Exclusion of Utility Operations-Related Swaps With Utility Special Entities From De Minimis Threshold for Swaps With Special Entities, 31238-31247 [2014-12469]

Download as PDF 31238 Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 105 / Monday, June 2, 2014 / Proposed Rules COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION 17 CFR Part 1 RIN 3038–AE19 Exclusion of Utility Operations-Related Swaps With Utility Special Entities From De Minimis Threshold for Swaps With Special Entities Commodity Futures Trading Commission. ACTION: Proposed rule. emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS AGENCY: SUMMARY: The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (Commission or CFTC) is proposing to amend its regulations (Proposal) to permit a person to exclude utility operationsrelated swaps with utility special entities in calculating the aggregate gross notional amount of the person’s swap positions solely for purposes of the de minimis exception applicable to swaps with special entities. DATES: Comments must be received on or before July 2, 2014. ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by RIN number 3038–AE19, by any of the following methods: • Agency Web site: https:// comments.cftc.gov; • Mail: Secretary of the Commission, Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Three Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st Street NW., Washington, DC 20581; • Hand delivery/courier: Same as Mail, above. • Federal eRulemaking Portal: https:// www.regulations.gov. Follow instructions for submitting comments. All comments must be submitted in English, or if not, accompanied by an English translation. Comments will be posted as received to www.cftc.gov. You should submit only information that you wish to make available publicly. If you wish the Commission to consider information that is exempt from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act, a petition for confidential treatment of the exempt information may be submitted according to the procedure established in CFTC Regulation 145.9.1 The Commission reserves the right, but shall have no obligation, to review, pre-screen, filter, redact, refuse or remove any or all of your submission from www.cftc.gov that it may deem to be inappropriate for publication, such as obscene language. All submissions that have been redacted or removed that 1 The Commission’s regulations are found at 17 CFR Ch. I (2013) and can be accessed through the Commission’s Web site. VerDate Mar<15>2010 15:53 May 30, 2014 Jkt 232001 contain comments on the merits of the rulemaking will be retained in the public comment file and will be considered as required under the Administrative Procedure Act and other applicable laws, and may be accessible under the Freedom of Information Act. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Gary Barnett, Director, (202) 418–6700, gbarnett@cftc.gov; Erik Remmler, Deputy Director, (202) 418–7630, eremmler@cftc.gov; Christopher W. Cummings, Special Counsel, (202) 418– 5445, ccummings@cftc.gov; or Israel Goodman, Special Counsel, (202) 418– 6715, igoodman@cftc.gov, Division of Swap Dealer and Intermediary Oversight, Commodity Futures Trading Commission, 1155 21st Street NW., Washington, DC 20581. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: I. Background A. De Minimis Exception From Swap Dealer Definition Section 1a(49) 2 of the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA or Act) defines the term ‘‘swap dealer.’’ CEA Section 1a(49)(D) requires the Commission to exempt from swap dealer designation an entity that engages in a de minimis quantity of swap dealing, and to promulgate regulations to establish factors for making a determination to so exempt such entities. Pursuant to this mandate, on April 27, 2012, the Commission adopted Regulation 1.3(ggg), which further defines the term ‘‘swap dealer.’’ 3 Regulation 1.3(ggg) became effective on July 23, 2012, and registration as a swap dealer was required beginning October 12, 2012.4 Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4) includes an exception from the swap dealer definition for a person that has entered into swap positions connected with its swap dealing activities that, in the aggregate, do not exceed, during the preceding twelve-month period, either of two aggregate gross notional amount thresholds. The two aggregate gross notional amount thresholds are: (i) $3 billion, subject to a phase in level of $8 billion 5 (General De Minimis 2 7 U.S.C. 1a(49) (2012). The CEA can be accessed through the Commission’s Web site. 3 See 77 FR 30596 (May 23, 2012) (Swap Dealer Definition Adopting Release). 4 The further definition of the term ‘‘swap’’ is found in Regulation 1.3(xxx), which became effective October 12, 2012. See 77 FR 48208 (Aug. 13, 2012). See also Regulation 3.10(a)(1)(v)(C), which establishes that each person who comes within the swap dealer definition from and after the effective date of that definition is subject to registration as a swap dealer with the Commission. 5 The Commission set the General De Minimis Threshold at an initial phase-in level of $8 billion as of July 23, 2012, the effective date of the Swap PO 00000 Frm 00010 Fmt 4702 Sfmt 4702 Threshold), and (ii) $25 million with regard to swaps in which the counterparty is a ‘‘special entity’’ (Special Entity De Minimis Threshold). CEA Section 4s(h)(2)(C) and Regulation 23.401(c) define the term ‘‘special entity’’ to include: A Federal agency; a State, State agency, city, county, municipality, or other political subdivision of a State; any employee benefit plan as defined under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA); any government plan as defined under ERISA; and any endowment. Regulation 23.401(c) adds ‘‘any instrumentality, department, or a corporation of or established by a State or subdivision of a State’’ to the definition. B. Petition for Rulemaking On July 12, 2012, the Commission received a petition for rulemaking that sought an amendment of Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4) (Petition).6 The Petition requested that the regulation be amended to exclude from consideration, in determining whether a person has exceeded the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold, swaps to which the Petitioners and certain other special entities (collectively defined in the Petition as ‘‘utility special entities’’ 7) are counterparties and that relate to the Petitioners’ and other utility special entities’ utility operations (defined in the Petition as ‘‘utility operationsrelated swaps’’).8 Dealer Definition Adopting Release. Upon termination of the phase-in period this amount will decrease to $3 billion (or such alternative amount as the Commission may adopt by rulemaking) in accordance with the phase-in procedure outlined in Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(ii). 6 Petition for Rulemaking to Amend CFTC Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4), dated July 12, 2012. The Petition was filed by the American Public Power Association, the Large Public Power Council, the American Public Gas Association, the Transmission Access Policy Study Group and the Bonneville Power Administration (Petitioners). The Petition and the comment letters that were submitted in support of it are available at https://sirt.cftc.gov/sirt/ sirt.aspx?Topic=PendingFilingsandActions AD&Key=23845. 7 The Petition defined the term ‘‘utility special entity’’ to mean a government special entity that— owns or operates electric or natural gas facilities or electric or natural gas operations (or anticipated facilities or operations), supplies natural gas and/ or electric energy to other utility special entities, has public service obligations (or anticipated public service obligations) under Federal, State or local law or regulation to deliver electric energy and/or natural gas service to utility customers, or is a Federal power marketing agency as defined in Section 3 of the Federal Power Act (16 U.S.C. 796(19)). 8 The Petition defined the term ‘‘utility operations-related swap’’ to mean any swap that a utility special entity enters into ‘‘to hedge or mitigate commercial risks’’ (as that phrase is used in CEA Section 2(h)(7)(A)(ii))— intrinsically related to the electric or natural gas facilities that the utility special entity owns or E:\FR\FM\02JNP1.SGM 02JNP1 Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 105 / Monday, June 2, 2014 / Proposed Rules The amendment requested by the Petition would have the effect of allowing a person, in any rolling twelvemonth period, to deal in utility-related swaps with utility special entities up to an aggregate gross notional amount not to exceed (together with other swaps in which the person was engaged) the General De Minimis Threshold (currently $8 billion) without being required to register as a swap dealer. In support of this amendment, the Petition claimed that: The rule amendment is necessary in order to preserve uninterrupted and cost-effective access to the customized, nonfinancial commodity swaps that Petitioners and other Utility Special Entities [as defined in the Petition] use to hedge or mitigate commercial risks arising from their utility facilities, operations and public service obligations. The Petition explained that this amendment was necessary in order to increase the number of counterparties available to utility special entities to enter into swaps that are necessary for the efficient conduct of the businesses and operations of utility special entities. emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS C. CFTC Staff Letter No. 12–18 9 As the October 12, 2012, effective date for Regulation 1.3(ggg) and the other regulations announced in the Swap Dealer Definition Adopting Release approached, Petitioners submitted to the operates or its electric or natural gas operations (or anticipated facilities or operations), or to the utility special entity’s supply of natural gas and/or electric energy to other utility special entities or to its public service obligations (or anticipated public service obligations) to deliver electric energy or natural gas service to utility customers. The Petition defined the term ‘‘intrinsically related’’ to include all transactions related to: (i) The generation or production, purchase or sale, and transmission or transportation of electric energy or natural gas, or the supply of natural gas and/or electric energy to other utility special entities, or delivery of electric energy or natural gas service to utility customers, (ii) all fuel supply for the utility special entity’s electric facilities or operations, (iii) compliance with electric system reliability obligations applicable to the utility special entity, its electric facilities or operations, (iv) compliance with energy, energy efficiency, conservation or renewable energy or environmental statutes, regulations or government orders applicable to the utility special entity, its facilities or operations, or (v) any other electric or natural gas utility operations-related swap to which the utility special entity is a party. Finally, the Petition stated that a ‘‘utility operations-related swap’’ did not include: A swap based or derived on, or referencing, commodities in the interest rates, credit, equity, or currency asset classes, or a product type or category in the ‘other commodity’ asset class that is based or derived on, or referencing, metals, or agricultural commodities or crude oil or gasoline commodities of any grade not used as fuel for electric generation. 9 [2012–2013 Transfer Binder] Comm. L. Fut. Rep. (CCH) ¶ 32,409 (October 12, 2012). (Staff Letter 12– 18). The letter can be accessed on the Commission’s Web site at https://www.cftc.gov/ucm/groups/public/ @lrlettergeneral/documents/letter/12-18.pdf. VerDate Mar<15>2010 15:53 May 30, 2014 Jkt 232001 Commission and several of its divisions a letter requesting no-action relief from the de minimis threshold for swaps with certain special entities.10 In Staff Letter 12–18, the staff of the Commission’s Division of Swap Dealer and Intermediary Oversight (Division),11 concluded that, in light of the representations made in support of the request and in view of the impending effective date for the swap dealer registration requirement, it was appropriate to provide temporary, limited no-action relief with respect to the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold for persons dealing in utility related swaps with utility special entities. Staff Letter 12–18 stated that the Division would not recommend that the Commission commence an enforcement action against a person for failure to apply to be registered as a swap dealer, if: (1) the Utility Commodity Swaps connected with the person’s swap dealing activities into which the person—or any other entity controlling, controlled by or under common control with the person— enters over the course of the immediately preceding 12 months (or following October 12, 2012, if that period is less than 12 months) have an aggregate gross notional amount of no more than $800 million; (2) the person is not otherwise within the definition of the term ‘‘swap dealer,’’ as provided in 17 CFR 1.3(ggg) (i.e., the person—or any other entity controlling, controlled by or under common control with the person—has not entered into swaps as a result of its swap dealing activities in excess of the General De Minimis Threshold or (not counting Utility Commodity Swaps) the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold); 12 and (3) the person is not a ‘‘financial entity,’’ as defined in section 2(h)(7)(C)(i) of the CEA. For purposes of Staff Letter 12–18, Division staff defined the term ‘‘utility commodity swap’’ 13 to mean a swap where: (1) A party to the swap is a utility special entity; 14 (2) a utility special entity is using the swap in the manner described in Regulation 10 This letter was received on October 8, 2012. Division is responsible for, among other things, overseeing compliance with the registration requirements applicable to swap dealers. 12 Division staff emphasized that the aggregate gross notional amount of a person’s utility commodity swaps would reduce the $8 billion aggregate gross notional amount General De Minimis Threshold for that person. 13 Based on conversations with industry participants, Division staff decided to use a definition for ‘‘utility commodity swap’’ that encompassed the transactions that utility special entities believed were necessary to their business, while avoiding an over-expansive application of the relief. 14 Either or both parties to the swap could be a utility special entity. For purposes of Staff Letter 12–18, Division staff employed the definition of ‘‘utility special entity’’ set forth in the Petition. 11 The PO 00000 Frm 00011 Fmt 4702 Sfmt 4702 31239 1.3(ggg)(6)(iii); 15 and (3) the swap is related to an exempt commodity in which both parties to the swap transact as part of the normal course of their physical energy businesses.16 The Division selected the $800 million aggregate gross notional amount threshold, which is ten percent of the current General De Minimis Threshold of $8 billion, based on suggestions made by certain of the Petitioners and other commenters responding to the Commission’s proposed further definition of the term ‘‘swap dealer.’’ In a joint comment letter on that proposed definition, two persons recommended a de minimis threshold for swaps with special entities that would be one-tenth of the General De Minimis Threshold for exclusion from the ‘‘swap dealer’’ definition.17 Another joint comment letter on the proposed further definition of the term ‘‘swap dealer’’ (whose signatories included two of the Petitioners) concurred with this recommendation.18 The relief made available by Staff Letter 12–18 was not self-executing. 15 That is, the utility special entity is using the swap to hedge a physical position, as described in Regulation 1.3(ggg)(6)(iii). 16 As defined in CEA Section 1a(20), an ‘‘exempt commodity’’ is one that is neither an agricultural commodity, nor an ‘‘excluded commodity’’ as defined in CEA Section 1a(19) (which encompasses interest rates, exchange rates, and other instruments, indices and measures of a generally financial nature). At the time Staff Letter 12–18 was issued, Division staff believed it was necessary to limit the relief the Division was providing to situations involving an exempt commodity in which both parties transact as part of the normal course of their physical energy businesses. 17 Those commenters stated that the Commission should: Set the threshold for the [general] de minimis exception at 1/1,000th of a percent of the aggregate gross notional size of the U.S. swap market over the preceding 12 months, or 1/10,000th of a percent of the aggregate gross notional size of the U.S. swap market over the preceding 12 months for swaps in which the counterparty is a ‘special entity.’ This level of swap dealing activity more accurately corresponds to an amount that arguably could pose a potential risk to the stability of the financial system. Joint comment letter from the Edison Electric Institute and Electric Power Supply Association dated Feb. 22, 2011, at pages 10–11. The letter can be accessed at the Commission’s Web site. See https://comments.cftc.gov/ PublicComments/ViewComment.aspx?id=27918. 18 See joint comment letter from the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association, the American Public Power Association and the Large Public Power Council dated Feb. 22, 2011, at 18. The letter can be accessed at the Commission’s Web site. See https://comments.cftc.gov/ PublicComments/ViewComment.aspx?id=27917. Four other comment letters on the Commission’s proposed further definition of the term ‘‘swap dealer’’ from energy market participants also recommended that the overall de minimis threshold be set at 1/1,000th of a percent of the aggregate gross notional size of the U.S. swap market and that the de minimis threshold for swaps with special entities be set at 1/10,000th of a percent of the aggregate gross notional size. See the Swap Dealer Definition Adopting Release, 77 FR at 30627, n.390. E:\FR\FM\02JNP1.SGM 02JNP1 emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS 31240 Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 105 / Monday, June 2, 2014 / Proposed Rules Rather, to claim the relief, a person was required to file with the Division a notice 19 that, among other things, identified each utility special entity with which the person has entered into utility commodity swaps connected with the person’s swap dealing activities, and that stated with respect to each such utility special entity the total gross notional amount of such utility commodity swaps. Division staff based its decision to provide relief on several reasons. For one, the Petitioners had represented that that commodity and swap markets are likely to be local and particularized for utility special entities (as opposed to other special entities that do not provide public utility services). Pricing and other terms of electricity and natural gas swaps may vary significantly from region to region so that only market participants active in the physical energy markets in a particular region are able to enter into swaps with the utility special entities. Thus, staff also understood that the counterparties to the utility special entities for hedging swaps were generally other nonfinancial entities that are active in the physical markets for these products. As a result, the number of counterparties available to the utility special entities is likely to be limited. Second, staff understood that utility special entities have a unique obligation to provide continuous service to the public; moreover, this continuous service is crucial to public safety. This also may limit the availability of counterparties to utility special entities if, for example, a utility special entity must arrange hedges covering a continuous period of time without interruption. While other special entities, such as municipal governments, also serve the public interest, they do not have the same obligations to provide a continuous supply of a commodity (e.g., electricity or natural gas). Thus, the need for utility special entities to use physical commodity swaps is different from their need to use other types of swaps, and it is different from the need for other special entities to use swaps. Finally, a significant reduction in the number of swap counterparties available to utility special entities could be especially harmful to the public interest in view of the importance of the energy services provided by the utility special entities. 