Self-Regulatory Organizations; ICE Clear Europe Limited; Notice of Filing of Proposed Rule Change Relating To EMIR Requirements, 39429-39440 [2014-16099]
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 132 / Thursday, July 10, 2014 / Notices
printing in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room, 100 F Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20549, on official
business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of the
filing also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of the Exchange. All comments
received will be posted without change;
the Commission does not edit personal
identifying information from
submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make
available publicly. All submissions
should refer to File Number SR–
NYSEMKT–2014–21 and should be
submitted on or before July 31, 2014.
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V. Accelerated Approval of Proposal, as
Modified by Amendment No. 1
In Amendment No. 1, the Exchange
submitted a revised Pilot Report that
corrects errors in the total FLEX Equity
Option contract trading volume under
the pilot, total FLEX Index Option
contract trading volume under the pilot,
and total number of FLEX Index Option
trades under the pilot reported in the
original Pilot Report. The revised Pilot
Report also makes corresponding
adjustments to other figures reported in
the Pilot Report, as well non-substantive
changes to certain descriptive language
in the Pilot Report. The Commission
believes that these corrections to the
Pilot Report do not substantively alter
the findings in the Pilot Report or
diminish their support for approval of
the pilot on a permanent basis.
Accordingly, the Commission also finds
good cause, pursuant to Section 19(b)(2)
of the Act,34 for approving the proposed
rule change, as modified by Amendment
No. 1, prior to the thirtieth day after the
date of publication of notice in the
Federal Register.
VI. Conclusion
In summary, the Commission
believes, for the reasons noted above,
that the proposed rule change to
permanently approve the Pilot Program
as well as remove the minimum size
requirements for currently-opened FLEX
Option series and FLEX Quotes, thereby
permanently removing the minimum
size requirements for all FLEX Options
on the Exchange, is consistent with the
Act and Section 6(b)(5) thereunder in
particular, and should be approved, as
amended. The Exchange has committed,
and the Commission expects the
Exchange, to continue to monitor the
usage of FLEX Options, whether
changes need to be made to its rules or
the ODD to address any changes in retail
FLEX Option participation, and for any
34 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
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other issues that may occur as a result
of the elimination of the minimum
value sizes on a permanent basis,
including whether FLEX Option trades
are being used as a surrogate for trading
options in the standardized market.35
It is therefore ordered, pursuant to
Section 19(b)(2) of the Act,36 that the
proposed rule change (SR–NYSEMKT–
2014–21) be, and it hereby is, approved,
on an accelerated basis, as amended.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.37
Jill M. Peterson,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2014–16095 Filed 7–9–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–72540; File No. SR–ICEEU–
2014–09]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; ICE
Clear Europe Limited; Notice of Filing
of Proposed Rule Change Relating To
EMIR Requirements
July 3, 2014.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’),1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on June 30,
2014, ICE Clear Europe Limited (‘‘ICE
Clear Europe’’) filed with the Securities
and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) the proposed rule
changes described in Items I, II and III
below, which Items have been prepared
by ICE Clear Europe. The Commission is
publishing this notice to solicit
comments on the proposed rule change
from interested persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The principal purpose of the
proposed changes is to amend the ICE
Clear Europe Clearing Rules in order to
comply with requirements under the
European Market Infrastructure
Regulation (including regulations and
implementing technical standards
thereunder, ‘‘EMIR’’) 3 that will apply to
35 See Notice, 79 FR at 19164 (Exchange
representing that it will continue to monitor the
usage of FLEX Options and whether any changes to
its rules or the ODD are necessary).
36 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
37 17 CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
1 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
3 Regulation (EU) No 648/2012 of the European
Parliament and of the Council of 4 July 2012 on
OTC derivatives, central counterparties and trade
repositories, as well as various implementing
regulations and technical standards.
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39429
ICE Clear Europe as an authorized
central counterparty.4 Among other
changes, the proposed rules would
implement a framework under which
Clearing Members may offer to their
clients the ability to have their positions
and margin assets segregated from those
of other clients of the Clearing Member
(‘‘Individual Client Segregation’’).5 The
proposed rule changes include various
other amendments to comply with
EMIR, as discussed herein. In addition,
certain other aspects of the proposed
amendments are not specifically
intended to comply with EMIR, but are
designed to harmonize various rule
provisions across different products and
to make various other improvements to
the rules. ICE Clear Europe will be
required to be in compliance with EMIR
as of the time it receives authorization
as a central counterparty from the
European Securities and Markets
Authority (‘‘ESMA’’).
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission, ICE
Clear Europe included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for
the proposed rule change and discussed
any comments it received on the
proposed rule change. The text of these
statements may be examined at the
places specified in Item IV below. ICE
Clear Europe has prepared summaries,
set forth in sections A, B, and C below,
of the most significant aspects of these
statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
a. Purpose
ICE Clear Europe submitted proposed
amendments to its Rules in order to
comply with requirements under EMIR
that will apply to ICE Clear Europe
upon its authorization as a central
counterparty under EMIR, and to make
certain other improvements to its rules.
The principal change will be to
implement changes to the structure of
customer accounts for cleared
transactions to enhance segregation
4 ICE Clear Europe will separately file certain
related changes to its policies and procedures,
including risk management policies.
5 As discussed herein, the Individual Client
Segregation model is not being offered at this time
to U.S. clearing members or U.S. person clients, and
certain provisions of the proposed rules are
therefore not applicable to such persons. ICE Clear
Europe will make a subsequent rule filing if it
subsequently determines to offer such model to U.S.
clearing members or U.S. persons.
