Comparability Determination for Canada: Certain Entity-Level Requirements, 78839-78852 [2013-30979]
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 249 / Friday, December 27, 2013 / Notices
Dated: December 16, 2013.
Margaret A. Focarino,
Commissioner for Patents, Performing the
functions and duties of the Under Secretary
of Commerce for Intellectual Property and
Director of the United States Patent and
Trademark Office.
[FR Doc. 2013–31019 Filed 12–26–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING
COMMISSION
Comparability Determination for
Canada: Certain Entity-Level
Requirements
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission.
ACTION: Notice of Comparability
Determination for Certain Requirements
under the Laws of Canada.
AGENCY:
The following is the analysis
and determination of the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) regarding certain parts
of a joint request by the Canadian
Bankers Association (‘‘CBA’’), five
individual Canadian banks
provisionally-registered with the
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission (‘‘Commission’’) as swap
dealers (‘‘SDs’’), and the Office of the
Superintendent of Financial Institutions
(‘‘OSFI’’) that the Commission
determine that certain laws and
regulations applicable in Canada
provide a sufficient basis for an
affirmative finding of comparability
with respect to the following regulatory
obligations applicable to SDs and major
swap participants (‘‘MSPs’’) registered
with the Commission: (i) Chief
compliance officer; (ii) risk
management; and (iii) swap data
recordkeeping (collectively, the
‘‘Internal Business Conduct
Requirements’’).
SUMMARY:
Effective Date: This
determination will become effective
immediately upon publication in the
Federal Register.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Gary
Barnett, Director, 202–418–5977,
gbarnett@cftc.gov, Frank Fisanich, Chief
Counsel, 202–418–5949,
ffisanich@cftc.gov, and Andy Chapin,
Associate Director, 202–418–5465,
achapin@cftc.gov, Division of Swap
Dealer and Intermediary Oversight,
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission, Three Lafayette Centre,
1155 21st Street NW., Washington, DC
20581.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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I. Introduction
On July 26, 2013, the Commission
published in the Federal Register its
‘‘Interpretive Guidance and Policy
Statement Regarding Compliance with
Certain Swap Regulations’’ (the
‘‘Guidance’’).1 In the Guidance, the
Commission set forth its interpretation
of the manner in which it believes that
section 2(i) of the Commodity Exchange
Act (‘‘CEA’’) applies Title VII’s swap
provisions to activities outside the U.S.
and informed the public of some of the
policies that it expects to follow,
generally speaking, in applying Title VII
and certain Commission regulations in
contexts covered by section 2(i). Among
other matters, the Guidance generally
described the policy and procedural
framework under which the
Commission would consider a
substituted compliance program with
respect to Commission regulations
applicable to entities located outside the
U.S. Specifically, the Commission
addressed a recognition program where
compliance with a comparable
regulatory requirement of a foreign
jurisdiction would serve as a reasonable
substitute for compliance with the
attendant requirements of the CEA and
the Commission’s regulations
promulgated thereunder.
In addition to the Guidance, on July
22, 2013, the Commission issued the
Exemptive Order Regarding Compliance
with Certain Swap Regulations (the
‘‘Exemptive Order’’).2 Among other
things, the Exemptive Order provided
time for the Commission to consider
substituted compliance with respect to
six jurisdictions where non-U.S. SDs are
currently organized. In this regard, the
Exemptive Order generally provided
non-U.S. SDs and MSPs in the six
jurisdictions with conditional relief
from certain requirements of
Commission regulations (those referred
to as ‘‘Entity-Level Requirements’’ in the
Guidance) until the earlier of December
21, 2013, or 30 days following the
issuance of a substituted compliance
determination.3
On May 13, 2013, the CBA, five
individual Canadian banks
1 78 FR 45292 (July 26, 2013). The Commission
originally published proposed and further proposed
guidance on July 12, 2012 and January 7, 2013,
respectively. See Cross-Border Application of
Certain Swaps Provisions of the Commodity
Exchange Act, 77 FR 41214 (July 12, 2012) and
Further Proposed Guidance Regarding Compliance
with Certain Swap Regulations, 78 FR 909 (Jan. 7,
2013).
2 78 FR 43785 (July 22, 2013).
3 The Entity-Level Requirements under the
Exemptive Order consist of 17 CFR 1.31, 3.3,
23.201, 23.203, 23.600, 23.601, 23.602, 23.603,
23.605, 23.606, 23.608, 23.609, and parts 45 and 46
of the Commission’s regulations.
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provisionally registered with the
Commission as SDs, and OSFI
(collectively hereinafter, the
‘‘applicant’’) submitted a request that
the Commission determine that laws
and regulations applicable in Canada
provide a sufficient basis for an
affirmative finding of comparability
with respect to certain Entity-Level
Requirements, including the Internal
Business Conduct Requirements.4 The
applicants provided Commission staff
with a supplemental submission from
the Ontario Securities Commission
(‘‘OSC’’) dated June 7, 2013. The
following is the Commission’s analysis
and determination regarding the
Internal Business Conduct
Requirements, as detailed below.5
II. Background
On July 21, 2010, President Obama
signed the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act 6
(‘‘Dodd-Frank Act’’ or ‘‘Dodd-Frank’’),
which, in Title VII, established a new
regulatory framework for swaps.
Section 722(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act
amended the CEA by adding section
2(i), which provides that the swap
provisions of the CEA (including any
CEA rules or regulations) apply to crossborder activities when certain
conditions are met, namely, when such
activities have a ‘‘direct and significant
connection with activities in, or effect
on, commerce of the United States’’ or
when they contravene Commission
rules or regulations as are necessary or
appropriate to prevent evasion of the
swap provisions of the CEA enacted
under Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act.7
In the three years since its enactment,
the Commission has finalized 68 rules
and orders to implement Title VII of the
Dodd-Frank Act. The finalized rules
include those promulgated under
section 4s of the CEA, which address
registration of SDs and MSPs and other
substantive requirements applicable to
SDs and MSPs. With few exceptions, the
delayed compliance dates for the
Commission’s regulations implementing
such section 4s requirements applicable
to SDs and MSPs have passed and new
SDs and MSPs are now required to be
in full compliance with such regulations
upon registration with the
4 For purposes of this notice, the Internal
Business Conduct Requirements consist of 17 CFR
3.3, 23.201, 23.203, 23.600, 23.601, 23.602, 23.603,
23.605, and 23.606.
5 This notice does not address swap data
repository reporting (‘‘SDR Reporting’’). The
Commission may provide a comparability
determination with respect to the SDR Reporting
requirement in a separate notice.
6 Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010).
7 7 U.S.C. 2(i).
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Commission.8 Notably, the requirements
under Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act
related to SDs and MSPs by their terms
apply to all registered SDs and MSPs,
irrespective of where they are located,
albeit subject to the limitations of CEA
section 2(i).
To provide guidance as to the
Commission’s views regarding the scope
of the cross-border application of Title
VII of the Dodd-Frank Act, the
Commission set forth in the Guidance
its interpretation of the manner in
which it believes that Title VII’s swap
provisions apply to activities outside
the U.S. pursuant to section 2(i) of the
CEA. Among other matters, the
Guidance generally described the policy
and procedural framework under which
the Commission would consider a
substituted compliance program with
respect to Commission regulations
applicable to entities located outside the
U.S. Specifically, the Commission
addressed a recognition program where
compliance with a comparable
regulatory requirement of a foreign
jurisdiction would serve as a reasonable
substitute for compliance with the
attendant requirements of the CEA and
the Commission’s regulations. With
respect to the standards forming the
basis for any determination of
comparability (‘‘comparability
determination’’ or ‘‘comparability
finding’’), the Commission stated:
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In evaluating whether a particular category
of foreign regulatory requirement(s) is
comparable and comprehensive to the
applicable requirement(s) under the CEA and
Commission regulations, the Commission
will take into consideration all relevant
factors, including but not limited to, the
comprehensiveness of those requirement(s),
the scope and objectives of the relevant
regulatory requirement(s), the
comprehensiveness of the foreign regulator’s
supervisory compliance program, as well as
the home jurisdiction’s authority to support
and enforce its oversight of the registrant. In
this context, comparable does not necessarily
mean identical. Rather, the Commission
would evaluate whether the home
jurisdiction’s regulatory requirement is
comparable to and as comprehensive as the
corresponding U.S. regulatory
requirement(s).9
Upon a comparability finding,
consistent with CEA section 2(i) and
comity principles, the Commission’s
policy generally is that eligible entities
may comply with a substituted
compliance regime, subject to any
conditions the Commission places on its
finding, and subject to the
8 The compliance dates are summarized on the
Compliance Dates page of the Commission’s Web
site. (https://www.cftc.gov/LawRegulation/
DoddFrankAct/ComplianceDates/index.htm.)
9 78 FR 45342–45.
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Commission’s retention of its
examination authority and its
enforcement authority.10
In this regard, the Commission notes
that a comparability determination
cannot be premised on whether an SD
or MSP must disclose comprehensive
information to its regulator in its home
jurisdiction, but rather on whether
information relevant to the
Commission’s oversight of an SD or
MSP would be directly available to the
Commission and any U.S. prudential
regulator of the SD or MSP.11 The
Commission’s direct access to the books
and records required to be maintained
by an SD or MSP registered with the
Commission is a core requirement of the
CEA 12 and the Commission’s
regulations,13 and is a condition to
registration.14
III. Regulation of SDs and MSPs in
Canada
On May 13, 2013, the applicant
submitted a request that the
Commission assess the comparability of
Canadian laws and regulations with the
requirements of the CEA and the
Commission’s regulations promulgated
thereunder. OSC provided a supplement
to the submission on June 7, 2013. On
November 8, 2013, OSFI further
10 See
the Guidance, 78 FR 45342–44.
§§ 23.203 and 23.606, all records
required by the CEA and the Commission’s
regulations to be maintained by a registered SD or
MSP shall be maintained in accordance with
Commission regulation 1.31 and shall be open for
inspection by representatives of the Commission,
the United States Department of Justice, or any
applicable U.S. prudential regulator.
In its Final Exemptive Order Regarding
Compliance with Certain Swap Regulations, 78 FR
858 (Jan. 7, 2013), the Commission noted that an
applicant for registration as an SD or MSP must file
a Form 7–R with the National Futures Association
and that Form 7–R was being modified at that time
to address existing blocking, privacy, or secrecy
laws of foreign jurisdictions that applied to the
books and records of SDs and MSPs acting in those
jurisdictions. See id. at 871–72 n. 107. The
modifications to Form 7–R were a temporary
measure intended to allow SDs and MSPs to apply
for registration in a timely manner in recognition
of the existence of the blocking, privacy, and
secrecy laws. In the Guidance, the Commission
clarified that the change to Form 7–R impacts the
registration application only and does not modify
the Commission’s authority under the CEA and its
regulations to access records held by registered SDs
and MSPs. Commission access to a registrant’s
books and records is a fundamental regulatory tool
necessary to properly monitor and examine each
registrant’s compliance with the CEA and the
regulations adopted pursuant thereto. The
Commission has maintained an ongoing dialogue
on a bilateral and multilateral basis with foreign
regulators and with registrants to address books and
records access issues and may consider appropriate
measures where requested to do so.
12 See e.g., sections 4s(f)(1)(C), 4s(j)(3) and (4) of
the CEA.
13 See e.g., §§ 23.203(b) and 23.606.
14 See supra note 10.
11 Under
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supplemented the application with
corrections and additional materials.
All of the currently registered
Canadian SDs are banks regulated under
the Canadian Bank Act (the ‘‘Bank
Act’’),15 relevant regulations thereunder,
and guidelines, advisories, and
interpretations provided by OSFI. As
the governing prudential regulator in
Canada, OSFI supervises all Canadian
banks on a consolidated basis, including
those provisionally registered with the
Commission as SDs (the ‘‘Canadian
Bank SDs’’). To implement its
‘‘Supervisory Framework,’’ OSFI has
published guidelines, advisories, and
interpretations which OSFI expects each
bank to follow. Each of the five
Canadian Bank SDs also has been
designated as Domestic Systemically
Important Banks (‘‘DSIBs’’) due to the
potential impact that failure could have
on the domestic economy based on their
size, interconnectedness,
substitutability, and complexity. As
DSIBs, these banks are expected to have
advanced practices in terms of the
design and operation of oversight
functions and controls, and are subject
to continued supervisory intensity,
enhanced disclosure requirements, and
a capital surcharge.16
Canada’s provincial securities
administrators, coordinated by the
Derivatives Committee of the Canadian
Securities Administrators (‘‘CSA’’), are
responsible for regulating the capital
markets. Harmonized policy
recommendations are made at the CSA
level, while regulations are made at the
provincial level. Currently, the CSA has
issued a Consultation Paper 91–407 on
‘‘Derivatives Registration’’ (comment
period closed June 17, 2013).
IV. Comparable and
Comprehensiveness Standard
The Commission’s comparability
analysis will be based on a comparison
of specific foreign requirements against
the specific related CEA provisions and
Commission regulations as categorized
and described in the Guidance. As
explained in the Guidance, within the
framework of CEA section 2(i) and
principles of international comity, the
Commission may make a comparability
determination on a requirement-byrequirement basis, rather than on the
15 Consolidated
Acts of Canada, S.C. 1991, c. 46.
the applicant’s request and the
Commissions determinations herein are based on
the comparability of Canadian requirements
applicable to banks, an SD or MSP that is not a
bank, or is otherwise not subject to the
requirements applicable to banks upon which the
Commission bases its determinations, may not be
able to rely on the Commission’s comparability
determinations herein.
16 Because
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basis of the foreign regime as a whole.17
In making its comparability
determinations, the Commission may
include conditions that take into
account timing and other issues related
to coordinating the implementation of
reform efforts across jurisdictions.18
In evaluating whether a particular
category of foreign regulatory
requirement(s) is comparable and
comprehensive to the corollary
requirement(s) under the CEA and
Commission regulations, the
Commission will take into consideration
all relevant factors, including, but not
limited to:
• The comprehensiveness of those
requirement(s),
• The scope and objectives of the
relevant regulatory requirement(s),
• The comprehensiveness of the
foreign regulator’s supervisory
compliance program, and
• The home jurisdiction’s authority to
support and enforce its oversight of the
registrant.19
In making a comparability
determination, the Commission takes an
‘‘outcome-based’’ approach. An
‘‘outcome-based’’ approach means that
when evaluating whether a foreign
jurisdiction’s regulatory requirements
are comparable to, and as
comprehensive as, the corollary areas of
the CEA and Commission regulations,
the Commission ultimately focuses on
regulatory outcomes (i.e., the home
jurisdiction’s requirements do not have
to be identical).20 This approach
recognizes that foreign regulatory
systems differ and their approaches vary
and may differ from how the
Commission chose to address an issue,
but that the foreign jurisdiction’s
regulatory requirements nonetheless
achieve the regulatory outcome sought
to be achieved by a certain provision of
the CEA or Commission regulation.
In doing its comparability analysis the
Commission may determine that no
17 78
FR 45343.
FR 45343.
19 78 FR 45343. The Commission’s substituted
compliance program would generally be available
for SDR Reporting, as outlined in the Guidance,
only if the Commission has direct access to all of
the data elements that are reported to a foreign trade
repository pursuant to the substituted compliance
program. Thus, direct access to swap data is a
threshold matter to be addressed in a comparability
evaluation for SDR Reporting. Moreover, the
Commission explains in the Guidance that, due to
its technical nature, a comparability evaluation for
SDR Reporting ‘‘will generally entail a detailed
comparison and technical analysis.’’ A more
particularized analysis will generally be necessary
to determine whether data stored in a foreign trade
repository provides for effective Commission use, in
furtherance of the regulatory purposes of the DoddFrank Act. See 78 FR 45345.
20 78 FR 45343.
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comparability determination can be
made 21 and that the non-U.S. SD or
non-U.S. MSP, U.S. bank that is an SD
or MSP with respect to its foreign
branches, or non-registrant, to the extent
applicable under the Guidance, may be
required to comply with the CEA and
Commission regulations.
The starting point in the
Commission’s analysis is a
consideration of the regulatory
objectives of the foreign jurisdiction’s
regulation of swaps and swap market
participants. As stated in the Guidance,
jurisdictions may not have swap
specific regulations in some areas, and
instead have regulatory or supervisory
regimes that achieve comparable and
comprehensive regulation to the DoddFrank Act requirements, but on a more
general, entity-wide, or prudential,
basis.22 In addition, portions of a foreign
regulatory regime may have similar
regulatory objectives, but the means by
which these objectives are achieved
with respect to swaps market activities
may not be clearly defined, or may not
expressly include specific regulatory
elements that the Commission
concludes are critical to achieving the
regulatory objectives or outcomes
required under the CEA and the
Commission’s regulations. In these
circumstances, the Commission will
work with the regulators and registrants
in these jurisdictions to consider
alternative approaches that may result
in a determination that substituted
compliance applies.23
21 A finding of comparability may not be possible
for a number of reasons, including the fact that the
foreign jurisdiction has not yet implemented or
finalized particular requirements.
22 78 FR 45343.
23 As explained in the Guidance, such
‘‘approaches used will vary depending on the
circumstances relevant to each jurisdiction. One
example would include coordinating with the
foreign regulators in developing appropriate
regulatory changes or new regulations, particularly
where changes or new regulations already are being
considered or proposed by the foreign regulators or
legislative bodies. As another example, the
Commission may, after consultation with the
appropriate regulators and market participants,
include in its substituted compliance determination
a description of the means by which certain swaps
market participants can achieve substituted
compliance within the construct of the foreign
regulatory regime. The identification of the means
by which substituted compliance is achieved would
be designed to address the regulatory objectives and
outcomes of the relevant Dodd-Frank Act
requirements in a manner that does not conflict
with a foreign regulatory regime and reduces the
likelihood of inconsistent regulatory obligations.
For example, the Commission may specify that
[SDs] and MSPs in the jurisdiction undertake
certain recordkeeping and documentation for swap
activities that otherwise is only addressed by the
foreign regulatory regime with respect to financial
activities generally. In addition, the substituted
compliance determination may include provisions
for summary compliance and risk reporting to the
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Finally, the Commission will
generally rely on an applicant’s
description of the laws and regulations
of the foreign jurisdiction in making its
comparability determination. The
Commission considers an application to
be a representation by the applicant that
the laws and regulations submitted are
in full force and effect, that the
description of such laws and regulations
is accurate and complete, and that,
unless otherwise noted, the scope of
such laws and regulations encompasses
the swaps activities 24 of SDs and
MSPs 25 in the relevant jurisdictions.26
Further, as stated in the Guidance, the
Commission expects that an applicant
would notify the Commission of any
material changes to information
submitted in support of a comparability
determination (including, but not
limited to, changes in the relevant
supervisory or regulatory regime) as,
depending on the nature of the change,
the Commission’s comparability
determination may no longer be valid.27
The Guidance provided a detailed
discussion of the Commission’s policy
regarding the availability of substituted
Commission to allow the Commission to monitor
whether the regulatory outcomes are being
achieved. By using these approaches, in the interest
of comity, the Commission would seek to achieve
its regulatory objectives with respect to the
Commission’s registrants that are operating in
foreign jurisdictions in a manner that works in
harmony with the regulatory interests of those
jurisdictions.’’ 78 FR 45343–44.
24 ‘‘Swaps activities’’ is defined in Commission
regulation 23.600(a)(7) to mean, ‘‘with respect to a
registrant, such registrant’s activities related to
swaps and any product used to hedge such swaps,
including, but not limited to, futures, options, other
swaps or security-based swaps, debt or equity
securities, foreign currency, physical commodities,
and other derivatives.’’ The Commission’s
regulations under Part 23 (17 CFR Part 23) are
limited in scope to the swaps activities of SDs and
MSPs.
25 No SD or MSP that is not legally required to
comply with a law or regulation determined to be
comparable may voluntarily comply with such law
or regulation in lieu of compliance with the CEA
and the relevant Commission regulation. Each SD
or MSP that seeks to rely on a comparability
determination is responsible for determining
whether it is subject to the laws and regulations
found comparable. Currently there are no MSPs
organized outside the U.S. and the Commission
therefore cautions any non-financial entity
organized outside the U.S. and applying for
registration as an MSP to carefully consider
whether the laws and regulations determined to be
comparable herein are applicable to such entity.
26 The Commission has provided the relevant
foreign regulator(s) with opportunities to review
and correct the applicant’s description of such laws
and regulations on which the Commission will base
its comparability determination. The Commission
relies on the accuracy and completeness of such
review and any corrections received in making its
comparability determinations. A comparability
determination based on an inaccurate description of
foreign laws and regulations may not be valid.
27 78 FR 45345.
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compliance 28 for the Internal Business
Conduct Requirements.29
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V. Supervisory Arrangement
In the Guidance, the Commission
stated that, in connection with a
determination that substituted
compliance is appropriate, it would
expect to enter into an appropriate
memorandum of understanding
(‘‘MOU’’) or similar arrangement 30 with
the relevant foreign regulator(s).
Although existing arrangements would
indicate a foreign regulator’s ability to
cooperate and share information, ‘‘going
forward, the Commission and relevant
foreign supervisor(s) would need to
establish supervisory MOUs or other
arrangements that provide for
information sharing and cooperation in
the context of supervising [SDs] and
MSPs.’’ 31
The Commission is in the process of
developing its registration and
supervision regime for provisionallyregistered SDs and MSPs. This new
initiative includes setting forth
supervisory arrangements with
authorities that have joint jurisdiction
over SDs and MSPs that are registered
with the Commission and subject to
U.S. law. Given the developing nature of
the Commission’s regime and the fact
that the Commission has not negotiated
prior supervisory arrangements with
certain authorities, the negotiation of
supervisory arrangements presents a
unique opportunity to develop close
working relationships between and
among authorities, as well as highlight
28 See 78 FR 45348–50. The Commission notes
that registrants and other market participants are
responsible for determining whether substituted
compliance is available pursuant to the Guidance
based on the comparability determination
contained herein (including any conditions or
exceptions), and its particular status and
circumstances.
