plans, the investment decisions
of which are made by one of four enumerated types of regulated
entities); and certain governmental entities and individuals that
meet defined thresholds. 7 U.S.C. 2(c)(2)(E)(i). The CFTC has
adopted rules further clarifying the definition of ``eligible
contract participant'' in the CEA. See 17 CFR 1.3(m). See also
Further Definition of ``Swap Dealer,'' ``Security-Based Swap
Dealer,'' ``Major Swap Participant,'' ``Major Security-Based Swap
Participant'' and ``Eligible Contract Participant,'' Exchange Act
Release No. 66868 (April 27, 2012), 77 FR 30596 (May 23, 2012).
Because transactions that are the subject of this release are
commonly referred to as ``retail forex transactions,'' this release
uses the term ``retail customer'' to describe persons who are not
ECPs.
\6\ See 7 U.S.C. 2(c)(2)(B)(i)(II) and 7 U.S.C.
2(c)(2)(E)(ii)(I). On September 10, 2010, the CFTC adopted a retail
forex rule for persons subject to its jurisdiction. See Regulation
of Off-Exchange Retail Foreign Exchange Transactions and
Intermediaries, 75 FR 55410 (September 10, 2010). The CFTC had
proposed its rules regarding retail forex transactions prior to the
enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act. See Regulation of Off-Exchange
Retail Foreign Exchange Transactions and Intermediaries, 75 FR 3282
(January 20, 2010). The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(``FDIC'') and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
(``OCC'') have adopted similar rules. See Retail Foreign Exchange
Transactions, 76 FR 40779 (July 12, 2011); Retail Foreign Exchange
Transactions, 76 FR 41375 (July 14, 2011). The Board of Governors of
the Federal Reserve System (the ``Board'') has proposed rules for
bank holding companies. See Retail Foreign Exchange Transactions, 76
FR 46652 (August 3, 2011).
\7\ 7 U.S.C. 2(c)(2)(E)(iii)(II).
\8\ 7 U.S.C. 2(c)(2)(E)(iii)(I).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The prohibition in CEA section 2(c)(2)(B) took effect on July 16,
2011. Beginning on that date, broker-dealers, including broker-dealers
also registered with the CFTC as futures commission merchants (``BD-
FCMs''), for which the Commission is the ``Federal regulatory agency,''
were no longer able to engage in off-exchange retail forex futures and
options transactions with a customer except pursuant to a retail forex
rule issued by the Commission.\9\ On July 13, 2011, the Commission
adopted interim final temporary Rule 15b12-1T, which temporarily
permits a broker-dealer to engage in a ``retail forex business,'' as
defined in the rule, in compliance with the Exchange Act, the rules and
regulations thereunder, and the rules of the self-regulatory
organizations of which the broker-dealer is a member, insofar as they
are applicable to retail forex transactions.\10\ We explained at the
time that our action was intended to preserve potentially beneficial
market practices that, for example, may serve to minimize a retail
customer's exposure to the risk of changes in foreign currency rates in
connection with the customer's purchase or sale of a security. We also
discussed in the Interim Release that there may be potentially abusive
practices such as lack of disclosure about fees and forex pricing, and
insufficient capital or margin requirements occurring in the retail
forex market, and sought comment on these practices and steps we should
take to seek to prevent them.\11\ Rule 15b12-1T, by its terms and
without further Commission action, would have expired on July 16, 2012.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ See 7 U.S.C. 2(c)(2)(B)(i)(II)(cc) (giving the CFTC
jurisdiction over retail forex transactions with FCMs that, among
other things, are not registered broker-dealers) and 7 U.S.C.
2(c)(2)(C)(i)(I)(aa). In addition, a commenter noted that the CFTC
``does not have jurisdiction over retail foreign exchange activities
conducted by broker-dealers, including entities that are dually
registered as broker-dealers with the SEC and as futures commission
merchants (`FCMs') with the CFTC.'' SIFMA/ISDA Letter at 1.
\10\ See Retail Foreign Exchange Transactions, Exchange Act
Release No. 64874 (July 13, 2011), 76 FR 41676 (July 15, 2011)
(adopting 17 CFR 240.15b12-1T) (``Interim Release'').
\11\ Our Office of Investor Education Advocacy has published an
Investor Bulletin providing information about retail forex
investing, including information about the risks involved in that
trading. See Investor Bulletin: Foreign Currency Exchange (Forex)
Trading for Individual Investors (July 2011), available at https://www.sec.gov/investor/alerts/forextrading.pdf. The CFTC and the North
American Securities Administrators Association also have published
an alert regarding risks of fraud in forex markets. See Foreign
Exchange Currency Fraud: CFTC/NASAA Investor Alert, available at
https://www.cftc.gov/ConsumerProtection/FraudAwarenessPrevention/ForeignCurrencyTrading/cftcnasaaforexalert. We recently brought an
enforcement action against the CEO of a purported foreign currency
trading firm alleging fraud by that person. See SEC v. Jeffery A.