19 The notice was required to be provided by December 31, 2012, and on a quarterly basis thereafter. VerDate Mar<15>2010 15:53 May 30, 2014 Jkt 232001 D. CFTC Staff Letter No. 14–34 Subsequent to the issuance of Staff Letter 12–18, certain Petitioners acknowledged to the Commission the relief the letter had made available, but also raised concerns regarding the effects of the conditions imposed upon persons seeking to avail themselves of that relief, and regarding continuing regulatory uncertainty surrounding some transactions with utility special entities.20 They characterized specific features of Staff Letter 12–18 (e.g., the requirement to establish that the utility special entity is using the swap to hedge a physical position in an exempt commodity, and the requirement to establish that the counterparty seeking relief is not a ‘‘financial entity’’) as imposing administrative costs or creating legal uncertainty such that would-be counterparties were dissuaded from entering into relevant swaps. The Petitioners’ Letter thus renewed the relief requested in the previously-filed Petition, claiming that counterparties that had become reluctant to deal with utility special entities were not taking Staff Letter 12–18 as a reason to resume entering into swaps with those entities.21 In response to these concerns, on March 21, 2014, the Division issued CFTC Staff Letter No. 14–34 (Staff Letter 14–34),22 which superseded and broadened the relief provided in Staff Letter 12–18. Specifically, Staff Letter 14–34 stated that the Division would not recommend that the Commission commence an enforcement action 20 Letter from Petitioners to Gary Gensler, CFTC Chairman, dated Nov. 19, 2013 (Petitioners’ Letter), available at https://sirt.cftc.gov/sirt/ sirt.aspx?Topic=PendingFilingsandActionsAD& Key=23845. (One of the original Petitioners did not, however, participate in this follow up letter.) More recently, one of the Petitioners asserted to the Commission that based on an informal survey it conducted, public power utilities subject to the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold have on average lost a large percentage of their potential counterparties, and that granting the request made in the Petition would provide a substantial increase in potential counterparties to the affected utilities. See Letter from the American Public Power Association to Mark Wetjen, Acting CFTC Chairman, dated March 6, 2014. 21 On March 11, 2013, a bill (H.R. 1038) was introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives that would amend the CEA to require the Commission to treat a ‘‘utility operations-related swap’’ entered into with a ‘‘utility special entity’’ as though the swap were entered into with an entity that was not a special entity. The bill would add definitions for ‘‘utility special entity’’ and ‘‘utility operations-related swap.’’ H.R. 1038 was passed in the House on June 12, 2013. On December 11, 2013, a companion bill with the same text as H.R. 1038 was introduced in the Senate (S. 1802), and that bill was referred to the Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry on the same date. 22 The letter can be accessed on the Commission’s Web site at https://www.cftc.gov/ucm/groups/public/ @lrlettergeneral/documents/letter/14-34.pdf. PO 00000 Frm 00012 Fmt 4702 Sfmt 4702 against a person for failure to register as a swap dealer if the person—or any other entity controlling, controlled by or under common control with the person—does not include ‘‘utility operations-related swaps’’ in calculating whether it has exceeded the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold, provided that the person’s swap dealing activities have not exceeded the General De Minimis Threshold, including utility operations-related swaps. For purposes of Staff Letter 14–34, a swap is a ‘‘utility operations-related swap’’ if: (1) A party to the swap is a utility special entity; 23 (2) The utility special entity has represented to the other party that it is using the swap in the manner described in 17 CFR 50.50(c); and (3) The swap is either (i) an electric energy or natural gas swap; or (ii) The utility special entity has represented to the other party that the swap is associated with: (a) The generation, production, purchase or sale of natural gas or electric energy, the supply of natural gas or electric energy to a utility, or the delivery of natural gas or electric energy service to utility customers; (b) Fuel supply for the facilities or operations of a utility; (c) Compliance with an electric system reliability obligation; or (d) Compliance with an energy, energy efficiency, conservation, or renewable energy or environmental statute, regulation, or government order applicable to a utility. The Division explained in Staff Letter 14–34 that it was revising the relief provided in Staff Letter 12–18 based on its understanding from discussions with market participants that (1) doing so would allow utility special entities to significantly increase the number of swap counterparties available to utility special entities and thereby lessen potential harm to the public interest in view of the importance of the energy services provided by utility special entities; and (2) acting to increase the volume of utility operations-related swaps between utility special entities and persons not registered as a swap dealer would likely not raise the types of risks that swap dealer registration is intended to prevent. The Commission does not intend the Proposal to have any effect on the eligibility requirements for the relief currently available under Staff Letter 14–34. In the event the Commission adopts the regulations being proposed herein, the Commission will discuss in the adopting Federal Register release the effect of those regulations on the relief provided under Staff Letter 14–34. 23 For purposes of Staff Letter 14–34, Division staff continued to employ the definition of ‘‘utility special entity’’ set forth in the Petition. E:\FR\FM\02JNP1.SGM 02JNP1 emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 105 / Monday, June 2, 2014 / Proposed Rules II. The Proposal The Commission recognizes that utility special entities have a specialized purpose—they provide electricity and natural gas production and/or distribution to their customers. Utility special entities have a unique obligation in that the services they provide must be continuous and are important to public safety. Furthermore, the Commission is of the view that utility operationsrelated swaps have become an integral part of providing continuous service and managing costs in connection therewith. The specialized nature of utility special entities distinguishes them from other types of special entities (e.g., public pension plans or municipal governments) in that the conduct of their business routinely involves, and indeed often depends upon access to, specific types of swap transactions that permit them to manage the risks of their businesses and to be able to provide electricity and natural gas consistently. As a consequence, they not only need regular access to swaps that directly affect the smooth operation of their business activities, but also are more likely to have developed expertise with swaps directly related to their operations. While the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold may represent a reasonable protection for other types of special entities that enter into swaps intermittently and whose activities do not depend on a consistent use of particular swaps, for the reasons stated above, the Commission believes that its application to utility operations-related swaps with utility special entities is not as necessary for their regular operation.24 The Commission believes that it is important to address the concerns raised in the Petition regarding the ability of utility special entities to hedge the commercial risks of their electric and natural gas production and delivery businesses including the availability of counterparties with whom utility special entities can enter into customized swaps. The Commission believes that, because the swaps used by utility special entities are typically conducted in localized and specialized markets and the number of available counterparties may be limited, the $25 million amount of the existing Special Entity De Minimis Threshold may deter those counterparties from engaging in utility operations-related swaps. Given the obligations of utility special entities 24 The Commission is not considering, as part of this proposed rulemaking, altering the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold with respect to other types of swaps or special entities. VerDate Mar<15>2010 15:53 May 30, 2014 Jkt 232001 to provide continuous service to customers, the Commission preliminarily believes that the public interest would be better served if the likely counterparties for utility operations-related swaps are able to provide liquidity to this limited segment of the market without registering as swap dealers solely on account of exceeding the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold. In addition, given the expertise utility special entities are likely to have with utility operationsrelated swaps, the need for a lower de minimis threshold for dealing activity in such swaps with utility special entities is reduced. Accordingly, the Proposal would permit a person to exclude specified swaps (i.e., utility operations-related swaps) entered into with a defined subset of special entities (i.e., utility special entities) when calculating whether the person has exceeded the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold. In light of the foregoing and the Commission’s further deliberations in this area, the Commission is now proposing to amend its regulations in order to permit persons engaging in utility operations-related swaps with utility special entities (as these terms are defined in the Proposal) to exclude such swaps solely for purposes of calculating whether such persons’ swap dealing activities have exceeded the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold. A. Adding an Exclusion for Utility Operations-Related Swaps With Utility Special Entities Regulation 1.3(ggg) defines the term ‘‘swap dealer.’’ Currently, Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i) provides for a de minimis exception from the swap dealer definition, under either the General De Minimis Threshold or the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold. The Proposal would amend Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i) to permit persons engaging in utility operations-related swaps with utility special entities to exclude such swaps solely for purposes of determining whether they have exceeded the Special Entities De Minimis Threshold. This would be done by redesignating current Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i) as Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(A), placing the text ‘‘In General’’ before the redesignated regulation and adding a new Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B), captioned ‘‘Utility Special Entities.’’ Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B)(1) would provide that solely for purposes of determining whether a person’s swap dealing activity has exceeded the $25 million aggregate gross notional amount threshold set forth in Regulation (ggg)(4)(i)(A) for swaps in which the PO 00000 Frm 00013 Fmt 4702 Sfmt 4702 31241 counterparty is a special entity, a person may exclude utility operations-related swaps in which the counterparty is a utility special entity. Proposed Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B)(1) would not, however, permit a person to exclude the gross notional amount of such utility operations-related swaps in determining whether the person has exceeded the General De Minimis Threshold. In other words, a person would add the aggregate gross notional amount of the utility operations-related swaps it enters into with utility special entities to the gross notional amount of any other swaps entered into by it during the preceding twelve months in determining whether the person has exceeded the General De Minimis Threshold.25 As is the case for other swaps, in calculating the gross notional amount of utility operations-related swap positions entered into with utility special entities, a person must also include swap positions entered into by any entity controlling, controlled by or under common control with the person, and if a stated notional amount of a swap is leveraged or enhanced by the structure of the swap, the threshold calculation would be required to be based ‘‘on the effective notional amount of the swap rather than on the stated notional amount.’’ Under the Proposal, a person would be required to file a one-time notice to rely on the exclusion provided by the new rule.26 Specifically, the notice would be required to be filed electronically with the National Futures Association (NFA),27 to provide such information as the person’s name, address, and a contact, and to contain a 25 A person likewise would include the aggregate gross notional amount of swaps entered into with other types of special entities to the same extent required for swaps generally in determining whether the person’s swap dealing activity has exceeded the General De Minimis Threshold. 26 See proposed Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B)(4). 27 NFA is a futures association registered as such with the Commission pursuant to CEA Section 17. Although persons relying on the exclusion in Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(A) would be outside the swap dealer definition and therefore not subject to the requirement in Regulation 170.16 that a swap dealer must become an NFA member, a requirement to file a notice with NFA would be consistent with past action the Commission has taken with regard to requiring other persons seeking to rely on an exception or exclusion from a term defined in the Act—i.e., by requiring such persons to file a notice with NFA. See, e.g., 62 FR 52088 (Oct. 6, 1997), authorizing NFA to process notices of eligibility for exclusion from the definition of the term ‘‘commodity pool operator’’ under Regulation 4.5, and 72 FR 1658 (Jan. 16, 2007), establishing that a person seeking an exclusion under Regulation 4.5 must file its claim with NFA electronically. In the event the Commission adopts the proposing filing requirement, it will concurrently delegate to NFA the authority to accept the filing. E:\FR\FM\02JNP1.SGM 02JNP1 31242 Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 105 / Monday, June 2, 2014 / Proposed Rules representation that the person meets the criteria of the exclusion for utility operations-related swaps with utility special entities in Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B). Congress has determined that special entities merit additional protections when engaging in swap transactions, and has adopted, for example, heightened business conduct requirements on swap dealers advising and dealing with special entities.28 Because the Proposal, if adopted, would permit persons to engage in a greater aggregate gross notional amount of swaps with utility special entities, who Congress has determined warrant additional protections under the CEA, without registering as swap dealers (and becoming subject to corresponding business conduct standards), it is important that the Commission be able to know who the persons are that rely on the exclusion under the Proposal. The proposed notice filing will help the Commission to monitor compliance with the swap dealer registration requirement, and better ensure that the exclusion under the Proposal serves the intended purpose of enabling utility special entities to manage operational risks in a cost-effective way. Additionally, a person relying on the exclusion under the Proposal would be required to maintain in accordance with Regulation 1.31 books and records that substantiate its eligibility to rely on this exclusion.29 B. New Definitions emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS 1. ‘‘Utility Special Entity’’ Proposed Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B)(2) would define the term ‘‘utility special entity’’ to mean a special entity 30 that owns or operates electric or natural gas facilities, electric or natural gas operations or anticipated electric or natural gas facilities or operations; supplies natural gas or electric energy to other utility special entities; has public service obligations or anticipated public service obligations under Federal, State or local law or regulation to deliver electric energy or natural gas service to utility customers; or is a Federal power marketing agency as defined in Section 3 of the Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C. 796(19). This definition is essentially identical to the 28 See CEA Sections 4s(h)(4) and 4s(h)(5). requirement is consistent with other similar Commission regulations, such as the requirement in Regulation 4.7 that commodity pool operators and commodity trading advisors claiming relief under that regulation maintain books and records relating to their eligibility to claim that relief. 30 As noted above, the term ‘‘special entity’’ is defined in CEA Section 4s(h)(2)(c) and Regulation 23.401(c). 29 This VerDate Mar<15>2010 15:53 May 30, 2014 Jkt 232001 definition of ‘‘utility special entity’’ in the Petition. 2. ‘‘Utility Operations-Related Swap’’ Proposed Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B)(3) would define the term ‘‘utility operations-related swap,’’ to mean a swap to which at least one of the parties is a utility special entity that is using the swap to hedge or mitigate commercial risk, and that is related to an exempt commodity. In addition, the swap must be an electric energy or natural gas swap, or associated with the operations or compliance obligations of a utility special entity in a manner more fully set forth in Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B)(3)(iv). In this regard, the Commission notes that, in determining whether a person may rely on the proposed exclusion for utility operations-related swaps with utility special entities, it may not always be possible for the person to establish with absolute certainty that a counterparty is a utility special entity, that the counterparty is using a swap to hedge or mitigate commercial risk, that the swap is related to an exempt commodity, or that the swap meets the other requirements to come within the definition of a utility operations-related swap. Therefore, the Commission intends to take the position that a person seeking to rely on the (proposed) exclusion may reasonably rely upon a representation by the utility special entity that it is a utility special entity and that the swap is a utility operationsrelated swap, as such terms are defined in proposed Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B), so long as the person was not aware, and should not reasonably have been aware, of facts indicating the contrary.31 III. Request for Comments The Commission seeks comments regarding the nature and application of an exclusion for utility operationsrelated swaps with utility special entities for purposes of calculating whether a person’s swap dealing activities have exceeded the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold, as provided for in the Proposal. Set forth below, then, is a non-exclusive list of questions to which the Commission seeks responses. 