29 This notice does not address § 23.608
(Restrictions on counterparty clearing
relationships). The Commission declines to take up
the request for a comparability determination with
respect to this regulation due to the Commission’s
view that there are not laws or regulations
applicable in Canada to compare with the
prohibitions and requirements of § 23.608. The
Commission may provide a comparability
determination with respect to this regulation at a
later date in consequence of further developments
in the law and regulations applicable in Canada.
This notice also does not address capital
adequacy because the Commission has not yet
finalized rules for SDs and MSPs in this area, nor
SDR Reporting. The Commission may provide a
comparability determination with respect to these
requirements at a later date or in a separate notice.
30 An MOU is one type of arrangement between
or among regulators. Supervisory arrangements
could include, as appropriate, cooperative
arrangements that are memorialized and executed
as addenda to existing MOUs or, for example, as
independent bilateral arrangements, statements of
intent, declarations, or letters.
31 78 FR 45344.
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any potential issues related to
cooperation and information sharing.
Accordingly, the Commission is
negotiating such a supervisory
arrangement with each applicable
foreign regulator of an SD or MSP. The
Commission expects that the
arrangement will establish expectations
for ongoing cooperation, address direct
access to information,32 provide for
notification upon the occurrence of
specified events, memorialize
understandings related to on-site
visits,33 and include protections related
to the use and confidentiality of nonpublic information shared pursuant to
the arrangement.
These arrangements will establish a
roadmap for how authorities will
consult, cooperate, and share
information. As with any such
arrangement, however, nothing in these
arrangements will supersede domestic
laws or resolve potential conflicts of
law, such as the application of domestic
secrecy or blocking laws to regulated
entities.
VI. Comparability Determination and
Analysis
The following section describes the
requirements imposed by specific
sections of the CEA and the
Commission’s regulations for the
Internal Business Conduct
Requirements that are the subject of this
comparability determination, and the
Commission’s regulatory objectives with
respect to such requirements.
Immediately following a description of
the requirement(s) and regulatory
objective(s) of the specific Internal
Business Conduct Requirements that the
32 Section 4s(j)(3) and (4) of the CEA and
Commission regulation 23.606 require a registered
SD or MSP to make all records required to be
maintained in accordance with Commission
regulation 1.31 available promptly upon request to,
among others, representatives of the Commission.
See also 7 U.S.C. 6s(f); 17 CFR 23.203. In the
Guidance, the Commission states that it ‘‘reserves
this right to access records held by registered [SDs]
and MSPs, including those that are non-U.S.
persons who may comply with the Dodd-Frank
recordkeeping requirement through substituted
compliance.’’ 78 FR 45345 n. 472; see also id. at
45342 n. 461 (affirming the Commission’s authority
under the CEA and its regulations to access books
and records held by registered SDs and MSPs as ‘‘a
fundamental regulatory tool necessary to properly
monitor and examine each registrant’s compliance
with the CEA and the regulations adopted pursuant
thereto’’).
33 The Commission retains its examination
authority, both during the application process as
well as upon and after registration of an SD or MSP.
See 78 FR 45342 (stating Commission policy that
‘‘eligible entities may comply with a substituted
compliance regime under certain circumstances,
subject, however, to the Commission’s retention of
its examination authority’’) and 45344 n. 471
(stating that the ‘‘Commission may, as it deems
appropriate and necessary, conduct an on-site
examination of the applicant’’).
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applicant submitted for a comparability
determination, the Commission
provides a description of the foreign
jurisdiction’s comparable laws,
regulations, or rules and whether such
laws, regulations, or rules meet the
applicable regulatory objective.
The Commission’s determinations in
this regard and the discussion in this
section are intended to inform the
public of the Commission’s views
regarding whether the foreign
jurisdiction’s laws, regulations, or rules
may be comparable and comprehensive
as those requirements in the DoddFrank Act (and Commission regulations
promulgated thereunder) and therefore,
may form the basis of substituted
compliance. In turn, the public (in the
foreign jurisdiction, in the United
States, and elsewhere) retains its ability
to present facts and circumstances that
would inform the determinations set
forth in this notice.
As was stated in the Guidance, the
Commission recognizes the complex
and dynamic nature of the global swap
market and the need to take an
adaptable approach to cross-border
issues, particularly as it continues to
work closely with foreign regulators to
address potential conflicts with respect
to each country’s respective regulatory
regime. In this regard, the Commission
may review, modify, or expand the
determinations herein in light of
comments received and future
developments.
A. Chief Compliance Officer (§ 3.3).
Commission Requirement:
Implementing section 4s(k) of the CEA,
Commission regulation 3.3 generally
sets forth the following requirements for
SDs and MSPs:
• An SD or MSP must designate an
individual as Chief Compliance Officer
(‘‘CCO’’);
• The CCO must have the
responsibility and authority to develop
the regulatory compliance policies and
procedures of the SD or MSP;
• The CCO must report to the board
of directors or the senior officer of the
SD or MSP;
• Only the board of directors or a
senior officer may remove the CCO;
• The CCO and the board of directors
must meet at least once per year;
• The CCO must have the background
and skills appropriate for the
responsibilities of the position;
• The CCO must not be subject to
disqualification from registration under
sections 8a(2) or (3) of the CEA;
• Each SD and MSP must include a
designation of a CCO in its registration
application;
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• The CCO must administer the
regulatory compliance policies of the SD
or MSP;
• The CCO must take reasonable steps
to ensure compliance with the CEA and
Commission regulations, and resolve
conflicts of interest;
• The CCO must establish procedures
for detecting and remediating noncompliance issues;
• The CCO must annually prepare
and sign an ‘‘annual compliance report’’
containing: (i) A description of policies
and procedures reasonably designed to
ensure compliance; (ii) an assessment of
the effectiveness of such policies and
procedures; (iii) a description of
material non-compliance issues and the
action taken; (iv) recommendations of
improvements in compliance policies;
and (v) a certification by the CCO or
CEO that, to the best of such officer’s
knowledge and belief, the annual report
is accurate and complete under penalty
of law; and
• The annual compliance report must
be furnished to the CFTC within 90 days
after the end of the fiscal year of the SD
or MSP, simultaneously with its annual
financial condition report.
Regulatory Objective: The
Commission believes that compliance
by SDs and MSPs with the CEA and the
Commission’s rules greatly contributes
to the protection of customers, orderly
and fair markets, and the stability and
integrity of the market intermediaries
registered with the Commission. The
Commission expects SDs and MSPs to
strictly comply with the CEA and the
Commission’s rules and to devote
sufficient resources to ensuring such
compliance. Thus, through its CCO rule,
the Commission seeks to ensure firms
have designated a qualified individual
as CCO that reports directly to the board
of directors or the senior officer of the
firm and that has the independence,
responsibility, and authority to develop
and administer compliance policies and
procedures reasonably designed to
ensure compliance with the CEA and
Commission regulations, resolve
conflicts of interest, remediate
noncompliance issues, and report
annually to the Commission and the
board or senior officer on compliance of
the firm.
Comparable Canadian Law and
Regulations: The applicant has
represented to the Commission that the
following provisions of law and
regulations applicable in Canada are in
full force and effect in Canada, and
comparable to and as comprehensive as
section 4s(k) of the CEA and
Commission regulation 3.3.
OSFI’s Legislative Compliance
Management Guideline E–13 (‘‘LCM
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Guideline’’) requires Canadian banks to
establish an enterprise-wide framework
of regulatory risk management controls
to ensure that regulatory compliance
risks are managed effectively. The
required LCM framework must meet the
requirements of the LCM Guideline,
which sets out OSFI’s expectations. The
Canadian Bank SDs are required to
demonstrate that they satisfy those
expectations in particular
circumstances. Pursuant to the LCM
Guideline:
• The compliance oversight function
should be designated to a member of
senior management as the bank’s CCO;
• Such CCO should have sufficient
stature, authority, resources, and access
to achieve compliance with applicable
law;
• Such CCO should have appropriate
skills and knowledge to effectively
fulfill the requirements of the function;
• The CCO should approve the
content and frequency of reports and
that such reports should be sufficient to
enable the CCO, senior management,
and the bank’s board to discharge their
compliance responsibilities;
• OSFI expects that each bank’s LCM
framework will include identification,
assessment, communication, and
maintenance of applicable regulatory
requirements, compliance procedures,
monitoring procedures, and reporting
procedures;
• OSFI expects the CCO to be
responsible for the LCM framework and
to report issues directly to the board,
including any material compliance
issues and their remediation; and
• Normal course reports to the board
should be made no less than annually,
and contain discussion of material
weaknesses, non-compliance issues, and
remedial action plans.
In addition, the OSFI Corporate
Governance Guideline of Federally
Regulated Financial Institutions (‘‘OSFI
Corporate Governance Guideline’’)
states that the bank’s board of directors
should be responsible for the selection,
performance, management,
compensation, and evaluation of a CCO.
Pursuant to the OSFI Supervisory
Framework, OSFI monitors banks’
management of compliance risk and
reports on banks’ compliance with the
Bank Act annually to the Canadian
Minister of Finance.
Commission Determination: The
Commission finds that the OSFI
standards specified above are generally
identical in intent to § 3.3 by seeking to
ensure firms have designated a qualified
individual as the compliance officer that
reports directly to a sufficiently senior
function of the firm and that has the
independence, responsibility, and
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authority to develop and administer
compliance policies and procedures
reasonably designed to ensure
compliance with the CEA and
Commission regulations, resolve
conflicts of interest, remediate
noncompliance issues, and report
annually on compliance of the firm.
Based on the foregoing and the
representations of the applicant, the
Commission hereby determines that the
CCO requirements of the OSFI
standards, specified above, are
comparable to and as comprehensive as
§ 3.3, with the exception of § 3.3(f)
concerning certifying and furnishing an
annual compliance report to the
Commission.34
Notwithstanding that the Commission
has not determined that the
requirements of the OSFI standards are
comparable to and as comprehensive as
§ 3.3(f), any SD or MSP to which both
§ 3.3 and the OSFI standards specified
above are applicable would generally be
deemed to be in compliance with
§ 3.3(f) if that SD or MSP complies with
the OSFI standards specified above,
subject to certifying and furnishing the
Commission with the annual report
required under the OSFI standards
specified above in accordance with
§ 3.3(f). The Commission notes that it
generally expects registrants to submit
required reports to the Commission in
the English language.
B. Risk Management Duties (§§ 23.600—
23.609)
Section 4s(j) of the CEA requires each
SD and MSP to establish internal
policies and procedures designed to,
among other things, address risk
management, monitor compliance with
position limits, prevent conflicts of
interest, and promote diligent
supervision, as well as maintain
business continuity and disaster
recovery programs.35 The Commission
adopted regulations 23.600, 23.601,
23.602, 23.603, 23.605, and 23.606 to
implement the statute.36 The
34 Because the Commission has not determined
that the requirements of the OSFI standards are
comparable to and as comprehensive as § 3.3(f), any
SD or MSP to which both § 3.3 and the OSFI
standards specified above are applicable would
generally be deemed to be in compliance with § 3.3
if that SD or MSP complies with the OSFI standards
specified above, subject to certifying and furnishing
the Commission with the annual report required
under the OSFI standards specified above in
accordance with § 3.3(f). The Commission notes
that it generally expects registrants to submit
required reports to the Commission in the English
language.
35 7 U.S.C. 6s(j).
36 See Final Swap Dealer and MSP Recordkeeping
Rule, 77 FR 20128 (April 3, 2012) (relating to risk
management program, monitoring of position
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Commission also adopted regulation
23.609, which requires certain risk
management procedures for SDs or
MSPs that are clearing members of a
derivatives clearing organization
(‘‘DCO’’).37 Collectively, these
requirements help to establish a robust
and comprehensive internal risk
management program for SDs and MSPs
with respect to their swaps activities,38
which is critical to effective systemic
risk management for the overall swaps
market. In making its comparability
determination with regard to these risk
management duties, the Commission
will consider each regulation
individually.39
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1. Risk Management Program for SDs
and MSPs (§ 23.600)
Commission Requirement:
Implementing section 4s(j)(2) of the
CEA, Commission regulation 23.600
generally requires that:
• Each SD or MSP must establish and
enforce a risk management program
consisting of a system of written risk
management policies and procedures
designed to monitor and manage the
risks associated with the swap activities
of the firm, including without
limitation, market, credit, liquidity,
foreign currency, legal, operational, and
settlement risks, and furnish a copy of
such policies and procedures to the
CFTC upon application for registration
and upon request;
limits, business continuity and disaster recovery,
conflicts of interest policies and procedures, and
general information availability, respectively).
37 See Customer Documentation Rule, 77 FR
21278. Also, SDs must comply with Commission
regulation 23.608, which prohibits SDs providing
clearing services to customers from entering into
agreements that would: (i) Disclose the identity of
a customer’s original executing counterparty; (ii)
limit the number of counterparties a customer may
trade with; (iii) impose counterparty-based position
limits; (iv) impair a customer’s access to execution
of a trade on terms that have a reasonable
relationship to the best terms available; or (v)
prevent compliance with specified time frames for
acceptance of trades into clearing.
38 ‘‘Swaps activities’’ is defined in Commission
regulation 23.600(a)(7) to mean, ‘‘with respect to a
registrant, such registrant’s activities related to
swaps and any product used to hedge such swaps,
including, but not limited to, futures, options, other
swaps or security-based swaps, debt or equity
securities, foreign currency, physical commodities,
and other derivatives.’’ The Commission’s
regulations under Part 23 (17 CFR Part 23) are
limited in scope to the swaps activities of SDs and
MSPs.
39 As stated above, this notice does not address
§ 23.608 (Restrictions on counterparty clearing
relationships). The Commission declines to take up
the request for a comparability determination with
respect to this regulation due to the Commission’s
view that there are not laws or regulations
applicable in Canada to compare with the
prohibitions and requirements of § 23.608. The
Commission may provide a comparability
determination with respect to this regulation at a
later date in consequence of further developments
in the law and regulations applicable in Canada.
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• The SD or MSP must establish a
risk management unit independent from
the business trading unit;
• The risk management policies and
procedures of the SD or MSP must be
approved by the firm’s governing body;
• Risk tolerance limits and exceptions
therefrom must be reviewed and
approved quarterly by senior
management and annually by the
governing body;
• The risk management program must
have a system for detecting breaches of
risk tolerance limits and alerting
supervisors and senior management, as
appropriate;
• The risk management program must
account for risks posed by affiliates and
be integrated at the consolidated entity
level;
• The risk management unit must
provide senior management and the
governing body with quarterly risk
exposure reports and upon detection of
any material change in the risk exposure
of the SD or MSP;
• Risk exposure reports must be
furnished to the CFTC within five
business days following provision to
senior management;
• The risk management program must
have a new product policy for assessing
the risks of new products prior to
engaging in such transactions;
• The risk management program must
have policies and procedures providing
for trading limits, monitoring of trading,
processing of trades, and separation of
personnel in the trading unit from
personnel in the risk management unit;
and
• The risk management program must
be reviewed and tested at least annually
and upon any material change in the
business of the SD or MSP.
Regulatory Objective: Through the
required system of risk management, the
Commission seeks to ensure that firms
are adequately managing the risks of
their swaps activities to prevent failure
of the SD or MSP, which could result in
losses to counterparties doing business
with the SD or MSP, and systemic risk
more generally. To this end, the
Commission believes the risk
management program of an SD or MSP
must contain at least the following
critical elements:
• Identification of risk categories;
• Establishment of risk tolerance
limits for each category of risk and
approval of such limits by senior
management and the governing body;
• An independent risk management
unit to administer a risk management
program; and
• Periodic oversight of risk exposures
by senior management and the
governing body.
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Comparable Canadian Law and
Regulations: The applicant has
represented to the Commission that the
following provisions of law and
regulations applicable in Canada are in
full force and effect in Canada, and are
comparable to and as comprehensive as
section 4s(j)(2) of the CEA and
Commission regulation § 23.600.
The OSFI Corporate Governance
Guideline requires that each bank
establish a risk appetite framework
(‘‘RAF’’) that:
• Guides the amount of risk the bank
is willing to accept in pursuit of its
strategic and business objectives.
• Sets basic goals, benchmarks,
parameters, and limits, and should
consider all applicable types of risks.
• Contains all elements required by
an annex to the Corporate Governance
Guideline, including a risk appetite
statement, specific risk tolerance limits,
and processes for implementation of the
RAF.
Further, the OSFI Corporate
Governance Guideline states that DSIBs
should establish a dedicated risk
committee to oversee risk management
on an enterprise-wide basis, and that the
oversight of the risk management
activities of the bank are to be
independent from operational
management, adequately resourced, and
have appropriate status and visibility.
The OSFI Derivatives Best Practice
Guideline states that each bank should
ensure that each derivative product
traded is subject to a product
authorization signed off by senior
management, and sets forth OSFI’s
expectations with respect to having
documented policies and procedures for
risk management, creating risk tolerance
limits, and measuring, reporting,
managing, and controlling the risks
associated with the derivatives business,
including market, currency, interest
rate, equity price, commodity price,
credit, settlement, liquidity, operational,
and legal risks.
Finally, OSFI represents that its
oversight pursuant to the Supervisory
Framework will assess the extent to
which the risk management function
integrates policies, practices, and limits
with day-to-day business activities and
with the bank’s strategic, capital, and
liquidity management policies. Under
the Supervisory Framework, OSFI also
will assess whether the risk
management function effectively
monitors risk positions against
approved limits and ensures that
material breaches are addressed on a
timely basis. OSFI represents that it will
look at various indicators, including the
extent to which the bank proactively
updates its policies, practices, and
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limits in response to changes in the
industry and in the institution’s
strategy, business activities and risk
tolerances.40
Commission Determination: The
Commission finds that the OSFI
standards specified above are generally
identical in intent to § 23.600 by
requiring a system of risk management
that seeks to ensure that firms are
adequately managing the risks of their
swaps activities to prevent failure of the
SD or MSP, which could result in losses
to counterparties doing business with
the SD or MSP, and systemic risk more
generally. Specifically, the Commission
finds that the OSFI standards specified
above would comprehensively require
SDs and MSPs to establish risk
management programs containing the
following critical elements:
• Identification of risk categories;
• Establishment of risk tolerance
limits for each category of risk and
approval of such limits by senior
management and the governing body;
• An independent risk management
unit to administer a risk management
program; and
• Periodic oversight of risk exposures
by senior management and the
governing body.
Based on the foregoing and the
representations of the applicant, the
Commission hereby determines that the
risk management program requirements
of the OSFI standards, as specified
above, are comparable to and as
comprehensive as § 23.600, with the
exception of § 23.600(c)(2) concerning
the requirement that each SD and MSP
produce a quarterly risk exposure report
and provide such report to its senior
management, governing body, and the
Commission.
Notwithstanding that the Commission
has not determined that the
requirements of the OSFI standards are
comparable to and as comprehensive as
§ 23.600(c)(2), any SD or MSP to which
both § 23.600 and the OSFI standards
specified above are applicable would
generally be deemed to be in
compliance with § 23.600(c)(2) if that
SD or MSP complies with the OSFI
standards specified above, subject to
compliance with the requirement that it
produce quarterly risk exposure reports
and provide such reports to its senior
management, governing body, and the
40 In addition to the foregoing, the applicant notes
that the Canadian Bank SDs may be subject to
heightened standards for their derivatives business
in the near future under regulatory
recommendations that would require registrants to
establish, maintain and apply systems, policies and
procedures that establish robust compliance and
risk management systems specifically for their
derivatives business. See CSA Consultation Paper
91–407.
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Commission in accordance with
§ 23.600(c)(2). The Commission notes
that it generally expects reports
furnished to the Commission by
registrants to be in the English language.
2. Monitoring of Position Limits
(§ 23.601)
Commission Requirement:
Implementing section 4s(j)(1) of the
CEA, Commission regulation 23.601
requires each SD or MSP to establish
and enforce written policies and
procedures that are reasonably designed
to monitor for, and prevent violations
of, applicable position limits established
by the Commission, a DCM, or a SEF.41
The policies and procedures must
include an early warning system and
provide for escalation of violations to
senior management (including the firm’s
governing body).
Regulatory Objective: Generally,
position limits are implemented to
ensure market integrity, fairness,
orderliness, and accurate pricing in the
commodity markets. Commission
regulation 23.601 thus seeks to ensure
that SDs and MSPs have established the
necessary policies and procedures to
monitor the trading of the firm to
prevent violations of applicable position
limits established by the Commission, a
DCM, or a SEF. As part of its Risk
Management Program, § 23.601 is
intended to ensure that established
position limits are not breached by the
SD or MSP.
Comparable Canadian Law and
Regulations: The applicant has
represented to the Commission that the
following provisions of law and
regulations applicable in Canada are in
full force and effect in Canada, and
comparable to and as comprehensive as
section 4s(j)(1) of the CEA and
Commission regulation § 23.601.