Lowrance, et al., Case No. CV-11-3451, press release, complaint and
litigation release, available at https://www.sec.gov/news/press/2011/2011-147.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission received comments on the Interim Release, which are
summarized below.\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ The comments are available at https://www.sec.gov/comments/s7-30-11/s73011.shtml. In addition to other specific requests for
comment, the Commission requested comment in the Interim Release as
to whether Rule 15b12-1T should be extended, and if so for how long.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nine commenters asked the Commission to preserve their
ability to engage in retail forex transactions.\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ See email comments from Raul Gonzalez, dated July 17, 2011,
James Peck, dated July 17, 2011, Bob Flowers, dated July 17, 2011,
James M. Beatty, dated July 17, 2011, Angela Li, dated July 17,
2011, Mark A. McDonnell, dated July 21, 2011, Mark Smith, dated July
23, 2011, John Baur, dated July 27, 2011, and Ronald Covington,
dated October 23, 2011.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter stated that the Commission should rescind
the rule and allow the ban to take effect or, in the alternative, to
limit the scope of the rule to a narrowly defined class of forex
transactions, specifically hedging and the facilitation of settlement
of foreign securities.\14\ The commenter further stated that in
adopting Rule 15b12-1T, the Commission did not provide notice of and
opportunity for comment on the rule, and did not include a ``concrete
assessment or quantification of the need'' for the relief granted by
this rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ See Letter from Dennis M. Kelleher, President and CEO, and
Stephen W. Hall, Securities Specialist, Better Markets, Inc. to Ms.
Elizabeth Murphy, Secretary, Commission, dated September 12, 2011
(``Better Markets Letter''). We understand the commenter's reference
to transactions entered into to facilitate the settlement of foreign
securities to mean the conversion trades discussed infra, in the
text accompanying notes 19 and 20.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Another commenter provided data on the returns of retail
forex accounts at futures commission merchants and retail foreign
exchange dealers, and offered recommendations that the commenter
believed would improve retail forex transactions and identified areas
of retail forex that the commenter believed warrants further study.\15\
This commenter also suggested that currency exchange-traded funds
(``currency ETFs'') would provide an alternative means for effectively
hedging against currency risk.\16\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ Letter from Justin Hughes, CFA and Managing Member,
Philadelphia Financial Management of San Francisco to Ms. Elizabeth
Murphy, Secretary, Commission, dated August 2, 2011 (``Philadelphia
Financial Letter''). See also letter from P. Georgia Bullitt,
Michael A. Piracci and F. Mindy Lo, Morgan Lewis to Joseph Furey,
Bonnie L. Gauch and Adam Yonce, Commission, dated July 28, 2011
(``Morgan Lewis Letter'').
\16\ See Philadelphia Financial Letter. See also Better Markets
Letter. While certain forex transactions, in particular portfolio
hedges or currency transactions that are part of a diversified
investment strategy, may have close substitutes in currency ETFs,
currency conversions that facilitate securities transactions
(discussed in more detail below) may not have such close
substitutes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter provided data from five large broker-dealers
showing that the notional amount of foreign exchange conversion trades
at those broker-dealers accounts for approximately 90% of those firms'
foreign exchange transactions. The firms' data further indicated that
99% of customer accounts have entered into a conversion trade, though
not all trades within an account may be conversion trades.\17\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ See Morgan Lewis Letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One group of commenters urged the Commission to adopt a
final rule based on the approach followed in the interim final
temporary rule, with certain modifications.\18\ These commenters
maintained that it is in the best interests of retail customers to have
the opportunity to conduct forex activity as part of their broader
investing activity, through their broker-dealers, with the assistance
of personnel who have expertise in forex.
More recently, in April 2012, a group of commenters asked the CFTC,
as well as other Federal regulatory agencies (including the
Commission), to take the view that forex transactions that are solely
incidental to, and that are initiated for the sole purpose of,
permitting a customer to complete a transaction in a foreign security,
so-called ``conversion trades,'' are not prohibited retail forex
transactions for purposes of section 2 of the CEA.\19\
[[Page 41673]]
These commenters maintain that Congress did not intend to include
within the scope of the CEA section 2 prohibition currency transactions
effected in connection with securities transactions, stating that
``[s]uch transactions do not involve speculation in the underlying
currencies and, to the contrary, will result in an exchange of
currencies to be used to settle the relevant securities transactions.''
\20\ We anticipate that the interpretation will be addressed in the
context of the CFTC's and SEC's joint rulemaking to further define
terms such as ``swap'' and ``security-based swap'' under Title VII of
the Dodd-Frank Act (``Products Definition Release'').\21\ We further
anticipate that the rulemaking will be finalized in the near future and
the CFTC will provide at that time its views of whether conversion
trades are excluded from the prohibition under CEA section 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ See Letter from Kenneth E. Bentsen, Jr., Executive Vice
President Public Policy and Advocacy, SIFMA and Robert Pickel,
Executive Vice Chairman, ISDA, to Ms. Elizabeth Murphy, Secretary,
Commission, dated October 17, 2011 (``SIFMA/ISDA Letter''). See also
Memorandum from SIFMA and ISDA to Marc Menchel, Gary Goldsholle,
Matthew Vitek, Rudy Verra, Glen Garofalo, FINRA, dated February 23,
2012.