1. Will the Proposal enable utility special entities to adequately hedge their operational risks in a cost-effective 31 This position is consistent with the Commission’s approach to permitting reliance on representations for other purposes, such as the requirement in Regulation 50.50(b)(3) that a reporting party have a reasonable basis to believe that its counterparty meets the requirements for the exception to the clearing requirement for end-users. See 77 FR 42560, 42570 (July 19, 2012). PO 00000 Frm 00014 Fmt 4702 Sfmt 4702 manner by entering into utility operations-related swaps? If not, explain why, and indicate ways in which the Proposal could be modified in order to accomplish this goal. 2. Are there factual errors or omissions in the Commission’s understanding and analysis of the issues faced by utility special entities and the efforts to date to resolve those issues? 3. Is it appropriate to treat utility operations-related swaps with utility special entities differently than other swaps with special entities for purposes of determining whether a person is a swap dealer? 4. Does the definition of utility operations-related swap in proposed Regulation 1.3(ggg)(i)(4)(B)(3) adequately encompass the range of swap transactions with respect to which it is appropriate to, in effect, set a higher de minimis threshold in the context of persons dealing with utility special entities? If not, in what way(s) should the definition be expanded or narrowed and why? More specifically, should the scope of the swaps identified in Regulation 1.3(ggg)(i)(4)(B)(3)(iv) be expanded or narrowed? Are there swaps that would meet the requirements of Regulation 1.3(ggg)(i)(4)(B)(3)(i), (ii) and (iii), but not of Regulation 1.3(ggg)(i)(4)(B)(3)(iv) that should be included? Is Regulation 1.3(ggg)(i)(4)(B)(3)(iv) too restrictive or not restrictive enough? 5. One of the conditions to coming within the definition of the term ‘‘utility operations-related swap’’ is that the party to the swap that is a utility special entity is using the swap in the manner prescribed in Regulation 50.50(c)—i.e., to hedge or mitigate commercial risk. What issues might there be in determining whether a swap constitutes hedging activity for purposes of complying with this proposed rule? Is reference to Regulation 50.50(c) for defining hedging activities appropriate? Are there alternative definitions that should be considered (e.g., Regulation 1.3(ggg)(6)(iii))? Should the definitions for hedging activities in Regulation 50.50(c) and Regulation 1.3(ggg)(6)(iii) be harmonized? If so, how (e.g., by following Regulation 50.50(c) or Regulation 1.3(ggg)(6)(iii) or some iteration of both) and why? Please provide any estimates of costs of compliance with any proposed alternative as compared to the cost of compliance with Regulation 50.50(c). 6. Another condition to coming within the proposed definition of the term ‘‘utility operations-related swap’’ is that the swap be related to an exempt commodity (as defined in CEA Section 1a(20)). Is this condition appropriate? If E:\FR\FM\02JNP1.SGM 02JNP1 emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 105 / Monday, June 2, 2014 / Proposed Rules not, why not and/or how and why should it be modified? 7. Should the definition of utility operations-related swap be limited to swaps in which both parties to the swap transact as part of the normal course of their physical energy businesses? 8. The Proposal would allow persons to, in effect, treat utility operationsrelated swaps in which the counterparty is a utility special entity like swaps with a counterparty that is not a special entity in determining whether the person has exceeded a de minimis threshold under Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(A). Thus, utility operations-related swaps with utility special entities would be subject to the General De Minimis Threshold under Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i), which is currently set at the $8 billion phase in level. Is that an appropriate threshold, or should the de minimis threshold for such swaps be higher or lower? What considerations support using a different amount? Should the de minimis threshold for utility operations-related swaps be set at $3 billion, the level of the General De Minimis Threshold without application of the $8 billion phase-in level, in light of the special protections afforded to special entities under the CEA? Should the threshold be set at an amount equal to a percentage of the gross notional amount of the General De Minimis Threshold, such that an increase or decrease in the gross notional amount of the General De Minimis Threshold would result in a proportionate change in the de minimis threshold for utility operations-related swaps? 9. Should the nature of the person entering into swaps with a utility special entity determine whether the person can rely on the exclusion for utility operations-related swaps under the Proposal (e.g., by limiting the exclusion to persons who are not ‘‘financial entities,’’ as Staff Letter 12– 18 limited relief to such persons)? If so, what characteristics or factors should be considered? 10. Should the Commission specify the books and records a person must maintain to substantiate that the person may rely on the (proposed) exclusion for utility operations-related swaps? 11. Would the Proposal impact the Commission’s ability to carry out its market oversight responsibilities with regard to the overall derivatives market? If so, how? 12. To what extent, if any, would the Proposal reduce transparency with regard to utility operations-related swaps, counterparties to such transactions or the broader derivatives market? VerDate Mar<15>2010 15:53 May 30, 2014 Jkt 232001 13. Does the Proposal serve the public interest? In what ways? How could the Proposal be improved to better serve the public interest? 14. How should the Commission balance the public interest in having the additional protections that a de minimis threshold for transactions with utility special entities that is lower than the General De Minimis Threshold would afford, versus the public interest in maintaining the ability for utility special entities to enter hedging transactions? 15. As noted above, it is important that the Commission be able to know who the persons are that rely on the exclusion under the Proposal to monitor compliance with the swap dealer registration requirement, and better ensure that the exclusion under the Proposal serves the intended purpose of enabling utility special entities to manage operational risks in a costeffective way. Will the notice requirement in proposed Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B)(4) enable the Commission to achieve these objectives? If not, why? Is there an alternative method for the Commission to obtain the relevant information and achieve the stated objectives without requiring a notice filing? 16. Are there any special entities (or types of special entities) who come within the proposed definition of ‘‘utility special entity’’ (as set forth in proposed Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B)(2)), but are not likely to have expertise in utility operationsrelated swaps? If yes, describe those entities. Should persons dealing in swaps with those entities be treated differently than persons dealing with other utility special entities under the Proposal? 17. Should the description of swap dealing activity in the swap dealer definition be more specifically described for the purposes of defining swap dealing with utility special entities? What specific dealing or nondealing activities should be taken into account given the nature of utility special entities? Have any compliance issues arisen with respect to the description of swap dealing activity in the swap dealer definition? If so, how should the Commission clarify the description? 18. Will utility special entities benefit if the Commission revised its interpretation regarding forward contracts with embedded volumetric optionality as described in the swap definition adopting release? 32 If so, how? Is the seven element interpretation appropriate for determining whether a 32 See PO 00000 forward contract with volumetric optionality qualifies for the forward contract exclusion from the definition of a swap? If not, should the Commission revise the interpretation or adopt an alternative standard? If so, what should the revised interpretation or standard be? 19. Regulation 1.3(ggg)(6)(iv) provides that swaps entered into by a floor trader who meets certain conditions do not need to be counted in determining whether the floor trader is a swap dealer. Should the Commission afford similar treatment to swaps entered into with utility special entities by their counterparties? For purposes of the de minimis calculation under the swap dealer definition, why should the Commission hold floor traders and entities dealing with utility special entities to different standards? The Commission welcomes comments on any other issues concerning the subject matter of this Federal Register release and the de minimis exception from the swap dealer definition for persons engaging in swap transactions with special entities, in general. IV. Related Matters A. Regulatory Flexibility Act The Regulatory Flexibility Act 33 requires that Federal agencies consider whether the rules they propose will have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities and, if so, they must provide a regulatory flexibility analysis respecting the impact. Whenever an agency publishes a general notice of proposed rulemaking for any rule, pursuant to the notice-and-comment provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act 34 a regulatory flexibility analysis or certification typically is required.35 The Proposal, if adopted, will not have a significant economic impact on affected persons because the Proposal will primarily relieve them from regulatory obligations that would otherwise apply to them. That is, the (proposed) exclusion for utility operations-related swaps will permit counterparties to engage with utility special entities in utility operations-related swaps to a degree that would, absent the proposed exclusion, require them to register with the Commission as a swap dealer, and to comply with regulations applicable to swap dealers.36 While the Proposal does 33 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq. U.S.C. 553. The Administrative Procedure Act is found at 5 U.S.C. 500 et seq. 35 See 5 U.S.C. 601(2), 603–05. 36 See, e.g., Part 23 of the Commission’s regulations, which establishes, among other things, 34 5 77 FR 48238 (Aug. 13, 2012). Frm 00015 Fmt 4702 Sfmt 4702 31243 Continued E:\FR\FM\02JNP1.SGM 02JNP1 31244 Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 105 / Monday, June 2, 2014 / Proposed Rules require a notice filing in order to rely on the (proposed) exclusion for utility operations-related swaps, to the extent that any small entities opt to rely on the exclusion, the notice requirement will not have a significant economic impact on those entities.37 Moreover, the number of potential counterparties seeking to rely on the (proposed) exclusion may be limited, given the local nature of the relevant markets. Accordingly, the Chairman, on behalf of the Commission, hereby certifies pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b) that the Proposal will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. B. Paperwork Reduction Act The Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) 38 provides that an agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays a valid control number from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). This rulemaking contains notification and recordkeeping requirements that are collections of information within the meaning of the PRA. Accordingly, the Commission will submit the required information collection requests to OMB. emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS 1. Collections of Information This rulemaking contains two elements that would qualify as collections of information. First, proposed Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B) would create an exclusion from the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold with regard to specified swaps (utility operations-related swaps) entered into with a defined subset of special entities (utility special entities). As proposed, a person seeking to rely on the exclusion would be required to file a one-time notice. Specifically, and as explained above, the notice would be required to be filed electronically with NFA, to provide such information as the person’s name, address, and a contact, and to contain a representation that the person meets the criteria of the exclusion for utility operations-related swaps in Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B). Based upon the information currently available to the Commission, an accurate estimate of the persons who may rely on the exclusion under the reporting, recordkeeping and business conduct requirements for swap dealers. 37 See 77 FR 2613, 2620 (Jan. 19, 2012), wherein the Commission stated that in the experience of the Commission, complying with the registration process regulations—a far more burdensome process than the notice filing that would be required under the Proposal—has not had a significant economic effect on a substantial number of small entities. 38 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. VerDate Mar<15>2010 15:53 May 30, 2014 Jkt 232001 Proposal, if adopted, cannot be made. Nevertheless, the Commission is preliminarily using a conservative estimate of 100 potential counterparties of utility special entities. The Commission invites comments regarding whether this is a reasonable estimate to use for PRA paperwork burden calculations. Commission staff estimates that ascertaining whether a person is eligible to rely on the exclusion for utility operations-related swaps under the Proposal will take no more than one hour. Because the information required for the notice is readily known to the person, staff estimates that preparing and filing the notice will take no more than one-half hour. The notice will be filed only once, but a person who has filed a notice will periodically check to ensure that it remains eligible. Staff estimates that because such verification will be based on information within the person’s control, it will not require more than an hour annually. Consequently, the Commission preliminarily estimates the burden associated with the required notice filing would be as follows: Number of Respondents: 100. Frequency of Response: Annually (initial filing and ongoing compliance). Average Burden Hours per Response: 1.2. Estimated gross annual reporting burden: $79,680. On this basis, the Commission will request a new collection of information control number from OMB. Proposed Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B) would also require a person seeking to rely on the proposed exclusion for utility operations-related swaps to maintain books and records in accordance with Regulation 1.31 that substantiate its eligibility. The Commission notes that it has previously requested and obtained OMB Control Number 3038–0090 pertaining to Regulation 1.31. The Commission preliminarily believes that each person claiming the proposed exclusion will need to establish a procedure to maintain the necessary books and records substantiating ongoing eligibility with for reliance on the proposed exclusion. In addition, each such person will incur some burden to create and maintain relevant records. As noted above, the Commission preliminarily estimates 100 persons may seek to rely on the exclusion for utility operations-related swaps under the Proposal, if adopted. Although the books and records required to substantiate initial and ongoing eligibility to rely on the exclusion will PO 00000 Frm 00016 Fmt 4702 Sfmt 4702 be books and records that the person has already prepared in the course of engaging in utility operations-related swaps, Commission staff estimates that the person will incur an hour of burden initially and an hour annually thereafter as a result of consulting and reviewing those books and records. Consequently, the Commission preliminarily estimates the recordkeeping burden associated with the proposed Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B) would be as follows: Number of Respondents: 100. Frequency of Response: Annually. Average Burden Hours per Response: 1. Estimated gross annual reporting burden: $16,100. On this basis, the Commission will submit a request to amend OMB Control Number 3038–0090. The Commission preliminarily believes that the persons who are likely to rely on the exclusion for utility operations-related swaps may already have procedures in place to comply with this requirement so that actual burdens may be less—and possibly much less—for those persons. 2. Information Collection Comments The Commission invites comment on any aspect of the proposed information collection requirements discussed above. Pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(B), the Commission will consider public comments on such proposed requirements in: • Evaluating whether the proposed collection of information is necessary for the proper performance of the functions of the Commission, including whether the information will have a practical use; • Evaluating the accuracy of the Commission’s estimate of the burden of the proposed collection of information, including the validity of the methodology and assumptions used; • Enhancing the quality, utility, and clarity of the information proposed to be collected; and • Minimizing the burden of collection of information on those who are to respond, including through the use of appropriate automated, electronic, mechanical, or other technological information collection techniques. Copies of the submission from the Commission to OMB are available from the CFTC Clearance Officer, 1155 21st Street NW., Washington, DC 20581, (202) 418–5160 or from https:// RegInfo.gov. Persons desiring to submit comments on the proposed information collection requirements should send those comments to: • The Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, Room 10235, E:\FR\FM\02JNP1.SGM 02JNP1 Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 105 / Monday, June 2, 2014 / Proposed Rules emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS New Executive Office Building, Washington, DC 20503, Attn: Desk Officer of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission; • (202) 395–6566 (fax); or • OIRAsubmissions@omb.eop.gov (email). Please provide the Commission with a copy of submitted comments so that all comments can be summarized and addressed in the final rulemaking, and please refer to the ADDRESSES section of this rulemaking for instructions on submitting comments to the Commission. OMB is required to make a decision concerning the proposed information collection requirements between thirty (30) and sixty (60) days after publication of the Proposal in the Federal Register. Therefore, a comment to OMB is best assured of receiving full consideration if OMB (as well as the Commission) receives it within thirty (30) days of publication of the Proposal. The time frame for commenting on the PRA does not affect the deadline established by the Commission on the Proposal, provided in the DATES section of this rulemaking. C. Cost-Benefit Considerations CEA Section 15(a) requires the Commission to consider the costs and benefits of its actions before promulgating a regulation under the CEA or issuing certain orders. CEA Section 15(a) further specifies that the costs and benefits shall be evaluated in light of five broad areas of market and public concern: (1) Protection of market participants and the public; (2) efficiency, competitiveness and financial integrity of futures markets; (3) price discovery; (4) sound risk management practices; and (5) other public interest considerations. The Commission considers the costs and benefits resulting from its discretionary determinations with respect to the Section 15(a) factors, and seeks comments from interested persons regarding the nature and extent of such costs and benefits. 