OSFI states that the monitoring of
position limits is an aspect of the risk
management and compliance framework
for each bank. Specifically:
• OSFI’s LCM Guideline requires
Canadian banks to establish an
enterprise-wide framework of regulatory
risk management controls to ensure that
regulatory compliance risks are
managed effectively. The required LCM
framework sets out OSFI’s expectations
and banks are required to demonstrate
that they satisfy those expectations in
particular circumstances; and
41 The setting of position limits by the
Commission, a DCM, or a SEF is subject to
requirements under the CEA and Commission
regulations other than § 23.601. The setting of
position limits and compliance with such limits is
not subject to the Commission’s substituted
compliance regime.
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• OSFI expects that each bank’s LCM
framework will include identification,
assessment, communication, and
maintenance of applicable regulatory
requirements, compliance procedures,
monitoring procedures, and reporting
procedures.42
• The applicants represent to the
Commission that the OSFI requirement
to monitor the effectiveness of
procedures to ensure compliance with
regulatory obligations includes
applicable regulatory obligations of an
SD or MSP under the CEA, Commission
regulations, and position limits set by
the Commission, a DCM, or a SEF. OSFI
expects banks to comply with all
applicable regulatory requirements,
which includes legislation, regulations,
and regulatory directives applicable to
the activities of the bank or its
subsidiaries worldwide.
Commission Determination: The
Commission finds that the OSFI
standards specified above are generally
identical in intent to § 23.601 by
requiring SDs and MSPs to establish
necessary policies and procedures to
monitor the trading of the firm to
prevent violations of applicable position
limits established by applicable laws
and regulations, including those of the
Commission, a DCM, or a SEF.
Specifically, the Commission finds that
the OSFI standards specified above,
while not specific to the issue of
position limit compliance, nevertheless
comprehensively require SDs and MSPs
to monitor for regulatory compliance
generally, including monitoring for
compliance with position limits set
pursuant to applicable law (including
the CEA and Commission regulations)
and the responsibility of senior
management (including the board of
directors) for such compliance.
Based on the foregoing and the
representations of the applicant, the
Commission hereby determines that the
compliance monitoring requirements of
the OSFI standards, as specified above,
are comparable to and as comprehensive
as § 23.601. For the avoidance of doubt,
the Commission notes that this
determination may not be relied on to
relieve an SD or MSP from its obligation
to strictly comply with any applicable
42 In addition to the foregoing, the applicant also
submitted various guidelines and required best
practices concerning the setting of internal risk
tolerance limits and monitoring for compliance
with such internal limits. Although the Commission
recognizes these as prudent risk management
practices, the Commission does not believe that
these provisions are relevant for a comparability
determination with respect to § 23.601 because
§ 23.601 requires monitoring for compliance with
external position limits set by the Commission, a
DCM, or a SEF.
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position limit established by the
Commission, a DCM, or a SEF.
3. Diligent Supervision (§ 23.602)
Commission Requirement:
Commission regulation 23.602
implements section 4s(h)(1)(B) of the
CEA and requires each SD and MSP to
establish a system to diligently
supervise all activities relating to its
business performed by its partners,
members, officers, employees, and
agents. The system must be reasonably
designed to achieve compliance with
the CEA and CFTC regulations.
Commission regulation 23.602 requires
that the supervisory system must
specifically designate qualified persons
with authority to carry out the
supervisory responsibilities of the SD or
MSP for all activities relating to its
business as an SD or MSP.
Regulatory Objective: The
Commission’s diligent supervision rule
seeks to ensure that SDs and MSPs
strictly comply with the CEA and the
Commission’s rules. To this end,
through § 23.602, the Commission seeks
to ensure that each SD and MSP not
only establishes the necessary policies
and procedures that would lead to
compliance with the CEA and
Commission regulations, but also
establishes an effective system of
internal oversight and enforcement of
such policies and procedures to ensure
that such policies and procedures are
diligently followed.
Comparable Canadian Law and
Regulations: The applicant has
represented to the Commission that the
following provisions of law and
regulations applicable in Canada are in
full force and effect in Canada, and
comparable to and as comprehensive as
section 4s(h)(1)(B) of the CEA and
Commission regulation 23.602.
• Section 157 of the Bank Act
imposes a duty on the board of directors
of a bank to manage or supervise the
management of the business and affairs
of the bank.
• OSFI’s Supervisory Framework
states that the board and senior
management are designated as
ultimately accountable for the safety
and soundness of the bank.
• OSFI’s Corporate Governance
Guideline states that banks should
appoint a senior officer, identified as the
Chief Risk Officer (‘‘CRO’’), who has
responsibility for the oversight of all
relevant risks across the firm. The CRO
must be identified in the bank’s license
application along with a description of
the resources and authority allocated to
discharge his duties. Like the CCO, the
CRO should have sufficient stature and
authority within the organization, be
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independent from operational
management, have unfettered access
and, for functional purposes, a direct
reporting line to the board of directors
or risk committee.
In addition, the applicant states that
diligent supervision is an aspect of the
risk management and compliance
framework for each bank, which
includes requirements for controls and
monitoring. Specifically:
• OSFI’s LCM Guideline requires
Canadian banks to establish an
enterprise-wide framework of regulatory
risk management controls to ensure that
regulatory compliance risks are
managed effectively. The required LCM
framework sets out OSFI’s expectations
and banks are required to demonstrate
that they satisfy those expectations in
particular circumstances; and
• OSFI expects that each bank’s LCM
framework will include identification,
assessment, communication, and
maintenance of applicable regulatory
requirements, compliance procedures,
monitoring procedures, and reporting
procedures.
• The applicants represent to the
Commission that the OSFI requirement
to monitor the effectiveness of
procedures to ensure compliance with
regulatory obligations includes
applicable regulatory obligations of an
SD or MSP under the CEA and
Commission regulations. OSFI expects
banks to comply with all applicable
regulatory requirements, which includes
legislation, regulations, and regulatory
directives applicable to the activities of
the bank or its subsidiaries worldwide.
Commission Determination: The
Commission finds that the provisions of
the Bank Act and the OSFI standards
specified above are generally identical
in intent to § 23.602 because such
standards seek to ensure that SDs and
MSPs strictly comply with applicable
law, which would include the CEA and
the Commission’s regulations. Through
the provisions of the Bank Act and the
OSFI standards specified above,
Canadian laws and regulations seek to
ensure that each SD and MSP not only
establishes the necessary policies and
procedures that would lead to
compliance with applicable law, which
would include the CEA and
Commission regulations, but also
establishes an effective system of
internal oversight and enforcement of
such policies and procedures to ensure
that such policies and procedures are
diligently followed.
Based on the foregoing and the
representations of the applicant, the
Commission hereby determines that the
internal supervision requirements of the
Bank Act and the OSFI standards, as
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specified above, are comparable to and
as comprehensive as § 23.602.
4. Business Continuity and Disaster
Recovery (§ 23.603)
Commission Requirement: To ensure
the proper functioning of the swaps
markets and the prevention of systemic
risk more generally, Commission
regulation 23.603 requires each SD and
MSP, as part of its risk management
program, to establish a business
continuity and disaster recovery plan
that includes procedures for, and the
maintenance of, back-up facilities,
systems, infrastructure, personnel, and
other resources to achieve the timely
recovery of data and documentation and
to resume operations generally within
the next business day after the
disruption.
Regulatory Objective: Commission
regulation 23.603 is intended to ensure
that any market disruption affecting SDs
and MSPs, whether caused by natural
disaster or otherwise, is minimized in
length and severity. To that end, this
requirement seeks to ensure that entities
adequately plan for disruptions and
devote sufficient resources capable of
carrying out an appropriate plan within
one business day, if necessary.
Comparable Canadian Law and
Regulations: The applicant has
represented to the Commission that the
following provisions of law and
regulations applicable in Canada are in
full force and effect in Canada, and
comparable to and as comprehensive as
Commission regulation 23.603.
The applicant has represented that
business continuity and disaster
recovery are aspects of the risk
management framework for each bank.
Specifically:
• OSFI’s Derivatives Best Practice
Guideline requires banks to regularly
assess contingency plans to deal with
operations and systems risks.
• OSFI’s Outsourcing of Business
Activities, Functions and Processes
Guideline requires banks that outsource
functions to ensure that adequate
continuity and disaster recovery are in
place.
• OSFI’s Supervisory Framework
subjects each bank to a ‘‘Business
Continuity & Disaster Recovery
Preparedness Cross Sector Review’’ that
is divided into three broad sections:
Structure, Operational Management,
and Controls & Oversight. Pursuant to
such review, OSFI ensures: the
existence of a plan for both business
continuity and disaster recovery; that
such plans have essential components
related to identification of documents,
data, staff, supervisory personnel, backup locations, third party disruptions,
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etc.; that plans are distributed to all
employees; that appropriate emergency
contacts are identified; that plans are
reviewed at least annually; that plans
are subject to comprehensive testing and
audit; and that records related to
developing and maintaining the plans
are maintained in accordance with
banking supervisory guidelines and are
accessible to OSFI.
Commission Determination: The
Commission finds that the OSFI
standards specified above are generally
identical in intent to § 23.603 because
such standards seek to ensure that any
market disruption affecting SDs and
MSPs, whether caused by natural
disaster or otherwise, is minimized in
length and severity. To that end, the
Commission finds that the OSFI
standards specified above seek to ensure
that entities adequately plan for
disruptions and devote sufficient
resources capable of carrying out an
appropriate plan in a timely manner.
Based on the foregoing and the
representations of the applicant, the
Commission hereby determines that the
business continuity and disaster
recovery requirements of the OSFI
standards, as specified above, are
comparable to and as comprehensive as
§ 23.603.
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5. Conflicts of Interest (§ 23.605)
Commission Requirement: Section
4s(j)(5) of the CEA and Commission
regulation 23.605(c) generally require
each SD or MSP to establish structural
and institutional safeguards to ensure
that the activities of any person within
the firm relating to research or analysis
of the price or market for any
commodity or swap are separated by
appropriate informational partitions
within the firm from the review,
pressure, or oversight of persons whose
involvement in pricing, trading, or
clearing activities might potentially bias
their judgment or supervision.
In addition, section 4s(j)(5) of the CEA
and Commission regulation 23.605(d)(1)
generally prohibits an SD or MSP from
directly or indirectly interfering with or
attempting to influence the decision of
any clearing unit of any affiliated
clearing member of a DCO to provide
clearing services and activities to a
particular customer, including:
• Whether to offer clearing services to
a particular customer;
• Whether to accept a particular
customer for clearing derivatives;
• Whether to submit a customer’s
transaction to a particular DCO;
• Whether to set or adjust risk
tolerance levels for a particular
customer; or
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• Whether to set a customer’s fees
based on criteria other than those
generally available and applicable to
other customers.
Commission regulation 23.605(d)(2)
generally requires each SD or MSP to
create and maintain an appropriate
informational partition between
business trading units of the SD or MSP
and clearing units of any affiliated
clearing member of a DCO to reasonably
ensure compliance with the Act and the
prohibitions set forth in § 23.605(d)(1)
outlined above.
The Commission observes that
§ 23.605(d) works in tandem with
Commission regulation 1.71, which
requires FCMs that are clearing
members of a DCO and affiliated with
an SD or MSP to create and maintain an
appropriate informational partition
between business trading units of the
SD or MSP and clearing units of the
FCM to reasonably ensure compliance
with the Act and the prohibitions set
forth in § 1.71(d)(1), which are the same
as the prohibitions set forth in
§ 23.605(d)(1) outlined above.
Finally, § 23.605(e) requires that each
SD or MSP have policies and
procedures that mandate the disclosure
to counterparties of material incentives
or conflicts of interest regarding the
decision of a counterparty to execute a
derivative on a swap execution facility
or DCM or to clear a derivative through
a DCO.
Regulatory Objective: Commission
regulation 23.605(c) seeks to ensure that
research provided to the general public
by an SD or MSP is unbiased and free
from the influence of the interests of an
SD or MSP arising from the SD’s or
MSP’s trading business.
In addition, the § 23.605(d) (working
in tandem with § 1.71) seeks to ensure
open access to the clearing of swaps by
requiring that access to and the
provision of clearing services provided
by an affiliate of an SD or MSP are not
influenced by the interests of an SD’s or
MSP’s trading business.
Finally, § 23.605(e) seeks to ensure
equal access to trading venues and
clearinghouses, as well as orderly and
fair markets, by requiring that each SD
and MSP disclose to counterparties any
material incentives or conflicts of
interest regarding the decision of a
counterparty to execute a derivative on
a SEF or DCM, or to clear a derivative
through a DCO.
Comparable Canadian Law and
Regulations: The applicant has
represented to the Commission that the
following provisions of law and
regulations applicable in Canada are in
full force and effect in Canada, and
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comparable to and as comprehensive as
Commission regulation 23.605(c).
The Bank Act subsection 157(2)(c), as
well as the Competition Act, requires
that directors of a bank establish
procedures to resolve conflicts of
interest, including techniques for the
identification and remediation of
potential conflict situations, tied selling,
exclusive dealing, and refusal to deal,
and for restricting the use of
confidential information.
The Bank Act subsection 157(2)(b)
requires the directors of a bank to have
a review committee to ensure
compliance with the self-dealing
provisions of the Bank Act, while
157(2)(d) requires that banks designate a
committee of the board of directors to
monitor the conflict of interest
procedures.
The Bank Act subsection 459.1(1)
prohibits a bank from imposing undue
pressure on, or coercing a person to
obtain a product or service from a
particular person, including the bank
and any of its affiliates, as a condition
for obtaining another product or service
from the bank.
The Bank Act subsection 459.1(4.1)
requires a bank to disclose coercive tied
selling arrangements.
OSFI’s Supervisory Framework
requires monitoring of conflicts of
interest through a bank’s risk
management program.
The applicants have represented to
the Commission that OSFI, in the
process of its oversight and enforcement
of the foregoing Canadian standards,
would require any SD or MSP subject to
such standards to resolve or mitigate
conflicts of interests in the provision of
clearing services by a clearing member
of a DCO that is an affiliate of the SD
or MSP, or the decision of a
counterparty to execute a derivative on
a SEF or DCM, or clear a derivative
through a DCO, through appropriate
information firewalls and disclosures.
Commission Determination: The
Commission finds that the Bank Act
standards specified above with respect
to conflicts of interest that may arise in
producing or distributing research are
generally identical in intent to
§ 23.605(c) because such standards seek
to ensure that research provided to the
general public by an SD is unbiased and
free from the influence of the interests
of an SD arising from the SD’s trading
business.
With respect to conflicts of interest
that may arise in the provision of
clearing services by an affiliate of an SD
or MSP, the Commission further finds
that although the general conflicts of
interest prevention requirements under
the Bank Act standards specified above
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do not require with specificity that
access to and the provision of clearing
services provided by an affiliate of an
SD or MSP not be improperly
influenced by the interests of an SD’s or
MSP’s trading business, such general
requirements would require prevention
and remediation of such improper
influence when recognized or
discovered. Thus such standards would
ensure open access to clearing.
Finally, although not as specific as the
requirements of § 23.605(e) (Undue
influence on counterparties), the
Commission finds that the general
disclosure requirements of the Bank Act
standards specified above would ensure
equal access to trading venues and
clearinghouses by requiring that each
SD and MSP disclose to counterparties
any material incentives or conflicts of
interest regarding the decision of a
counterparty to execute a derivative on
a SEF or DCM, or to clear a derivative
through a DCO.
Based on the foregoing and the
representations of the applicants, the
Commission hereby determines that the
requirements found in the Bank Act
standards specified above in relation to
conflicts of interest are comparable to
and as comprehensive as § 23.605.
6. Availability of Information for
Disclosure and Inspection (§ 23.606)
Commission Requirement:
Commission regulation 23.606
implements sections 4s(j)(3) and (4) of
the CEA, and requires each SD and MSP
to disclose to the Commission, and an
SD’s or MSP’s U.S. prudential regulator
(if any) comprehensive information
about its swap activities, and to
establish and maintain reliable internal
data capture, processing, storage, and
other operational systems sufficient to
capture, process, record, store, and
produce all information necessary to
satisfy its duties under the CEA and
Commission regulations. Such systems
must be designed to provide such
information to the Commission and an
SD’s or MSP’s U.S. prudential regulator
within the time frames set forth in the
CEA and Commission regulations and
upon request.
Regulatory Objective: Commission
regulation 23.606 seeks to ensure that
each SD and MSP captures and
maintains comprehensive information
about their swap activities, and is able
to retrieve and disclose such
information to the Commission and its
U.S. prudential regulator, if any, as
necessary for compliance with the CEA
and the Commission’s regulations and
for purposes of Commission oversight,
as well as oversight by the SD’s or
MSP’s U.S. prudential regulator, if any.
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The Commission observes that it
would be impossible to meet the
regulatory objective of § 23.606 unless
the required information is available to
the Commission and any U.S.
prudential regulator under the foreign
legal regime. Thus, a comparability
determination with respect to the
information access provisions of
§ 23.606 would be premised on whether
the relevant information would be
available to the Commission and any
U.S. prudential regulator of the SD or
MSP, not on whether an SD or MSP
must disclose comprehensive
information to its regulator in its home
jurisdiction.
Comparable Canadian Law and
Regulations: The applicant has
represented to the Commission that the
following provisions of law and
regulations applicable in Canada are in
full force and effect in Canada, and
comparable to and as comprehensive as
Commission regulation 23.606.
OSFI relies on general reporting
obligations of Canadian banks and
OSFI’s monitoring function under the
OSFI Supervisory Framework with
respect to availability of information for
disclosure and inspection. Specifically,
banks are expected to have appropriate
policies and procedures in place to
ensure that all regulatory filings are
received by OSFI within specified
timeframes and are error free. Banks are
subject to penalties for late or erroneous
filings pursuant to OSFI’s Late and
Erroneous Filing Penalty Framework.
With respect to data capture and
retention, as part of the bank licensing
process, OSFI must approve a bank’s
operational risk management policies,
including policies related to information
technology, information management
and security, and records retention.
As part of the OSFI Supervisory
Framework, OSFI generally requires
banks to establish and maintain an
enterprise-wide LCM framework. OSFI
expects the LCM framework to include
‘‘Adequate Documentation’’ as one of its
key controls. As set forth in the OSFI
Derivatives Best Practice Guideline,
each bank should have mechanisms in
place to assure the confirmation,
maintenance and safeguarding of
derivatives contract documentation. In
particular, it states:
Commission Determination: The
Commission finds that the OSFI
standards specified above are generally
identical in intent to § 23.606 because
such standards seek to ensure that each
SD and MSP captures and stores
comprehensive information about their
swap activities, and are able to retrieve
and disclose such information as
necessary for compliance with
applicable law and for purposes of
regulatory oversight.
Based on the foregoing and the
representations of the applicant, the
Commission hereby determines that the
OSFI standards with respect to the
availability of information for
inspection and disclosure, as specified
above, are comparable to, and as
comprehensive as, § 23.606, with the
exception of § 23.606(a)(2) concerning
the requirement that an SD or MSP
make information required by
§ 23.606(a)(1) available promptly upon
request to Commission staff and the staff
of an applicable U.S. prudential
regulator. The applicant has not
submitted any provision of law or
regulations applicable in Canada upon
which the Commission could make a
finding that SDs and MSPs would be
required to retrieve and disclose
comprehensive information about their
swap activities to the Commission or
any U.S. prudential regulator as
necessary for compliance with the CEA
and Commission regulations, and for
purposes of Commission oversight and
the oversight of any U.S. prudential
regulator.
Notwithstanding that the Commission
has not determined that the
requirements of the OSFI standards are
comparable to and as comprehensive as
§ 23.606(a)(2), any SD or MSP to which
both § 23.606 and the OSFI standards
specified above are applicable would
generally be deemed to be in
compliance with § 23.606(a)(2) if that
SD or MSP complies with the OSFI
standards specified above, subject to
compliance with the requirement that it
produce information to Commission
staff and the staff of an applicable U.S.
prudential regulator in accordance with
§ 23.606(a)(2).
[t]he design of information systems will
vary according to the risks demanded by the
scope and complexity of an institution’s
involvement in derivatives. The degree of
accuracy and timeliness of information
processing should be sufficient to meet an
institution’s risk exposure monitoring needs.
Appropriate information processing and
reporting capabilities should be put in place
and fully operational.
Commission Requirement:
Commission regulation 23.609 generally
requires each SD or MSP that is a
clearing member of a DCO to:
• Establish risk-based limits based on
position size, order size, margin
requirements, or similar factors;
• Screen orders for compliance with
the risk-based limits;
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7. Clearing Member Risk Management
(§ 23.609)
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• Monitor for adherence to the riskbased limits intra-day and overnight;
• Conduct stress tests under extreme
but plausible conditions of all positions
at least once per week;
• Evaluate its ability to meet initial
margin requirements at least once per
week;
• Evaluate its ability to meet variation
margin requirements in cash at least
once per week;
• Evaluate its ability to liquidate
positions it clears in an orderly manner,
and estimate the cost of liquidation; and
• Test all lines of credit at least once
per year.
Regulatory Objective: Through
Commission regulation 23.609, the
Commission seeks to ensure the
financial integrity of the markets and
the clearing system, to avoid systemic
risk, and to protect customer funds.
Effective risk management by SDs and
MSPs that are clearing members is
essential to achieving these objectives.
A failure of risk management can cause
a clearing member to become insolvent
and default to a DCO. Such default can
disrupt the markets and the clearing
system and harm customers.
Comparable Canadian Law and
Regulations: The applicant has
represented to the Commission that the
following provisions of law and
regulations applicable in Canada are in
full force and effect in Canada, and
comparable to and as comprehensive as
Commission regulation 23.609.