\19\ See Letter from Phoebe A. Papageorgiou, Senior Counsel,
American Bankers Association, and James Kemp, Managing Director,
Global Foreign Exchange Division, to Thomas J. Curry, Comptroller,
OCC, Robert E. Feldman, Executive Secretary, FDIC, Jennifer J.
Johnson, Secretary, the Board, David Stanwick, Secretary, CFTC, and
Elizabeth Murphy, Secretary, Commission, dated April 18, 2012
(``ABA/GFMA Letter'').
\20\ Id. at 2.
\21\ See also Further Definition of ``Swap,'' ``Security-Based
Swap,'' and ``Security-Based Swap Agreement''; Mixed Swaps;
Security-Based Swap Agreement Recordkeeping, Securities Act Release
No. 9204 (April 29, 2011), 76 FR 29818 (May 23, 2011) (proposing
release).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The ABA/GFMA Letter and the CFTC response affect the scope,
substance, and timing of our consideration of further rulemaking for
retail forex transactions. If the CFTC were to adopt the interpretation
put forth by the ABA/GFMA, conversion trades, which commenters have
asserted comprise the overwhelming majority of retail forex
transactions conducted through broker-dealers,\22\ would not fall
within the scope of the prohibition. The potential for such
interpretation means that further rulemaking could well confront a very
different set of transactions than contemplated in April 2012, one
focused not on conversion trades, but rather on apparently less common
and more diverse retail forex transactions identified by commenters,
such as hedging transactions and direct investments.\23\ It also means
that further rulemaking would need to consider whether there are
classes of conversion trades not excluded under any final
interpretation that may be adopted by the CFTC that must be addressed
separately. We expect to consider these types of transactions and an
appropriate regulatory approach to them in considering whether and what
permanent rules we should adopt in this area.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ See Morgan Lewis Letter.
\23\ See SIFMA/ISDA Letter (Annex A, Part I).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Extending the expiration of Rule 15b12-1T to July 16, 2013 will
provide the Commission additional time to consider carefully these
issues. The extension will help to ensure that we have sufficient time
to take such action as we may determine appropriate in this area,
particularly in light of the diverse classes of transactions--beyond
the conversion trades that have been the focus of comments to date--
that any further rulemaking may need to consider.\24\ We recognize that
commenters' views differed as to whether and to what extent we should
permit broker-dealers to continue to engage in some or all retail forex
transactions. As discussed above, some commenters urged us to permit
the statutory prohibition simply to take effect, thereby preventing
potential abuses of retail customers by broker-dealers and BD-FCMs. A
number of retail customers asked us to permit them to have continued
access to retail forex transactions through broker-dealers. Some
commenters stated that we should make certain revisions to Rule 15b12-
1T, while others favored the rule as written, stating that existing
broker-dealer regulations adequately address retail forex activities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ If the Commission adopts permanent rules for retail forex
transactions by broker-dealers before July 16, 2013, the Commission
will consider whether it is appropriate to terminate the
effectiveness of Rule 15b12-1T as part of that rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In considering commenters' views, we believe, on balance, that we
should extend the expiration date of the rule to permit further
assessment by the Commission in this area, which would be informed by
any potential CFTC interpretation regarding conversion trades. Our view
is influenced by investors' views that we should permit them to conduct
retail forex transactions with broker-dealers. We also are mindful that
while futures commission merchants that are not also broker-dealers
could continue to engage in retail forex transactions in compliance
with CFTC rules, a futures commission merchant that is also a broker-
dealer would be prohibited from engaging in retail forex transactions
if we do not extend Rule 15b12-1T. For these reasons, we are extending
the expiration date of Rule 15b12-1T to July 16, 2013 to prevent retail
customers who transact retail forex transactions through a broker-
dealer from being potentially disadvantaged by the prohibition for
retail forex transactions taking effect.\25\ Given the limited nature
of this extension, the pending request for a CFTC interpretation
regarding conversion trades, the need to further understand the
implications of the CFTC's interpretation, and the scope of comments we
are seeking before any further action is taken, we are not modifying
the interim final temporary rule other than to extend the expiration
date of Rule 15b12-1T to July 16, 2013. Absent further action by the
Commission, Rule 15b12-1T as amended will expire on July 16, 2013 at
11:59 p.m. Eastern Time.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ While retail customers could of course open an account with
a futures commission merchant (that is not also registered as a
broker-dealer) to engage in retail forex transactions, as explained
below, this could create certain inefficiencies and additional
costs. See discussion in the Economic Analysis section below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Request for Comment
The Commission requests comment regarding all aspects of the
interim final temporary rule and the current market practices involving
retail forex transactions, as well as any investor protection or other
concerns that commenters believe should be addressed by Commission
rulemaking. The Commission particularly requests comment from broker-
dealers, including BD-FCMs, that are currently engaged or plan to
engage in a retail forex business, retail customers that engage in
forex transactions, and ECPs. The Commission welcomes information from
all affected parties about the current scope and nature of retail forex
transactions. This information, together with input from market
participants and other regulators, as well as comments received on the
Interim Release, will help inform the Commission's consideration of the
appropriate regulatory framework, if any, for retail forex transactions
before or beyond the expiration of the interim final temporary rule.