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options for customers of Clearing
Members. This includes the adoption of
the Individual Client Segregation
framework as well as certain
modifications relating to the existing,
omnibus client segregation model for
Non-FCM/BD Clearing Members. (The
existing account structure and
segregation framework applicable to
FCM/BD Clearing Members will remain
in effect for such clearing members.)
The customer clearing model and
commitments being offered by ICE Clear
Europe in compliance with EMIR are
being made available for all product
categories, subject to applicable local
law.
Pursuant to Article 39(1) to (3) of
EMIR, ICE Clear Europe is required to
keep separate records and accounts that
will enable it to distinguish the assets
and positions of: (i) One Clearing
Member from those of any other
Clearing Member and (ii) either (A) a
Clearing Member from those of its
clients (‘‘omnibus segregation’’) or (B) a
client of a Clearing Member from any
other client of that Clearing Member
(‘‘individual segregation’’). In addition,
each of ICE Clear Europe’s Clearing
Members is required (i) to keep separate
records and accounts that enable them
to distinguish in both accounts held
with the clearing house and their own
accounts Clearing Member assets and
positions from those of its clients; and
(ii) to offer clients a choice of individual
or omnibus segregation at the clearing
house. ICE Clear Europe has revised its
segregation models to implement this
requirement, as described herein, to
provide both individual segregation and
omnibus segregation options.
The proposed rules would establish
two new types of individually
segregated accounts for Non-FCM/BD
Clearing Members, Individually
Segregated Margin-flow Co-mingled
Accounts and Individually Segregated
Sponsored Accounts. The proposed
rules will also establish multiple new
types of omnibus accounts, Segregated
Customer Omnibus Accounts
(separately for each product: FX, F&O
and CDS) and Segregated TTFCA
Customer Omnibus Accounts
(separately for each product: FX, F&O
and CDS) as well as Omnibus Marginflow Co-mingled Accounts. These new
individually segregated and omnibus
accounts will be available only to nonFCM/BD Clearing Members and their
customers. For FCM/BD Clearing
Members and their customers,
individual client segregation is not
being offered at this time, and the
existing account types and segregation
requirements for client assets (which are
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required under applicable law) would
be maintained.6
Each Margin-flow Co-mingled
Account constitutes a separate account,
referencing a single client (in the case of
an Individually Segregated Margin-flow
Co-mingled Account) or group of clients
(in the case of an Omnibus Margin-flow
Co-mingled Account) for which separate
records are kept of both margin and
positions. However, margin flows are
aggregated across all Margin-flow Comingled Accounts. These accounts are
broadly similar to an LSOC account
under CFTC rules in operational terms
for position-keeping but differ in that
assets are also tracked per individual
Customer, rather than constituting a
shared pool with deemed interests,
allowing Customers to decide (subject to
agreeing this with their Clearing
Member) what sort of assets should be
used to cover their individual positions,
as is required under EMIR. The Rules
provide for two types of Margin-flow
Co-mingled Accounts: Individually
segregated and omnibus segregated.
Each Individually Segregated Marginflow Co-mingled Account records the
margin and positions of a single
customer. An Omnibus Margin-flow Comingled Account records the margin
and positions of a group of customers
(such as a group of affiliated customers
or funds under common management).
In either case, margin flows are
aggregated across all Margin-flow Comingled Accounts of a Clearing
Member.
Individually Segregated Sponsored
Accounts, from a position-keeping and
margin accounting operational
perspective treat a client (‘‘Sponsored
Principal’’) in effect as if it were a
Clearing Member, with fully segregated
margin, positions and margin flows. The
Individually Segregated Sponsored
Account requires the Sponsored
Principal to appoint a Sponsor from
among the Clearing Membership to be
fully jointly liable on the account.
6 The Bank of England has advised ICE Clear
Europe that the requirement under EMIR for the
Clearing House to offer an individual segregation
model to Clearing Members (and in turn for
Clearing Members to offer individual segregation to
their customers) may be satisfied, in the case of an
FCM/BD Clearing Member, if the Clearing Member
introduces such customers to another Clearing
Member (including an affiliate) that can offer an
individually segregated account, to the extent
permitted by applicable law. ICE Clear Europe is
not at this time offering its Sponsored Principal
Model to U.S. Clearing Members or potential U.S.
Sponsored Principals, and therefore Rule 1905 and
other references in the Rules to U.S. Sponsored
Principals will not apply at this time. ICE Clear
Europe will submit another rule filing if it
determines to offer the Sponsored Principal Model
to U.S. Clearing Members or U.S. Sponsored
Principals.
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Under the revised rules, ICE Clear
Europe will also offer several types of
omnibus segregation accounts for
customers of non-FCM/BD Clearing
Members, including a segregated
customer omnibus account for each
product category (F&O, CDS and FX)
(each a ‘‘Segregated Customer Omnibus
Account’’) and a segregated title transfer
financial collateral arrangement
(‘‘TTFCA’’) account for each product
category (each, a ‘‘Segregated TTFCA
Customer Omnibus Account’’). In
accordance with the FSA policy
statement on client money and client
assets,7 Segregated Customer Omnibus
Accounts will be used for customers of
non-FCM/BD Clearing Members who
provide assets to their Clearing
Members that are subject to the FCA’s
client money and client assets regime
(or another legal requirement to
segregate which goes beyond that
required under EMIR). In contrast,
Segregated TTFCA Customer Omnibus
Accounts will be used for customers of
non-FCM/BD Clearing Members who
use title transfer financial collateral
arrangements to provide margin to their
Clearing Members (or which are
otherwise subjected only to the
requirement to segregate assets under
EMIR, and not under any applicable
law, trust or property law based regime).