OSFI stated that, to the extent that any
bank is a clearing member, risk
management specifically for clearing
members is an aspect of the risk
management framework.
OSFI Derivatives Best Practice
Guideline states that banks should have
knowledgeable individuals or units
responsible for risk monitoring and
control functions, including the
responsibility for actively monitoring
transactions and positions for adherence
to internal policy limits. Moreover,
stress tests should be performed
regularly and should account for
abnormally large market swings and
periods of prolonged inactivity, while
considering the effect of price changes
on the ‘‘mid-market value’’ of the
portfolio.
More generally, the OSFI Corporate
Governance Guideline requires that
each bank establish a risk appetite
framework (‘‘RAF’’) that:
• Guides the amount of risk the bank
is willing to accept in pursuit of its
strategic and business objectives.
• Sets basic goals, benchmarks,
parameters, and limits, and should
consider all applicable types of risks.
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• Contains all elements required by
an annex to the Corporate Governance
Guideline, including a risk appetite
statement, specific risk tolerance limits,
and processes for implementation of the
RAF.
Further, the OSFI Corporate
Governance Guideline states that DSIBs
should establish a dedicated risk
committee to oversee risk management
on an enterprise-wide basis, and that the
oversight of the risk management
activities of the bank are to be
independent from operational
management, adequately resourced, and
have appropriate status and visibility.
The OSFI Derivatives Best Practice
Guideline states that each bank should
ensure that each derivative product
traded is subject to a product
authorization signed off by senior
management, and sets forth OSFI’s
expectations with respect to having
documented policies and procedures for
risk management, creating risk tolerance
limits, and measuring, reporting,
managing, and controlling the risks
associated with the derivatives business,
including market, currency, interest
rate, equity price, commodity price,
credit, settlement, liquidity, operational,
and legal risks.
OSFI represents that its oversight
pursuant to the Supervisory Framework
will assess the extent to which the risk
management function integrates
policies, practices, and limits with dayto-day business activities and with the
bank’s strategic, capital, and liquidity
management policies. Under the
Supervisory Framework, OSFI also will
assess whether the risk management
function effectively monitors risk
positions against approved limits and
ensures that material breaches are
addressed on a timely basis. OSFI
represents that it will look at various
indicators, including the extent to
which the bank proactively updates its
policies, practices, and limits in
response to changes in the industry and
in the institution’s strategy, business
activities and risk tolerances.43
Specifically, OSFI has represented to
the Commission that, in the process of
its oversight and enforcement of the
foregoing Canadian law and regulations,
any SD or MSP subject to such
standards that is a clearing member of
a DCO would be required to comply
43 In addition to the foregoing, the applicant notes
that the Canadian Bank SDs may be subject to
heightened standards for their derivatives business
in the near future under regulatory
recommendations that would require registrants to
establish, maintain and apply systems, policies and
procedures that establish robust compliance and
risk management systems specifically for their
derivatives business. See CSA Consultation Paper
91–407.
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78849
with clearing member risk management
requirements comparable to
Commission regulation 23.609.
Commission Determination: The
Commission finds that the OSFI
standards specified above are generally
identical in intent to § 23.609 because
such standards seek to ensure the
financial integrity of the markets and
the clearing system, to avoid systemic
risk, and to protect customer funds.
The Commission notes that the OSFI
standards specified above are not as
specific as § 23.609 with respect to
ensuring that SDs and MSPs that are
clearing members of a DCO establish
detailed procedures and limits for
clearing member risk management
purposes. Nevertheless, the Commission
finds that the general requirements
under the OSFI standards specified
above, implemented in the context of
clearing member risk management and
pursuant to the representations of OSFI,
meet the Commission’s regulatory
objective specified above.
Based on the foregoing and the
representations above, the Commission
hereby determines that the clearing
member risk management requirements
of the Canadian law and regulations
specified above are comparable to and
as comprehensive as § 23.609.
C. Swap Data Recordkeeping (§§ 23.201
and 23.203)
Commission Requirement: Sections
4s(f)(1)(B) and 4s(g)(1) of the CEA, and
Commission regulation 23.201 generally
require SDs and MSPs to retain records
of each transaction, each position held,
general business records (including
records related to complaints and sales
and marketing materials), records
related to governance, financial records,
records of data reported to SDRs, and
records of real-time reporting data along
with a record of the date and time the
SD or MSP made such reports.
Transaction records must be kept in a
form and manner identifiable and
searchable by transaction and
counterparty.
Commission regulation 23.203,
requires SDs and MSPs to maintain
records of a swap transaction until the
termination, maturity, expiration,
transfer, assignment, or novation date of
the transaction, and for a period of five
years after such date. Records must be
‘‘readily accessible’’ for the first 2 years
of the 5 year retention period (consistent
with § 1.31).
The Commission notes that the
comparability determination below with
respect to §§ 23.201 and 23.203
encompasses both swap data
recordkeeping generally and swap data
recordkeeping relating to complaints
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and marketing and sales materials in
accordance with § 23.201(b)(3) and
(4).44
Regulatory Objective: Through the
Commission’s regulations requiring SDs
and MSPs to keep comprehensive
records of their swap transactions and
related data, the Commission seeks to
ensure the effectiveness of the internal
controls of SDs and MSPs, and
transparency in the swaps market for
regulators and market participants.
The Commission’s regulations require
SDs and MSPs to keep swap data in a
level of detail sufficient to enable
regulatory authorities to understand an
SD’s or MSP’s swaps business and to
assess its swaps exposure.
By requiring comprehensive records
of swap data, the Commission seeks to
ensure that SDs and MSPs employ
effective risk management, and strictly
comply with Commission regulations.
Further, such records facilitate effective
regulatory oversight.
The Commission observes that it
would be impossible to meet the
regulatory objective of §§ 23.201 and
23.203 unless the required information
is available to the Commission and any
U.S. prudential regulator under the
foreign legal regime. Thus, a
comparability determination with
respect to the information access
provisions of § 23.203 would be
premised on whether the relevant
information would be available to the
Commission and any U.S. prudential
regulator of the SD or MSP, not on
whether an SD or MSP must disclose
comprehensive information to its
regulator in its home jurisdiction.
Comparable Canadian Law and
Regulations: The applicant has
represented to the Commission that the
following provisions of law and
regulations applicable in Canada are in
full force and effect in Canada, and
comparable to and as comprehensive as
sections 4s(f)(1)(B) and 4s(g)(1) of the
CEA and §§ 23.201 and 23.203.
OSFI’s Supervisory Framework
requires banks to establish and maintain
an enterprise-wide LCM framework of
regulatory risk management controls,
and these controls include oversight
functions that are independent of the
activities they oversee. OSFI expects the
LCM framework to include ‘‘Adequate
Documentation’’ as one of its key
controls.
As set forth in the OSFI Derivatives
Best Practice Guideline, each bank
should have mechanisms in place to
assure the confirmation, maintenance,
44 See the Guidance for a discussion of the
availability of substituted compliance with respect
to swap data recordkeeping, 78 FR 45332–33.
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and safeguarding of derivatives contract
documentation. In particular, it states:
[t]he design of information systems will vary
according to the risks demanded by the scope
and complexity of an institution’s
involvement in derivatives. The degree of
accuracy and timeliness of information
processing should be sufficient to meet an
institution’s risk exposure monitoring needs.
Appropriate information processing and
reporting capabilities should be put in place
and fully operational.
Finally, Sections 238, 239 and 597 of
the Bank Act generally require banks
carrying on business in Canada to
maintain records in Canada and to
ensure that OSFI can access in Canada
any records necessary to enable OSFI to
fulfill its supervisory mandate.
Commission Determination: The
Commission finds that the Bank Act and
OSFI standards specified above are
generally identical in intent to §§ 23.201
and 23.203 because such standards seek
to ensure the effectiveness of the
internal controls of SDs and MSPs, and
transparency in the swaps market for
regulators and market participants.
In addition, the Commission finds
that the Bank Act and OSFI standards
specified above require SDs and MSPs
to keep swap data in a level of detail
sufficient to enable regulatory
authorities to understand an SD’s or
MSP’s swaps business and to assess its
swaps exposure.
Finally, the Commission finds that the
Bank Act and OSFI standards specified
above, by requiring comprehensive
records of swap data, seek to ensure that
SDs and MSPs employ effective risk
management, seek to ensure that SDs
and MSPs strictly comply with
applicable regulatory requirements
(including the CEA and Commission
regulations), and that such records
facilitate effective regulatory oversight.
Based on the foregoing and the
representations of the applicant, the
Commission hereby determines that the
requirements of the Bank Act and the
OSFI standards with respect to swap
data recordkeeping, as specified above,
are comparable to, and as
comprehensive as, §§ 23.201 and
23.203, with the exception of
§ 23.203(b)(2) concerning the
requirement that an SD or MSPs make
records required by § 23.201 open to
inspection by any representative of the
Commission, the United States
Department of Justice, or any applicable
U.S. prudential regulator. The applicant
has not submitted any provision of law
or regulations applicable in Canada
upon which the Commission could
make a finding that SDs and MSPs
would be required to make records
required by § 23.201 open to inspection
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by any representative of the
Commission, the United States
Department of Justice, or any applicable
U.S. prudential regulator.
Notwithstanding that the Commission
has not determined that the
requirements of the Bank Act and the
OSFI standards are comparable to and
as comprehensive as § 23.203(b)(2), any
SD or MSP to which both § 23.203 and
the Bank Act and OSFI standards
specified above are applicable would
generally be deemed to be in
compliance with § 23.203(b)(2) if that
SD or MSP complies with the Bank Act
and OSFI standards specified above,
subject to compliance with the
requirement that it make records
required by § 23.201 open to inspection
by any representative of the
Commission, the United States
Department of Justice, or any applicable
U.S. prudential regulator in accordance
with § 23.203(b)(2).
Issued in Washington, DC on December 20,
2013, by the Commission.
Christopher J. Kirkpatrick,
Deputy Secretary of the Commission.
Appendices to Comparability
Determination for Canada: Certain
Entity-Level Requirements
Appendix 1—Commission Voting
Summary
On this matter, Chairman Gensler and
Commissioners Chilton and Wetjen voted in
the affirmative. Commissioner O’Malia voted
in the negative.
Appendix 2—Joint Statement of
Chairman Gary Gensler and
Commissioners Bart Chilton and Mark
Wetjen
We support the Commission’s approval of
broad comparability determinations that will
be used for substituted compliance purposes.
For each of the six jurisdictions that has
registered swap dealers, we carefully
reviewed each regulatory provision of the
foreign jurisdictions submitted to us and
compared the provision’s intended outcome
to the Commission’s own regulatory
objectives. The resulting comparability
determinations for entity-level requirements
permit non-U.S. swap dealers to comply with
regulations in their home jurisdiction as a
substitute for compliance with the relevant
Commission regulations.
These determinations reflect the
Commission’s commitment to coordinating
our efforts to bring transparency to the swaps
market and reduce its risks to the public. The
comparability findings for the entity-level
requirements are a testament to the
comparability of these regulatory systems as
we work together in building a strong
international regulatory framework.
In addition, we are pleased that the
Commission was able to find comparability
with respect to swap-specific transaction-
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 249 / Friday, December 27, 2013 / Notices
level requirements in the European Union
and Japan.
The Commission attained this benchmark
by working cooperatively with authorities in
Australia, Canada, the European Union, Hong
Kong, Japan, and Switzerland to reach
mutual agreement. The Commission looks
forward to continuing to collaborate with
both foreign authorities and market
participants to build on this progress in the
months and years ahead.
Appendix 3—Statement of Dissent by
Commissioner Scott D. O’Malia
I respectfully dissent from the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission’s
(‘‘Commission’’) approval of the Notices of
Comparability Determinations for Certain
Requirements under the laws of Australia,
Canada, the European Union, Hong Kong,
Japan, and Switzerland (collectively,
‘‘Notices’’). While I support the narrow
comparability determinations that the
Commission has made, moving forward, the
Commission must collaborate with foreign
regulators to harmonize our respective
regimes consistent with the G–20 reforms.
However, I cannot support the Notices
because they: (1) Are based on the legally
unsound cross-border guidance
(‘‘Guidance’’);1 (2) are the result of a flawed
substituted compliance process; and (3) fail
to provide a clear path moving forward. If the
Commission’s objective for substituted
compliance is to develop a narrow rule-byrule approach that leaves unanswered major
regulatory gaps between our regulatory
framework and foreign jurisdictions, then I
believe that the Commission has successfully
achieved its goal today.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Determinations Based on Legally Unsound
Guidance
As I previously stated in my dissent, the
Guidance fails to articulate a valid statutory
foundation for its overbroad scope and
inconsistently applies the statute to different
activities.2 Section 2(i) of the Commodity
Exchange Act (‘‘CEA’’) states that the
Commission does not have jurisdiction over
foreign activities unless ‘‘those activities
have a direct and significant connection with
activities in, or effect on, commerce of the
United States . . .’’ 3 However, the
Commission never properly articulated how
and when this limiting standard on the
Commission’s extraterritorial reach is met,
which would trigger the application of Title
VII of the Dodd-Frank Act 4 and any
Commission regulations promulgated
thereunder to swap activities that are outside
of the United States. Given this statutorily
unsound interpretation of the Commission’s
extraterritorial authority, the Commission
often applies CEA section 2(i) inconsistently
and arbitrarily to foreign activities.
1 Interpretive
Guidance and Policy Statement
Regarding Compliance with Certain Swap
Regulations, 78 FR 45292 (Jul. 26, 2013).
2 https://www.cftc.gov/PressRoom/
SpeechesTestimony/omaliastatement071213b.
3 CEA section 2(i); 7 U.S.C. 2(i).
4 Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act, Public Law 111–203,
124 Stat. 1376 (2010).
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Accordingly, because the Commission is
relying on the legally deficient Guidance to
make its substituted compliance
determinations, and for the reasons discussed
below, I cannot support the Notices. The
Commission should have collaborated with
foreign regulators to agree on and implement
a workable regime of substituted compliance,
and then should have made determinations
pursuant to that regime.
Flawed Substituted Compliance Process
Substituted compliance should not be a
case of picking a set of foreign rules identical
to our rules, determining them to be
‘‘comparable,’’ but then making no
determination regarding rules that require
extensive gap analysis to assess to what
extent each jurisdiction is, or is not,
comparable based on overall outcomes of the
regulatory regimes. While I support the
narrow comparability determinations that the
Commission has made, I am concerned that
in a rush to provide some relief, the
Commission has made substituted
compliance determinations that only afford
narrow relief and fail to address major
regulatory gaps between our domestic
regulatory framework and foreign
jurisdictions. I will address a few examples
below.
First, earlier this year, the OTC Derivatives
Regulators Group (‘‘ODRG’’) agreed to a
number of substantive understandings to
improve the cross-border implementation of
over-the-counter derivatives reforms.5 The
ODRG specifically agreed that a flexible,
outcomes-based approach, based on a broad
category-by-category basis, should form the
basis of comparability determinations.6
However, instead of following this
approach, the Commission has made its
comparability determinations on a rule-byrule basis. For example, in Japan’s
Comparability Determination for
Transaction-Level Requirements, the
Commission has made a positive
comparability determination for some of the
detailed requirements under the swap trading
relationship documentation provisions, but
not for other requirements.7 This detailed
approach clearly contravenes the ODRG’s
understanding.
Second, in several areas, the Commission
has declined to consider a request for a
comparability determination, and has also
failed to provide an analysis regarding the
extent to which the other jurisdiction is, or
is not, comparable. For example, the
Commission has declined to address or
provide any clarity regarding the European
Union’s regulatory data reporting
determination, even though the European
5 https://www.cftc.gov/PressRoom/PressReleases/
pr6678–13.
6 https://www.cftc.gov/ucm/groups/public/@
newsroom/documents/file/odrgreport.pdf. The
ODRG agreed to six understandings. Understanding
number 2 states that ‘‘[a] flexible, outcomes-based
approach should form the basis of final assessments
regarding equivalence or substituted compliance.’’
7 The Commission made a positive comparability
determination for Commission regulations
23.504(a)(2), (b)(1), (b)(2), (b)(3), (b)(4), (c), and (d),
but not for Commission regulations 23.504(b)(5) and
(b)(6).
PO 00000
Frm 00042
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
78851
Union’s reporting regime is set to begin on
February 12, 2014. Although the Commission
has provided some limited relief with respect
to regulatory data reporting, the lack of
clarity creates unnecessary uncertainty,
especially when the European Union’s
reporting regime is set to begin in less than
two months.
Similarly, Japan receives no consideration
for its mandatory clearing requirement, even
though the Commission considers Japan’s
legal framework to be comparable to the U.S.
framework. While the Commission has
declined to provide even a partial
comparability determination, at least in this
instance the Commission has provided a
reason: The differences in the scope of
entities and products subject to the clearing
requirement.8 Such treatment creates
uncertainty and is contrary to increased
global harmonization efforts.
Third, in the Commission’s rush to meet
the artificial deadline of December 21, 2013,
as established in the Exemptive Order
Regarding Compliance with Certain Swap
Regulations (‘‘Exemptive Order’’),9 the
Commission failed to complete an important
piece of the cross-border regime, namely,
supervisory memoranda of understanding
(‘‘MOUs’’) between the Commission and
fellow regulators.
I have previously stated that these MOUs,
if done right, can be a key part of the global
harmonization effort because they provide
mutually agreed-upon solutions for
differences in regulatory regimes.10
Accordingly, I stated that the Commission
should be able to review MOUs alongside the
respective comparability determinations and
vote on them at the same time. Without these
MOUs, our fellow regulators are left
wondering whether and how any differences,
such as direct access to books and records,
will be resolved.
Finally, as I have consistently maintained,
the substituted compliance process should
allow other regulatory bodies to engage with
the full Commission.11 While I am pleased
that the Notices are being voted on by the
Commission, the full Commission only
gained access to the comment letters from
foreign regulators on the Commission’s
comparability determination draft proposals
a few days ago. This is hardly a transparent
process.
Unclear Path Forward
Looking forward to next steps, the
Commission must provide answers to several
outstanding questions regarding these
comparability determinations. In doing so,
the Commission must collaborate with
foreign regulators to increase global
harmonization.
First, there is uncertainty surrounding the
timing and outcome of the MOUs. Critical
8 Yen-denominated interest rate swaps are subject
to the mandatory clearing requirement in both the
U.S. and Japan.
9 Exemptive Order Regarding Compliance With
Certain Swap Regulations, 78 FR 43785 (Jul. 22,
2013).
10 https://www.cftc.gov/PressRoom/
SpeechesTestimony/opaomalia-29.
11 https://www.cftc.gov/PressRoom/
SpeechesTestimony/omaliastatement071213b.
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 249 / Friday, December 27, 2013 / Notices
questions regarding information sharing,
cooperation, supervision, and enforcement
will remain unanswered until the
Commission and our fellow regulators
execute these MOUs.
Second, the Commission has issued timelimited no-action relief for the swap data
repository reporting requirements. These
comparability determinations will be done as
separate notices. However, the timing and
process for these determinations remain
uncertain.
Third, the Commission has failed to
provide clarity on the process for addressing
the comparability determinations that it
declined to undertake at this time. The
Notices only state that the Commission may
address these requests in a separate notice at
a later date given further developments in the
law and regulations of other jurisdictions. To
promote certainty in the financial markets,
the Commission must provide a clear path
forward for market participants and foreign
regulators.
The following steps would be a better
approach: (1) The Commission should extend
the Exemptive Order to allow foreign
regulators to further implement their
regulatory regimes and coordinate with them
to implement a harmonized substituted
compliance process; (2) the Commission
should implement a flexible, outcomes-based
approach to the substituted compliance
process and apply it similarly to all
jurisdictions; and (3) the Commission should
work closely with our fellow regulators to
expeditiously implement MOUs that resolve
regulatory differences and address regulatory
oversight issues.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Conclusion
While I support the narrow comparability
determinations that the Commission has
made, it was my hope that the Commission
would work with foreign regulators to
implement a substituted compliance process
that would increase the global harmonization
effort. I am disappointed that the
Commission has failed to implement such a
process.
I do believe that in the longer term, the
swaps regulations of the major jurisdictions
will converge. At this time, however, the
Commission’s comparability determinations
have done little to alleviate the burden of
regulatory uncertainty and duplicative
compliance with both U.S. and foreign
regulations.
The G–20 process delineated and put in
place the swaps market reforms in G–20
member nations. It is then no surprise that
the Commission must learn to coordinate
with foreign regulators to minimize
confusion and disruption in bringing much
needed clarity to the swaps market. For all
these shortcomings, I respectfully dissent
from the Commission’s approval of the
Notices.
[FR Doc. 2013–30979 Filed 12–26–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6351–01–P
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Jkt 232001
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING
COMMISSION
Comparability Determination for Hong
Kong: Certain Entity-Level
Requirements
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission.
ACTION: Notice of Comparability
Determination for Certain Requirements
under the laws of Hong Kong.
AGENCY:
The following is the analysis
and determination of the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) regarding certain parts
of a request by the Hong Kong Monetary
Authority (‘‘HKMA’’) that the
Commission determine that laws and
regulations applicable in Hong Kong
provide a sufficient basis for an
affirmative finding of comparability
with respect to the following regulatory
obligations applicable to swap dealers
(‘‘SDs’’) and major swap participants
(‘‘MSPs’’) registered with the
Commission: (i) Chief compliance
officer; (ii) risk management; and (iii)
swap data recordkeeping (collectively,
the ‘‘Internal Business Conduct
Requirements’’).