The Commission seeks comment on the need for further Commission
rulemaking, should the CFTC determine that certain conversion trades
are not subject to the CEA prohibition with respect to retail forex
transactions.\26\ We specifically seek to better understand the other
types of retail forex transactions in which broker-dealers may engage,
such as forex transactions to hedge portfolio currency risk or to
diversify a portfolio, that would not be excluded from the prohibition
under section 2 of the CEA by the requested interpretation. We also
request information about what mechanisms broker-dealers use currently
to comply with existing disclosure, recordkeeping, capital and margin,
reporting, business conduct and documentation rules with respect to
each type of retail forex transaction in which they engage. What
policies and procedures and supervisory controls, for example, have
broker-
[[Page 41674]]
dealers implemented to address those transactions? We also seek comment
on what mechanisms broker-dealers use currently to comply with other
existing regulatory requirements with respect to retail forex
transactions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ See 7 U.S.C. 2(c)(2)(E)(ii)(I).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
If commenters believe further rulemaking is needed, please explain
why, and provide us with a discussion of the types of transactions for
which rules are needed and the circumstances under which such
transactions are entered into. If commenters believe further rulemaking
is not needed, please explain why not. The Commission seeks comment on
the extent to which broker-dealers' retail forex activities may be
affected, and any impact on retail customers of broker-dealers, in the
event the Commission does not adopt any further rules in this area.
The Commission also seeks comment on the retail forex activities of
BD-FCMs, and whether the Commission should adopt tailored rules for
these intermediaries. We seek comment on the nature of BD-FCM retail
forex activities, including the type of transactions in which they
engage, and which part of the dually registered entity may engage in
these activities or transactions. We also request comment on the
mechanisms BD-FCMs use currently to comply with existing disclosure,
recordkeeping, capital and margin, reporting, business conduct and
documentation rules with respect to each type of retail forex
transaction in which they engage. In connection with this specific
request for comment, please identify whether the relevant requirements
are Exchange Act Rules, CEA Rules, or rules of a particular self-
regulatory organization (``SRO'') of which the BD-FCM is a member. The
Commission also seeks comment on the extent to which the retail forex
activities of BD-FCMs may be affected, and any impact on retail
customers of BD-FCMs, in the event the Commission does not adopt any
further rules in this area.
Some commenters have suggested that if broker-dealers were
prohibited from engaging in retail forex activities, currency ETFs
would be a reasonable substitute for broker-dealer customers seeking to
hedge their currency exposures.\27\ The Commission requests comment on
whether and how currency ETFs could meet the needs of retail customers
in this regard. The Commission also requests information about how
currency ETFs (and any other financial product or service that
commenters believe could serve as a substitute for forex) could be used
more generally to meet the risk mitigation and any other needs of
retail customers that currently are addressed using retail forex
transactions. Would currency ETFs (or other financial products) hedge
currency risks in connection with foreign securities transactions in
the same manner or differently than retail forex transactions? How
would the transaction and other costs associated with currency ETFs and
retail forex transactions compare? We further seek comment on what the
associated benefits and costs would be of retail customers using
currency ETFs or some other product or service, as a substitute for
retail forex. We also seek comment on the liquidity of such alternative
products or services, the ease or difficulty of accessing and using
those products or services, and any additional risks involved in using
those products or services.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ See Philadelphia Financial Letter at 8, and Better Markets
Letter at 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission also seeks comment on whether Rule 15b12-1T should
be extended beyond July 16, 2013, and if so, why and for how long, or
whether it should be adopted as a final rule.
III. Economic Analysis
A. Introduction
Section 3(f) of the Exchange Act requires the Commission, whenever
it engages in rulemaking under the Exchange Act and is required to
consider or determine whether an action is necessary or appropriate in
the public interest, to consider, in addition to the protection of
investors, whether the action would promote efficiency, competition and
capital formation.\28\ In addition, Section 23(a)(2) of the Exchange
Act requires the Commission, when making rules under the Exchange Act,
to consider the impact such rules would have on competition.\29\
Section 23(a)(2) of the Exchange Act prohibits the Commission from
adopting any rule that would impose a burden on competition not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance of the purposes of the Exchange
Act.\30\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ See 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
\29\ See 15 U.S.C. 78w(a)(2).
\30\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We understand that under the current regulatory regime, retail
customers typically enter into foreign exchange transactions with
broker-dealers for a number of reasons. Industry participants have told
us that the most common transaction is a foreign exchange conversion
trade, in which a currency trade is made in connection with a foreign
securities transaction.\31\ Commenters have also told us that retail
customers enter into forex transactions with broker-dealers as part of
a hedging strategy. For instance, retail customers may engage in forex
transactions through broker-dealers in order to hedge currency risk in
securities or in a portfolio generally held in the customer's brokerage
account; they may also engage in these transactions in order to obtain
exposure to foreign markets as part of their investment strategy.\32\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ Morgan Lewis Letter. As explained above, the ABA/GFMA
Letter requests an interpretation that would exclude conversion
trades from the prohibition under CEA section 2.