1. Background. The Commission is proposing to amend its regulations to permit a person to exclude utility operations-related swaps with utility special entities (as such terms are defined in the Proposal) in calculating the aggregate gross notional amount of the person’s swap positions for purposes of the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold. As discussed above, CEA Section 1a(49) defines the term ‘‘swap dealer,’’ and Regulation 1.3(ggg) further defines that term. A person who comes within the swap dealer definition is subject to registration as such with the VerDate Mar<15>2010 15:53 May 30, 2014 Jkt 232001 Commission and the regulatory requirements applicable to swap dealers.39 Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i) provides an exception from the swap dealer definition for persons who engage in a de minimis amount of swap dealing activity. Currently, under Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i) persons who engage in swap dealing activity with special entities are excepted from the swap dealer definition so long as the swap positions connected with those dealing activities into which the person enters over the course of the immediately preceding 12 months have an aggregate gross notional amount of no more than $25 million (i.e., the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold). These regulatory provisions set the baseline for the Commission’s consideration of the costs and benefits of the Proposal. That is, the Commission considers the costs and benefits that would result from allowing persons to exclude utility operations-related swaps with utility special entities from the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold ($25 million), such that the de minimis threshold with respect to such swaps would the same as for swaps not involving a special entity (i.e., the General De Minimis Threshold, currently set at $8 billion), subject to the requirements set forth in the Proposal.40 2. Costs. As noted by the Commission in the Swap Dealer Definition Adopting Release, ‘‘a de minimis exception, by its nature, will eliminate key counterparty protections provided by Title VII for particular users of swaps . . . [and] [t]he broader the exception, the greater the loss of protection.’’ 41 In adopting the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold, the Commission explained that the $25 million threshold was ‘‘appropriate in light of the special protections that Title VII affords to special entities.’’ The Commission also recognized the ‘‘serious concerns raised by commenters’’ regarding the application of the de minimis exception to swap dealing with special entities in light of losses that special entities have incurred in the financial markets.42 39 See, e.g., Part 23 of the Commission’s regulations. 40 While Staff Letter 14–34 currently provides noaction relief in circumstances, and subject to requirements, that are substantially similar to those of the Proposal, the Commission preliminarily believes that Staff Letter 14–34 should not set or affect the baseline from which the Commission considers the costs and benefits of the Proposal. This is because, as it indicates, Staff Letter 14–34 does necessarily represent the position or view of the Commission or any other office or division of the Commission. 41 See 77 FR at 30596, 30627–30628 (May 23, 2012). 42 See Id. at 30633. PO 00000 Frm 00017 Fmt 4702 Sfmt 4702 31245 Under the Proposal, a greater quantity of swap dealing with utility special entities would potentially be undertaken without the benefits to utility special entities of that dealing activity being subject to swap dealer regulation.43 In addition, the Proposal will impose costs associated with ascertaining whether a person is eligible to rely on the proposed exclusion for utility operations-related swaps and the preparation and submission of the notice required to rely on the exclusion under proposed Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B)(2). Finally, to the extent that a person relying on the exclusion under the Proposal would be required to keep books and records it would not otherwise keep, in order to substantiate its eligibility for the exclusion, that represents another potential cost. Comments are invited regarding the extent of all of these costs, and any other costs that would result from adoption of the Proposal, including estimates of monetary or other measurements thereof. 3. Benefits. With respect to benefits, the Commission preliminarily believes that the Proposal will benefit utility special entities and the public by encouraging a greater number of prospective counterparties to engage with utility special entities in utility operations-related swaps.44 Because of the local and particularized nature of the electric and natural gas production and distribution, the number of potential swap counterparties for utility special entities seeking to hedge commercial risk is more limited than for other special entities seeking to hedge non-physical commodities. The number of counterparties to utility special entities may be further limited due to the unique obligation of utilities to provide continuous service to the public. These considerations may be more critical given the important role energy services play in public safety and commerce. Thus, limiting the number of counterparties to utility special entities could be counter to the public interest. Accordingly, increasing the number of potential counterparties available to utility special entities will enable utility special entities to practice sound, costeffective risk management and to 43 See Id. at 30707 (stating that the benefits of swap dealing regulation include customer protection, market orderliness and market transparency). 44 The Commission explained in the Swap Dealer Definition Adopting Release that ‘‘[i]n principle, a higher [de minimis] threshold would promote a larger pool of swap-dealing entities (since entities with swap dealing activity below the threshold need not incur costs to comply with swap dealer regulations), meaning more potential counterparties available to swap users.’’ See Id. E:\FR\FM\02JNP1.SGM 02JNP1 emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS 31246 Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 105 / Monday, June 2, 2014 / Proposed Rules efficiently operate and conduct their business. This will, in turn, help utility special entities meet their obligations to provide continuous services to the public in a cost-effective manner, and will help protect the public interest and safety that is dependent on such energy services. Comments are sought regarding these benefits and any other benefits resulting from adoption of the Proposal, and to the extent they can be quantified, estimates of the monetary or other value thereof. 4. Section 15(a). Section 15(a) of the CEA requires the Commission to consider the effects of its actions in light of the following five factors: a. Protection of Market Participants and the Public. The Proposal will allow utility special entities to engage in certain swaps to a greater extent than other special entities, without the protections of swap dealer registration and regulation. However, given the limited circumstances for which the proposed exclusion would apply, and the requirements persons must meet to rely on the exclusion, the Commission preliminarily believes the costs to the affected utilities, market participants and the public will be limited. Moreover, these costs will be counteracted by the benefits the Proposal will provide to utility special entities and the public, namely, enabling utility special entities to efficiently hedge and manage risk, and to meet their obligations to provide vital energy services to the public in a consistent and cost-effective manner. b. Efficiency, Competitiveness, and Financial Integrity of Markets. The Commission preliminarily believes that the Proposal will enhance efficiency and competitiveness in the electricity and natural gas markets by encouraging prospective counterparties to engage in swap transactions with utility special entities. The availability of additional swap counterparties in these markets will enhance competition between counterparties, which will, in turn benefit utility special entities by lowering transaction costs for utility special entities. c. Price Discovery. It is unlikely that facilitating more counterparties for utility special entities to trade with will have a significant impact on price discovery. Price discovery is the process by which prices for underlying commodities may be determined or inferred through market prices. The addition of more counterparties willing to trade with utility special entities may improve, but not necessarily adversely impact, the prices that the utility special entities receive on their swap contract transactions, but the overall effect on VerDate Mar<15>2010 15:53 May 30, 2014 Jkt 232001 the determined or inferred prices for the underlying commodities is indeterminate. Interested persons are invited to comment on this conclusion. d. Sound Risk Management. The Commission preliminarily believes that if counterparties refrain from transacting in swaps with utility special entities because of the regulatory costs associated with swap dealer registration and regulation, the ability of utility special entities to hedge commercial risks will be impaired, particularly in cases for which the number of counterparties available becomes very limited. Mitigating the costs and regulatory concerns of potential counterparties by permitting them to transact with utility special entities without being subject to swap dealer registration and regulation will enable utility special entities to better manage their commercial risk. e. Other Public Interest Considerations. As discussed above, the Commission preliminarily believes the proposed rule will enable utility special entities to practice sound, cost-effective risk management and to more effectively operate and conduct their business. This may, in turn, help utility special entities meet their obligations to provide continuous services to the public in a more cost-effective manner. 5. Request for Comment The Commission invites comments from the public on all aspects of its preliminary consideration of costs and benefits associated with the Proposal. The questions below relate to areas that the Commission preliminarily believes may be relevant. In addressing these or any other aspect of the Commission’s preliminary assessment, commenters are encouraged to submit any data or other information that they may have quantifying or qualifying the costs and benefits of the Proposal. a. What are the costs and benefits to market participants, if any, associated with the Proposal? Please explain and, to the extent possible, quantify these costs. b. What are the costs and benefits to the public associated with the Proposal? Please explain and, to the extent possible, quantify these costs. c. Would a de minimis threshold other than the General De Minimis threshold for transactions with utility special entities as set forth in the Proposal impact the costs and/or benefits to market participants or the public? Is there a threshold level that would be optimal, i.e., maximize net benefits? d. Has the Commission identified all of the relevant categories of costs and PO 00000 Frm 00018 Fmt 4702 Sfmt 4702 benefits in its preliminary consideration of the costs and benefits associated with the Proposal? Please describe any additional categories of costs or benefits that the Commission should consider with respect to the Proposal. e. To what extent does the Proposal protect market participants and the public? How, if at all, could the Proposal be altered to better protect market participants and the public? f. How, if at all, does the Proposal affect the efficiency, competitiveness, and financial integrity of markets? g. How, if at all, does the Proposal affect price discovery for utility operations-related swaps? For the swaps market more generally? h. How, if at all, does the Proposal affect sound risk management for utility special entities? For participants in the swaps market more generally? i. How, if at all, does the Proposal affect the public interest? List of Subjects in 17 CFR Part 1 De minimis exception, Registration, Special Entities, Swap dealers, Swaps, Utility operations-related swaps, Utility special entities. For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Commission proposes to amend 17 CFR part 1 as follows: PART 1—GENERAL REGULATIONS UNDER THE COMMODITY EXCHANGE ACT 1. The authority citation for part 1 is revised to read as follows: ■ Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1a, 2, 5, 6, 6a, 6b, 6c, 6d, 6e, 6f, 6g, 6h, 6i, 6k, 6l, 6m, 6n, 6o, 6p, 6r, 6s, 7, 7a–1, 7a–2, 7b, 7b–3, 8, 9, 10a, 12, 12a, 12c, 13a, 13a–1, 16, 16a, 19, 21, 23, and 24 (2012). 2. Amend § 1.3 by revising paragraph (ggg)(4)(i) to read as follows: ■ § 1.3 Definitions. * * * * * (ggg) * * * (4) De minimis exception—(i)(A) In General. Except as provided in paragraph (ggg)(4)(vi) of this section, a person that is not currently registered as a swap dealer shall be deemed not to be a swap dealer as a result of its swap dealing activity involving counterparties, so long as the swap positions connected with those dealing activities into which the person—or any other entity controlling, controlled by or under common control with the person—enters over the course of the immediately preceding 12 months (or following the effective date of final rules implementing Section 1a(47) of the Act, 7 U.S.C. 1a(47), if that period is less than 12 months) have an aggregate gross E:\FR\FM\02JNP1.SGM 02JNP1 emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 105 / Monday, June 2, 2014 / Proposed Rules notional amount of no more than $3 billion, subject to a phase in level of an aggregate gross notional amount of no more than $8 billion applied in accordance with paragraph (ggg)(4)(ii) of this section, and an aggregate gross notional amount of no more than $25 million with regard to swaps in which the counterparty is a ‘‘special entity’’ (as that term is defined in Section 4s(h)(2)(C) of the Act, 7 U.S.C. 6s(h)(2)(C), and § 23.401(c) of this chapter), except as provided in paragraph (ggg)(4)(i)(B) of this section. For purposes of this paragraph, if the stated notional amount of a swap is leveraged or enhanced by the structure of the swap, the calculation shall be based on the effective notional amount of the swap rather than on the stated notional amount. (B) Utility Special Entities. (1) Solely for purposes of determining whether a person’s swap dealing activity has exceeded the $25 million aggregate gross notional amount threshold set forth in paragraph (ggg)(4)(i)(A) of this section for swaps in which the counterparty is a special entity, a person may exclude ‘‘utility operations-related swaps’’ in which the counterparty is a ‘‘utility special entity.’’ (2) For purposes of this paragraph (4)(i)(B) a ‘‘utility special entity’’ is a special entity, as that term is defined in Section 4s(h)(2)(C) of the Act, 7 U.S.C. 6s(h)(2)(C), and § 23.401(c) of this chapter, that: (i) Owns or operates electric or natural gas facilities, electric or natural gas operations or anticipated electric or natural gas facilities or operations; (ii) Supplies natural gas or electric energy to other utility special entities; (iii) Has public service obligations or anticipated public service obligations under Federal, State or local law or regulation to deliver electric energy or natural gas service to utility customers; or (iv) Is a Federal power marketing agency as defined in Section 3 of the Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C. 796(19). (3) For purposes of this paragraph (ggg)(4)(i)(B) a ‘‘utility operationsrelated swap’’ is a swap that meets the following conditions: (i) A party to the swap is a utility special entity; (ii) A utility special entity is using the swap in the manner described in § 50.50(c) of this chapter; (iii) The swap is related to an exempt commodity, as that term is defined in Section 1a(20) of the Act; and (iv) The swap is an electric energy or natural gas swap; or the swap is associated with: The generation, production, purchase or sale of natural VerDate Mar<15>2010 15:53 May 30, 2014 Jkt 232001 gas or electric energy, the supply of natural gas or electric energy to a utility special entity, or the delivery of natural gas or electric energy service to customers of a utility special entity; fuel supply for the facilities or operations of a utility special entity; compliance with an electric system reliability obligation; or compliance with an energy, energy efficiency, conservation, or renewable energy or environmental statute, regulation, or government order applicable to a utility special entity. (4) Any person relying upon the exclusion in paragraph (ggg)(4)(i)(B)(1) of this section must file electronically with the National Futures Association a Notice of Reliance on Exclusion for Utility Operations-Related Swaps with Utility Special Entities. The notice must be filed by no later than [effective date of final rule] or the date the person first engages in such swaps, whichever is later. The notice must contain: The person’s name, main business address, and main telephone number; the name of a contact; and a statement signed by an individual with authority to bind the person that the person meets the criteria for the exclusion in Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B) (paragraph (ggg)(4)(i)(B) of this section). (5) Each person who relies on the exclusion in paragraph (ggg)(4)(i)(B) of this section must maintain books and records, in accordance with § 1.31, that substantiate its eligibility to rely on the exclusion in paragraph (ggg)(4)(i)(B) of this section. * * * * * Issued in Washington, DC, on May 23, 2014, by the Commission. Christopher J. Kirkpatrick, Deputy Secretary of the Commission. Note: The following appendix will not appear in the Code of Federal Regulations. Appendix to Exclusion of Utility Operations-Related Swaps With Utility Special Entities From De Minimis Threshold for Swaps With Special Entities—Commission Voting Summary On this matter, Acting Chairman Wetjen and Commissioner O’Malia voted in the affirmative. No Commissioner voted in the negative. [FR Doc. 2014–12469 Filed 5–30–14; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 6351–01–P PO 00000 Frm 00019 Fmt 4702 Sfmt 4702 31247 FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION 47 CFR Parts 1, 2, 90, 95, and 96 [GN Docket No. 12–354; FCC 14–49] Commission Seeks Comment on Shared Commercial Operations in the 3550–3650 MHz Band Federal Communications Commission. ACTION: Proposed rule. AGENCY: SUMMARY: In this further notice of proposed rulemaking, the Commission seeks comment on specific rule proposals for the establishment of a new Citizens Broadband Radio Service in the 3550–3650 MHz band (3.5 GHz Band). DATES: Submit comments on or before July 14, 2014 and reply comments on or before August 1, 2014. ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by GN Docket No. 12–354, by any of the following methods: D Federal Communications Commission’s Web site: https:// fjallfoss.fcc.gov/ecfs2/. Follow the instructions for submitting comments. D Mail: All hand-delivered or messenger-delivered paper filings for the Commission’s Secretary must be delivered to FCC Headquarters at 445 12th St. SW., Room TW–A325, Washington, DC 20554. The filing hours are 8:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. All hand deliveries must be held together with rubber bands or fasteners. Any envelopes and boxes must be disposed of before entering the building. Commercial overnight mail (other than U.S. Postal Service Express Mail and Priority Mail) must be sent to 9300 East Hampton Drive, Capitol Heights, MD 20743. U.S. Postal Service first-class, Express, and Priority mail must be addressed to 445 12th Street SW., Washington DC 20554. D People with Disabilities: Contact the FCC to request reasonable accommodations (accessible format documents, sign language interpreters, CART, etc.) by email: FCC504@fcc.gov or phone: 202–418–0530 or TTY: 202– 418–0432. For detailed instructions for submitting comments and additional information on the rulemaking process, see the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of this document. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Paul Powell, Attorney Advisor, Wireless Bureau—Mobility Division at (202) 418– 1613 or Paul.Powell@fcc.gov. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Commission’s Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking in GN E:\FR\FM\02JNP1.SGM 02JNP1