SUMMARY:
Effective Date: This
determination will become effective
immediately upon publication in the
Federal Register.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Gary
Barnett, Director, 202–418–5977,
gbarnett@cftc.gov, Frank Fisanich, Chief
Counsel, 202–418–5949, ffisanich@
cftc.gov, and August A. Imholtz III,
Special Counsel, 202–418–5140,
aimholtz@cftc.gov, Division of Swap
Dealer and Intermediary Oversight,
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission, Three Lafayette Centre,
1155 21st Street, NW., Washington, DC
20581.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
DATES:
I. Introduction
On July 26, 2013, the Commission
published in the Federal Register its
‘‘Interpretive Guidance and Policy
Statement Regarding Compliance with
Certain Swap Regulations’’ (the
‘‘Guidance’’).1 In the Guidance, the
Commission set forth its interpretation
of the manner in which it believes that
section 2(i) of the Commodity Exchange
Act (‘‘CEA’’) applies Title VII’s swap
provisions to activities outside the U.S.
and informed the public of some of the
policies that it expects to follow,
generally speaking, in applying Title VII
and certain Commission regulations in
contexts covered by section 2(i). Among
other matters, the Guidance generally
described the policy and procedural
framework under which the
Commission would consider a
substituted compliance program with
respect to Commission regulations
applicable to entities located outside the
U.S. Specifically, the Commission
addressed a recognition program where
compliance with a comparable
regulatory requirement of a foreign
jurisdiction would serve as a reasonable
substitute for compliance with the
attendant requirements of the CEA and
the Commission’s regulations
promulgated thereunder.
In addition to the Guidance, on July
22, 2013, the Commission issued the
Exemptive Order Regarding Compliance
with Certain Swap Regulations (the
‘‘Exemptive Order’’).2 Among other
things, the Exemptive Order provided
time for the Commission to consider
substituted compliance with respect to
six jurisdictions where non-U.S. SDs are
currently organized. In this regard, the
Exemptive Order generally provided
non-U.S. SDs and MSPs in the six
jurisdictions with conditional relief
from certain requirements of
Commission regulations (those referred
to as ‘‘Entity-Level Requirements’’ in the
Guidance) until the earlier of December
21, 2013, or 30 days following the
issuance of a substituted compliance
determination.3
On July 12, 2013, the HKMA (the
‘‘applicant’’) submitted a request that
the Commission determine that laws
and regulations applicable in Hong
Kong provide a sufficient basis for an
affirmative finding of comparability
with respect to certain Entity-Level
Requirements, including the Internal
Business Conduct Requirements.4 The
applicant provided Commission staff
with updated submissions on August 8
and 19, 2013. On November 11,
November 28, and December 6, 2013,
the applicant further supplemented the
application with corrections and
additional materials. The following is
2 78
1 78
FR 45292 (July 26, 2013). The Commission
originally published proposed and further proposed
guidance on July 12, 2012 and January 7, 2013,
respectively. See Cross-Border Application of
Certain Swaps Provisions of the Commodity
Exchange Act, 77 FR 41214 (July 12, 2012) and
Further Proposed Guidance Regarding Compliance
with Certain Swap Regulations, 78 FR 909 (Jan. 7,
2013).
PO 00000
Frm 00043
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
FR 43785 (July 22, 2013).
Entity-Level Requirements under the
Exemptive Order consist of 17 CFR 1.31, 3.3,
23.201, 23.203, 23.600, 23.601, 23.602, 23.603,
23.605, 23.606, 23.608, 23.609, and parts 45 and 46
of the Commission’s regulations.
4 For purposes of this notice, the Internal
Business Conduct Requirements consist of 17 CFR
3.3, 23.201, 23.203, 23.600, 23.601, 23.602, 23.603,
23.605, and 23.606.
3 The
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 249 (Friday, December 27, 2013)]
[Notices]
[Pages 78839-78852]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-30979]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
Comparability Determination for Canada: Certain Entity-Level
Requirements
AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
ACTION: Notice of Comparability Determination for Certain Requirements
under the Laws of Canada.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The following is the analysis and determination of the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (``Commission'') regarding certain
parts of a joint request by the Canadian Bankers Association (``CBA''),
five individual Canadian banks provisionally-registered with the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (``Commission'') as swap dealers
(``SDs''), and the Office of the Superintendent of Financial
Institutions (``OSFI'') that the Commission determine that certain laws
and regulations applicable in Canada provide a sufficient basis for an
affirmative finding of comparability with respect to the following
regulatory obligations applicable to SDs and major swap participants
(``MSPs'') registered with the Commission: (i) Chief compliance
officer; (ii) risk management; and (iii) swap data recordkeeping
(collectively, the ``Internal Business Conduct Requirements'').
DATES: Effective Date: This determination will become effective
immediately upon publication in the Federal Register.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Gary Barnett, Director, 202-418-5977,
gbarnett@cftc.gov, Frank Fisanich, Chief Counsel, 202-418-5949,
ffisanich@cftc.gov, and Andy Chapin, Associate Director, 202-418-5465,
achapin@cftc.gov, Division of Swap Dealer and Intermediary Oversight,
Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Three Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st
Street NW., Washington, DC 20581.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Introduction
On July 26, 2013, the Commission published in the Federal Register
its ``Interpretive Guidance and Policy Statement Regarding Compliance
with Certain Swap Regulations'' (the ``Guidance'').\1\ In the Guidance,
the Commission set forth its interpretation of the manner in which it
believes that section 2(i) of the Commodity Exchange Act (``CEA'')
applies Title VII's swap provisions to activities outside the U.S. and
informed the public of some of the policies that it expects to follow,
generally speaking, in applying Title VII and certain Commission
regulations in contexts covered by section 2(i). Among other matters,
the Guidance generally described the policy and procedural framework
under which the Commission would consider a substituted compliance
program with respect to Commission regulations applicable to entities
located outside the U.S. Specifically, the Commission addressed a
recognition program where compliance with a comparable regulatory
requirement of a foreign jurisdiction would serve as a reasonable
substitute for compliance with the attendant requirements of the CEA
and the Commission's regulations promulgated thereunder.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 78 FR 45292 (July 26, 2013). The Commission originally
published proposed and further proposed guidance on July 12, 2012
and January 7, 2013, respectively. See Cross-Border Application of
Certain Swaps Provisions of the Commodity Exchange Act, 77 FR 41214
(July 12, 2012) and Further Proposed Guidance Regarding Compliance
with Certain Swap Regulations, 78 FR 909 (Jan. 7, 2013).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to the Guidance, on July 22, 2013, the Commission
issued the Exemptive Order Regarding Compliance with Certain Swap
Regulations (the ``Exemptive Order'').\2\ Among other things, the
Exemptive Order provided time for the Commission to consider
substituted compliance with respect to six jurisdictions where non-U.S.
SDs are currently organized. In this regard, the Exemptive Order
generally provided non-U.S. SDs and MSPs in the six jurisdictions with
conditional relief from certain requirements of Commission regulations
(those referred to as ``Entity-Level Requirements'' in the Guidance)
until the earlier of December 21, 2013, or 30 days following the
issuance of a substituted compliance determination.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ 78 FR 43785 (July 22, 2013).
\3\ The Entity-Level Requirements under the Exemptive Order
consist of 17 CFR 1.31, 3.3, 23.201, 23.203, 23.600, 23.601, 23.602,
23.603, 23.605, 23.606, 23.608, 23.609, and parts 45 and 46 of the
Commission's regulations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On May 13, 2013, the CBA, five individual Canadian banks
provisionally registered with the Commission as SDs, and OSFI
(collectively hereinafter, the ``applicant'') submitted a request that
the Commission determine that laws and regulations applicable in Canada
provide a sufficient basis for an affirmative finding of comparability
with respect to certain Entity-Level Requirements, including the
Internal Business Conduct Requirements.\4\ The applicants provided
Commission staff with a supplemental submission from the Ontario
Securities Commission (``OSC'') dated June 7, 2013. The following is
the Commission's analysis and determination regarding the Internal
Business Conduct Requirements, as detailed below.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ For purposes of this notice, the Internal Business Conduct
Requirements consist of 17 CFR 3.3, 23.201, 23.203, 23.600, 23.601,
23.602, 23.603, 23.605, and 23.606.
\5\ This notice does not address swap data repository reporting
(``SDR Reporting''). The Commission may provide a comparability
determination with respect to the SDR Reporting requirement in a
separate notice.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Background
On July 21, 2010, President Obama signed the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act \6\ (``Dodd-Frank Act'' or ``Dodd-
Frank''), which, in Title VII, established a new regulatory framework
for swaps.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 722(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act amended the CEA by adding
section 2(i), which provides that the swap provisions of the CEA
(including any CEA rules or regulations) apply to cross-border
activities when certain conditions are met, namely, when such
activities have a ``direct and significant connection with activities
in, or effect on, commerce of the United States'' or when they
contravene Commission rules or regulations as are necessary or
appropriate to prevent evasion of the swap provisions of the CEA
enacted under Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act.\7\ In the three years
since its enactment, the Commission has finalized 68 rules and orders
to implement Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act. The finalized rules
include those promulgated under section 4s of the CEA, which address
registration of SDs and MSPs and other substantive requirements
applicable to SDs and MSPs. With few exceptions, the delayed compliance
dates for the Commission's regulations implementing such section 4s
requirements applicable to SDs and MSPs have passed and new SDs and
MSPs are now required to be in full compliance with such regulations
upon registration with the
[[Page 78840]]
Commission.\8\ Notably, the requirements under Title VII of the Dodd-
Frank Act related to SDs and MSPs by their terms apply to all
registered SDs and MSPs, irrespective of where they are located, albeit
subject to the limitations of CEA section 2(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ 7 U.S.C. 2(i).
\8\ The compliance dates are summarized on the Compliance Dates
page of the Commission's Web site. (https://www.cftc.gov/LawRegulation/DoddFrankAct/ComplianceDates/index.htm.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To provide guidance as to the Commission's views regarding the
scope of the cross-border application of Title VII of the Dodd-Frank
Act, the Commission set forth in the Guidance its interpretation of the
manner in which it believes that Title VII's swap provisions apply to
activities outside the U.S. pursuant to section 2(i) of the CEA. Among
other matters, the Guidance generally described the policy and
procedural framework under which the Commission would consider a
substituted compliance program with respect to Commission regulations
applicable to entities located outside the U.S. Specifically, the
Commission addressed a recognition program where compliance with a
comparable regulatory requirement of a foreign jurisdiction would serve
as a reasonable substitute for compliance with the attendant
requirements of the CEA and the Commission's regulations. With respect
to the standards forming the basis for any determination of
comparability (``comparability determination'' or ``comparability
finding''), the Commission stated:
In evaluating whether a particular category of foreign
regulatory requirement(s) is comparable and comprehensive to the
applicable requirement(s) under the CEA and Commission regulations,
the Commission will take into consideration all relevant factors,
including but not limited to, the comprehensiveness of those
requirement(s), the scope and objectives of the relevant regulatory
requirement(s), the comprehensiveness of the foreign regulator's
supervisory compliance program, as well as the home jurisdiction's
authority to support and enforce its oversight of the registrant. In
this context, comparable does not necessarily mean identical.
Rather, the Commission would evaluate whether the home
jurisdiction's regulatory requirement is comparable to and as
comprehensive as the corresponding U.S. regulatory
requirement(s).\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ 78 FR 45342-45.
Upon a comparability finding, consistent with CEA section 2(i) and
comity principles, the Commission's policy generally is that eligible
entities may comply with a substituted compliance regime, subject to
any conditions the Commission places on its finding, and subject to the
Commission's retention of its examination authority and its enforcement
authority.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ See the Guidance, 78 FR 45342-44.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In this regard, the Commission notes that a comparability
determination cannot be premised on whether an SD or MSP must disclose
comprehensive information to its regulator in its home jurisdiction,
but rather on whether information relevant to the Commission's
oversight of an SD or MSP would be directly available to the Commission
and any U.S. prudential regulator of the SD or MSP.\11\ The
Commission's direct access to the books and records required to be
maintained by an SD or MSP registered with the Commission is a core
requirement of the CEA \12\ and the Commission's regulations,\13\ and
is a condition to registration.\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ Under Sec. Sec. 23.203 and 23.606, all records required by
the CEA and the Commission's regulations to be maintained by a
registered SD or MSP shall be maintained in accordance with
Commission regulation 1.31 and shall be open for inspection by
representatives of the Commission, the United States Department of
Justice, or any applicable U.S. prudential regulator.
In its Final Exemptive Order Regarding Compliance with Certain
Swap Regulations, 78 FR 858 (Jan. 7, 2013), the Commission noted
that an applicant for registration as an SD or MSP must file a Form
7-R with the National Futures Association and that Form 7-R was
being modified at that time to address existing blocking, privacy,
or secrecy laws of foreign jurisdictions that applied to the books
and records of SDs and MSPs acting in those jurisdictions. See id.
at 871-72 n. 107. The modifications to Form 7-R were a temporary
measure intended to allow SDs and MSPs to apply for registration in
a timely manner in recognition of the existence of the blocking,
privacy, and secrecy laws. In the Guidance, the Commission clarified
that the change to Form 7-R impacts the registration application
only and does not modify the Commission's authority under the CEA
and its regulations to access records held by registered SDs and
MSPs. Commission access to a registrant's books and records is a
fundamental regulatory tool necessary to properly monitor and
examine each registrant's compliance with the CEA and the
regulations adopted pursuant thereto. The Commission has maintained
an ongoing dialogue on a bilateral and multilateral basis with
foreign regulators and with registrants to address books and records
access issues and may consider appropriate measures where requested
to do so.
\12\ See e.g., sections 4s(f)(1)(C), 4s(j)(3) and (4) of the
CEA.
\13\ See e.g., Sec. Sec. 23.203(b) and 23.606.
\14\ See supra note 10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. Regulation of SDs and MSPs in Canada
On May 13, 2013, the applicant submitted a request that the
Commission assess the comparability of Canadian laws and regulations
with the requirements of the CEA and the Commission's regulations
promulgated thereunder. OSC provided a supplement to the submission on
June 7, 2013. On November 8, 2013, OSFI further supplemented the
application with corrections and additional materials.
All of the currently registered Canadian SDs are banks regulated
under the Canadian Bank Act (the ``Bank Act''),\15\ relevant
regulations thereunder, and guidelines, advisories, and interpretations
provided by OSFI. As the governing prudential regulator in Canada, OSFI
supervises all Canadian banks on a consolidated basis, including those
provisionally registered with the Commission as SDs (the ``Canadian
Bank SDs''). To implement its ``Supervisory Framework,'' OSFI has
published guidelines, advisories, and interpretations which OSFI
expects each bank to follow. Each of the five Canadian Bank SDs also
has been designated as Domestic Systemically Important Banks
(``DSIBs'') due to the potential impact that failure could have on the
domestic economy based on their size, interconnectedness,
substitutability, and complexity. As DSIBs, these banks are expected to
have advanced practices in terms of the design and operation of
oversight functions and controls, and are subject to continued
supervisory intensity, enhanced disclosure requirements, and a capital
surcharge.\16\
Canada's provincial securities administrators, coordinated by the
Derivatives Committee of the Canadian Securities Administrators
(``CSA''), are responsible for regulating the capital markets.
Harmonized policy recommendations are made at the CSA level, while
regulations are made at the provincial level. Currently, the CSA has
issued a Consultation Paper 91-407 on ``Derivatives Registration''
(comment period closed June 17, 2013).
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\15\ Consolidated Acts of Canada, S.C. 1991, c. 46.
\16\ Because the applicant's request and the Commissions
determinations herein are based on the comparability of Canadian
requirements applicable to banks, an SD or MSP that is not a bank,
or is otherwise not subject to the requirements applicable to banks
upon which the Commission bases its determinations, may not be able
to rely on the Commission's comparability determinations herein.
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IV. Comparable and Comprehensiveness Standard
The Commission's comparability analysis will be based on a
comparison of specific foreign requirements against the specific
related CEA provisions and Commission regulations as categorized and
described in the Guidance. As explained in the Guidance, within the
framework of CEA section 2(i) and principles of international comity,
the Commission may make a comparability determination on a requirement-
by-requirement basis, rather than on the
[[Page 78841]]
basis of the foreign regime as a whole.\17\ In making its comparability
determinations, the Commission may include conditions that take into
account timing and other issues related to coordinating the
implementation of reform efforts across jurisdictions.\18\
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\17\ 78 FR 45343.
\18\ 78 FR 45343.
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In evaluating whether a particular category of foreign regulatory
requirement(s) is comparable and comprehensive to the corollary
requirement(s) under the CEA and Commission regulations, the Commission
will take into consideration all relevant factors, including, but not
limited to:
The comprehensiveness of those requirement(s),
The scope and objectives of the relevant regulatory
requirement(s),
The comprehensiveness of the foreign regulator's
supervisory compliance program, and
The home jurisdiction's authority to support and enforce
its oversight of the registrant.\19\
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\19\ 78 FR 45343. The Commission's substituted compliance
program would generally be available for SDR Reporting, as outlined
in the Guidance, only if the Commission has direct access to all of
the data elements that are reported to a foreign trade repository
pursuant to the substituted compliance program. Thus, direct access
to swap data is a threshold matter to be addressed in a
comparability evaluation for SDR Reporting. Moreover, the Commission
explains in the Guidance that, due to its technical nature, a
comparability evaluation for SDR Reporting ``will generally entail a
detailed comparison and technical analysis.'' A more particularized
analysis will generally be necessary to determine whether data
stored in a foreign trade repository provides for effective
Commission use, in furtherance of the regulatory purposes of the
Dodd-Frank Act. See 78 FR 45345.
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In making a comparability determination, the Commission takes an
``outcome-based'' approach. An ``outcome-based'' approach means that
when evaluating whether a foreign jurisdiction's regulatory
requirements are comparable to, and as comprehensive as, the corollary
areas of the CEA and Commission regulations, the Commission ultimately
focuses on regulatory outcomes (i.e., the home jurisdiction's
requirements do not have to be identical).\20\ This approach recognizes
that foreign regulatory systems differ and their approaches vary and
may differ from how the Commission chose to address an issue, but that
the foreign jurisdiction's regulatory requirements nonetheless achieve
the regulatory outcome sought to be achieved by a certain provision of
the CEA or Commission regulation.
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\20\ 78 FR 45343.
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In doing its comparability analysis the Commission may determine
that no comparability determination can be made \21\ and that the non-
U.S. SD or non-U.S. MSP, U.S. bank that is an SD or MSP with respect to
its foreign branches, or non-registrant, to the extent applicable under
the Guidance, may be required to comply with the CEA and Commission
regulations.
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\21\ A finding of comparability may not be possible for a number
of reasons, including the fact that the foreign jurisdiction has not
yet implemented or finalized particular requirements.
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The starting point in the Commission's analysis is a consideration
of the regulatory objectives of the foreign jurisdiction's regulation
of swaps and swap market participants. As stated in the Guidance,
jurisdictions may not have swap specific regulations in some areas, and
instead have regulatory or supervisory regimes that achieve comparable
and comprehensive regulation to the Dodd-Frank Act requirements, but on
a more general, entity-wide, or prudential, basis.\22\ In addition,
portions of a foreign regulatory regime may have similar regulatory
objectives, but the means by which these objectives are achieved with
respect to swaps market activities may not be clearly defined, or may
not expressly include specific regulatory elements that the Commission
concludes are critical to achieving the regulatory objectives or
outcomes required under the CEA and the Commission's regulations. In
these circumstances, the Commission will work with the regulators and
registrants in these jurisdictions to consider alternative approaches
that may result in a determination that substituted compliance
applies.\23\
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\22\ 78 FR 45343.
\23\ As explained in the Guidance, such ``approaches used will
vary depending on the circumstances relevant to each jurisdiction.
One example would include coordinating with the foreign regulators
in developing appropriate regulatory changes or new regulations,
particularly where changes or new regulations already are being
considered or proposed by the foreign regulators or legislative
bodies. As another example, the Commission may, after consultation
with the appropriate regulators and market participants, include in
its substituted compliance determination a description of the means
by which certain swaps market participants can achieve substituted
compliance within the construct of the foreign regulatory regime.
The identification of the means by which substituted compliance is
achieved would be designed to address the regulatory objectives and
outcomes of the relevant Dodd-Frank Act requirements in a manner
that does not conflict with a foreign regulatory regime and reduces
the likelihood of inconsistent regulatory obligations. For example,
the Commission may specify that [SDs] and MSPs in the jurisdiction
undertake certain recordkeeping and documentation for swap
activities that otherwise is only addressed by the foreign
regulatory regime with respect to financial activities generally. In
addition, the substituted compliance determination may include
provisions for summary compliance and risk reporting to the
Commission to allow the Commission to monitor whether the regulatory
outcomes are being achieved. By using these approaches, in the
interest of comity, the Commission would seek to achieve its
regulatory objectives with respect to the Commission's registrants
that are operating in foreign jurisdictions in a manner that works
in harmony with the regulatory interests of those jurisdictions.''