\32\ SIFMA/ISDA Letter at 4, Annex A at 1-2.
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Congress prohibited the retail forex transactions described in CEA
section 2 except pursuant to rules adopted by the relevant Federal
regulatory agencies allowing the transactions. As we noted in the
Interim Release, some of these transactions, in particular hedging
transactions and securities conversion trades, may be beneficial to
investors.\33\ At the same time, as discussed in the Interim Release,
the Commission is aware of potentially abusive practices that may be
occurring in the retail forex market. Such practices may include, for
example, lack of disclosure about fees and forex pricing, and
insufficient capital or margin requirements.\34\
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\33\ See Interim Release at 41684.
\34\ See id.
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As discussed above, on April 18, 2012, a group of commenters asked
the CFTC, as well as other Federal regulatory agencies (including the
Commission), to take the view that forex transactions that are solely
incidental to, and are initiated for the sole purpose of, permitting a
client to complete a transaction in a foreign security, through
``conversion trades,'' would not be subject to the retail forex
prohibition under section 2 of the CEA.\35\ An interpretation by the
CFTC that conversion trades are not subject to the statutory
prohibition could significantly affect the costs and benefits of any
action by the Commission with regard to retail forex transactions going
forward. Commenters have stated that conversion trades comprise the
vast majority of retail forex transactions engaged in by broker-
dealers,\36\ but also note that there are other types of forex
transactions in which broker-dealers engage with retail customers.\37\
Because the request for the interpretation is still pending, however,
the Commission will continue to consider conversion trades as retail
forex transactions that would be
[[Page 41675]]
prohibited but for Rule 15b12-1T, for purposes of our economic
analysis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ See ABA/GFMA Letter.
\36\ See Morgan Lewis Letter.
\37\ See SIFMA/ISDA Letter, Annex A.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Extending Rule 15b12-1T maintains the regulatory framework that
currently exists for broker-dealers, and does not create any new
regulatory obligations. Furthermore, the rule preserves the ability of
broker-dealers to provide, among other services, hedging and conversion
trades to retail customers while the Commission considers what further
appropriate steps to take, if any.\38\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ To the extent that conversion trades are not excluded from
the prohibition in CEA section 2, extension of the Rule 15b12-1T
would also have the benefit of allowing customers to continue to
engage in those transactions as part of their brokerage activities
while the Commission considers any further action.
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The Commission has previously considered and discussed in the
Interim Release its economic analysis of Rule 15b12-1T.\39\ The
Commission solicited comment on its economic analysis in the Interim
Release, and received one comment that addressed but did not support
its economic analysis.\40\ As stated in the Interim Release, we adopted
Rule 15b12-1T as an interim final temporary rule to allow the existing
regulatory framework for retail forex transactions to continue for a
defined period, to avoid potentially unintended consequences from
broker-dealers immediately discontinuing their retail forex business,
and to provide the Commission sufficient time to determine the
appropriate regulatory framework regarding retail forex
transactions.\41\ Furthermore, investors who commented on the rule
asked the Commission to preserve their ability to engage in retail
forex transaction through their broker-dealers. In addition, we
included an economic analysis of the rule in the Interim Release.\42\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ For a detailed description of the costs and benefits of
Rule 15b12-1T, see also Interim Release at 41684.
\40\ Better Markets Letter. But see SIFMA/ISDA Letter.
\41\ See Interim Release at 48683.
\42\ See id. at 41684.
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As mentioned above, based on data a commenter provided of five
broker-dealers, in terms of notional amount, foreign exchange
conversion trades would account for approximately 90% of foreign
exchange transactions done through broker-dealers, and 99% of all
broker-dealer customer accounts are involved in conversion trades,
though not all trades within an account may be conversions.\43\
Commenters have told us that certain forex transactions, particularly
certain portfolio hedges, may have close substitutes in currency
ETFs.\44\ It does not appear that currency ETFs would necessarily
function as effectively in mitigating the currency risk of particular
securities transactions, because the precise timing and amount of a
securities transaction may not be readily matched to a currency ETF, as
conversion trades are customer-specific and typically designed to
facilitate particular securities transactions, whereas currency ETFs
generally are designed to provide broad exposure to exchange rate
movements. The contracts used to complete forex conversions do have
close substitutes in exchange-traded currency futures, as both involve
the exchange of currency at a future date. However, as with currency
ETFs, the precise timing and amount of a securities transaction may not
be easily matched to exchange-traded futures contracts, which have
standardized maturity dates and notional amounts. Off-exchange
forwards, on the other hand, can be easily customized to match a
particular transaction. Additionally, exchange-traded futures are not
as effective at mitigating risks between the trade and settlement
dates, since mark-to-market margin requirements expose the investor to
additional cash flow risk.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ Morgan Lewis Letter.
\44\ See Philadelphia Financial Letter. See also Better Markets
Letter.