Within each category, ICE Clear Europe
has chosen to set up separate accounts
for each of the different product types
cleared by ICE Clear Europe (F&O, FX
and CDS), for purposes of ease of
administration and maintaining the
separation of product categories as
otherwise provided in the rules.
Consistent with EMIR,8 Clearing
Members may use multiple different
types of individually segregated and
omnibus segregated accounts for their
various customers.
In terms of individual segregation, as
discussed herein, the proposed rules
establish the framework for the relevant
new account structures for Non-FCM/
BD Clearing Members. For Individually
Segregated Margin-flow Co-mingled
Accounts, new provisions require
separate record keeping and reporting
for the account and permit the
aggregation of margin flows across
accounts in this class. As discussed in
further detail below, the amendments
for Individually Segregated Sponsored
Principal Accounts, among other
matters, (i) introduce the concepts of a
‘‘Sponsored Principal’’ (the client whose
positions and margin are being
segregated under the Individually
7 FSA Policy Statement PS12/23: Client Assets
Regime: Changes Following EMIR (Dec. 2012).
8 EMIR Article 39.
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Segregated Sponsored Account) and a
‘‘Sponsor’’ (the Clearing Member
responsible to the clearing house for the
Sponsored Principal’s performance in
an Individually Segregated Sponsored
Account); (ii) set forth the relationship
among the clearing house, Sponsored
Principal and Sponsor; (iii) establish
procedures under which ICE Clear
Europe may manage a default by either
the Sponsor and/or the Sponsored
Principal under the Rules, (iv) allocate
responsibilities and rights as between a
Sponsor and a Sponsored Participant
with respect to cleared contracts; and (v)
establish documentation requirements
for Sponsored Principal arrangements.
The proposed rule amendments are
described in detail as follows.
In Part 1 of the Rules, various
definitions have been added or modified
in order to address the changes required
by EMIR in a consistent manner across
all products, including: ‘‘CDS Standard
Terms’’, ‘‘Customer-CM CDS
Transaction’’, Customer-CM F&O
Transaction’’, ‘‘Customer-CM FX
Transaction’’, ‘‘EMIR’’, ‘‘Energy’’,
‘‘F&O’’, ‘‘F&O Standard Terms’’, ‘‘FX
Standard Terms’’, ‘‘FX Trade
Particulars’’, ‘‘Individually Segregated
Customer’’, Individually Segregated
Margin-flow Co-mingled Account’’,
‘‘Individually Segregated Sponsored
Account’’, ‘‘Margin Account’’, ‘‘Position
Account’’, ‘‘Repository’’, ‘‘Segregated
Customer Omnibus Account for CDS’’,
‘‘Segregated Customer Omnibus
Account for F&O’’, ‘‘Segregated
Customer Omnibus Account for FX’’,
Segregated TTFCA Customer’’,
‘‘Segregated TTFCA Customer Omnibus
Account for CDS’’, ‘‘Segregated TTFCA
Customer Omnibus Account for F&O’’,
‘‘Segregated TTFCA Customer Omnibus
Account for FX’’, ‘‘Sponsor,’’ ‘‘Sponsor
Agreement’’, ‘‘Sponsored Principal’’,
‘‘Sponsored Principal Clearing
Agreement’’, and ‘‘U.S. Sponsored
Principal’’. In addition, conforming
changes have been made to numerous
existing definitions in order to
incorporate these concepts, including in
particular references to Sponsored
Principals in addition to existing
references to Clearing Members. In light
of various changes and expected
changes to trade execution requirements
in the U.S. and Europe, revised
definitions of ‘‘CDS Trade Execution/
Processing Platform’’ and ‘‘FX Trade
Execution/Processing Platform’’ have
been added, and conforming references
have been made throughout the Rules.
Certain defined terms relating to ICE
OTC commodity contracts and certain
other definitions have been removed as
they are no longer used. Definitions of
the Financial Conduct Authority
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(‘‘FCA’’) and Prudential Regulatory
Authority (‘‘PRA’’) (and of their rules)
have been added following the recent
separation of regulators in the UK, and
references to the FCA’s former name,
the Financial Services Authority (the
‘‘FSA’’), are deleted. References to the
FSA throughout the rules have been
modified accordingly.
The hierarchy of documents in Rule
102(f) has been revised to include, in
relation to an Individually Segregated
Sponsored Account, the Sponsored
Principal Clearing Agreement between
the Sponsored Principal and ICE Clear
Europe and the Sponsor Agreement
between the relevant Clearing Member
Sponsor and ICE Clear Europe.
Reference to the new Standard Terms
annexes for FX and F&O customer
clearing are also included. Other
clarifications and conforming changes
have been made to the rest of Rule
102(f). Similar changes have been made
in Rule 102(l). New Rule 102(g) requires
all Clearing Members providing services
to customers to comply with relevant
provisions of EMIR.9 Specifically,
Clearing Members must offer customers
a choice of individual or omnibus
segregation, to the extent they are
permitted to do so under applicable law,
and provide information as to the costs
and levels of protection for various
options. Where a Clearing Member is
not able under applicable law to offer
such an account, it must, to the extent
permitted under applicable law, offer to
introduce the customer to another
Clearing Member that can offer such an
account.