78 FR 45343-44.
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Finally, the Commission will generally rely on an applicant's
description of the laws and regulations of the foreign jurisdiction in
making its comparability determination. The Commission considers an
application to be a representation by the applicant that the laws and
regulations submitted are in full force and effect, that the
description of such laws and regulations is accurate and complete, and
that, unless otherwise noted, the scope of such laws and regulations
encompasses the swaps activities \24\ of SDs and MSPs \25\ in the
relevant jurisdictions.\26\ Further, as stated in the Guidance, the
Commission expects that an applicant would notify the Commission of any
material changes to information submitted in support of a comparability
determination (including, but not limited to, changes in the relevant
supervisory or regulatory regime) as, depending on the nature of the
change, the Commission's comparability determination may no longer be
valid.\27\
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\24\ ``Swaps activities'' is defined in Commission regulation
23.600(a)(7) to mean, ``with respect to a registrant, such
registrant's activities related to swaps and any product used to
hedge such swaps, including, but not limited to, futures, options,
other swaps or security-based swaps, debt or equity securities,
foreign currency, physical commodities, and other derivatives.'' The
Commission's regulations under Part 23 (17 CFR Part 23) are limited
in scope to the swaps activities of SDs and MSPs.
\25\ No SD or MSP that is not legally required to comply with a
law or regulation determined to be comparable may voluntarily comply
with such law or regulation in lieu of compliance with the CEA and
the relevant Commission regulation. Each SD or MSP that seeks to
rely on a comparability determination is responsible for determining
whether it is subject to the laws and regulations found comparable.
Currently there are no MSPs organized outside the U.S. and the
Commission therefore cautions any non-financial entity organized
outside the U.S. and applying for registration as an MSP to
carefully consider whether the laws and regulations determined to be
comparable herein are applicable to such entity.
\26\ The Commission has provided the relevant foreign
regulator(s) with opportunities to review and correct the
applicant's description of such laws and regulations on which the
Commission will base its comparability determination. The Commission
relies on the accuracy and completeness of such review and any
corrections received in making its comparability determinations. A
comparability determination based on an inaccurate description of
foreign laws and regulations may not be valid.
\27\ 78 FR 45345.
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The Guidance provided a detailed discussion of the Commission's
policy regarding the availability of substituted
[[Page 78842]]
compliance \28\ for the Internal Business Conduct Requirements.\29\
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\28\ See 78 FR 45348-50. The Commission notes that registrants
and other market participants are responsible for determining
whether substituted compliance is available pursuant to the Guidance
based on the comparability determination contained herein (including
any conditions or exceptions), and its particular status and
circumstances.
\29\ This notice does not address Sec. 23.608 (Restrictions on
counterparty clearing relationships). The Commission declines to
take up the request for a comparability determination with respect
to this regulation due to the Commission's view that there are not
laws or regulations applicable in Canada to compare with the
prohibitions and requirements of Sec. 23.608. The Commission may
provide a comparability determination with respect to this
regulation at a later date in consequence of further developments in
the law and regulations applicable in Canada.
This notice also does not address capital adequacy because the
Commission has not yet finalized rules for SDs and MSPs in this
area, nor SDR Reporting. The Commission may provide a comparability
determination with respect to these requirements at a later date or
in a separate notice.
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V. Supervisory Arrangement
In the Guidance, the Commission stated that, in connection with a
determination that substituted compliance is appropriate, it would
expect to enter into an appropriate memorandum of understanding
(``MOU'') or similar arrangement \30\ with the relevant foreign
regulator(s). Although existing arrangements would indicate a foreign
regulator's ability to cooperate and share information, ``going
forward, the Commission and relevant foreign supervisor(s) would need
to establish supervisory MOUs or other arrangements that provide for
information sharing and cooperation in the context of supervising [SDs]
and MSPs.'' \31\
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\30\ An MOU is one type of arrangement between or among
regulators. Supervisory arrangements could include, as appropriate,
cooperative arrangements that are memorialized and executed as
addenda to existing MOUs or, for example, as independent bilateral
arrangements, statements of intent, declarations, or letters.
\31\ 78 FR 45344.
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The Commission is in the process of developing its registration and
supervision regime for provisionally-registered SDs and MSPs. This new
initiative includes setting forth supervisory arrangements with
authorities that have joint jurisdiction over SDs and MSPs that are
registered with the Commission and subject to U.S. law. Given the
developing nature of the Commission's regime and the fact that the
Commission has not negotiated prior supervisory arrangements with
certain authorities, the negotiation of supervisory arrangements
presents a unique opportunity to develop close working relationships
between and among authorities, as well as highlight any potential
issues related to cooperation and information sharing.
Accordingly, the Commission is negotiating such a supervisory
arrangement with each applicable foreign regulator of an SD or MSP. The
Commission expects that the arrangement will establish expectations for
ongoing cooperation, address direct access to information,\32\ provide
for notification upon the occurrence of specified events, memorialize
understandings related to on-site visits,\33\ and include protections
related to the use and confidentiality of non-public information shared
pursuant to the arrangement.
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\32\ Section 4s(j)(3) and (4) of the CEA and Commission
regulation 23.606 require a registered SD or MSP to make all records
required to be maintained in accordance with Commission regulation
1.31 available promptly upon request to, among others,
representatives of the Commission. See also 7 U.S.C. 6s(f); 17 CFR
23.203. In the Guidance, the Commission states that it ``reserves
this right to access records held by registered [SDs] and MSPs,
including those that are non-U.S. persons who may comply with the
Dodd-Frank recordkeeping requirement through substituted
compliance.'' 78 FR 45345 n. 472; see also id. at 45342 n. 461
(affirming the Commission's authority under the CEA and its
regulations to access books and records held by registered SDs and
MSPs as ``a fundamental regulatory tool necessary to properly
monitor and examine each registrant's compliance with the CEA and
the regulations adopted pursuant thereto'').
\33\ The Commission retains its examination authority, both
during the application process as well as upon and after
registration of an SD or MSP. See 78 FR 45342 (stating Commission
policy that ``eligible entities may comply with a substituted
compliance regime under certain circumstances, subject, however, to
the Commission's retention of its examination authority'') and 45344
n. 471 (stating that the ``Commission may, as it deems appropriate
and necessary, conduct an on-site examination of the applicant'').
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These arrangements will establish a roadmap for how authorities
will consult, cooperate, and share information. As with any such
arrangement, however, nothing in these arrangements will supersede
domestic laws or resolve potential conflicts of law, such as the
application of domestic secrecy or blocking laws to regulated entities.
VI. Comparability Determination and Analysis
The following section describes the requirements imposed by
specific sections of the CEA and the Commission's regulations for the
Internal Business Conduct Requirements that are the subject of this
comparability determination, and the Commission's regulatory objectives
with respect to such requirements. Immediately following a description
of the requirement(s) and regulatory objective(s) of the specific
Internal Business Conduct Requirements that the applicant submitted for
a comparability determination, the Commission provides a description of
the foreign jurisdiction's comparable laws, regulations, or rules and
whether such laws, regulations, or rules meet the applicable regulatory
objective.
The Commission's determinations in this regard and the discussion
in this section are intended to inform the public of the Commission's
views regarding whether the foreign jurisdiction's laws, regulations,
or rules may be comparable and comprehensive as those requirements in
the Dodd-Frank Act (and Commission regulations promulgated thereunder)
and therefore, may form the basis of substituted compliance. In turn,
the public (in the foreign jurisdiction, in the United States, and
elsewhere) retains its ability to present facts and circumstances that
would inform the determinations set forth in this notice.
As was stated in the Guidance, the Commission recognizes the
complex and dynamic nature of the global swap market and the need to
take an adaptable approach to cross-border issues, particularly as it
continues to work closely with foreign regulators to address potential
conflicts with respect to each country's respective regulatory regime.
In this regard, the Commission may review, modify, or expand the
determinations herein in light of comments received and future
developments.
A. Chief Compliance Officer (Sec. 3.3).
Commission Requirement: Implementing section 4s(k) of the CEA,
Commission regulation 3.3 generally sets forth the following
requirements for SDs and MSPs:
An SD or MSP must designate an individual as Chief
Compliance Officer (``CCO'');
The CCO must have the responsibility and authority to
develop the regulatory compliance policies and procedures of the SD or
MSP;
The CCO must report to the board of directors or the
senior officer of the SD or MSP;
Only the board of directors or a senior officer may remove
the CCO;
The CCO and the board of directors must meet at least once
per year;
The CCO must have the background and skills appropriate
for the responsibilities of the position;
The CCO must not be subject to disqualification from
registration under sections 8a(2) or (3) of the CEA;
Each SD and MSP must include a designation of a CCO in its
registration application;
[[Page 78843]]
The CCO must administer the regulatory compliance policies
of the SD or MSP;
The CCO must take reasonable steps to ensure compliance
with the CEA and Commission regulations, and resolve conflicts of
interest;
The CCO must establish procedures for detecting and
remediating non-compliance issues;
The CCO must annually prepare and sign an ``annual
compliance report'' containing: (i) A description of policies and
procedures reasonably designed to ensure compliance; (ii) an assessment
of the effectiveness of such policies and procedures; (iii) a
description of material non-compliance issues and the action taken;
(iv) recommendations of improvements in compliance policies; and (v) a
certification by the CCO or CEO that, to the best of such officer's
knowledge and belief, the annual report is accurate and complete under
penalty of law; and
The annual compliance report must be furnished to the CFTC
within 90 days after the end of the fiscal year of the SD or MSP,
simultaneously with its annual financial condition report.
Regulatory Objective: The Commission believes that compliance by
SDs and MSPs with the CEA and the Commission's rules greatly
contributes to the protection of customers, orderly and fair markets,
and the stability and integrity of the market intermediaries registered
with the Commission. The Commission expects SDs and MSPs to strictly
comply with the CEA and the Commission's rules and to devote sufficient
resources to ensuring such compliance. Thus, through its CCO rule, the
Commission seeks to ensure firms have designated a qualified individual
as CCO that reports directly to the board of directors or the senior
officer of the firm and that has the independence, responsibility, and
authority to develop and administer compliance policies and procedures
reasonably designed to ensure compliance with the CEA and Commission
regulations, resolve conflicts of interest, remediate noncompliance
issues, and report annually to the Commission and the board or senior
officer on compliance of the firm.
Comparable Canadian Law and Regulations: The applicant has
represented to the Commission that the following provisions of law and
regulations applicable in Canada are in full force and effect in
Canada, and comparable to and as comprehensive as section 4s(k) of the
CEA and Commission regulation 3.3.
OSFI's Legislative Compliance Management Guideline E-13 (``LCM
Guideline'') requires Canadian banks to establish an enterprise-wide
framework of regulatory risk management controls to ensure that
regulatory compliance risks are managed effectively. The required LCM
framework must meet the requirements of the LCM Guideline, which sets
out OSFI's expectations. The Canadian Bank SDs are required to
demonstrate that they satisfy those expectations in particular
circumstances. Pursuant to the LCM Guideline:
The compliance oversight function should be designated to
a member of senior management as the bank's CCO;
Such CCO should have sufficient stature, authority,
resources, and access to achieve compliance with applicable law;
Such CCO should have appropriate skills and knowledge to
effectively fulfill the requirements of the function;
The CCO should approve the content and frequency of
reports and that such reports should be sufficient to enable the CCO,
senior management, and the bank's board to discharge their compliance
responsibilities;
OSFI expects that each bank's LCM framework will include
identification, assessment, communication, and maintenance of
applicable regulatory requirements, compliance procedures, monitoring
procedures, and reporting procedures;
OSFI expects the CCO to be responsible for the LCM
framework and to report issues directly to the board, including any
material compliance issues and their remediation; and
Normal course reports to the board should be made no less
than annually, and contain discussion of material weaknesses, non-
compliance issues, and remedial action plans.
In addition, the OSFI Corporate Governance Guideline of Federally
Regulated Financial Institutions (``OSFI Corporate Governance
Guideline'') states that the bank's board of directors should be
responsible for the selection, performance, management, compensation,
and evaluation of a CCO. Pursuant to the OSFI Supervisory Framework,
OSFI monitors banks' management of compliance risk and reports on
banks' compliance with the Bank Act annually to the Canadian Minister
of Finance.
Commission Determination: The Commission finds that the OSFI
standards specified above are generally identical in intent to Sec.
3.3 by seeking to ensure firms have designated a qualified individual
as the compliance officer that reports directly to a sufficiently
senior function of the firm and that has the independence,
responsibility, and authority to develop and administer compliance
policies and procedures reasonably designed to ensure compliance with
the CEA and Commission regulations, resolve conflicts of interest,
remediate noncompliance issues, and report annually on compliance of
the firm.
Based on the foregoing and the representations of the applicant,
the Commission hereby determines that the CCO requirements of the OSFI
standards, specified above, are comparable to and as comprehensive as
Sec. 3.3, with the exception of Sec. 3.3(f) concerning certifying and
furnishing an annual compliance report to the Commission.\34\
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\34\ Because the Commission has not determined that the
requirements of the OSFI standards are comparable to and as
comprehensive as Sec. 3.3(f), any SD or MSP to which both Sec. 3.3
and the OSFI standards specified above are applicable would
generally be deemed to be in compliance with Sec. 3.3 if that SD or
MSP complies with the OSFI standards specified above, subject to
certifying and furnishing the Commission with the annual report
required under the OSFI standards specified above in accordance with
Sec. 3.3(f). The Commission notes that it generally expects
registrants to submit required reports to the Commission in the
English language.
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Notwithstanding that the Commission has not determined that the
requirements of the OSFI standards are comparable to and as
comprehensive as Sec. 3.3(f), any SD or MSP to which both Sec. 3.3
and the OSFI standards specified above are applicable would generally
be deemed to be in compliance with Sec. 3.3(f) if that SD or MSP
complies with the OSFI standards specified above, subject to certifying
and furnishing the Commission with the annual report required under the
OSFI standards specified above in accordance with Sec. 3.3(f). The
Commission notes that it generally expects registrants to submit
required reports to the Commission in the English language.
B. Risk Management Duties (Sec. Sec. 23.600--23.609)
Section 4s(j) of the CEA requires each SD and MSP to establish
internal policies and procedures designed to, among other things,
address risk management, monitor compliance with position limits,
prevent conflicts of interest, and promote diligent supervision, as
well as maintain business continuity and disaster recovery
programs.\35\ The Commission adopted regulations 23.600, 23.601,
23.602, 23.603, 23.605, and 23.606 to implement the statute.\36\ The
[[Page 78844]]
Commission also adopted regulation 23.609, which requires certain risk
management procedures for SDs or MSPs that are clearing members of a
derivatives clearing organization (``DCO'').\37\ Collectively, these
requirements help to establish a robust and comprehensive internal risk
management program for SDs and MSPs with respect to their swaps
activities,\38\ which is critical to effective systemic risk management
for the overall swaps market. In making its comparability determination
with regard to these risk management duties, the Commission will
consider each regulation individually.\39\
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\35\ 7 U.S.C. 6s(j).
\36\ See Final Swap Dealer and MSP Recordkeeping Rule, 77 FR
20128 (April 3, 2012) (relating to risk management program,
monitoring of position limits, business continuity and disaster
recovery, conflicts of interest policies and procedures, and general
information availability, respectively).
\37\ See Customer Documentation Rule, 77 FR 21278. Also, SDs
must comply with Commission regulation 23.608, which prohibits SDs
providing clearing services to customers from entering into
agreements that would: (i) Disclose the identity of a customer's
original executing counterparty; (ii) limit the number of
counterparties a customer may trade with; (iii) impose counterparty-
based position limits; (iv) impair a customer's access to execution
of a trade on terms that have a reasonable relationship to the best
terms available; or (v) prevent compliance with specified time
frames for acceptance of trades into clearing.
\38\ ``Swaps activities'' is defined in Commission regulation
23.600(a)(7) to mean, ``with respect to a registrant, such
registrant's activities related to swaps and any product used to
hedge such swaps, including, but not limited to, futures, options,
other swaps or security-based swaps, debt or equity securities,
foreign currency, physical commodities, and other derivatives.'' The
Commission's regulations under Part 23 (17 CFR Part 23) are limited
in scope to the swaps activities of SDs and MSPs.
\39\ As stated above, this notice does not address Sec. 23.608
(Restrictions on counterparty clearing relationships). The
Commission declines to take up the request for a comparability
determination with respect to this regulation due to the
Commission's view that there are not laws or regulations applicable
in Canada to compare with the prohibitions and requirements of Sec.
23.608. The Commission may provide a comparability determination
with respect to this regulation at a later date in consequence of
further developments in the law and regulations applicable in
Canada.
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1. Risk Management Program for SDs and MSPs (Sec. 23.600)
Commission Requirement: Implementing section 4s(j)(2) of the CEA,
Commission regulation 23.600 generally requires that:
Each SD or MSP must establish and enforce a risk
management program consisting of a system of written risk management
policies and procedures designed to monitor and manage the risks
associated with the swap activities of the firm, including without
limitation, market, credit, liquidity, foreign currency, legal,
operational, and settlement risks, and furnish a copy of such policies
and procedures to the CFTC upon application for registration and upon
request;
The SD or MSP must establish a risk management unit
independent from the business trading unit;
The risk management policies and procedures of the SD or
MSP must be approved by the firm's governing body;
Risk tolerance limits and exceptions therefrom must be
reviewed and approved quarterly by senior management and annually by
the governing body;
The risk management program must have a system for
detecting breaches of risk tolerance limits and alerting supervisors
and senior management, as appropriate;
The risk management program must account for risks posed
by affiliates and be integrated at the consolidated entity level;
The risk management unit must provide senior management
and the governing body with quarterly risk exposure reports and upon
detection of any material change in the risk exposure of the SD or MSP;
Risk exposure reports must be furnished to the CFTC within
five business days following provision to senior management;
The risk management program must have a new product policy
for assessing the risks of new products prior to engaging in such
transactions;
The risk management program must have policies and
procedures providing for trading limits, monitoring of trading,
processing of trades, and separation of personnel in the trading unit
from personnel in the risk management unit; and
The risk management program must be reviewed and tested at
least annually and upon any material change in the business of the SD
or MSP.
Regulatory Objective: Through the required system of risk
management, the Commission seeks to ensure that firms are adequately
managing the risks of their swaps activities to prevent failure of the
SD or MSP, which could result in losses to counterparties doing
business with the SD or MSP, and systemic risk more generally. To this
end, the Commission believes the risk management program of an SD or
MSP must contain at least the following critical elements:
Identification of risk categories;
Establishment of risk tolerance limits for each category
of risk and approval of such limits by senior management and the
governing body;
An independent risk management unit to administer a risk
management program; and
Periodic oversight of risk exposures by senior management
and the governing body.
Comparable Canadian Law and Regulations: The applicant has
represented to the Commission that the following provisions of law and
regulations applicable in Canada are in full force and effect in
Canada, and are comparable to and as comprehensive as section 4s(j)(2)
of the CEA and Commission regulation Sec. 23.600.
The OSFI Corporate Governance Guideline requires that each bank
establish a risk appetite framework (``RAF'') that:
Guides the amount of risk the bank is willing to accept in
pursuit of its strategic and business objectives.
Sets basic goals, benchmarks, parameters, and limits, and
should consider all applicable types of risks.
Contains all elements required by an annex to the
Corporate Governance Guideline, including a risk appetite statement,
specific risk tolerance limits, and processes for implementation of the
RAF.
Further, the OSFI Corporate Governance Guideline states that DSIBs
should establish a dedicated risk committee to oversee risk management
on an enterprise-wide basis, and that the oversight of the risk
management activities of the bank are to be independent from
operational management, adequately resourced, and have appropriate
status and visibility.
The OSFI Derivatives Best Practice Guideline states that each bank
should ensure that each derivative product traded is subject to a
product authorization signed off by senior management, and sets forth
OSFI's expectations with respect to having documented policies and
procedures for risk management, creating risk tolerance limits, and
measuring, reporting, managing, and controlling the risks associated
with the derivatives business, including market, currency, interest
rate, equity price, commodity price, credit, settlement, liquidity,
operational, and legal risks.
Finally, OSFI represents that its oversight pursuant to the
Supervisory Framework will assess the extent to which the risk
management function integrates policies, practices, and limits with
day-to-day business activities and with the bank's strategic, capital,
and liquidity management policies. Under the Supervisory Framework,
OSFI also will assess whether the risk management function effectively
monitors risk positions against approved limits and ensures that
material breaches are addressed on a timely basis. OSFI represents that
it will look at various indicators, including the extent to which the
bank proactively updates its policies, practices, and
[[Page 78845]]
limits in response to changes in the industry and in the institution's
strategy, business activities and risk tolerances.\40\
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\40\ In addition to the foregoing, the applicant notes that the
Canadian Bank SDs may be subject to heightened standards for their
derivatives business in the near future under regulatory
recommendations that would require registrants to establish,
maintain and apply systems, policies and procedures that establish
robust compliance and risk management systems specifically for their
derivatives business. See CSA Consultation Paper 91-407.
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Commission Determination: The Commission finds that the OSFI
standards specified above are generally identical in intent to Sec.
23.600 by requiring a system of risk management that seeks to ensure
that firms are adequately managing the risks of their swaps activities
to prevent failure of the SD or MSP, which could result in losses to
counterparties doing business with the SD or MSP, and systemic risk
more generally. Specifically, the Commission finds that the OSFI
standards specified above would comprehensively require SDs and MSPs to
establish risk management programs containing the following critical
elements:
Identification of risk categories;
Establishment of risk tolerance limits for each category
of risk and approval of such limits by senior management and the
governing body;
An independent risk management unit to administer a risk
management program; and
Periodic oversight of risk exposures by senior management
and the governing body.
Based on the foregoing and the representations of the applicant,
the Commission hereby determines that the risk management program
requirements of the OSFI standards, as specified above, are comparable
to and as comprehensive as Sec. 23.600, with the exception of Sec.