Agencies

[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 105 (Monday, June 2, 2014)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 31238-31247]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-12469]



[[Page 31238]]

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COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION

17 CFR Part 1

RIN 3038-AE19


Exclusion of Utility Operations-Related Swaps With Utility 
Special Entities From De Minimis Threshold for Swaps With Special 
Entities

AGENCY: Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

ACTION: Proposed rule.

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SUMMARY: The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (Commission or CFTC) 
is proposing to amend its regulations (Proposal) to permit a person to 
exclude utility operations-related swaps with utility special entities 
in calculating the aggregate gross notional amount of the person's swap 
positions solely for purposes of the de minimis exception applicable to 
swaps with special entities.

DATES: Comments must be received on or before July 2, 2014.

ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by RIN number 3038-AE19, 
by any of the following methods:
     Agency Web site: https://comments.cftc.gov;
     Mail: Secretary of the Commission, Commodity Futures 
Trading Commission, Three Lafayette Centre, 1155 21st Street NW., 
Washington, DC 20581;
     Hand delivery/courier: Same as Mail, above.
     Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov. 
Follow instructions for submitting comments.
    All comments must be submitted in English, or if not, accompanied 
by an English translation. Comments will be posted as received to 
www.cftc.gov. You should submit only information that you wish to make 
available publicly. If you wish the Commission to consider information 
that is exempt from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act, a 
petition for confidential treatment of the exempt information may be 
submitted according to the procedure established in CFTC Regulation 
145.9.\1\
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    \1\ The Commission's regulations are found at 17 CFR Ch. I 
(2013) and can be accessed through the Commission's Web site.
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    The Commission reserves the right, but shall have no obligation, to 
review, pre-screen, filter, redact, refuse or remove any or all of your 
submission from www.cftc.gov that it may deem to be inappropriate for 
publication, such as obscene language. All submissions that have been 
redacted or removed that contain comments on the merits of the 
rulemaking will be retained in the public comment file and will be 
considered as required under the Administrative Procedure Act and other 
applicable laws, and may be accessible under the Freedom of Information 
Act.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Gary Barnett, Director, (202) 418-
6700, gbarnett@cftc.gov; Erik Remmler, Deputy Director, (202) 418-7630, 
eremmler@cftc.gov; Christopher W. Cummings, Special Counsel, (202) 418-
5445, ccummings@cftc.gov; or Israel Goodman, Special Counsel, (202) 
418-6715, igoodman@cftc.gov, Division of Swap Dealer and Intermediary 
Oversight, Commodity Futures Trading Commission, 1155 21st Street NW., 
Washington, DC 20581.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

I. Background

A. De Minimis Exception From Swap Dealer Definition

    Section 1a(49) \2\ of the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA or Act) 
defines the term ``swap dealer.'' CEA Section 1a(49)(D) requires the 
Commission to exempt from swap dealer designation an entity that 
engages in a de minimis quantity of swap dealing, and to promulgate 
regulations to establish factors for making a determination to so 
exempt such entities. Pursuant to this mandate, on April 27, 2012, the 
Commission adopted Regulation 1.3(ggg), which further defines the term 
``swap dealer.'' \3\ Regulation 1.3(ggg) became effective on July 23, 
2012, and registration as a swap dealer was required beginning October 
12, 2012.\4\
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    \2\ 7 U.S.C. 1a(49) (2012). The CEA can be accessed through the 
Commission's Web site.
    \3\ See 77 FR 30596 (May 23, 2012) (Swap Dealer Definition 
Adopting Release).
    \4\ The further definition of the term ``swap'' is found in 
Regulation 1.3(xxx), which became effective October 12, 2012. See 77 
FR 48208 (Aug. 13, 2012). See also Regulation 3.10(a)(1)(v)(C), 
which establishes that each person who comes within the swap dealer 
definition from and after the effective date of that definition is 
subject to registration as a swap dealer with the Commission.
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    Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4) includes an exception from the swap dealer 
definition for a person that has entered into swap positions connected 
with its swap dealing activities that, in the aggregate, do not exceed, 
during the preceding twelve-month period, either of two aggregate gross 
notional amount thresholds. The two aggregate gross notional amount 
thresholds are: (i) $3 billion, subject to a phase in level of $8 
billion \5\ (General De Minimis Threshold), and (ii) $25 million with 
regard to swaps in which the counterparty is a ``special entity'' 
(Special Entity De Minimis Threshold). CEA Section 4s(h)(2)(C) and 
Regulation 23.401(c) define the term ``special entity'' to include: A 
Federal agency; a State, State agency, city, county, municipality, or 
other political subdivision of a State; any employee benefit plan as 
defined under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 
(ERISA); any government plan as defined under ERISA; and any endowment. 
Regulation 23.401(c) adds ``any instrumentality, department, or a 
corporation of or established by a State or subdivision of a State'' to 
the definition.
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    \5\ The Commission set the General De Minimis Threshold at an 
initial phase-in level of $8 billion as of July 23, 2012, the 
effective date of the Swap Dealer Definition Adopting Release. Upon 
termination of the phase-in period this amount will decrease to $3 
billion (or such alternative amount as the Commission may adopt by 
rulemaking) in accordance with the phase-in procedure outlined in 
Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(ii).
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B. Petition for Rulemaking

    On July 12, 2012, the Commission received a petition for rulemaking 
that sought an amendment of Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4) (Petition).\6\ The 
Petition requested that the regulation be amended to exclude from 
consideration, in determining whether a person has exceeded the Special 
Entity De Minimis Threshold, swaps to which the Petitioners and certain 
other special entities (collectively defined in the Petition as 
``utility special entities'' \7\) are counterparties and that relate to 
the Petitioners' and other utility special entities' utility operations 
(defined in the Petition as ``utility operations-related swaps'').\8\
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    \6\ Petition for Rulemaking to Amend CFTC Regulation 
1.3(ggg)(4), dated July 12, 2012. The Petition was filed by the 
American Public Power Association, the Large Public Power Council, 
the American Public Gas Association, the Transmission Access Policy 
Study Group and the Bonneville Power Administration (Petitioners). 
The Petition and the comment letters that were submitted in support 
of it are available at https://sirt.cftc.gov/sirt/sirt.aspx?Topic=PendingFilingsandActionsAD&Key=23845.
    \7\ The Petition defined the term ``utility special entity'' to 
mean a government special entity that--
    owns or operates electric or natural gas facilities or electric 
or natural gas operations (or anticipated facilities or operations), 
supplies natural gas and/or electric energy to other utility special 
entities, has public service obligations (or anticipated public 
service obligations) under Federal, State or local law or regulation 
to deliver electric energy and/or natural gas service to utility 
customers, or is a Federal power marketing agency as defined in 
Section 3 of the Federal Power Act (16 U.S.C. 796(19)).
    \8\ The Petition defined the term ``utility operations-related 
swap'' to mean any swap that a utility special entity enters into 
``to hedge or mitigate commercial risks'' (as that phrase is used in 
CEA Section 2(h)(7)(A)(ii))--
    intrinsically related to the electric or natural gas facilities 
that the utility special entity owns or operates or its electric or 
natural gas operations (or anticipated facilities or operations), or 
to the utility special entity's supply of natural gas and/or 
electric energy to other utility special entities or to its public 
service obligations (or anticipated public service obligations) to 
deliver electric energy or natural gas service to utility customers.
    The Petition defined the term ``intrinsically related'' to 
include all transactions related to:
    (i) The generation or production, purchase or sale, and 
transmission or transportation of electric energy or natural gas, or 
the supply of natural gas and/or electric energy to other utility 
special entities, or delivery of electric energy or natural gas 
service to utility customers, (ii) all fuel supply for the utility 
special entity's electric facilities or operations, (iii) compliance 
with electric system reliability obligations applicable to the 
utility special entity, its electric facilities or operations, (iv) 
compliance with energy, energy efficiency, conservation or renewable 
energy or environmental statutes, regulations or government orders 
applicable to the utility special entity, its facilities or 
operations, or (v) any other electric or natural gas utility 
operations-related swap to which the utility special entity is a 
party.
    Finally, the Petition stated that a ``utility operations-related 
swap'' did not include:
    A swap based or derived on, or referencing, commodities in the 
interest rates, credit, equity, or currency asset classes, or a 
product type or category in the `other commodity' asset class that 
is based or derived on, or referencing, metals, or agricultural 
commodities or crude oil or gasoline commodities of any grade not 
used as fuel for electric generation.

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[[Page 31239]]

    The amendment requested by the Petition would have the effect of 
allowing a person, in any rolling twelve-month period, to deal in 
utility-related swaps with utility special entities up to an aggregate 
gross notional amount not to exceed (together with other swaps in which 
the person was engaged) the General De Minimis Threshold (currently $8 
billion) without being required to register as a swap dealer. In 
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support of this amendment, the Petition claimed that:

    The rule amendment is necessary in order to preserve 
uninterrupted and cost-effective access to the customized, 
nonfinancial commodity swaps that Petitioners and other Utility 
Special Entities [as defined in the Petition] use to hedge or 
mitigate commercial risks arising from their utility facilities, 
operations and public service obligations.

The Petition explained that this amendment was necessary in order to 
increase the number of counterparties available to utility special 
entities to enter into swaps that are necessary for the efficient 
conduct of the businesses and operations of utility special entities.

C. CFTC Staff Letter No. 12-18 9
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    \9\ [2012-2013 Transfer Binder] Comm. L. Fut. Rep. (CCH) ] 
32,409 (October 12, 2012). (Staff Letter 12-18). The letter can be 
accessed on the Commission's Web site at https://www.cftc.gov/ucm/groups/public/@lrlettergeneral/documents/letter/12-18.pdf.
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    As the October 12, 2012, effective date for Regulation 1.3(ggg) and 
the other regulations announced in the Swap Dealer Definition Adopting 
Release approached, Petitioners submitted to the Commission and several 
of its divisions a letter requesting no-action relief from the de 
minimis threshold for swaps with certain special entities.\10\ In Staff 
Letter 12-18, the staff of the Commission's Division of Swap Dealer and 
Intermediary Oversight (Division),\11\ concluded that, in light of the 
representations made in support of the request and in view of the 
impending effective date for the swap dealer registration requirement, 
it was appropriate to provide temporary, limited no-action relief with 
respect to the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold for persons dealing 
in utility related swaps with utility special entities. Staff Letter 
12-18 stated that the Division would not recommend that the Commission 
commence an enforcement action against a person for failure to apply to 
be registered as a swap dealer, if:
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    \10\ This letter was received on October 8, 2012.
    \11\ The Division is responsible for, among other things, 
overseeing compliance with the registration requirements applicable 
to swap dealers.

    (1) the Utility Commodity Swaps connected with the person's swap 
dealing activities into which the person--or any other entity 
controlling, controlled by or under common control with the person--
enters over the course of the immediately preceding 12 months (or 
following October 12, 2012, if that period is less than 12 months) 
have an aggregate gross notional amount of no more than $800 
million;
    (2) the person is not otherwise within the definition of the 
term ``swap dealer,'' as provided in 17 CFR 1.3(ggg) (i.e., the 
person--or any other entity controlling, controlled by or under 
common control with the person--has not entered into swaps as a 
result of its swap dealing activities in excess of the General De 
Minimis Threshold or (not counting Utility Commodity Swaps) the 
Special Entity De Minimis Threshold); \12\ and
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    \12\ Division staff emphasized that the aggregate gross notional 
amount of a person's utility commodity swaps would reduce the $8 
billion aggregate gross notional amount General De Minimis Threshold 
for that person.
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    (3) the person is not a ``financial entity,'' as defined in 
section 2(h)(7)(C)(i) of the CEA.

For purposes of Staff Letter 12-18, Division staff defined the term 
``utility commodity swap'' \13\ to mean a swap where: (1) A party to 
the swap is a utility special entity; \14\ (2) a utility special entity 
is using the swap in the manner described in Regulation 
1.3(ggg)(6)(iii); \15\ and (3) the swap is related to an exempt 
commodity in which both parties to the swap transact as part of the 
normal course of their physical energy businesses.\16\
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    \13\ Based on conversations with industry participants, Division 
staff decided to use a definition for ``utility commodity swap'' 
that encompassed the transactions that utility special entities 
believed were necessary to their business, while avoiding an over-
expansive application of the relief.
    \14\ Either or both parties to the swap could be a utility 
special entity. For purposes of Staff Letter 12-18, Division staff 
employed the definition of ``utility special entity'' set forth in 
the Petition.
    \15\ That is, the utility special entity is using the swap to 
hedge a physical position, as described in Regulation 
1.3(ggg)(6)(iii).
    \16\ As defined in CEA Section 1a(20), an ``exempt commodity'' 
is one that is neither an agricultural commodity, nor an ``excluded 
commodity'' as defined in CEA Section 1a(19) (which encompasses 
interest rates, exchange rates, and other instruments, indices and 
measures of a generally financial nature). At the time Staff Letter 
12-18 was issued, Division staff believed it was necessary to limit 
the relief the Division was providing to situations involving an 
exempt commodity in which both parties transact as part of the 
normal course of their physical energy businesses.
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    The Division selected the $800 million aggregate gross notional 
amount threshold, which is ten percent of the current General De 
Minimis Threshold of $8 billion, based on suggestions made by certain 
of the Petitioners and other commenters responding to the Commission's 
proposed further definition of the term ``swap dealer.'' In a joint 
comment letter on that proposed definition, two persons recommended a 
de minimis threshold for swaps with special entities that would be one-
tenth of the General De Minimis Threshold for exclusion from the ``swap 
dealer'' definition.\17\ Another joint comment letter on the proposed 
further definition of the term ``swap dealer'' (whose signatories 
included two of the Petitioners) concurred with this 
recommendation.\18\
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    \17\ Those commenters stated that the Commission should: Set the 
threshold for the [general] de minimis exception at 1/1,000th of a 
percent of the aggregate gross notional size of the U.S. swap market 
over the preceding 12 months, or 1/10,000th of a percent of the 
aggregate gross notional size of the U.S. swap market over the 
preceding 12 months for swaps in which the counterparty is a 
`special entity.' This level of swap dealing activity more 
accurately corresponds to an amount that arguably could pose a 
potential risk to the stability of the financial system. Joint 
comment letter from the Edison Electric Institute and Electric Power 
Supply Association dated Feb. 22, 2011, at pages 10-11. The letter 
can be accessed at the Commission's Web site. See https://comments.cftc.gov/PublicComments/ViewComment.aspx?id=27918.
    \18\ See joint comment letter from the National Rural Electric 
Cooperative Association, the American Public Power Association and 
the Large Public Power Council dated Feb. 22, 2011, at 18. The 
letter can be accessed at the Commission's Web site. See https://comments.cftc.gov/PublicComments/ViewComment.aspx?id=27917. Four 
other comment letters on the Commission's proposed further 
definition of the term ``swap dealer'' from energy market 
participants also recommended that the overall de minimis threshold 
be set at 1/1,000th of a percent of the aggregate gross notional 
size of the U.S. swap market and that the de minimis threshold for 
swaps with special entities be set at 1/10,000th of a percent of the 
aggregate gross notional size. See the Swap Dealer Definition 
Adopting Release, 77 FR at 30627, n.390.
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    The relief made available by Staff Letter 12-18 was not self-
executing.

[[Page 31240]]

Rather, to claim the relief, a person was required to file with the 
Division a notice \19\ that, among other things, identified each 
utility special entity with which the person has entered into utility 
commodity swaps connected with the person's swap dealing activities, 
and that stated with respect to each such utility special entity the 
total gross notional amount of such utility commodity swaps.
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    \19\ The notice was required to be provided by December 31, 
2012, and on a quarterly basis thereafter.
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    Division staff based its decision to provide relief on several 
reasons. For one, the Petitioners had represented that that commodity 
and swap markets are likely to be local and particularized for utility 
special entities (as opposed to other special entities that do not 
provide public utility services). Pricing and other terms of 
electricity and natural gas swaps may vary significantly from region to 
region so that only market participants active in the physical energy 
markets in a particular region are able to enter into swaps with the 
utility special entities. Thus, staff also understood that the 
counterparties to the utility special entities for hedging swaps were 
generally other non-financial entities that are active in the physical 
markets for these products. As a result, the number of counterparties 
available to the utility special entities is likely to be limited.
    Second, staff understood that utility special entities have a 
unique obligation to provide continuous service to the public; 
moreover, this continuous service is crucial to public safety. This 
also may limit the availability of counterparties to utility special 
entities if, for example, a utility special entity must arrange hedges 
covering a continuous period of time without interruption. While other 
special entities, such as municipal governments, also serve the public 
interest, they do not have the same obligations to provide a continuous 
supply of a commodity (e.g., electricity or natural gas). Thus, the 
need for utility special entities to use physical commodity swaps is 
different from their need to use other types of swaps, and it is 
different from the need for other special entities to use swaps.
    Finally, a significant reduction in the number of swap 
counterparties available to utility special entities could be 
especially harmful to the public interest in view of the importance of 
the energy services provided by the utility special entities.