Rule 102(j) has been amended to
clarify that Sponsors and Sponsored
Principals, in addition to Clearing
Members, are responsible for the
conduct of their employees and agents
(in addition to their own conduct) and
to reference the new defined terms
‘‘CDS Trade Execution/Processing
Platform’’ and ‘‘FX Trade Execution/
Processing Platform’’ to account for the
current and expected use of such
platforms in light of trade execution
requirements under applicable law.
Rule 102(o) clarifies that with respect
to a Clearing Member that is also a
Sponsor, the Rules, the Sponsor
Agreement, and certain other specified
documents form a contract between ICE
Clear Europe, each Sponsor acting in its
capacity as such and each Sponsored
Principal for which such Sponsor acts.
Similarly, the Rules, the applicable
Sponsored Principal Clearing
Agreement (if any) and other certain
9 Clearing Members would, of course, also need
to comply with any other applicable law in
providing services to Customers.
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39431
other specified documents also form a
contract between ICE Clear Europe, each
Sponsored Principal and the Sponsor
for that Sponsored Principal. Other
conforming changes are made in the rest
of Rule 102(o) and Rule 102(p).
Rule 102(q) has been revised to clarify
certain segregation requirements with
respect to different categories of
accounts, including the limitations on
setting off one category of proprietary or
customer account against another
category, or otherwise using one
category to cover losses in another
category, in light of the additional types
of account classes added under the
proposed rules.
Rule 102(r) has been revised to refer
to certain of the clearing house’s
obligations under EMIR and address
certain related interpretive issues, as
well as to add references to Sponsored
Principals.
The governing law provision in Rule
102(s) has been revised to clarify that
the choice of English law is intended
also to govern non-contractual
obligations arising out of or in
connection with the Rules or any
Contract.
New Rule 102(w) addresses a Clearing
Member’s ability to outsource
performance of its obligations, in
particular to allow Clearing Members to
outsource performance to affiliates or
third parties of their obligation with
respect to end-of-day settlement price
submission, acceptance of forced
allocations and participation in default
auctions. This approach is consistent
with EMIR and also reflects the
requirements of CFTC Rule 39.16.
New Rule 102(x) clarifies that persons
that are partners of general partnerships
will be jointly and severally liable for
the partnership’s obligations under the
Rules, and that dissolution of the
partnership will not affect that liability.
This provision is not specifically
required under EMIR but is intended to
clarify the Clearing House’s rights and
obligations when dealing with
Sponsored Principals that may be
partnerships, but also is drafted to be
applicable in the event that a
partnership applies in future for
clearing membership.
Rule 104, which addresses the
clearing house’s ability to ‘‘invoice
back’’ (in effect, termination of a
position through creation by the
clearing house of an offsetting contract)
or override the price or other terms of
contracts has been revised to provide
that the clearing house may do so only
in the case of a force majeure event,
illegality or impossibility and not, as a
general matter, as a remedy for a default
by a Clearing Member. Although this
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change is not specifically intended to
comply with EMIR, it results from
ongoing discussions with Clearing
Members and other market participants,
who have asked that the powers under
this provision be clarified,
circumscribed and made consistent
across all products. In so doing, the
change has also eliminated uncertainty
that these powers could be used in a
default management situation, and thus
has clarified that the Clearing House’s
default management powers are as set
forth in Part 9 of the Rules. Conforming
changes have been made to relevant
definitions, including the addition of a
new definition of ‘‘Impossibility’’.
Rule 105, which addresses a decision
by the clearing house to cease acting in
that capacity, has been revised to clarify
that such an action might be taken if the
clearing house loses any regulatory
authorization required to continue its
business.
The confidentiality provisions of Rule
106 have been extended to apply to
Sponsored Principals and Sponsors and
modified in various technical respects
to ensure compliance with ICE Clear
Europe’s confidentiality, reporting and
disclosure obligations under EMIR. The
changes also clarify that that the
Clearing House may disclose
confidential information in certain
circumstances, including in the case of
a breach by the Clearing Member or
Sponsored Principal of membership
criteria and certain other disclosure
requirements (clause (a)(ii)), information
being provided to a data repository or
other entity for purposes of transaction
reporting (clause (a)(iii)),10 information
concerning an Individually Segregated
Sponsored Account to the relevant
Sponsor or Sponsored Principal (clause
(a)(xi)) and information concerning a
Customer to the relevant Clearing
Member carrying its account (clause
(a)(xii)).
The record retention requirements
under Rule 108 for Clearing Members
(and other persons, such as Sponsored
Principals) that provide information to
the Clearing House has been extended to
ten years, consistent with the record
retention requirements applicable to the
Clearing House itself under Article 29 of
EMIR. Various conforming references to
Sponsored Principals, Sponsors and
other new defined terms, as well as
other clarifying changes, have also been
added in Rules 107–113. In Rules
111(a)(B) and 111(c)(xviii), ‘‘gross
negligence’’ is added as an exclusion to
10 Based on Staff’s conversation with ICE Clear
Europe’s counsel on July 2, 2014, ICE Clear
Europe’s counsel has confirmed that the reference
to Rule 106(a)(iii) should instead refer to Rule
106(a)(viii).
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exculpatory provisions relating to ICE
Clear Europe’s liability, in order to
address enforceability issues with
respect to exculpatory provisions that
lack such an exclusion in some
continental European jurisdictions,
based on legal advice received by the
clearing house.
Rule 114(c) allows for outsourcing by
the clearing house, subject to its
retention of liability, consistent with the
requirements of article 35 of EMIR. A
clarification has been made to Rule 116
to require notice of changes to Clearing
House business days. Finally, new Rules
117(p) and (q) have been added to
clarify that the dispute resolution
procedures from the Rules apply to
disputes in connection with Sponsored
Principals, Sponsors, Sponsored
Principal Clearing Agreements and
Sponsor Agreements in the same way
the Rules apply to disputes in
connection with Clearing Members and
Clearing Membership Agreements.