23.600(c)(2) concerning the requirement that each SD and MSP produce a
quarterly risk exposure report and provide such report to its senior
management, governing body, and the Commission.
Notwithstanding that the Commission has not determined that the
requirements of the OSFI standards are comparable to and as
comprehensive as Sec. 23.600(c)(2), any SD or MSP to which both Sec.
23.600 and the OSFI standards specified above are applicable would
generally be deemed to be in compliance with Sec. 23.600(c)(2) if that
SD or MSP complies with the OSFI standards specified above, subject to
compliance with the requirement that it produce quarterly risk exposure
reports and provide such reports to its senior management, governing
body, and the Commission in accordance with Sec. 23.600(c)(2). The
Commission notes that it generally expects reports furnished to the
Commission by registrants to be in the English language.
2. Monitoring of Position Limits (Sec. 23.601)
Commission Requirement: Implementing section 4s(j)(1) of the CEA,
Commission regulation 23.601 requires each SD or MSP to establish and
enforce written policies and procedures that are reasonably designed to
monitor for, and prevent violations of, applicable position limits
established by the Commission, a DCM, or a SEF.\41\ The policies and
procedures must include an early warning system and provide for
escalation of violations to senior management (including the firm's
governing body).
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\41\ The setting of position limits by the Commission, a DCM, or
a SEF is subject to requirements under the CEA and Commission
regulations other than Sec. 23.601. The setting of position limits
and compliance with such limits is not subject to the Commission's
substituted compliance regime.
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Regulatory Objective: Generally, position limits are implemented to
ensure market integrity, fairness, orderliness, and accurate pricing in
the commodity markets. Commission regulation 23.601 thus seeks to
ensure that SDs and MSPs have established the necessary policies and
procedures to monitor the trading of the firm to prevent violations of
applicable position limits established by the Commission, a DCM, or a
SEF. As part of its Risk Management Program, Sec. 23.601 is intended
to ensure that established position limits are not breached by the SD
or MSP.
Comparable Canadian Law and Regulations: The applicant has
represented to the Commission that the following provisions of law and
regulations applicable in Canada are in full force and effect in
Canada, and comparable to and as comprehensive as section 4s(j)(1) of
the CEA and Commission regulation Sec. 23.601.
OSFI states that the monitoring of position limits is an aspect of
the risk management and compliance framework for each bank.
Specifically:
OSFI's LCM Guideline requires Canadian banks to establish
an enterprise-wide framework of regulatory risk management controls to
ensure that regulatory compliance risks are managed effectively. The
required LCM framework sets out OSFI's expectations and banks are
required to demonstrate that they satisfy those expectations in
particular circumstances; and
OSFI expects that each bank's LCM framework will include
identification, assessment, communication, and maintenance of
applicable regulatory requirements, compliance procedures, monitoring
procedures, and reporting procedures.\42\
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\42\ In addition to the foregoing, the applicant also submitted
various guidelines and required best practices concerning the
setting of internal risk tolerance limits and monitoring for
compliance with such internal limits. Although the Commission
recognizes these as prudent risk management practices, the
Commission does not believe that these provisions are relevant for a
comparability determination with respect to Sec. 23.601 because
Sec. 23.601 requires monitoring for compliance with external
position limits set by the Commission, a DCM, or a SEF.
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The applicants represent to the Commission that the OSFI
requirement to monitor the effectiveness of procedures to ensure
compliance with regulatory obligations includes applicable regulatory
obligations of an SD or MSP under the CEA, Commission regulations, and
position limits set by the Commission, a DCM, or a SEF. OSFI expects
banks to comply with all applicable regulatory requirements, which
includes legislation, regulations, and regulatory directives applicable
to the activities of the bank or its subsidiaries worldwide.
Commission Determination: The Commission finds that the OSFI
standards specified above are generally identical in intent to Sec.
23.601 by requiring SDs and MSPs to establish necessary policies and
procedures to monitor the trading of the firm to prevent violations of
applicable position limits established by applicable laws and
regulations, including those of the Commission, a DCM, or a SEF.
Specifically, the Commission finds that the OSFI standards specified
above, while not specific to the issue of position limit compliance,
nevertheless comprehensively require SDs and MSPs to monitor for
regulatory compliance generally, including monitoring for compliance
with position limits set pursuant to applicable law (including the CEA
and Commission regulations) and the responsibility of senior management
(including the board of directors) for such compliance.
Based on the foregoing and the representations of the applicant,
the Commission hereby determines that the compliance monitoring
requirements of the OSFI standards, as specified above, are comparable
to and as comprehensive as Sec. 23.601. For the avoidance of doubt,
the Commission notes that this determination may not be relied on to
relieve an SD or MSP from its obligation to strictly comply with any
applicable
[[Page 78846]]
position limit established by the Commission, a DCM, or a SEF.
3. Diligent Supervision (Sec. 23.602)
Commission Requirement: Commission regulation 23.602 implements
section 4s(h)(1)(B) of the CEA and requires each SD and MSP to
establish a system to diligently supervise all activities relating to
its business performed by its partners, members, officers, employees,
and agents. The system must be reasonably designed to achieve
compliance with the CEA and CFTC regulations. Commission regulation
23.602 requires that the supervisory system must specifically designate
qualified persons with authority to carry out the supervisory
responsibilities of the SD or MSP for all activities relating to its
business as an SD or MSP.
Regulatory Objective: The Commission's diligent supervision rule
seeks to ensure that SDs and MSPs strictly comply with the CEA and the
Commission's rules. To this end, through Sec. 23.602, the Commission
seeks to ensure that each SD and MSP not only establishes the necessary
policies and procedures that would lead to compliance with the CEA and
Commission regulations, but also establishes an effective system of
internal oversight and enforcement of such policies and procedures to
ensure that such policies and procedures are diligently followed.
Comparable Canadian Law and Regulations: The applicant has
represented to the Commission that the following provisions of law and
regulations applicable in Canada are in full force and effect in
Canada, and comparable to and as comprehensive as section 4s(h)(1)(B)
of the CEA and Commission regulation 23.602.
Section 157 of the Bank Act imposes a duty on the board of
directors of a bank to manage or supervise the management of the
business and affairs of the bank.
OSFI's Supervisory Framework states that the board and
senior management are designated as ultimately accountable for the
safety and soundness of the bank.
OSFI's Corporate Governance Guideline states that banks
should appoint a senior officer, identified as the Chief Risk Officer
(``CRO''), who has responsibility for the oversight of all relevant
risks across the firm. The CRO must be identified in the bank's license
application along with a description of the resources and authority
allocated to discharge his duties. Like the CCO, the CRO should have
sufficient stature and authority within the organization, be
independent from operational management, have unfettered access and,
for functional purposes, a direct reporting line to the board of
directors or risk committee.
In addition, the applicant states that diligent supervision is an
aspect of the risk management and compliance framework for each bank,
which includes requirements for controls and monitoring. Specifically:
OSFI's LCM Guideline requires Canadian banks to establish
an enterprise-wide framework of regulatory risk management controls to
ensure that regulatory compliance risks are managed effectively. The
required LCM framework sets out OSFI's expectations and banks are
required to demonstrate that they satisfy those expectations in
particular circumstances; and
OSFI expects that each bank's LCM framework will include
identification, assessment, communication, and maintenance of
applicable regulatory requirements, compliance procedures, monitoring
procedures, and reporting procedures.
The applicants represent to the Commission that the OSFI
requirement to monitor the effectiveness of procedures to ensure
compliance with regulatory obligations includes applicable regulatory
obligations of an SD or MSP under the CEA and Commission regulations.
OSFI expects banks to comply with all applicable regulatory
requirements, which includes legislation, regulations, and regulatory
directives applicable to the activities of the bank or its subsidiaries
worldwide.
Commission Determination: The Commission finds that the provisions
of the Bank Act and the OSFI standards specified above are generally
identical in intent to Sec. 23.602 because such standards seek to
ensure that SDs and MSPs strictly comply with applicable law, which
would include the CEA and the Commission's regulations. Through the
provisions of the Bank Act and the OSFI standards specified above,
Canadian laws and regulations seek to ensure that each SD and MSP not
only establishes the necessary policies and procedures that would lead
to compliance with applicable law, which would include the CEA and
Commission regulations, but also establishes an effective system of
internal oversight and enforcement of such policies and procedures to
ensure that such policies and procedures are diligently followed.
Based on the foregoing and the representations of the applicant,
the Commission hereby determines that the internal supervision
requirements of the Bank Act and the OSFI standards, as specified
above, are comparable to and as comprehensive as Sec. 23.602.
4. Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery (Sec. 23.603)
Commission Requirement: To ensure the proper functioning of the
swaps markets and the prevention of systemic risk more generally,
Commission regulation 23.603 requires each SD and MSP, as part of its
risk management program, to establish a business continuity and
disaster recovery plan that includes procedures for, and the
maintenance of, back-up facilities, systems, infrastructure, personnel,
and other resources to achieve the timely recovery of data and
documentation and to resume operations generally within the next
business day after the disruption.
Regulatory Objective: Commission regulation 23.603 is intended to
ensure that any market disruption affecting SDs and MSPs, whether
caused by natural disaster or otherwise, is minimized in length and
severity. To that end, this requirement seeks to ensure that entities
adequately plan for disruptions and devote sufficient resources capable
of carrying out an appropriate plan within one business day, if
necessary.
Comparable Canadian Law and Regulations: The applicant has
represented to the Commission that the following provisions of law and
regulations applicable in Canada are in full force and effect in
Canada, and comparable to and as comprehensive as Commission regulation
23.603.
The applicant has represented that business continuity and disaster
recovery are aspects of the risk management framework for each bank.
Specifically:
OSFI's Derivatives Best Practice Guideline requires banks
to regularly assess contingency plans to deal with operations and
systems risks.
OSFI's Outsourcing of Business Activities, Functions and
Processes Guideline requires banks that outsource functions to ensure
that adequate continuity and disaster recovery are in place.
OSFI's Supervisory Framework subjects each bank to a
``Business Continuity & Disaster Recovery Preparedness Cross Sector
Review'' that is divided into three broad sections: Structure,
Operational Management, and Controls & Oversight. Pursuant to such
review, OSFI ensures: the existence of a plan for both business
continuity and disaster recovery; that such plans have essential
components related to identification of documents, data, staff,
supervisory personnel, back-up locations, third party disruptions,
[[Page 78847]]
etc.; that plans are distributed to all employees; that appropriate
emergency contacts are identified; that plans are reviewed at least
annually; that plans are subject to comprehensive testing and audit;
and that records related to developing and maintaining the plans are
maintained in accordance with banking supervisory guidelines and are
accessible to OSFI.
Commission Determination: The Commission finds that the OSFI
standards specified above are generally identical in intent to Sec.
23.603 because such standards seek to ensure that any market disruption
affecting SDs and MSPs, whether caused by natural disaster or
otherwise, is minimized in length and severity. To that end, the
Commission finds that the OSFI standards specified above seek to ensure
that entities adequately plan for disruptions and devote sufficient
resources capable of carrying out an appropriate plan in a timely
manner.
Based on the foregoing and the representations of the applicant,
the Commission hereby determines that the business continuity and
disaster recovery requirements of the OSFI standards, as specified
above, are comparable to and as comprehensive as Sec. 23.603.
5. Conflicts of Interest (Sec. 23.605)
Commission Requirement: Section 4s(j)(5) of the CEA and Commission
regulation 23.605(c) generally require each SD or MSP to establish
structural and institutional safeguards to ensure that the activities
of any person within the firm relating to research or analysis of the
price or market for any commodity or swap are separated by appropriate
informational partitions within the firm from the review, pressure, or
oversight of persons whose involvement in pricing, trading, or clearing
activities might potentially bias their judgment or supervision.
In addition, section 4s(j)(5) of the CEA and Commission regulation
23.605(d)(1) generally prohibits an SD or MSP from directly or
indirectly interfering with or attempting to influence the decision of
any clearing unit of any affiliated clearing member of a DCO to provide
clearing services and activities to a particular customer, including:
Whether to offer clearing services to a particular
customer;
Whether to accept a particular customer for clearing
derivatives;
Whether to submit a customer's transaction to a particular
DCO;
Whether to set or adjust risk tolerance levels for a
particular customer; or
Whether to set a customer's fees based on criteria other
than those generally available and applicable to other customers.
Commission regulation 23.605(d)(2) generally requires each SD or
MSP to create and maintain an appropriate informational partition
between business trading units of the SD or MSP and clearing units of
any affiliated clearing member of a DCO to reasonably ensure compliance
with the Act and the prohibitions set forth in Sec. 23.605(d)(1)
outlined above.
The Commission observes that Sec. 23.605(d) works in tandem with
Commission regulation 1.71, which requires FCMs that are clearing
members of a DCO and affiliated with an SD or MSP to create and
maintain an appropriate informational partition between business
trading units of the SD or MSP and clearing units of the FCM to
reasonably ensure compliance with the Act and the prohibitions set
forth in Sec. 1.71(d)(1), which are the same as the prohibitions set
forth in Sec. 23.605(d)(1) outlined above.
Finally, Sec. 23.605(e) requires that each SD or MSP have policies
and procedures that mandate the disclosure to counterparties of
material incentives or conflicts of interest regarding the decision of
a counterparty to execute a derivative on a swap execution facility or
DCM or to clear a derivative through a DCO.
Regulatory Objective: Commission regulation 23.605(c) seeks to
ensure that research provided to the general public by an SD or MSP is
unbiased and free from the influence of the interests of an SD or MSP
arising from the SD's or MSP's trading business.
In addition, the Sec. 23.605(d) (working in tandem with Sec.
1.71) seeks to ensure open access to the clearing of swaps by requiring
that access to and the provision of clearing services provided by an
affiliate of an SD or MSP are not influenced by the interests of an
SD's or MSP's trading business.
Finally, Sec. 23.605(e) seeks to ensure equal access to trading
venues and clearinghouses, as well as orderly and fair markets, by
requiring that each SD and MSP disclose to counterparties any material
incentives or conflicts of interest regarding the decision of a
counterparty to execute a derivative on a SEF or DCM, or to clear a
derivative through a DCO.
Comparable Canadian Law and Regulations: The applicant has
represented to the Commission that the following provisions of law and
regulations applicable in Canada are in full force and effect in
Canada, and comparable to and as comprehensive as Commission regulation
23.605(c).
The Bank Act subsection 157(2)(c), as well as the Competition Act,
requires that directors of a bank establish procedures to resolve
conflicts of interest, including techniques for the identification and
remediation of potential conflict situations, tied selling, exclusive
dealing, and refusal to deal, and for restricting the use of
confidential information.
The Bank Act subsection 157(2)(b) requires the directors of a bank
to have a review committee to ensure compliance with the self-dealing
provisions of the Bank Act, while 157(2)(d) requires that banks
designate a committee of the board of directors to monitor the conflict
of interest procedures.
The Bank Act subsection 459.1(1) prohibits a bank from imposing
undue pressure on, or coercing a person to obtain a product or service
from a particular person, including the bank and any of its affiliates,
as a condition for obtaining another product or service from the bank.
The Bank Act subsection 459.1(4.1) requires a bank to disclose
coercive tied selling arrangements.
OSFI's Supervisory Framework requires monitoring of conflicts of
interest through a bank's risk management program.
The applicants have represented to the Commission that OSFI, in the
process of its oversight and enforcement of the foregoing Canadian
standards, would require any SD or MSP subject to such standards to
resolve or mitigate conflicts of interests in the provision of clearing
services by a clearing member of a DCO that is an affiliate of the SD
or MSP, or the decision of a counterparty to execute a derivative on a
SEF or DCM, or clear a derivative through a DCO, through appropriate
information firewalls and disclosures.
Commission Determination: The Commission finds that the Bank Act
standards specified above with respect to conflicts of interest that
may arise in producing or distributing research are generally identical
in intent to Sec. 23.605(c) because such standards seek to ensure that
research provided to the general public by an SD is unbiased and free
from the influence of the interests of an SD arising from the SD's
trading business.
With respect to conflicts of interest that may arise in the
provision of clearing services by an affiliate of an SD or MSP, the
Commission further finds that although the general conflicts of
interest prevention requirements under the Bank Act standards specified
above
[[Page 78848]]
do not require with specificity that access to and the provision of
clearing services provided by an affiliate of an SD or MSP not be
improperly influenced by the interests of an SD's or MSP's trading
business, such general requirements would require prevention and
remediation of such improper influence when recognized or discovered.
Thus such standards would ensure open access to clearing.
Finally, although not as specific as the requirements of Sec.
23.605(e) (Undue influence on counterparties), the Commission finds
that the general disclosure requirements of the Bank Act standards
specified above would ensure equal access to trading venues and
clearinghouses by requiring that each SD and MSP disclose to
counterparties any material incentives or conflicts of interest
regarding the decision of a counterparty to execute a derivative on a
SEF or DCM, or to clear a derivative through a DCO.
Based on the foregoing and the representations of the applicants,
the Commission hereby determines that the requirements found in the
Bank Act standards specified above in relation to conflicts of interest
are comparable to and as comprehensive as Sec. 23.605.
6. Availability of Information for Disclosure and Inspection (Sec.
23.606)
Commission Requirement: Commission regulation 23.606 implements
sections 4s(j)(3) and (4) of the CEA, and requires each SD and MSP to
disclose to the Commission, and an SD's or MSP's U.S. prudential
regulator (if any) comprehensive information about its swap activities,
and to establish and maintain reliable internal data capture,
processing, storage, and other operational systems sufficient to
capture, process, record, store, and produce all information necessary
to satisfy its duties under the CEA and Commission regulations. Such
systems must be designed to provide such information to the Commission
and an SD's or MSP's U.S. prudential regulator within the time frames
set forth in the CEA and Commission regulations and upon request.
Regulatory Objective: Commission regulation 23.606 seeks to ensure
that each SD and MSP captures and maintains comprehensive information
about their swap activities, and is able to retrieve and disclose such
information to the Commission and its U.S. prudential regulator, if
any, as necessary for compliance with the CEA and the Commission's
regulations and for purposes of Commission oversight, as well as
oversight by the SD's or MSP's U.S. prudential regulator, if any.
The Commission observes that it would be impossible to meet the
regulatory objective of Sec. 23.606 unless the required information is
available to the Commission and any U.S. prudential regulator under the
foreign legal regime. Thus, a comparability determination with respect
to the information access provisions of Sec. 23.606 would be premised
on whether the relevant information would be available to the
Commission and any U.S. prudential regulator of the SD or MSP, not on
whether an SD or MSP must disclose comprehensive information to its
regulator in its home jurisdiction.
Comparable Canadian Law and Regulations: The applicant has
represented to the Commission that the following provisions of law and
regulations applicable in Canada are in full force and effect in
Canada, and comparable to and as comprehensive as Commission regulation
23.606.
OSFI relies on general reporting obligations of Canadian banks and
OSFI's monitoring function under the OSFI Supervisory Framework with
respect to availability of information for disclosure and inspection.
Specifically, banks are expected to have appropriate policies and
procedures in place to ensure that all regulatory filings are received
by OSFI within specified timeframes and are error free. Banks are
subject to penalties for late or erroneous filings pursuant to OSFI's
Late and Erroneous Filing Penalty Framework.
With respect to data capture and retention, as part of the bank
licensing process, OSFI must approve a bank's operational risk
management policies, including policies related to information
technology, information management and security, and records retention.
As part of the OSFI Supervisory Framework, OSFI generally requires
banks to establish and maintain an enterprise-wide LCM framework. OSFI
expects the LCM framework to include ``Adequate Documentation'' as one
of its key controls. As set forth in the OSFI Derivatives Best Practice
Guideline, each bank should have mechanisms in place to assure the
confirmation, maintenance and safeguarding of derivatives contract
documentation. In particular, it states:
[t]he design of information systems will vary according to the
risks demanded by the scope and complexity of an institution's
involvement in derivatives. The degree of accuracy and timeliness of
information processing should be sufficient to meet an institution's
risk exposure monitoring needs. Appropriate information processing
and reporting capabilities should be put in place and fully
operational.
Commission Determination: The Commission finds that the OSFI
standards specified above are generally identical in intent to Sec.
23.606 because such standards seek to ensure that each SD and MSP
captures and stores comprehensive information about their swap
activities, and are able to retrieve and disclose such information as
necessary for compliance with applicable law and for purposes of
regulatory oversight.
Based on the foregoing and the representations of the applicant,
the Commission hereby determines that the OSFI standards with respect
to the availability of information for inspection and disclosure, as
specified above, are comparable to, and as comprehensive as, Sec.
23.606, with the exception of Sec. 23.606(a)(2) concerning the
requirement that an SD or MSP make information required by Sec.
23.606(a)(1) available promptly upon request to Commission staff and
the staff of an applicable U.S. prudential regulator. The applicant has
not submitted any provision of law or regulations applicable in Canada
upon which the Commission could make a finding that SDs and MSPs would
be required to retrieve and disclose comprehensive information about
their swap activities to the Commission or any U.S. prudential
regulator as necessary for compliance with the CEA and Commission
regulations, and for purposes of Commission oversight and the oversight
of any U.S. prudential regulator.
Notwithstanding that the Commission has not determined that the
requirements of the OSFI standards are comparable to and as
comprehensive as Sec. 23.606(a)(2), any SD or MSP to which both Sec.
23.606 and the OSFI standards specified above are applicable would
generally be deemed to be in compliance with Sec. 23.606(a)(2) if that
SD or MSP complies with the OSFI standards specified above, subject to
compliance with the requirement that it produce information to
Commission staff and the staff of an applicable U.S. prudential
regulator in accordance with Sec. 23.606(a)(2).