D. CFTC Staff Letter No. 14-34

    Subsequent to the issuance of Staff Letter 12-18, certain 
Petitioners acknowledged to the Commission the relief the letter had 
made available, but also raised concerns regarding the effects of the 
conditions imposed upon persons seeking to avail themselves of that 
relief, and regarding continuing regulatory uncertainty surrounding 
some transactions with utility special entities.\20\ They characterized 
specific features of Staff Letter 12-18 (e.g., the requirement to 
establish that the utility special entity is using the swap to hedge a 
physical position in an exempt commodity, and the requirement to 
establish that the counterparty seeking relief is not a ``financial 
entity'') as imposing administrative costs or creating legal 
uncertainty such that would-be counterparties were dissuaded from 
entering into relevant swaps. The Petitioners' Letter thus renewed the 
relief requested in the previously-filed Petition, claiming that 
counterparties that had become reluctant to deal with utility special 
entities were not taking Staff Letter 12-18 as a reason to resume 
entering into swaps with those entities.\21\
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    \20\ Letter from Petitioners to Gary Gensler, CFTC Chairman, 
dated Nov. 19, 2013 (Petitioners' Letter), available at https://sirt.cftc.gov/sirt/sirt.aspx?Topic=PendingFilingsandActionsAD&Key=23845. (One of the 
original Petitioners did not, however, participate in this follow up 
letter.) More recently, one of the Petitioners asserted to the 
Commission that based on an informal survey it conducted, public 
power utilities subject to the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold 
have on average lost a large percentage of their potential 
counterparties, and that granting the request made in the Petition 
would provide a substantial increase in potential counterparties to 
the affected utilities. See Letter from the American Public Power 
Association to Mark Wetjen, Acting CFTC Chairman, dated March 6, 
2014.
    \21\ On March 11, 2013, a bill (H.R. 1038) was introduced in the 
U.S. House of Representatives that would amend the CEA to require 
the Commission to treat a ``utility operations-related swap'' 
entered into with a ``utility special entity'' as though the swap 
were entered into with an entity that was not a special entity. The 
bill would add definitions for ``utility special entity'' and 
``utility operations-related swap.'' H.R. 1038 was passed in the 
House on June 12, 2013. On December 11, 2013, a companion bill with 
the same text as H.R. 1038 was introduced in the Senate (S. 1802), 
and that bill was referred to the Committee on Agriculture, 
Nutrition and Forestry on the same date.
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    In response to these concerns, on March 21, 2014, the Division 
issued CFTC Staff Letter No. 14-34 (Staff Letter 14-34),\22\ which 
superseded and broadened the relief provided in Staff Letter 12-18. 
Specifically, Staff Letter 14-34 stated that the Division would not 
recommend that the Commission commence an enforcement action against a 
person for failure to register as a swap dealer if the person--or any 
other entity controlling, controlled by or under common control with 
the person--does not include ``utility operations-related swaps'' in 
calculating whether it has exceeded the Special Entity De Minimis 
Threshold, provided that the person's swap dealing activities have not 
exceeded the General De Minimis Threshold, including utility 
operations-related swaps.
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    \22\ The letter can be accessed on the Commission's Web site at 
https://www.cftc.gov/ucm/groups/public/@lrlettergeneral/documents/letter/14-34.pdf.
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    For purposes of Staff Letter 14-34, a swap is a ``utility 
operations-related swap'' if:

    (1) A party to the swap is a utility special entity; \23\
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    \23\ For purposes of Staff Letter 14-34, Division staff 
continued to employ the definition of ``utility special entity'' set 
forth in the Petition.
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    (2) The utility special entity has represented to the other 
party that it is using the swap in the manner described in 17 CFR 
50.50(c); and
    (3) The swap is either (i) an electric energy or natural gas 
swap; or (ii) The utility special entity has represented to the 
other party that the swap is associated with: (a) The generation, 
production, purchase or sale of natural gas or electric energy, the 
supply of natural gas or electric energy to a utility, or the 
delivery of natural gas or electric energy service to utility 
customers; (b) Fuel supply for the facilities or operations of a 
utility; (c) Compliance with an electric system reliability 
obligation; or (d) Compliance with an energy, energy efficiency, 
conservation, or renewable energy or environmental statute, 
regulation, or government order applicable to a utility.

    The Division explained in Staff Letter 14-34 that it was revising 
the relief provided in Staff Letter 12-18 based on its understanding 
from discussions with market participants that (1) doing so would allow 
utility special entities to significantly increase the number of swap 
counterparties available to utility special entities and thereby lessen 
potential harm to the public interest in view of the importance of the 
energy services provided by utility special entities; and (2) acting to 
increase the volume of utility operations-related swaps between utility 
special entities and persons not registered as a swap dealer would 
likely not raise the types of risks that swap dealer registration is 
intended to prevent.
    The Commission does not intend the Proposal to have any effect on 
the eligibility requirements for the relief currently available under 
Staff Letter 14-34. In the event the Commission adopts the regulations 
being proposed herein, the Commission will discuss in the adopting 
Federal Register release the effect of those regulations on the relief 
provided under Staff Letter 14-34.

[[Page 31241]]

II. The Proposal

    The Commission recognizes that utility special entities have a 
specialized purpose--they provide electricity and natural gas 
production and/or distribution to their customers. Utility special 
entities have a unique obligation in that the services they provide 
must be continuous and are important to public safety. Furthermore, the 
Commission is of the view that utility operations-related swaps have 
become an integral part of providing continuous service and managing 
costs in connection therewith.
    The specialized nature of utility special entities distinguishes 
them from other types of special entities (e.g., public pension plans 
or municipal governments) in that the conduct of their business 
routinely involves, and indeed often depends upon access to, specific 
types of swap transactions that permit them to manage the risks of 
their businesses and to be able to provide electricity and natural gas 
consistently. As a consequence, they not only need regular access to 
swaps that directly affect the smooth operation of their business 
activities, but also are more likely to have developed expertise with 
swaps directly related to their operations. While the Special Entity De 
Minimis Threshold may represent a reasonable protection for other types 
of special entities that enter into swaps intermittently and whose 
activities do not depend on a consistent use of particular swaps, for 
the reasons stated above, the Commission believes that its application 
to utility operations-related swaps with utility special entities is 
not as necessary for their regular operation.\24\
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    \24\ The Commission is not considering, as part of this proposed 
rulemaking, altering the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold with 
respect to other types of swaps or special entities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Commission believes that it is important to address the 
concerns raised in the Petition regarding the ability of utility 
special entities to hedge the commercial risks of their electric and 
natural gas production and delivery businesses including the 
availability of counterparties with whom utility special entities can 
enter into customized swaps. The Commission believes that, because the 
swaps used by utility special entities are typically conducted in 
localized and specialized markets and the number of available 
counterparties may be limited, the $25 million amount of the existing 
Special Entity De Minimis Threshold may deter those counterparties from 
engaging in utility operations-related swaps. Given the obligations of 
utility special entities to provide continuous service to customers, 
the Commission preliminarily believes that the public interest would be 
better served if the likely counterparties for utility operations-
related swaps are able to provide liquidity to this limited segment of 
the market without registering as swap dealers solely on account of 
exceeding the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold. In addition, given 
the expertise utility special entities are likely to have with utility 
operations-related swaps, the need for a lower de minimis threshold for 
dealing activity in such swaps with utility special entities is 
reduced.
    Accordingly, the Proposal would permit a person to exclude 
specified swaps (i.e., utility operations-related swaps) entered into 
with a defined subset of special entities (i.e., utility special 
entities) when calculating whether the person has exceeded the Special 
Entity De Minimis Threshold. In light of the foregoing and the 
Commission's further deliberations in this area, the Commission is now 
proposing to amend its regulations in order to permit persons engaging 
in utility operations-related swaps with utility special entities (as 
these terms are defined in the Proposal) to exclude such swaps solely 
for purposes of calculating whether such persons' swap dealing 
activities have exceeded the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold.

A. Adding an Exclusion for Utility Operations-Related Swaps With 
Utility Special Entities

    Regulation 1.3(ggg) defines the term ``swap dealer.'' Currently, 
Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i) provides for a de minimis exception from the 
swap dealer definition, under either the General De Minimis Threshold 
or the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold. The Proposal would amend 
Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i) to permit persons engaging in utility 
operations-related swaps with utility special entities to exclude such 
swaps solely for purposes of determining whether they have exceeded the 
Special Entities De Minimis Threshold. This would be done by 
redesignating current Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i) as Regulation 
1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(A), placing the text ``In General'' before the 
redesignated regulation and adding a new Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B), 
captioned ``Utility Special Entities.''
    Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B)(1) would provide that solely for 
purposes of determining whether a person's swap dealing activity has 
exceeded the $25 million aggregate gross notional amount threshold set 
forth in Regulation (ggg)(4)(i)(A) for swaps in which the counterparty 
is a special entity, a person may exclude utility operations-related 
swaps in which the counterparty is a utility special entity. Proposed 
Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B)(1) would not, however, permit a person to 
exclude the gross notional amount of such utility operations-related 
swaps in determining whether the person has exceeded the General De 
Minimis Threshold. In other words, a person would add the aggregate 
gross notional amount of the utility operations-related swaps it enters 
into with utility special entities to the gross notional amount of any 
other swaps entered into by it during the preceding twelve months in 
determining whether the person has exceeded the General De Minimis 
Threshold.\25\
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    \25\ A person likewise would include the aggregate gross 
notional amount of swaps entered into with other types of special 
entities to the same extent required for swaps generally in 
determining whether the person's swap dealing activity has exceeded 
the General De Minimis Threshold.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As is the case for other swaps, in calculating the gross notional 
amount of utility operations-related swap positions entered into with 
utility special entities, a person must also include swap positions 
entered into by any entity controlling, controlled by or under common 
control with the person, and if a stated notional amount of a swap is 
leveraged or enhanced by the structure of the swap, the threshold 
calculation would be required to be based ``on the effective notional 
amount of the swap rather than on the stated notional amount.''
    Under the Proposal, a person would be required to file a one-time 
notice to rely on the exclusion provided by the new rule.\26\ 
Specifically, the notice would be required to be filed electronically 
with the National Futures Association (NFA),\27\ to provide such 
information as the person's name, address, and a contact, and to 
contain a

[[Page 31242]]

representation that the person meets the criteria of the exclusion for 
utility operations-related swaps with utility special entities in 
Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B). Congress has determined that special 
entities merit additional protections when engaging in swap 
transactions, and has adopted, for example, heightened business conduct 
requirements on swap dealers advising and dealing with special 
entities.\28\ Because the Proposal, if adopted, would permit persons to 
engage in a greater aggregate gross notional amount of swaps with 
utility special entities, who Congress has determined warrant 
additional protections under the CEA, without registering as swap 
dealers (and becoming subject to corresponding business conduct 
standards), it is important that the Commission be able to know who the 
persons are that rely on the exclusion under the Proposal. The proposed 
notice filing will help the Commission to monitor compliance with the 
swap dealer registration requirement, and better ensure that the 
exclusion under the Proposal serves the intended purpose of enabling 
utility special entities to manage operational risks in a cost-
effective way.
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    \26\ See proposed Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B)(4).
    \27\ NFA is a futures association registered as such with the 
Commission pursuant to CEA Section 17. Although persons relying on 
the exclusion in Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(A) would be outside the 
swap dealer definition and therefore not subject to the requirement 
in Regulation 170.16 that a swap dealer must become an NFA member, a 
requirement to file a notice with NFA would be consistent with past 
action the Commission has taken with regard to requiring other 
persons seeking to rely on an exception or exclusion from a term 
defined in the Act--i.e., by requiring such persons to file a notice 
with NFA. See, e.g., 62 FR 52088 (Oct. 6, 1997), authorizing NFA to 
process notices of eligibility for exclusion from the definition of 
the term ``commodity pool operator'' under Regulation 4.5, and 72 FR 
1658 (Jan. 16, 2007), establishing that a person seeking an 
exclusion under Regulation 4.5 must file its claim with NFA 
electronically. In the event the Commission adopts the proposing 
filing requirement, it will concurrently delegate to NFA the 
authority to accept the filing.
    \28\ See CEA Sections 4s(h)(4) and 4s(h)(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Additionally, a person relying on the exclusion under the Proposal 
would be required to maintain in accordance with Regulation 1.31 books 
and records that substantiate its eligibility to rely on this 
exclusion.\29\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \29\ This requirement is consistent with other similar 
Commission regulations, such as the requirement in Regulation 4.7 
that commodity pool operators and commodity trading advisors 
claiming relief under that regulation maintain books and records 
relating to their eligibility to claim that relief.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

B. New Definitions

1. ``Utility Special Entity''
    Proposed Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B)(2) would define the term 
``utility special entity'' to mean a special entity \30\ that owns or 
operates electric or natural gas facilities, electric or natural gas 
operations or anticipated electric or natural gas facilities or 
operations; supplies natural gas or electric energy to other utility 
special entities; has public service obligations or anticipated public 
service obligations under Federal, State or local law or regulation to 
deliver electric energy or natural gas service to utility customers; or 
is a Federal power marketing agency as defined in Section 3 of the 
Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C. 796(19). This definition is essentially 
identical to the definition of ``utility special entity'' in the 
Petition.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \30\ As noted above, the term ``special entity'' is defined in 
CEA Section 4s(h)(2)(c) and Regulation 23.401(c).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2. ``Utility Operations-Related Swap''
    Proposed Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B)(3) would define the term 
``utility operations-related swap,'' to mean a swap to which at least 
one of the parties is a utility special entity that is using the swap 
to hedge or mitigate commercial risk, and that is related to an exempt 
commodity. In addition, the swap must be an electric energy or natural 
gas swap, or associated with the operations or compliance obligations 
of a utility special entity in a manner more fully set forth in 
Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B)(3)(iv).
    In this regard, the Commission notes that, in determining whether a 
person may rely on the proposed exclusion for utility operations-
related swaps with utility special entities, it may not always be 
possible for the person to establish with absolute certainty that a 
counterparty is a utility special entity, that the counterparty is 
using a swap to hedge or mitigate commercial risk, that the swap is 
related to an exempt commodity, or that the swap meets the other 
requirements to come within the definition of a utility operations-
related swap. Therefore, the Commission intends to take the position 
that a person seeking to rely on the (proposed) exclusion may 
reasonably rely upon a representation by the utility special entity 
that it is a utility special entity and that the swap is a utility 
operations-related swap, as such terms are defined in proposed 
Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B), so long as the person was not aware, and 
should not reasonably have been aware, of facts indicating the 
contrary.\31\
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    \31\ This position is consistent with the Commission's approach 
to permitting reliance on representations for other purposes, such 
as the requirement in Regulation 50.50(b)(3) that a reporting party 
have a reasonable basis to believe that its counterparty meets the 
requirements for the exception to the clearing requirement for end-
users. See 77 FR 42560, 42570 (July 19, 2012).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