A statement has been added to the
preamble of Part 2 of the Rules to clarify
that Part 2 (Clearing Membership) does
not apply to Sponsored Principals
except to the extent expressly set out in
Part 19. Certain updates and drafting
improvements and clarifications to the
Clearing Membership criteria have been
made in Rule 201, including the
consolidation into the Rules of various
membership criteria previously in
paragraph 2 of the CDS Procedures and
paragraph 2 of the FX Procedures, and
other requirements stemming from
EMIR or other applicable law, including
requirements as to operational and
financial capacity, compliance with
sanctions regimes, and having a wellfounded legal framework to support
clearing operations. Rule 201(a)(v) has
been revised to require that a Clearing
Member be a user of a designated
repository for purposes of swap data
reporting. Rule 201(b) includes a
requirement that additional conditions
imposed on Clearing Membership be
proportional to the risk brought by the
applicant. Revised Rules 201(c) and (e)
contain additional requirements around
rejection or denial of applications.
Rule 202(a) contains certain
additional obligations on Clearing
Members driven by requirements in
EMIR, including obligations to make
available to the Clearing House certain
information for risk management
purposes (including as to client activity)
and to participate in default
management exercises and other testing.
Rule 202(b)–(e) (which are based on and
replace current Rule 1516(b) for CDS)
establish responsibilities of a Non-FCM/
BD Clearing Member for the execution
and content of customer-facing
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documentation, including to incorporate
the applicable CDS Standard Terms,
F&O Standard Terms or FX Standard
Terms. These aspects of customer
documentation facilitate the portability
of customer positions following Clearing
Member default, consistent with the
requirements of EMIR, among other
matters. Provisions concerning
controller guarantees of Clearing
Members are moved to Rule 202(f) from
the CDS Procedures and Rule 1709 (FX)
so as to apply to all product categories.
Certain conforming changes relating
to Sponsored Principals and the use of
the new set of account classes have been
added in Rule 207(a) and (d). New Rule
207(e) clarifies the obligations of certain
Disclosed Principal Members for which
a Clearing Member may act in
connection with the energy business,
but which are not treated as customers
under the Rules and to align this
provision with the equivalent
requirement for Sponsored Principals.
Rule 301 has been modified to clarify
certain matters relating to its payment
banking arrangements. (These generally
reflect comments of and discussions
with Clearing Members, and do not
specifically relate to compliance with
EMIR.) Rule 301(f), which generally
provides that payments from Clearing
Members to ICE Clear Europe are not
deemed received until they have been
transferred to the clearing house
concentration account at its
concentration bank, has been modified
to provide that if an Approved Financial
Institution used by the Clearing House
fails to pay due to a Clearing Member
default or similar event, the Clearing
House will first attempt to reinstruct the
payment excluding amounts relevant to
the defaulter rather than exercising its
rights to require use of a different
Approved Financial Institution under
Rule 301. This accords with the clearing
house’s existing practices, and ICE Clear
Europe believes it is an appropriate
clarification on its authority under Rule
301(f). Rules 301(m)–(n) document ICE
Clear Europe’s existing practice of
publishing a list of Approved Financial
Institutions and Concentration Banks,
and require ICE Clear Europe to ensure
there is always at least one
Concentration Bank.
Rule 302(a) has been revised to
incorporate new rules with respect to
the payment mechanics for the various
accounts classes (including as to
whether payments are made on a net
basis or, in certain specified cases, on a
gross basis for a particular account).
Rules 302(a)(iii) and (iv) have been
revised to provide for net payments to
and from the clearing house in respect
of the F&O product category, for either
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Segregated Customer Omnibus
Accounts or Segregated TTFCA
Customer Omnibus Accounts. Rules
302(a)(v) and (vi) address the need to
have consolidated settlement with
respect to all of a Clearing Member’s
Margin-flow Co-mingled Accounts.
Rules 302(a)(vii) and (viii) address
settlement of margin transfers for other
categories of customer account (such as
for CDS or FX customers), which are
calculated on a gross basis. A
conforming change is made in Rule
302(e) for Margin-flow Co-mingled
Accounts.
New Rule 304 applies the payment
provisions of Part 3 of the Rules in the
context of Individually Segregated
Sponsored Accounts. Pursuant to Rule
304(a)(ii), Payments are made to and
from the clearing house separately on a
net basis for each such account, by the
relevant Sponsored Principal (or the
Sponsor if acting as representative of the
Sponsored Principal for making
payments). Rule 304(a)(v) clarifies that
ICE Clear Europe is not permitted to
exercise rights of set off as between any
obligation, right or liability arising in
connection with an Individually
Segregated Sponsored Account and
between any obligation, right or liability
arising in connection with any
Customer Account that is not an
Individually Segregated Sponsored
Account in respect of which the
Sponsored Principal is a Customer. Rule
304 also disapplies a number of
provisions in Part 3 of the Rules,
including Rules 301(k), 302(a), 302(d)
and 302(e), as such provisions are more
specifically provided for in Rule 304 in
the context of Individually Segregated
Sponsored Accounts. Rule 304(a)(vi)
provides that if a payment is made by
the Sponsor in respect of an
Individually Segregated Sponsored
Account, that payment discharges the
obligation of the Sponsored Principal.