7. Clearing Member Risk Management (Sec. 23.609)
Commission Requirement: Commission regulation 23.609 generally
requires each SD or MSP that is a clearing member of a DCO to:
Establish risk-based limits based on position size, order
size, margin requirements, or similar factors;
Screen orders for compliance with the risk-based limits;
[[Page 78849]]
Monitor for adherence to the risk-based limits intra-day
and overnight;
Conduct stress tests under extreme but plausible
conditions of all positions at least once per week;
Evaluate its ability to meet initial margin requirements
at least once per week;
Evaluate its ability to meet variation margin requirements
in cash at least once per week;
Evaluate its ability to liquidate positions it clears in
an orderly manner, and estimate the cost of liquidation; and
Test all lines of credit at least once per year.
Regulatory Objective: Through Commission regulation 23.609, the
Commission seeks to ensure the financial integrity of the markets and
the clearing system, to avoid systemic risk, and to protect customer
funds. Effective risk management by SDs and MSPs that are clearing
members is essential to achieving these objectives. A failure of risk
management can cause a clearing member to become insolvent and default
to a DCO. Such default can disrupt the markets and the clearing system
and harm customers.
Comparable Canadian Law and Regulations: The applicant has
represented to the Commission that the following provisions of law and
regulations applicable in Canada are in full force and effect in
Canada, and comparable to and as comprehensive as Commission regulation
23.609.
OSFI stated that, to the extent that any bank is a clearing member,
risk management specifically for clearing members is an aspect of the
risk management framework.
OSFI Derivatives Best Practice Guideline states that banks should
have knowledgeable individuals or units responsible for risk monitoring
and control functions, including the responsibility for actively
monitoring transactions and positions for adherence to internal policy
limits. Moreover, stress tests should be performed regularly and should
account for abnormally large market swings and periods of prolonged
inactivity, while considering the effect of price changes on the ``mid-
market value'' of the portfolio.
More generally, the OSFI Corporate Governance Guideline requires
that each bank establish a risk appetite framework (``RAF'') that:
Guides the amount of risk the bank is willing to accept in
pursuit of its strategic and business objectives.
Sets basic goals, benchmarks, parameters, and limits, and
should consider all applicable types of risks.
Contains all elements required by an annex to the
Corporate Governance Guideline, including a risk appetite statement,
specific risk tolerance limits, and processes for implementation of the
RAF.
Further, the OSFI Corporate Governance Guideline states that DSIBs
should establish a dedicated risk committee to oversee risk management
on an enterprise-wide basis, and that the oversight of the risk
management activities of the bank are to be independent from
operational management, adequately resourced, and have appropriate
status and visibility.
The OSFI Derivatives Best Practice Guideline states that each bank
should ensure that each derivative product traded is subject to a
product authorization signed off by senior management, and sets forth
OSFI's expectations with respect to having documented policies and
procedures for risk management, creating risk tolerance limits, and
measuring, reporting, managing, and controlling the risks associated
with the derivatives business, including market, currency, interest
rate, equity price, commodity price, credit, settlement, liquidity,
operational, and legal risks.
OSFI represents that its oversight pursuant to the Supervisory
Framework will assess the extent to which the risk management function
integrates policies, practices, and limits with day-to-day business
activities and with the bank's strategic, capital, and liquidity
management policies. Under the Supervisory Framework, OSFI also will
assess whether the risk management function effectively monitors risk
positions against approved limits and ensures that material breaches
are addressed on a timely basis. OSFI represents that it will look at
various indicators, including the extent to which the bank proactively
updates its policies, practices, and limits in response to changes in
the industry and in the institution's strategy, business activities and
risk tolerances.\43\
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\43\ In addition to the foregoing, the applicant notes that the
Canadian Bank SDs may be subject to heightened standards for their
derivatives business in the near future under regulatory
recommendations that would require registrants to establish,
maintain and apply systems, policies and procedures that establish
robust compliance and risk management systems specifically for their
derivatives business. See CSA Consultation Paper 91-407.
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Specifically, OSFI has represented to the Commission that, in the
process of its oversight and enforcement of the foregoing Canadian law
and regulations, any SD or MSP subject to such standards that is a
clearing member of a DCO would be required to comply with clearing
member risk management requirements comparable to Commission regulation
23.609.
Commission Determination: The Commission finds that the OSFI
standards specified above are generally identical in intent to Sec.
23.609 because such standards seek to ensure the financial integrity of
the markets and the clearing system, to avoid systemic risk, and to
protect customer funds.
The Commission notes that the OSFI standards specified above are
not as specific as Sec. 23.609 with respect to ensuring that SDs and
MSPs that are clearing members of a DCO establish detailed procedures
and limits for clearing member risk management purposes. Nevertheless,
the Commission finds that the general requirements under the OSFI
standards specified above, implemented in the context of clearing
member risk management and pursuant to the representations of OSFI,
meet the Commission's regulatory objective specified above.
Based on the foregoing and the representations above, the
Commission hereby determines that the clearing member risk management
requirements of the Canadian law and regulations specified above are
comparable to and as comprehensive as Sec. 23.609.
C. Swap Data Recordkeeping (Sec. Sec. 23.201 and 23.203)
Commission Requirement: Sections 4s(f)(1)(B) and 4s(g)(1) of the
CEA, and Commission regulation 23.201 generally require SDs and MSPs to
retain records of each transaction, each position held, general
business records (including records related to complaints and sales and
marketing materials), records related to governance, financial records,
records of data reported to SDRs, and records of real-time reporting
data along with a record of the date and time the SD or MSP made such
reports. Transaction records must be kept in a form and manner
identifiable and searchable by transaction and counterparty.
Commission regulation 23.203, requires SDs and MSPs to maintain
records of a swap transaction until the termination, maturity,
expiration, transfer, assignment, or novation date of the transaction,
and for a period of five years after such date. Records must be
``readily accessible'' for the first 2 years of the 5 year retention
period (consistent with Sec. 1.31).
The Commission notes that the comparability determination below
with respect to Sec. Sec. 23.201 and 23.203 encompasses both swap data
recordkeeping generally and swap data recordkeeping relating to
complaints
[[Page 78850]]
and marketing and sales materials in accordance with Sec. 23.201(b)(3)
and (4).\44\
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\44\ See the Guidance for a discussion of the availability of
substituted compliance with respect to swap data recordkeeping, 78
FR 45332-33.
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Regulatory Objective: Through the Commission's regulations
requiring SDs and MSPs to keep comprehensive records of their swap
transactions and related data, the Commission seeks to ensure the
effectiveness of the internal controls of SDs and MSPs, and
transparency in the swaps market for regulators and market
participants.
The Commission's regulations require SDs and MSPs to keep swap data
in a level of detail sufficient to enable regulatory authorities to
understand an SD's or MSP's swaps business and to assess its swaps
exposure.
By requiring comprehensive records of swap data, the Commission
seeks to ensure that SDs and MSPs employ effective risk management, and
strictly comply with Commission regulations. Further, such records
facilitate effective regulatory oversight.
The Commission observes that it would be impossible to meet the
regulatory objective of Sec. Sec. 23.201 and 23.203 unless the
required information is available to the Commission and any U.S.
prudential regulator under the foreign legal regime. Thus, a
comparability determination with respect to the information access
provisions of Sec. 23.203 would be premised on whether the relevant
information would be available to the Commission and any U.S.
prudential regulator of the SD or MSP, not on whether an SD or MSP must
disclose comprehensive information to its regulator in its home
jurisdiction.
Comparable Canadian Law and Regulations: The applicant has
represented to the Commission that the following provisions of law and
regulations applicable in Canada are in full force and effect in
Canada, and comparable to and as comprehensive as sections 4s(f)(1)(B)
and 4s(g)(1) of the CEA and Sec. Sec. 23.201 and 23.203.
OSFI's Supervisory Framework requires banks to establish and
maintain an enterprise-wide LCM framework of regulatory risk management
controls, and these controls include oversight functions that are
independent of the activities they oversee. OSFI expects the LCM
framework to include ``Adequate Documentation'' as one of its key
controls.
As set forth in the OSFI Derivatives Best Practice Guideline, each
bank should have mechanisms in place to assure the confirmation,
maintenance, and safeguarding of derivatives contract documentation. In
particular, it states:
[t]he design of information systems will vary according to the risks
demanded by the scope and complexity of an institution's involvement
in derivatives. The degree of accuracy and timeliness of information
processing should be sufficient to meet an institution's risk
exposure monitoring needs. Appropriate information processing and
reporting capabilities should be put in place and fully operational.
Finally, Sections 238, 239 and 597 of the Bank Act generally
require banks carrying on business in Canada to maintain records in
Canada and to ensure that OSFI can access in Canada any records
necessary to enable OSFI to fulfill its supervisory mandate.
Commission Determination: The Commission finds that the Bank Act
and OSFI standards specified above are generally identical in intent to
Sec. Sec. 23.201 and 23.203 because such standards seek to ensure the
effectiveness of the internal controls of SDs and MSPs, and
transparency in the swaps market for regulators and market
participants.
In addition, the Commission finds that the Bank Act and OSFI
standards specified above require SDs and MSPs to keep swap data in a
level of detail sufficient to enable regulatory authorities to
understand an SD's or MSP's swaps business and to assess its swaps
exposure.
Finally, the Commission finds that the Bank Act and OSFI standards
specified above, by requiring comprehensive records of swap data, seek
to ensure that SDs and MSPs employ effective risk management, seek to
ensure that SDs and MSPs strictly comply with applicable regulatory
requirements (including the CEA and Commission regulations), and that
such records facilitate effective regulatory oversight.
Based on the foregoing and the representations of the applicant,
the Commission hereby determines that the requirements of the Bank Act
and the OSFI standards with respect to swap data recordkeeping, as
specified above, are comparable to, and as comprehensive as, Sec. Sec.
23.201 and 23.203, with the exception of Sec. 23.203(b)(2) concerning
the requirement that an SD or MSPs make records required by Sec.
23.201 open to inspection by any representative of the Commission, the
United States Department of Justice, or any applicable U.S. prudential
regulator. The applicant has not submitted any provision of law or
regulations applicable in Canada upon which the Commission could make a
finding that SDs and MSPs would be required to make records required by
Sec. 23.201 open to inspection by any representative of the
Commission, the United States Department of Justice, or any applicable
U.S. prudential regulator.
Notwithstanding that the Commission has not determined that the
requirements of the Bank Act and the OSFI standards are comparable to
and as comprehensive as Sec. 23.203(b)(2), any SD or MSP to which both
Sec. 23.203 and the Bank Act and OSFI standards specified above are
applicable would generally be deemed to be in compliance with Sec.
23.203(b)(2) if that SD or MSP complies with the Bank Act and OSFI
standards specified above, subject to compliance with the requirement
that it make records required by Sec. 23.201 open to inspection by any
representative of the Commission, the United States Department of
Justice, or any applicable U.S. prudential regulator in accordance with
Sec. 23.203(b)(2).
Issued in Washington, DC on December 20, 2013, by the
Commission.
Christopher J. Kirkpatrick,
Deputy Secretary of the Commission.
Appendices to Comparability Determination for Canada: Certain Entity-
Level Requirements
Appendix 1--Commission Voting Summary
On this matter, Chairman Gensler and Commissioners Chilton and
Wetjen voted in the affirmative. Commissioner O'Malia voted in the
negative.
Appendix 2--Joint Statement of Chairman Gary Gensler and Commissioners
Bart Chilton and Mark Wetjen
We support the Commission's approval of broad comparability
determinations that will be used for substituted compliance
purposes. For each of the six jurisdictions that has registered swap
dealers, we carefully reviewed each regulatory provision of the
foreign jurisdictions submitted to us and compared the provision's
intended outcome to the Commission's own regulatory objectives. The
resulting comparability determinations for entity-level requirements
permit non-U.S. swap dealers to comply with regulations in their
home jurisdiction as a substitute for compliance with the relevant
Commission regulations.
These determinations reflect the Commission's commitment to
coordinating our efforts to bring transparency to the swaps market
and reduce its risks to the public. The comparability findings for
the entity-level requirements are a testament to the comparability
of these regulatory systems as we work together in building a strong
international regulatory framework.
In addition, we are pleased that the Commission was able to find
comparability with respect to swap-specific transaction-
[[Page 78851]]
level requirements in the European Union and Japan.
The Commission attained this benchmark by working cooperatively
with authorities in Australia, Canada, the European Union, Hong
Kong, Japan, and Switzerland to reach mutual agreement. The
Commission looks forward to continuing to collaborate with both
foreign authorities and market participants to build on this
progress in the months and years ahead.
Appendix 3--Statement of Dissent by Commissioner Scott D. O'Malia
I respectfully dissent from the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission's (``Commission'') approval of the Notices of
Comparability Determinations for Certain Requirements under the laws
of Australia, Canada, the European Union, Hong Kong, Japan, and
Switzerland (collectively, ``Notices''). While I support the narrow
comparability determinations that the Commission has made, moving
forward, the Commission must collaborate with foreign regulators to
harmonize our respective regimes consistent with the G-20 reforms.
However, I cannot support the Notices because they: (1) Are
based on the legally unsound cross-border guidance
(``Guidance'');\1\ (2) are the result of a flawed substituted
compliance process; and (3) fail to provide a clear path moving
forward. If the Commission's objective for substituted compliance is
to develop a narrow rule-by-rule approach that leaves unanswered
major regulatory gaps between our regulatory framework and foreign
jurisdictions, then I believe that the Commission has successfully
achieved its goal today.
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\1\ Interpretive Guidance and Policy Statement Regarding
Compliance with Certain Swap Regulations, 78 FR 45292 (Jul. 26,
2013).
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Determinations Based on Legally Unsound Guidance
As I previously stated in my dissent, the Guidance fails to
articulate a valid statutory foundation for its overbroad scope and
inconsistently applies the statute to different activities.\2\
Section 2(i) of the Commodity Exchange Act (``CEA'') states that the
Commission does not have jurisdiction over foreign activities unless
``those activities have a direct and significant connection with
activities in, or effect on, commerce of the United States . . .''
\3\ However, the Commission never properly articulated how and when
this limiting standard on the Commission's extraterritorial reach is
met, which would trigger the application of Title VII of the Dodd-
Frank Act \4\ and any Commission regulations promulgated thereunder
to swap activities that are outside of the United States. Given this
statutorily unsound interpretation of the Commission's
extraterritorial authority, the Commission often applies CEA section
2(i) inconsistently and arbitrarily to foreign activities.
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\2\ https://www.cftc.gov/PressRoom/SpeechesTestimony/omaliastatement071213b.
\3\ CEA section 2(i); 7 U.S.C. 2(i).
\4\ Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act, Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010).
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Accordingly, because the Commission is relying on the legally
deficient Guidance to make its substituted compliance
determinations, and for the reasons discussed below, I cannot
support the Notices. The Commission should have collaborated with
foreign regulators to agree on and implement a workable regime of
substituted compliance, and then should have made determinations
pursuant to that regime.
Flawed Substituted Compliance Process
Substituted compliance should not be a case of picking a set of
foreign rules identical to our rules, determining them to be
``comparable,'' but then making no determination regarding rules
that require extensive gap analysis to assess to what extent each
jurisdiction is, or is not, comparable based on overall outcomes of
the regulatory regimes. While I support the narrow comparability
determinations that the Commission has made, I am concerned that in
a rush to provide some relief, the Commission has made substituted
compliance determinations that only afford narrow relief and fail to
address major regulatory gaps between our domestic regulatory
framework and foreign jurisdictions. I will address a few examples
below.
First, earlier this year, the OTC Derivatives Regulators Group
(``ODRG'') agreed to a number of substantive understandings to
improve the cross-border implementation of over-the-counter
derivatives reforms.\5\ The ODRG specifically agreed that a
flexible, outcomes-based approach, based on a broad category-by-
category basis, should form the basis of comparability
determinations.\6\
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\5\ https://www.cftc.gov/PressRoom/PressReleases/pr6678-13.
\6\ https://www.cftc.gov/ucm/groups/public/@newsroom/documents/file/odrgreport.pdf. The ODRG agreed to six understandings.
Understanding number 2 states that ``[a] flexible, outcomes-based
approach should form the basis of final assessments regarding
equivalence or substituted compliance.''
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However, instead of following this approach, the Commission has
made its comparability determinations on a rule-by-rule basis. For
example, in Japan's Comparability Determination for Transaction-
Level Requirements, the Commission has made a positive comparability
determination for some of the detailed requirements under the swap
trading relationship documentation provisions, but not for other
requirements.\7\ This detailed approach clearly contravenes the
ODRG's understanding.
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\7\ The Commission made a positive comparability determination
for Commission regulations 23.504(a)(2), (b)(1), (b)(2), (b)(3),
(b)(4), (c), and (d), but not for Commission regulations
23.504(b)(5) and (b)(6).
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Second, in several areas, the Commission has declined to
consider a request for a comparability determination, and has also
failed to provide an analysis regarding the extent to which the
other jurisdiction is, or is not, comparable. For example, the
Commission has declined to address or provide any clarity regarding
the European Union's regulatory data reporting determination, even
though the European Union's reporting regime is set to begin on
February 12, 2014. Although the Commission has provided some limited
relief with respect to regulatory data reporting, the lack of
clarity creates unnecessary uncertainty, especially when the
European Union's reporting regime is set to begin in less than two
months.
Similarly, Japan receives no consideration for its mandatory
clearing requirement, even though the Commission considers Japan's
legal framework to be comparable to the U.S. framework. While the
Commission has declined to provide even a partial comparability
determination, at least in this instance the Commission has provided
a reason: The differences in the scope of entities and products
subject to the clearing requirement.\8\ Such treatment creates
uncertainty and is contrary to increased global harmonization
efforts.
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\8\ Yen-denominated interest rate swaps are subject to the
mandatory clearing requirement in both the U.S. and Japan.
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Third, in the Commission's rush to meet the artificial deadline
of December 21, 2013, as established in the Exemptive Order
Regarding Compliance with Certain Swap Regulations (``Exemptive
Order''),\9\ the Commission failed to complete an important piece of
the cross-border regime, namely, supervisory memoranda of
understanding (``MOUs'') between the Commission and fellow
regulators.
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\9\ Exemptive Order Regarding Compliance With Certain Swap
Regulations, 78 FR 43785 (Jul. 22, 2013).
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I have previously stated that these MOUs, if done right, can be
a key part of the global harmonization effort because they provide
mutually agreed-upon solutions for differences in regulatory
regimes.\10\ Accordingly, I stated that the Commission should be
able to review MOUs alongside the respective comparability
determinations and vote on them at the same time. Without these
MOUs, our fellow regulators are left wondering whether and how any
differences, such as direct access to books and records, will be
resolved.
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\10\ https://www.cftc.gov/PressRoom/SpeechesTestimony/opaomalia-29.
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Finally, as I have consistently maintained, the substituted
compliance process should allow other regulatory bodies to engage
with the full Commission.\11\ While I am pleased that the Notices
are being voted on by the Commission, the full Commission only
gained access to the comment letters from foreign regulators on the
Commission's comparability determination draft proposals a few days
ago. This is hardly a transparent process.
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\11\ https://www.cftc.gov/PressRoom/SpeechesTestimony/omaliastatement071213b.
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Unclear Path Forward
Looking forward to next steps, the Commission must provide
answers to several outstanding questions regarding these
comparability determinations. In doing so, the Commission must
collaborate with foreign regulators to increase global
harmonization.
First, there is uncertainty surrounding the timing and outcome
of the MOUs. Critical
[[Page 78852]]
questions regarding information sharing, cooperation, supervision,
and enforcement will remain unanswered until the Commission and our
fellow regulators execute these MOUs.
Second, the Commission has issued time-limited no-action relief
for the swap data repository reporting requirements. These
comparability determinations will be done as separate notices.
However, the timing and process for these determinations remain
uncertain.
Third, the Commission has failed to provide clarity on the
process for addressing the comparability determinations that it
declined to undertake at this time. The Notices only state that the
Commission may address these requests in a separate notice at a
later date given further developments in the law and regulations of
other jurisdictions. To promote certainty in the financial markets,
the Commission must provide a clear path forward for market
participants and foreign regulators.
The following steps would be a better approach: (1) The
Commission should extend the Exemptive Order to allow foreign
regulators to further implement their regulatory regimes and
coordinate with them to implement a harmonized substituted
compliance process; (2) the Commission should implement a flexible,
outcomes-based approach to the substituted compliance process and
apply it similarly to all jurisdictions; and (3) the Commission
should work closely with our fellow regulators to expeditiously
implement MOUs that resolve regulatory differences and address
regulatory oversight issues.
Conclusion
While I support the narrow comparability determinations that the
Commission has made, it was my hope that the Commission would work
with foreign regulators to implement a substituted compliance
process that would increase the global harmonization effort. I am
disappointed that the Commission has failed to implement such a
process.
I do believe that in the longer term, the swaps regulations of
the major jurisdictions will converge. At this time, however, the
Commission's comparability determinations have done little to
alleviate the burden of regulatory uncertainty and duplicative
compliance with both U.S. and foreign regulations.
The G-20 process delineated and put in place the swaps market
reforms in G-20 member nations. It is then no surprise that the
Commission must learn to coordinate with foreign regulators to
minimize confusion and disruption in bringing much needed clarity to
the swaps market. For all these shortcomings, I respectfully dissent
from the Commission's approval of the Notices.
[FR Doc. 2013-30979 Filed 12-26-13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6351-01-P