III. Request for Comments

    The Commission seeks comments regarding the nature and application 
of an exclusion for utility operations-related swaps with utility 
special entities for purposes of calculating whether a person's swap 
dealing activities have exceeded the Special Entity De Minimis 
Threshold, as provided for in the Proposal. Set forth below, then, is a 
non-exclusive list of questions to which the Commission seeks 
responses.
    1. Will the Proposal enable utility special entities to adequately 
hedge their operational risks in a cost-effective manner by entering 
into utility operations-related swaps? If not, explain why, and 
indicate ways in which the Proposal could be modified in order to 
accomplish this goal.
    2. Are there factual errors or omissions in the Commission's 
understanding and analysis of the issues faced by utility special 
entities and the efforts to date to resolve those issues?
    3. Is it appropriate to treat utility operations-related swaps with 
utility special entities differently than other swaps with special 
entities for purposes of determining whether a person is a swap dealer?
    4. Does the definition of utility operations-related swap in 
proposed Regulation 1.3(ggg)(i)(4)(B)(3) adequately encompass the range 
of swap transactions with respect to which it is appropriate to, in 
effect, set a higher de minimis threshold in the context of persons 
dealing with utility special entities? If not, in what way(s) should 
the definition be expanded or narrowed and why? More specifically, 
should the scope of the swaps identified in Regulation 
1.3(ggg)(i)(4)(B)(3)(iv) be expanded or narrowed? Are there swaps that 
would meet the requirements of Regulation 1.3(ggg)(i)(4)(B)(3)(i), (ii) 
and (iii), but not of Regulation 1.3(ggg)(i)(4)(B)(3)(iv) that should 
be included? Is Regulation 1.3(ggg)(i)(4)(B)(3)(iv) too restrictive or 
not restrictive enough?
    5. One of the conditions to coming within the definition of the 
term ``utility operations-related swap'' is that the party to the swap 
that is a utility special entity is using the swap in the manner 
prescribed in Regulation 50.50(c)--i.e., to hedge or mitigate 
commercial risk. What issues might there be in determining whether a 
swap constitutes hedging activity for purposes of complying with this 
proposed rule? Is reference to Regulation 50.50(c) for defining hedging 
activities appropriate? Are there alternative definitions that should 
be considered (e.g., Regulation 1.3(ggg)(6)(iii))? Should the 
definitions for hedging activities in Regulation 50.50(c) and 
Regulation 1.3(ggg)(6)(iii) be harmonized? If so, how (e.g., by 
following Regulation 50.50(c) or Regulation 1.3(ggg)(6)(iii) or some 
iteration of both) and why? Please provide any estimates of costs of 
compliance with any proposed alternative as compared to the cost of 
compliance with Regulation 50.50(c).
    6. Another condition to coming within the proposed definition of 
the term ``utility operations-related swap'' is that the swap be 
related to an exempt commodity (as defined in CEA Section 1a(20)). Is 
this condition appropriate? If

[[Page 31243]]

not, why not and/or how and why should it be modified?
    7. Should the definition of utility operations-related swap be 
limited to swaps in which both parties to the swap transact as part of 
the normal course of their physical energy businesses?
    8. The Proposal would allow persons to, in effect, treat utility 
operations-related swaps in which the counterparty is a utility special 
entity like swaps with a counterparty that is not a special entity in 
determining whether the person has exceeded a de minimis threshold 
under Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(A). Thus, utility operations-related 
swaps with utility special entities would be subject to the General De 
Minimis Threshold under Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i), which is currently 
set at the $8 billion phase in level. Is that an appropriate threshold, 
or should the de minimis threshold for such swaps be higher or lower? 
What considerations support using a different amount? Should the de 
minimis threshold for utility operations-related swaps be set at $3 
billion, the level of the General De Minimis Threshold without 
application of the $8 billion phase-in level, in light of the special 
protections afforded to special entities under the CEA? Should the 
threshold be set at an amount equal to a percentage of the gross 
notional amount of the General De Minimis Threshold, such that an 
increase or decrease in the gross notional amount of the General De 
Minimis Threshold would result in a proportionate change in the de 
minimis threshold for utility operations-related swaps?
    9. Should the nature of the person entering into swaps with a 
utility special entity determine whether the person can rely on the 
exclusion for utility operations-related swaps under the Proposal 
(e.g., by limiting the exclusion to persons who are not ``financial 
entities,'' as Staff Letter 12-18 limited relief to such persons)? If 
so, what characteristics or factors should be considered?
    10. Should the Commission specify the books and records a person 
must maintain to substantiate that the person may rely on the 
(proposed) exclusion for utility operations-related swaps?
    11. Would the Proposal impact the Commission's ability to carry out 
its market oversight responsibilities with regard to the overall 
derivatives market? If so, how?
    12. To what extent, if any, would the Proposal reduce transparency 
with regard to utility operations-related swaps, counterparties to such 
transactions or the broader derivatives market?
    13. Does the Proposal serve the public interest? In what ways? How 
could the Proposal be improved to better serve the public interest?
    14. How should the Commission balance the public interest in having 
the additional protections that a de minimis threshold for transactions 
with utility special entities that is lower than the General De Minimis 
Threshold would afford, versus the public interest in maintaining the 
ability for utility special entities to enter hedging transactions?
    15. As noted above, it is important that the Commission be able to 
know who the persons are that rely on the exclusion under the Proposal 
to monitor compliance with the swap dealer registration requirement, 
and better ensure that the exclusion under the Proposal serves the 
intended purpose of enabling utility special entities to manage 
operational risks in a cost-effective way. Will the notice requirement 
in proposed Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B)(4) enable the Commission to 
achieve these objectives? If not, why? Is there an alternative method 
for the Commission to obtain the relevant information and achieve the 
stated objectives without requiring a notice filing?
    16. Are there any special entities (or types of special entities) 
who come within the proposed definition of ``utility special entity'' 
(as set forth in proposed Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B)(2)), but are not 
likely to have expertise in utility operations-related swaps? If yes, 
describe those entities. Should persons dealing in swaps with those 
entities be treated differently than persons dealing with other utility 
special entities under the Proposal?
    17. Should the description of swap dealing activity in the swap 
dealer definition be more specifically described for the purposes of 
defining swap dealing with utility special entities? What specific 
dealing or non-dealing activities should be taken into account given 
the nature of utility special entities? Have any compliance issues 
arisen with respect to the description of swap dealing activity in the 
swap dealer definition? If so, how should the Commission clarify the 
description?
    18. Will utility special entities benefit if the Commission revised 
its interpretation regarding forward contracts with embedded volumetric 
optionality as described in the swap definition adopting release? \32\ 
If so, how? Is the seven element interpretation appropriate for 
determining whether a forward contract with volumetric optionality 
qualifies for the forward contract exclusion from the definition of a 
swap? If not, should the Commission revise the interpretation or adopt 
an alternative standard? If so, what should the revised interpretation 
or standard be?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \32\ See 77 FR 48238 (Aug. 13, 2012).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    19. Regulation 1.3(ggg)(6)(iv) provides that swaps entered into by 
a floor trader who meets certain conditions do not need to be counted 
in determining whether the floor trader is a swap dealer. Should the 
Commission afford similar treatment to swaps entered into with utility 
special entities by their counterparties? For purposes of the de 
minimis calculation under the swap dealer definition, why should the 
Commission hold floor traders and entities dealing with utility special 
entities to different standards?
    The Commission welcomes comments on any other issues concerning the 
subject matter of this Federal Register release and the de minimis 
exception from the swap dealer definition for persons engaging in swap 
transactions with special entities, in general.

IV. Related Matters

A. Regulatory Flexibility Act

    The Regulatory Flexibility Act \33\ requires that Federal agencies 
consider whether the rules they propose will have a significant 
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities and, if so, 
they must provide a regulatory flexibility analysis respecting the 
impact. Whenever an agency publishes a general notice of proposed 
rulemaking for any rule, pursuant to the notice-and-comment provisions 
of the Administrative Procedure Act \34\ a regulatory flexibility 
analysis or certification typically is required.\35\ The Proposal, if 
adopted, will not have a significant economic impact on affected 
persons because the Proposal will primarily relieve them from 
regulatory obligations that would otherwise apply to them. That is, the 
(proposed) exclusion for utility operations-related swaps will permit 
counterparties to engage with utility special entities in utility 
operations-related swaps to a degree that would, absent the proposed 
exclusion, require them to register with the Commission as a swap 
dealer, and to comply with regulations applicable to swap dealers.\36\ 
While the Proposal does

[[Page 31244]]

require a notice filing in order to rely on the (proposed) exclusion 
for utility operations-related swaps, to the extent that any small 
entities opt to rely on the exclusion, the notice requirement will not 
have a significant economic impact on those entities.\37\ Moreover, the 
number of potential counterparties seeking to rely on the (proposed) 
exclusion may be limited, given the local nature of the relevant 
markets.
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    \33\ 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.
    \34\ 5 U.S.C. 553. The Administrative Procedure Act is found at 
5 U.S.C. 500 et seq.
    \35\ See 5 U.S.C. 601(2), 603-05.
    \36\ See, e.g., Part 23 of the Commission's regulations, which 
establishes, among other things, reporting, recordkeeping and 
business conduct requirements for swap dealers.
    \37\ See 77 FR 2613, 2620 (Jan. 19, 2012), wherein the 
Commission stated that in the experience of the Commission, 
complying with the registration process regulations--a far more 
burdensome process than the notice filing that would be required 
under the Proposal--has not had a significant economic effect on a 
substantial number of small entities.
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    Accordingly, the Chairman, on behalf of the Commission, hereby 
certifies pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b) that the Proposal will not have a 
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.

B. Paperwork Reduction Act

    The Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) \38\ provides that an agency may 
not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, a 
collection of information unless it displays a valid control number 
from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). This rulemaking 
contains notification and recordkeeping requirements that are 
collections of information within the meaning of the PRA. Accordingly, 
the Commission will submit the required information collection requests 
to OMB.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \38\ 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

1. Collections of Information
    This rulemaking contains two elements that would qualify as 
collections of information. First, proposed Regulation 
1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B) would create an exclusion from the Special Entity De 
Minimis Threshold with regard to specified swaps (utility operations-
related swaps) entered into with a defined subset of special entities 
(utility special entities). As proposed, a person seeking to rely on 
the exclusion would be required to file a one-time notice. 
Specifically, and as explained above, the notice would be required to 
be filed electronically with NFA, to provide such information as the 
person's name, address, and a contact, and to contain a representation 
that the person meets the criteria of the exclusion for utility 
operations-related swaps in Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B). Based upon 
the information currently available to the Commission, an accurate 
estimate of the persons who may rely on the exclusion under the 
Proposal, if adopted, cannot be made. Nevertheless, the Commission is 
preliminarily using a conservative estimate of 100 potential 
counterparties of utility special entities. The Commission invites 
comments regarding whether this is a reasonable estimate to use for PRA 
paperwork burden calculations.
    Commission staff estimates that ascertaining whether a person is 
eligible to rely on the exclusion for utility operations-related swaps 
under the Proposal will take no more than one hour. Because the 
information required for the notice is readily known to the person, 
staff estimates that preparing and filing the notice will take no more 
than one-half hour. The notice will be filed only once, but a person 
who has filed a notice will periodically check to ensure that it 
remains eligible. Staff estimates that because such verification will 
be based on information within the person's control, it will not 
require more than an hour annually.
    Consequently, the Commission preliminarily estimates the burden 
associated with the required notice filing would be as follows:
    Number of Respondents: 100.
    Frequency of Response: Annually (initial filing and ongoing 
compliance).
    Average Burden Hours per Response: 1.2.
    Estimated gross annual reporting burden: $79,680.

On this basis, the Commission will request a new collection of 
information control number from OMB.
    Proposed Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B) would also require a person 
seeking to rely on the proposed exclusion for utility operations-
related swaps to maintain books and records in accordance with 
Regulation 1.31 that substantiate its eligibility. The Commission notes 
that it has previously requested and obtained OMB Control Number 3038-
0090 pertaining to Regulation 1.31. The Commission preliminarily 
believes that each person claiming the proposed exclusion will need to 
establish a procedure to maintain the necessary books and records 
substantiating ongoing eligibility with for reliance on the proposed 
exclusion. In addition, each such person will incur some burden to 
create and maintain relevant records. As noted above, the Commission 
preliminarily estimates 100 persons may seek to rely on the exclusion 
for utility operations-related swaps under the Proposal, if adopted. 
Although the books and records required to substantiate initial and 
ongoing eligibility to rely on the exclusion will be books and records 
that the person has already prepared in the course of engaging in 
utility operations-related swaps, Commission staff estimates that the 
person will incur an hour of burden initially and an hour annually 
thereafter as a result of consulting and reviewing those books and 
records. Consequently, the Commission preliminarily estimates the 
recordkeeping burden associated with the proposed Regulation 
1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B) would be as follows:
    Number of Respondents: 100.
    Frequency of Response: Annually.
    Average Burden Hours per Response: 1.
    Estimated gross annual reporting burden: $16,100.
    On this basis, the Commission will submit a request to amend OMB 
Control Number 3038-0090. The Commission preliminarily believes that 
the persons who are likely to rely on the exclusion for utility 
operations-related swaps may already have procedures in place to comply 
with this requirement so that actual burdens may be less--and possibly 
much less--for those persons.
2. Information Collection Comments
    The Commission invites comment on any aspect of the proposed 
information collection requirements discussed above. Pursuant to 44 
U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(B), the Commission will consider public comments on 
such proposed requirements in:
     Evaluating whether the proposed collection of information 
is necessary for the proper performance of the functions of the 
Commission, including whether the information will have a practical 
use;
     Evaluating the accuracy of the Commission's estimate of 
the burden of the proposed collection of information, including the 
validity of the methodology and assumptions used;
     Enhancing the quality, utility, and clarity of the 
information proposed to be collected; and
     Minimizing the burden of collection of information on 
those who are to respond, including through the use of appropriate 
automated, electronic, mechanical, or other technological information 
collection techniques.
    Copies of the submission from the Commission to OMB are available 
from the CFTC Clearance Officer, 1155 21st Street NW., Washington, DC 
20581, (202) 418-5160 or from https://RegInfo.gov. Persons desiring to 
submit comments on the proposed information collection requirements 
should send those comments to:
     The Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office 
of Management and Budget, Room 10235,

[[Page 31245]]

New Executive Office Building, Washington, DC 20503, Attn: Desk Officer 
of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission;
     (202) 395-6566 (fax); or
     OIRAsubmissions@omb.eop.gov (email).
    Please provide the Commission with a copy of submitted comments so 
that all comments can be summarized and addressed in the final 
rulemaking, and please refer to the ADDRESSES section of this 
rulemaking for instructions on submitting comments to the Commission. 
OMB is required to make a decision concerning the proposed information 
collection requirements between thirty (30) and sixty (60) days after 
publication of the Proposal in the Federal Register. Therefore, a 
comment to OMB is best assured of receiving full consideration if OMB 
(as well as the Commission) receives it within thirty (30) days of 
publication of the Proposal. The time frame for commenting on the PRA 
does not affect the deadline established by the Commission on the 
Proposal, provided in the DATES section of this rulemaking.