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The Commission understands that conversion trades can be replicated
at futures commission merchants. However, as a practical matter, this
would require the customer to maintain multiple accounts, which could
increase transaction costs and reduce efficiency relative to conversion
trades performed within a broker-dealer.
B. Alternatives Considered
The Commission considered certain alternatives to extending Rule
15b12-1T. One alternative would be to let Rule 15b12-1T expire on its
original expiration date, and so preclude broker-dealers from engaging
in certain types of retail forex business other than, potentially,
conversion trades, at least until such time as the Commission were to
adopt final rules in this area. The benefit of this alternative would
be that the abuses Congress sought to address through Dodd-Frank Act
Section 724 would be addressed through this complete prohibition. The
cost of this alternative would be that an outright prohibition on
retail forex activity would interfere with certain business activities
engaged in by broker-dealers that are potentially beneficial for their
customers, in particular the potential benefit to customers relating to
conversion trades. We note in this alternative approach, retail
customers of broker-dealers would be required to open an account with a
futures commission merchant or other financial service provider merely
to engage in currency transactions intended to mitigate risks in
connection with brokerage transactions in foreign securities. While
this shifting to services to another intermediary would impose
additional costs, retail customers may, however, benefit from the
protection of rules to which those intermediaries are subject.\45\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ See supra note 6.
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The Commission has not adopted this alternative at this time for
the reasons discussed above, and in particular because of concerns that
we not disrupt potentially beneficial market practices, such as
conversion trades that may serve to minimize a retail customer's
exposure to the risk of changes in foreign currency rates in connection
with the customer's purchase or sale of a security. In addition, we
have not adopted this alternative because the CFTC's interpretation
regarding conversion trades is not yet settled.
The Commission also considered adopting Rule 15b12-1T as a final,
permanent rule. While the direct costs and benefits of this alternative
would be minimal (as it would simply continue the existing regulatory
requirements for broker-dealers engaging in retail forex transactions),
it nevertheless could have broader impacts on the markets given that
other regulators have now adopted or proposed final rules with various
specific requirements relating to retail forex that impose different
requirements on market intermediaries than those the Commission imposes
on broker-dealers under Rule 15b12-1T.\46\ The lack of comparable rules
across the various intermediaries engaging in a retail forex business
could lead to regulatory arbitrage or regulatory gaps. The Commission
is considering alternatives, including proposing rules pertaining to
retail forex that are more tailored than Rule 15b12-1T and that would
be more closely aligned with those of the other regulators but has
deferred a determination pending the resolution by the CFTC of the
pending request in the ABA/GFMA Letter concerning the treatment of
conversion trades.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ Id.
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C. Benefits
Rule 15b12-1T was designed to preserve retail customers' access to
the forex markets through broker-dealers and so promote efficiency by,
for example, permitting retail customers to continue to enter into
forex transactions in connection with trades in foreign
[[Page 41676]]
securities, as part of their brokerage activities until such time as
the Commission allows Rule 15b12-1T to expire or adopts final,
permanent rules in this area. Without the Commission acting to extend
Rule 15b12-1T, broker-dealers would be required to exit certain types
of retail forex business, which could require retail customers to
engage in forex transactions through a futures commission merchant or
other service provider. This could be economically inefficient. In
particular, to the extent that access to the foreign exchange markets
through broker-dealers provides hedging and conversion opportunities
for foreign investments, economic benefits may accrue to retail
customers.\47\ To the extent that the CFTC takes the view that some or
all conversion trades remain subject to the retail forex prohibition,
and as noted in the Interim Release, the benefits of these trades may
not be as easily or efficiently replicated outside of the broker-
dealer.\48\ Furthermore, by continuing to preserve a channel for
broker-dealers' retail customers to access forex transactions through
broker-dealers, the extension of the interim final temporary rule will
continue to prevent any loss of competition in the retail forex market
that could result if broker-dealers were required to exit the business.
Moreover, extending the term of the rule will likely, for the period of
the extended term, maintain the status quo for broker-dealers with
respect to other regulated intermediaries offering retail forex
services, whose regulators have adopted (or have proposed to adopt)
rules targeted to retail forex with which those intermediaries must
comply.\49\ Extending the term of the rule would not necessarily
promote competition between broker-dealers and the other regulated
intermediaries, as broker-dealers would continue to offer retail forex
services under Rule 15b12-1T which, in general, imposes requirements
that arguably could be viewed as less burdensome than those that have
become (or are proposed to become) applicable to other regulated
intermediaries. Competition among broker-dealers would most likely not
be affected by extending the term of the rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ See Interim Release at 41684.
\48\ See id.
\49\ See supra note 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Because the regulatory requirements for broker-dealers operating in
the retail forex market will remain unchanged, extending the expiration
date of Rule 15b12-1T will impose no new burden on competition.
Similarly, since the rule preserves an existing regulatory structure,
the Commission does not expect that extending the term of the rule
would result in any potential impairment of the capital formation
process.