Similarly, if the clearing house makes a
payment to the Sponsor in respect of the
Individually Segregated Sponsored
Account, that payment discharges the
clearing house’s obligation to the
Sponsored Principal. As provided in
Rule 304(a)(vii), Sponsored Principals
are not required to make guaranty fund
contributions to the clearing house.
Rule 401, which addresses the
formation of a cleared contract, has been
amended to incorporate the concept of
Sponsored Principals and Individually
Segregated Sponsored Accounts, as well
as the other categories of customer
account and certain other conforming
changes (including the removal of
obsolete references to ICE OTC markets
that have been superseded).
Specifically, the amendments clarify the
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capacity in which the Sponsor or
Clearing Member is acting with respect
to any such contracts, and the
appropriate account in which such
contracts are to be recorded. Conforming
changes that incorporate the new
account classes have also been made.
The amendments also include certain
non-EMIR related changes, including
harmonization of drafting of provisions
across different products and use of new
defined terms (such as Buying
Counterparty and Selling Counterparty,
terms introduced due to the existence of
Sponsored Principals as a joint
counterparty to Contracts, in addition to
Clearing Members). New Rule 401(l)
provides for the reporting of cleared
transactions to a Repository, in
accordance with the requirements of
EMIR. Rule 401(n) has been revised to
address customer-CM transactions
arising from FX transactions. Rule
401(o) has been revised to reflect the
various capacities in which a Clearing
Member or Sponsored Principal may
enter into a transaction for the relevant
account category. Conforming changes
have been made to rule 401(p) to reflect
the various account categories.
Conforming changes (including
addition of references to Sponsored
Principals, use of defined terms for
Buying Counterparties and Selling
Counterparties and providing for
reporting to Repositories) are made in
Rules 402–408 and 410. Additional
conforming changes are made to Rule
405 to address Disclosed Principal
Members and use of CDS Trade
Execution/Processing Platforms and FX
Trade Execution/Processing Platforms,
as well as other drafting clarifications.
Rule 406 contains additional
conforming changes relating to netting
of positions and reporting of net
positions to ta Repository. Rule 407 has
been amended to include references to
Sponsored Principals and to clarify use
of defined terms. Rule 408 has been
revised to address transfer of positions
of a Sponsored Principal as well as a
Clearing Member, and to incorporate
certain drafting clarifications.
Rule 502 has been amended with
various conforming changes and
clarifications as to the characterization
of margin, generally relating to the
additional account classes and revised
defined terms. Rule 502(h) has been
revised to expand an undertaking on the
part of ICE Clear not to change the legal
characterization of pledged collateral
accounts or assets provided with respect
thereto. This change is in response to
clearing member requests for additional
legal certainty as to account
characterization, but reflects existing
practices. Rule 502(i) contains certain
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drafting improvements as to the manner
in which the clearing house may use
pledged collateral for purposes of the
net sum calculation in Part 9 of the
Rules and conforms to the rules
governing the return of excess margin
for the account of customers set forth in
Part 9 of the Rules. Rules 503(e) and (f)
contain various conforming changes to
reflect the use of the new account
classes (and removing references to
Designated CDS Customer Accounts,
which are no longer used), as well as the
use of various defined terms.
New Rule 503(k) is the principal new
rule relating to the operation of Marginflow Co-mingled Accounts. In
circumstances where the clearing house
permits the use of more than one type
of permitted cover, the rule mandates
reporting by Clearing Members on such
accounts to allow the tracking of assets
(where more than one account is used
and more than one type of margin is
provided), such that assets can be
allocated to particular Customers. The
rule also sets out backstop rules for pro
rata allocation across different
customers that apply in the event of
reporting failures by the Clearing
Member.
Rules 504 and 505 contain various
conforming changes, including for the
addition of Sponsored Principals and
Individually Segregated Sponsored
Accounts, as well as a clarification of
the rights and obligations of Disclosed
Principal Members. Rule 506 sets out
particular procedures for the transfer of
margin in the context of Individually
Segregated Sponsored Accounts. As
further set out in Rule 1902, the
Sponsored Principal may provide
margin directly to the clearing house, or
the Sponsor may be operationally
responsible for providing margin to the
clearing house on behalf of the
Sponsored Principal. Rule 506 also
replaces Rules 504(a), 504(c)(v) and
504(f) with additional provisions more
specifically reflecting the particular
responsibilities of the Sponsored
Principal and Sponsor in connection
with the transfer of margin.
Parts 6, 7 and 8 of the Rules contain
various conforming changes that reflect
the addition of Individually Sponsored
Segregated Accounts and other
categories of customer accounts. These
changes also clarify that the rules in
those parts relating to position limits,
and settlement of futures and options
apply to Sponsored Principals in
substantially the same manner as
Clearing Members.