C. Cost-Benefit Considerations

    CEA Section 15(a) requires the Commission to consider the costs and 
benefits of its actions before promulgating a regulation under the CEA 
or issuing certain orders. CEA Section 15(a) further specifies that the 
costs and benefits shall be evaluated in light of five broad areas of 
market and public concern: (1) Protection of market participants and 
the public; (2) efficiency, competitiveness and financial integrity of 
futures markets; (3) price discovery; (4) sound risk management 
practices; and (5) other public interest considerations. The Commission 
considers the costs and benefits resulting from its discretionary 
determinations with respect to the Section 15(a) factors, and seeks 
comments from interested persons regarding the nature and extent of 
such costs and benefits.
    1. Background. The Commission is proposing to amend its regulations 
to permit a person to exclude utility operations-related swaps with 
utility special entities (as such terms are defined in the Proposal) in 
calculating the aggregate gross notional amount of the person's swap 
positions for purposes of the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold.
    As discussed above, CEA Section 1a(49) defines the term ``swap 
dealer,'' and Regulation 1.3(ggg) further defines that term. A person 
who comes within the swap dealer definition is subject to registration 
as such with the Commission and the regulatory requirements applicable 
to swap dealers.\39\ Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i) provides an exception 
from the swap dealer definition for persons who engage in a de minimis 
amount of swap dealing activity. Currently, under Regulation 
1.3(ggg)(4)(i) persons who engage in swap dealing activity with special 
entities are excepted from the swap dealer definition so long as the 
swap positions connected with those dealing activities into which the 
person enters over the course of the immediately preceding 12 months 
have an aggregate gross notional amount of no more than $25 million 
(i.e., the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold). These regulatory 
provisions set the baseline for the Commission's consideration of the 
costs and benefits of the Proposal. That is, the Commission considers 
the costs and benefits that would result from allowing persons to 
exclude utility operations-related swaps with utility special entities 
from the Special Entity De Minimis Threshold ($25 million), such that 
the de minimis threshold with respect to such swaps would the same as 
for swaps not involving a special entity (i.e., the General De Minimis 
Threshold, currently set at $8 billion), subject to the requirements 
set forth in the Proposal.\40\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \39\ See, e.g., Part 23 of the Commission's regulations.
    \40\ While Staff Letter 14-34 currently provides no-action 
relief in circumstances, and subject to requirements, that are 
substantially similar to those of the Proposal, the Commission 
preliminarily believes that Staff Letter 14-34 should not set or 
affect the baseline from which the Commission considers the costs 
and benefits of the Proposal. This is because, as it indicates, 
Staff Letter 14-34 does necessarily represent the position or view 
of the Commission or any other office or division of the Commission.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    2. Costs. As noted by the Commission in the Swap Dealer Definition 
Adopting Release, ``a de minimis exception, by its nature, will 
eliminate key counterparty protections provided by Title VII for 
particular users of swaps . . . [and] [t]he broader the exception, the 
greater the loss of protection.'' \41\ In adopting the Special Entity 
De Minimis Threshold, the Commission explained that the $25 million 
threshold was ``appropriate in light of the special protections that 
Title VII affords to special entities.'' The Commission also recognized 
the ``serious concerns raised by commenters'' regarding the application 
of the de minimis exception to swap dealing with special entities in 
light of losses that special entities have incurred in the financial 
markets.\42\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \41\ See 77 FR at 30596, 30627-30628 (May 23, 2012).
    \42\ See Id. at 30633.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Under the Proposal, a greater quantity of swap dealing with utility 
special entities would potentially be undertaken without the benefits 
to utility special entities of that dealing activity being subject to 
swap dealer regulation.\43\ In addition, the Proposal will impose costs 
associated with ascertaining whether a person is eligible to rely on 
the proposed exclusion for utility operations-related swaps and the 
preparation and submission of the notice required to rely on the 
exclusion under proposed Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B)(2). Finally, to 
the extent that a person relying on the exclusion under the Proposal 
would be required to keep books and records it would not otherwise 
keep, in order to substantiate its eligibility for the exclusion, that 
represents another potential cost. Comments are invited regarding the 
extent of all of these costs, and any other costs that would result 
from adoption of the Proposal, including estimates of monetary or other 
measurements thereof.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \43\ See Id. at 30707 (stating that the benefits of swap dealing 
regulation include customer protection, market orderliness and 
market transparency).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    3. Benefits. With respect to benefits, the Commission preliminarily 
believes that the Proposal will benefit utility special entities and 
the public by encouraging a greater number of prospective 
counterparties to engage with utility special entities in utility 
operations-related swaps.\44\ Because of the local and particularized 
nature of the electric and natural gas production and distribution, the 
number of potential swap counterparties for utility special entities 
seeking to hedge commercial risk is more limited than for other special 
entities seeking to hedge non-physical commodities. The number of 
counterparties to utility special entities may be further limited due 
to the unique obligation of utilities to provide continuous service to 
the public. These considerations may be more critical given the 
important role energy services play in public safety and commerce. 
Thus, limiting the number of counterparties to utility special entities 
could be counter to the public interest.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \44\ The Commission explained in the Swap Dealer Definition 
Adopting Release that ``[i]n principle, a higher [de minimis] 
threshold would promote a larger pool of swap-dealing entities 
(since entities with swap dealing activity below the threshold need 
not incur costs to comply with swap dealer regulations), meaning 
more potential counterparties available to swap users.'' See Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Accordingly, increasing the number of potential counterparties 
available to utility special entities will enable utility special 
entities to practice sound, cost-effective risk management and to

[[Page 31246]]

efficiently operate and conduct their business. This will, in turn, 
help utility special entities meet their obligations to provide 
continuous services to the public in a cost-effective manner, and will 
help protect the public interest and safety that is dependent on such 
energy services. Comments are sought regarding these benefits and any 
other benefits resulting from adoption of the Proposal, and to the 
extent they can be quantified, estimates of the monetary or other value 
thereof.
    4. Section 15(a). Section 15(a) of the CEA requires the Commission 
to consider the effects of its actions in light of the following five 
factors:
    a. Protection of Market Participants and the Public. The Proposal 
will allow utility special entities to engage in certain swaps to a 
greater extent than other special entities, without the protections of 
swap dealer registration and regulation. However, given the limited 
circumstances for which the proposed exclusion would apply, and the 
requirements persons must meet to rely on the exclusion, the Commission 
preliminarily believes the costs to the affected utilities, market 
participants and the public will be limited. Moreover, these costs will 
be counteracted by the benefits the Proposal will provide to utility 
special entities and the public, namely, enabling utility special 
entities to efficiently hedge and manage risk, and to meet their 
obligations to provide vital energy services to the public in a 
consistent and cost-effective manner.
    b. Efficiency, Competitiveness, and Financial Integrity of Markets. 
The Commission preliminarily believes that the Proposal will enhance 
efficiency and competitiveness in the electricity and natural gas 
markets by encouraging prospective counterparties to engage in swap 
transactions with utility special entities. The availability of 
additional swap counterparties in these markets will enhance 
competition between counterparties, which will, in turn benefit utility 
special entities by lowering transaction costs for utility special 
entities.
    c. Price Discovery. It is unlikely that facilitating more 
counterparties for utility special entities to trade with will have a 
significant impact on price discovery. Price discovery is the process 
by which prices for underlying commodities may be determined or 
inferred through market prices. The addition of more counterparties 
willing to trade with utility special entities may improve, but not 
necessarily adversely impact, the prices that the utility special 
entities receive on their swap contract transactions, but the overall 
effect on the determined or inferred prices for the underlying 
commodities is indeterminate. Interested persons are invited to comment 
on this conclusion.
    d. Sound Risk Management. The Commission preliminarily believes 
that if counterparties refrain from transacting in swaps with utility 
special entities because of the regulatory costs associated with swap 
dealer registration and regulation, the ability of utility special 
entities to hedge commercial risks will be impaired, particularly in 
cases for which the number of counterparties available becomes very 
limited. Mitigating the costs and regulatory concerns of potential 
counterparties by permitting them to transact with utility special 
entities without being subject to swap dealer registration and 
regulation will enable utility special entities to better manage their 
commercial risk.
    e. Other Public Interest Considerations. As discussed above, the 
Commission preliminarily believes the proposed rule will enable utility 
special entities to practice sound, cost-effective risk management and 
to more effectively operate and conduct their business. This may, in 
turn, help utility special entities meet their obligations to provide 
continuous services to the public in a more cost-effective manner.
5. Request for Comment
    The Commission invites comments from the public on all aspects of 
its preliminary consideration of costs and benefits associated with the 
Proposal. The questions below relate to areas that the Commission 
preliminarily believes may be relevant. In addressing these or any 
other aspect of the Commission's preliminary assessment, commenters are 
encouraged to submit any data or other information that they may have 
quantifying or qualifying the costs and benefits of the Proposal.
    a. What are the costs and benefits to market participants, if any, 
associated with the Proposal? Please explain and, to the extent 
possible, quantify these costs.
    b. What are the costs and benefits to the public associated with 
the Proposal? Please explain and, to the extent possible, quantify 
these costs.
    c. Would a de minimis threshold other than the General De Minimis 
threshold for transactions with utility special entities as set forth 
in the Proposal impact the costs and/or benefits to market participants 
or the public? Is there a threshold level that would be optimal, i.e., 
maximize net benefits?
    d. Has the Commission identified all of the relevant categories of 
costs and benefits in its preliminary consideration of the costs and 
benefits associated with the Proposal? Please describe any additional 
categories of costs or benefits that the Commission should consider 
with respect to the Proposal.
    e. To what extent does the Proposal protect market participants and 
the public? How, if at all, could the Proposal be altered to better 
protect market participants and the public?
    f. How, if at all, does the Proposal affect the efficiency, 
competitiveness, and financial integrity of markets?
    g. How, if at all, does the Proposal affect price discovery for 
utility operations-related swaps? For the swaps market more generally?
    h. How, if at all, does the Proposal affect sound risk management 
for utility special entities? For participants in the swaps market more 
generally?
    i. How, if at all, does the Proposal affect the public interest?

List of Subjects in 17 CFR Part 1

    De minimis exception, Registration, Special Entities, Swap dealers, 
Swaps, Utility operations-related swaps, Utility special entities.

    For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Commission proposes 
to amend 17 CFR part 1 as follows:

PART 1--GENERAL REGULATIONS UNDER THE COMMODITY EXCHANGE ACT

0
1. The authority citation for part 1 is revised to read as follows:

    Authority:  7 U.S.C. 1a, 2, 5, 6, 6a, 6b, 6c, 6d, 6e, 6f, 6g, 
6h, 6i, 6k, 6l, 6m, 6n, 6o, 6p, 6r, 6s, 7, 7a-1, 7a-2, 7b, 7b-3, 8, 
9, 10a, 12, 12a, 12c, 13a, 13a-1, 16, 16a, 19, 21, 23, and 24 
(2012).

0
2. Amend Sec.  1.3 by revising paragraph (ggg)(4)(i) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  1.3  Definitions.

* * * * *
    (ggg) * * *
    (4) De minimis exception--(i)(A) In General. Except as provided in 
paragraph (ggg)(4)(vi) of this section, a person that is not currently 
registered as a swap dealer shall be deemed not to be a swap dealer as 
a result of its swap dealing activity involving counterparties, so long 
as the swap positions connected with those dealing activities into 
which the person--or any other entity controlling, controlled by or 
under common control with the person--enters over the course of the 
immediately preceding 12 months (or following the effective date of 
final rules implementing Section 1a(47) of the Act, 7 U.S.C. 1a(47), if 
that period is less than 12 months) have an aggregate gross

[[Page 31247]]

notional amount of no more than $3 billion, subject to a phase in level 
of an aggregate gross notional amount of no more than $8 billion 
applied in accordance with paragraph (ggg)(4)(ii) of this section, and 
an aggregate gross notional amount of no more than $25 million with 
regard to swaps in which the counterparty is a ``special entity'' (as 
that term is defined in Section 4s(h)(2)(C) of the Act, 7 U.S.C. 
6s(h)(2)(C), and Sec.  23.401(c) of this chapter), except as provided 
in paragraph (ggg)(4)(i)(B) of this section. For purposes of this 
paragraph, if the stated notional amount of a swap is leveraged or 
enhanced by the structure of the swap, the calculation shall be based 
on the effective notional amount of the swap rather than on the stated 
notional amount.
    (B) Utility Special Entities. (1) Solely for purposes of 
determining whether a person's swap dealing activity has exceeded the 
$25 million aggregate gross notional amount threshold set forth in 
paragraph (ggg)(4)(i)(A) of this section for swaps in which the 
counterparty is a special entity, a person may exclude ``utility 
operations-related swaps'' in which the counterparty is a ``utility 
special entity.''
    (2) For purposes of this paragraph (4)(i)(B) a ``utility special 
entity'' is a special entity, as that term is defined in Section 
4s(h)(2)(C) of the Act, 7 U.S.C. 6s(h)(2)(C), and Sec.  23.401(c) of 
this chapter, that:
    (i) Owns or operates electric or natural gas facilities, electric 
or natural gas operations or anticipated electric or natural gas 
facilities or operations;
    (ii) Supplies natural gas or electric energy to other utility 
special entities;
    (iii) Has public service obligations or anticipated public service 
obligations under Federal, State or local law or regulation to deliver 
electric energy or natural gas service to utility customers; or
    (iv) Is a Federal power marketing agency as defined in Section 3 of 
the Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C. 796(19).
    (3) For purposes of this paragraph (ggg)(4)(i)(B) a ``utility 
operations-related swap'' is a swap that meets the following 
conditions:
    (i) A party to the swap is a utility special entity;
    (ii) A utility special entity is using the swap in the manner 
described in Sec.  50.50(c) of this chapter;
    (iii) The swap is related to an exempt commodity, as that term is 
defined in Section 1a(20) of the Act; and
    (iv) The swap is an electric energy or natural gas swap; or the 
swap is associated with: The generation, production, purchase or sale 
of natural gas or electric energy, the supply of natural gas or 
electric energy to a utility special entity, or the delivery of natural 
gas or electric energy service to customers of a utility special 
entity; fuel supply for the facilities or operations of a utility 
special entity; compliance with an electric system reliability 
obligation; or compliance with an energy, energy efficiency, 
conservation, or renewable energy or environmental statute, regulation, 
or government order applicable to a utility special entity.
    (4) Any person relying upon the exclusion in paragraph 
(ggg)(4)(i)(B)(1) of this section must file electronically with the 
National Futures Association a Notice of Reliance on Exclusion for 
Utility Operations-Related Swaps with Utility Special Entities. The 
notice must be filed by no later than [effective date of final rule] or 
the date the person first engages in such swaps, whichever is later. 
The notice must contain: The person's name, main business address, and 
main telephone number; the name of a contact; and a statement signed by 
an individual with authority to bind the person that the person meets 
the criteria for the exclusion in Regulation 1.3(ggg)(4)(i)(B) 
(paragraph (ggg)(4)(i)(B) of this section).
    (5) Each person who relies on the exclusion in paragraph 
(ggg)(4)(i)(B) of this section must maintain books and records, in 
accordance with Sec.  1.31, that substantiate its eligibility to rely 
on the exclusion in paragraph (ggg)(4)(i)(B) of this section.
* * * * *

    Issued in Washington, DC, on May 23, 2014, by the Commission.
Christopher J. Kirkpatrick,
Deputy Secretary of the Commission.

    Note: The following appendix will not appear in the Code of 
Federal Regulations.

Appendix to Exclusion of Utility Operations-Related Swaps With Utility 
Special Entities From De Minimis Threshold for Swaps With Special 
Entities--Commission Voting Summary

    On this matter, Acting Chairman Wetjen and Commissioner O'Malia 
voted in the affirmative. No Commissioner voted in the negative.

[FR Doc. 2014-12469 Filed 5-30-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6351-01-P
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