D. Costs
Because Rule 15b12-1T preserves the regulatory regime that had been
in place prior to the effective date of Section 742(c) of the Dodd-
Frank Act, the extension of the rule imposes no new regulatory burdens
beyond those that already existed for broker-dealers engaged in a
retail forex business. The Commission recognizes that broker-dealers
will face regulatory costs and requirements associated with operating
in the retail forex market, but these costs and requirements are those
they already shouldered from engaging in the business.\50\ As discussed
above and in the Interim Release, the Commission is aware of
potentially abusive practices that may be occurring in the retail forex
market. To the extent that such practices continue, customers may bear
the costs associated with these abuses. We are monitoring potential
fraud involved in forex within our jurisdiction,\52\ and our staff has
also alerted investors to the risks of retail forex trading.\53\ The
Commission believes, on balance, that the cost of market disruption
that may occur if the Commission does not extend Rule 15b12-1T,
particularly with respect to conversion transactions that may not be
easily replicated outside of the broker-dealer,\54\ justifies the cost
of maintaining the current regulatory regime while the Commission
considers proposing rules in light of additional developments,
including the recent request for the CFTC's interpretation regarding
conversion trades.\55\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\50\ As described in the Interim Release, these costs include
costs related to disclosure, recordkeeping and documentation,
capital and margin, reporting, and business conduct. A broker-dealer
that currently engages in forex transactions with retail customers,
for example, incurs costs associated with establishing, maintaining,
and implementing policies and procedures to comply with regulatory
requirements; preparing disclosure documents; establishing and
maintaining forex-related business records; and preparing filings
with the Commission, which may include legal and accounting fees.
Interim Release at 41684.
\52\ For instance, we recently brought an enforcement action
against the CEO of a purported foreign currency trading firm,
alleging fraud by that person. See SEC v. Jeffery A. Lowrance, et
al., Case No. CV-11-3451, press release, complaint and litigation
release, available at https://www.sec.gov/news/press/2011/2011-147.htm.
\53\ See Investor Bulletin: Foreign Currency Exchange (Forex)
Trading for Individual Investors (July 2011), available at https://www.sec.gov/investor/alerts/forextrading.pdf.
\54\ See Interim Release at 41684.
\55\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
E. Conclusion
Because the extension of Rule 15b12-1T will not affect the
regulatory requirements for broker-dealers operating in the retail
forex market, this extension will impose no new burden on competition.
Similarly, because the rule's extension does not alter the existing
regulatory structure, the Commission does not expect any potential
impairment of the capital formation process. To the extent that
potentially abusive practices continue in the retail forex market, the
market will continue to bear the costs associated with any such abuses
and the resultant inefficient provision of services across the market.
Because extending Rule 15b12-1T does not alter the existing regulatory
structure or regime, the Commission does not expect any potential
impairment of the capital formation process, especially as the rule's
extension allows retail customers to continue to have access through
broker-dealers to hedging transactions, conversion trades, and other
forex transactions, without the need to shift business and open new
accounts at other market intermediaries.
IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
Rule 15b12-1T does not impose any new ``collection of information''
requirements within the meaning of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(``PRA''),\56\ or create any new filing, reporting, recordkeeping, or
disclosure reporting requirements for broker-dealers that are or plan
to be engaged in a retail forex business. In the Interim Release, the
Commission requested comment on its conclusion that there are no
collections of information.\57\ The Commission received no comments
relating to the PRA analysis. Accordingly, the Commission maintains its
PRA analysis set forth in the Interim Release for purposes of this
extension.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\56\ 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
\57\ See Interim Release at 41683-84.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
V. Other Matters
A. Administrative Procedure Act
The Administrative Procedure Act generally requires an agency to
publish notice of a proposed rulemaking in the Federal Register.\58\
This requirement does not apply, however, if the agency ``for good
cause finds * * * that notice and public procedure are impracticable,
unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest.'' \59\ The
Administrative Procedure Act also generally requires that an agency
publish an adopted rule
[[Page 41677]]
in the Federal Register 30 days before it becomes effective.\60\ This
requirement, however, does not apply if the agency finds good cause for
making the rule effective sooner.\61\ The Commission finds that there
is good cause to extend the expiration date of Rule 15b12-1T to July
16, 2013, without notice and comment and not to delay the effective
date of the extension. The Commission further finds that notice and
solicitation of comment on the extension is impracticable, unnecessary,
or contrary to the public interest.\62\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\58\ See 5 U.S.C. 553(b).
\59\ Id.
\60\ See 5 U.S.C. 553(d).
\61\ Id.