The Default Rules in Part 9 have been
amended to provide for the management
of a default by a Sponsor and/or
Sponsored Principal. Certain
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conforming changes to defined terms
and related drafting improvements and
clarifications have also been made, as
discussed herein. The preamble to Part
9 has also been updated to refer to
relevant sections of EMIR and other
applicable law.11
Under new Rule 901(d), a Sponsored
Principal may be declared in default by
the Clearing House in the same way as
a Clearing Member if any of the events
specified in Rule 901(a) occur, unless,
in the case of a default under Rule
901(a)(i)–(iii), the Sponsor cures the
default. A Sponsored Principal may also
be declared in default if it is in default
under any relevant agreement between
the Sponsored Principal and its Sponsor
(as notified by the Sponsor to ICE Clear
Europe). If ICE Clear Europe becomes
aware of grounds for declaring a
Sponsored Principal to be a Defaulter
under Rule 901(a)(i) to (iii) but no Event
of Default is declared, ICE Clear Europe
will notify the Sponsor of details of
such grounds and give the Sponsor an
opportunity to perform the obligation
prior to declaring a default in respect of
the Sponsored Principal. (As discussed
above, the Sponsor is jointly and
severally liable with the Sponsored
Principal with respect to the Sponsored
Principal’s positions and related
obligations in its Individually
Segregated Sponsored Account. In the
case of a failure to perform by the
Sponsored Principal, the Clearing House
will direct all liabilities on the
Individually Segregated Sponsored
Account to be met from the Sponsor’s
nominated proprietary bank account,
and the Sponsor is liable to make such
payments.) A Sponsor will not be
declared a defaulter solely as a result of
a default of a Sponsored Principal,
although the Sponsor can be declared a
defaulter as a result of its own default,
including for failure to perform its own
obligations (as jointly and severally
liable) with respect to the Individually
Segregated Sponsored Account. Finally,
new Rule 901(e) provides for
notification to regulators of Clearing
Member or Sponsored Principal default,
as required under article 48(3) of EMIR.
If a Sponsored Principal is declared in
default, the clearing house will have the
rights and remedies set forth in Part 9
of the Rules, in the same manner as if
the Sponsored Principal were a
defaulting Clearing Member, as
provided in Rule 901(d). Various
changes to Rules 902–904 also
implement these default rights and
remedies. Rules 902 and 903, which
address certain remedies following
default, adds relevant references to
defaulting Sponsored Principals.
Revised Rule 903 also contains certain
changes to defined terms and reflects
reporting requirements to Repositories
under applicable law for all relevant
product categories.
The amendments to Rule 904 contain
the principal new provisions addressing
remedies of the clearing house in the
event of the default of a Sponsor or a
Sponsored Principal. They also make
certain other changes to general
provisions relating to transfer of
positions and use of margin, consistent
with EMIR requirements.12 Rules 904(a)
and (b) contain various changes
reflecting new defined terms. Rule
904(c) clarifies and specifies additional
circumstances in which the clearing
house is not obligated to transfer
contracts, including where it would
cause a default by the clearing house,
require the use of guaranty fund
contributions of non-defaulting Clearing
Members or an assessment on nondefaulting Clearing Members, be
contrary to applicable law or lack any
required consent or approval. Consistent
with the standards in EMIR, transfers
are required to be fair to both customers
and indirect customers of the defaulter.
The provisions in Rule 904 relating to
transfers generally apply to all Clearing
Members, including FCM/BD Clearing
Members, subject to any particular
requirements of applicable law or
approvals or consents required in order
to effect such transfers (as may be
required for the customer account of an
FCM/BD Clearing Member.)
Rule 904(d)(v) has been amended to
create a payment obligation from the
Clearing Member that will net out the
value of any appropriation of collateral
to support porting or direct payments to
customers under EMIR. Rule 904(f) has
been revised to remove a former
provision that the clearing house was
not obligated to effect any transfers of
margin, which was inconsistent with
EMIR Articles 39 and 48. Former Rules
904(j) and (k), which were applicable
only to CDS but now apply to all
products, have been removed and
combined into a new Rule 904(k) and
(l). Former Rule 904(l) (now renumbered
as Rule 904(j)), which addresses
transfers of contracts, has been revised
to apply generally to all product
categories and types of customer
accounts, and to contemplate reliance
on consents to transfers by customers
provided under standard terms
documentation.
Rules 904(m), (p) and (u) include a
commitment by ICE Clear Europe to
trigger the process for transfers of
customer positions and margin, as
required under Article 48(5–6) of EMIR.
Slightly different wording applies to
different types of account, reflecting the
requirements of EMIR for that kind of
account and the ability of ICE Clear
Europe to give additional assurances for
different account classes. This wording
is supplemented by additional amended
provisions around the operational
process for porting notices in the
Standard Terms annexes. These
commitments are subject to various
conditions precedent to porting set out
in the rules cited above and in Rule
904(c), as discussed above.
Rules 904(n) and (o) address the
default of a Sponsor. Under Rule 904(n),
upon a default of a Sponsor, the
Sponsored Principal must continue to
fulfill its payment and margin
obligations on the Individually
Segregated Sponsored Account to ICE
Clear Europe and may be required to
pay additional amounts by way of
margin (reflecting the fact that
Sponsored Principals do not make
Guaranty Fund Contributions). Pursuant
to Rule 904(o), a Sponsored Principal
must within 10 days of a Sponsor
default (i) notify ICE Clear Europe of a
new Sponsor, (ii) become a Clearing
Member itself or (iii) move its positions
and margin from the Individually
Segregated Sponsored Account to the
omnibus Customer Account of another
Clearing Member (which would require
the Sponsored Principal to have or to
put into place a customer relationship
with that Clearing Member). If one of
the above three steps is not taken within
10 days or such longer time as the
Clearing House at its discretion allows,
then the Sponsored Principal itself may
be declared in default under Rule
904(q).
New Rules 904(r)–(s) address the
default of a Sponsored Principal, where
the Sponsor is not itself in default.13
Pursuant to Rule 904(r), in such a case,
the Sponsor will be responsible for
performance of any obligations on the
Individually Segregated Sponsored
Account. The Sponsor may manage the
default by terminating contracts in the
Individually Segregated Sponsored
Account within a time period set by the
clearing house. The Sponsor may also
11 References to particular laws in this preamble
are not intended to be exclusive; nothing in this
provision affects any requirement on ICE Clear
Europe to comply with applicable laws not
specifically enumerated.