\62\ See 5 U.S.C. 553(b) and (d).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed above, on April 18, 2012, a group of commenters asked
the CFTC, as well as other Federal regulatory agencies (including the
Commission), to find that forex transactions that are solely incidental
to, and are initiated for the sole purpose of, permitting a client to
complete a transaction in a foreign security, so-called ``conversion
trades,'' would not be subject to the retail forex prohibition under
section 2 of the CEA.\63\ We anticipate that the CFTC will address this
request in the context of the Products Definition Release. An
interpretation by the CFTC that conversion trades are not subject to
the statutory prohibition could affect the need for, or the extent and
reach of, any Commission rulemaking for retail forex transactions
generally. Commenters have stated that conversion trades comprise the
vast majority of retail forex transactions engaged in by broker-
dealers,\64\ and permitting conversion trades by broker-dealers was one
of the reasons we adopted Rule 15b12-1T.\65\ As we previously have
noted, there are other types of forex transactions broker-dealers
engage in which may be potentially beneficial for retail customers,
such as using forex to hedge portfolio currency risk or to provide
portfolio diversification.\66\ The potential CFTC interpretation means
that further rulemaking could well confront a very different set of
transactions than contemplated in April 2012, one focused not on
conversion trades, but rather on these other types of forex
transactions. It also means that further rulemaking would need to
consider whether there are classes of conversion trades not excluded
under any final interpretation that may be adopted by the CFTC that
must be addressed separately. Accordingly, if the CEA is interpreted so
that certain conversion trades would not be prohibited, we would want
to consider what, if anything, we believe is appropriate with respect
to proposing and adopting a permanent rule in this area in light of the
diverse classes of transactions--beyond the conversion trades that have
been the focus of comments to date--that any such rule may need to
consider. Accordingly, in view of these very recent developments, the
Commission has determined that it would be impracticable to publish
notice of the proposed extension.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\63\ See ABA/GFMA Letter.
\64\ See Morgan Lewis Letter.
\65\ See Interim Release at 41684.
\66\ See id. See also SIFMA/ISDA Letter (Annex A, Part I).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In making this finding of good cause,\67\ the Commission has
decided to maintain the current regulatory regime in order to avoid
disruption for investors engaging in retail forex transactions through
broker-delaers, until such time as the Commission makes any final
decision with regard to permanent rulemaking in this area, in light of
any potential interpretation by the CFTC. In particular, the Commission
considered that not extending the expiration date, or allowing the
extension to be delayed, would cause disruption to the markets and
potentially harm investors, as retail forex transactions, including
conversion trades, would, as of July 16, 2012, the original expiration
date of Rule 15b12-1T, be prohibited. For the same reasons, the
Commission finds good cause not to delay the effective date of this
extension for 30 days.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\67\ This finding also satisfies the requirements of 5 U.S.C.
808(2), allowing the rules to become effective notwithstanding the
requirement of 5 U.S.C. 801 (if a federal agency finds that notice
and public comment are ``impractical, unnecessary or contrary to the
public interest,'' a rule ``shall take effect at such time as the
federal agency promulgating the rule determines'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the event that the Commission determines to propose a permanent
rule to replace Rule 15b12-1T, the Commission will provide notice and
solicit comment on that proposal.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification
In the Interim Release, the Commission certified that pursuant to 5
U.S.C. 605(b), Rule 15b12-1T would not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities. As explained in the
Interim Release, although Rule 15b12-1T applies to broker-dealers that
may engage in retail forex transactions, which may include small
businesses, any costs or regulatory burdens incurred as a result of the
rule are the same as those incurred by small broker-dealers prior to
the effective date of Section 742 of the Dodd-Frank Act.\68\ We also
noted that the rule would impose no new regulatory obligations, costs,
or burdens on such broker-dealers. Thus, there would not be a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
In the Interim Release, we requested comment on our conclusion that
Rule 15b12-1T should not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. The Commission received no
comments addressing this issue. In light of this, as well as the fact
that we are making no change to Rule 15b12-1T apart from extending its
expiration date, we hereby certify pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b) that
extending Rule 15b12-1T will not have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\68\ See id. at 41684-85.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
VI. Statutory Authority and Text of Rule and Amendment
Pursuant to section 2(c)(2) of the Commodity Exchange Act, as well
as the Exchange Act as amended, the Commission is amending Exchange Act
Rule 15b12-1T.
List of Subjects in 17 CFR Part 240
Brokers, Consumer protection, Currency, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
In accordance with the foregoing, the Securities and Exchange
Commission is amending Title 17, chapter II, of the Code of Federal
Regulations as follows:
Text of the Rule and Amendment
PART 240--GENERAL RULES AND REGULATIONS, SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF
1934
0
1. The general authority citation for Part 240 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77c, 77d, 77g, 77j, 77s, 77z-2, 77z-3,
77eee, 77ggg, 77nnn, 77sss, 77ttt, 78c, 78d, 78e, 78f, 78g, 78i,
78j, 78j-1, 78k, 78k-1, 78l, 78m, 78n, 78n-1, 78o, 78o-4, 78p, 78q,
78s, 78u-5, 78w, 78x, 78ll, 78mm, 80a-20, 80a-23, 80a-29, 80a-37,
80b-3, 80b-4, 80b-11, and 7201 et. seq.; 18 U.S.C. 1350; 12 U.S.C.
5221(e)(3); and 7 U.S.C. 2(c)(2)(E), unless otherwise noted.
* * * * *
Sec. 240.15b12-1T [Amended]
0
2. Revise paragraph (d) of Sec. 240.15b12-1T to read as follows:
Sec. 240.15b12-1T Brokers or dealers engaged in a retail forex
business.
* * * * *
(d) This section will expire and no longer be effective on July 16,
2013.
Dated: July 11, 2012.
[[Page 41678]]
By the Commission.
Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2012-17261 Filed 7-13-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P