12 These include the requirement that the central
counterparty contractually commit to trigger the
procedures for transfer of customer positions and
assets of a defaulting clearing member. EMIR
Article 48(5–6).
13 As noted above, the Sponsored Principal model
is not being offered at this time to U.S. Clearing
Members or potential U.S. Sponsored Principals,
and accordingly these provisions will not apply to
such persons.
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transfer positions (and margin) from the
Individually Segregated Sponsored
Account to its proprietary account as
part of the default management process.
The clearing house is also entitled to
manage the default, using the same
rights, remedies and procedures it has
for a Clearing Member default. If the
Sponsor elects to manage the default,
the clearing house will give the Sponsor
such time as the clearing house
determines reasonable before managing
the default itself. Rule 904(s) clarifies
the manner in which guaranty fund
contributions and surplus collateral of
the Sponsor may be applied to the net
sum calculated for an Individually
Segregated Sponsored Account of a
defaulting Sponsored Principal. Rule
904(s) also provides that if the Sponsor
has made payments in respect of the
Individually Segregated Sponsored
Account under Rule 901(d) or 904(r),
and the net sum on the account would
otherwise be payable in favor of the
Sponsored Principal, it will instead be
paid to the Sponsor. Together, Rules
904(r) and (s) are designed to give the
Sponsor an incentive to manage the
default itself (as would be the case for
any other customer default), in light of
its ongoing obligations (based on its
joint and several liability) with respect
to the Individually Segregated
Sponsored Account until the default
management process is completed. In
addition, where the Sponsor manages
the default by transferring the relevant
positions in the Individually Segregated
Sponsored Account to its own account,
it is entitled to also receive any margin
or balance in the account as well as any
net sum payable by the Clearing House
on the account in this situation, which
it may potentially apply against other
(uncleared) liabilities of the defaulted
Sponsored Principal. By contrast, if the
Clearing House has to manage the
default, then any net sum payable by the
Clearing House would be delivered to
the Sponsored Principal and the
Sponsor would have to recoup any
separate debts owed to it in other ways.
A new Rule 904(t) addresses the
calculation of net sums with respect to
Margin-flow Co-mingled Accounts of a
defaulting Clearing Member.14 The Rule
sets out a procedure for allocating all
assets and liabilities on the Margin-flow
Co-mingled Accounts appropriately and
fairly to each individual account, based
on the positions and reports provided as
to permitted cover. (Fallback rules apply
if no such reports or records are
14 As noted above, these accounts are not
applicable to FCM/BD Clearing Members or their
customers, and accordingly Rule 904(t) and (u)
would not apply to such persons.
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available, including providing for pro
rata allocation of certain initial margin
based on margin requirements for each
account.) New Rule 904(u) addresses
ICE Clear Europe’s responsibility to
transfer positions in an Individually
Segregated Margin-flow Co-mingled
Account, subject to certain conditions
analogous to those discussed above for
Rule 904(c).
Conforming and clarifying changes
are made in Rules 905 and 906,
including for Individually Segregated
Sponsored Accounts and the various
other new account classes. In particular,
Rule 905 has been amended to include
various conforming references to
Sponsored Principals and Individually
Segregated Sponsored Accounts. Rule
905(b)(ii) has been revised to harmonize
the drafting across different product
categories. Rules 905(b)(viii) and (ix)
have also been amended to clarify the
rights of the clearing house over pledged
collateral and the realization and/or
valuation of pledged collateral in the
case of set-off following default. In Rule
906(a), new language expressly clarifies
that the respective obligations of the
defaulting Clearing Member and the
clearing house that would otherwise be
due following default are to be reduced
to the net sum (as was implicit in the
current rule), in order to facilitate closeout netting following default.
Rule 906(b) has been revised to reflect
the calculation of separate net sums for
each of the new account classes.
Guaranty Fund Contributions of the
defaulter may be applied to the net sum
for any account, but will be applied first
to reduce losses on customer accounts,
on a pro rata basis. Rule 906(c) similarly
provides that where proprietary assets
of a defaulter are being used to satisfy
losses in the customer accounts, they
must be used on a pro rata basis across
such accounts. Revised Rule 906(d)
incorporates requirements under Article
48 of EMIR as to the payment of net
sums owed in respect of various
customer accounts, as applicable,
including, where permissible under
applicable law and the Rules, return of
a net sum directly to the relevant
customer(s). Certain protections under
current rules for the differences between
net and gross Customer Account margin
(old Rule 906(i) and usages of
‘‘Customer Account Gross-Net Amount’’
and ‘‘Gross Margin Shortfall’’ here and
elsewhere) are being removed in light of
the EMIR requirements and the new
account classes.
Additional clarifying and conforming
changes are made in Rules 907–918,
principally to reference Individually
Segregated Sponsored Accounts as well
as remove references to certain former
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CDS account concepts that have been
deleted as discussed above. Rule 907
incorporates certain default rules for FX
contracts. New Rule 907(m) clarifies
that positions in a customer account
may, at the request of a Clearing
Member, be moved to the proprietary
account of the Clearing Member in the
case of a default of the relevant
customer for default management
purposes. (This provision applies
equally in the absence of the declaration
of an Event of Default by the Clearing
House, and also applies to a request by
a Sponsor to transfer positions of a
Sponsored Principal following a breach
or default by the Sponsored Principal.)
Former Rule 908(a)(ix), which
referenced Designated CDS Customer
Accounts (which are no longer offered),
has been removed and replaced with a
new provision that provides that in case
of a Sponsored Principal default,
Guaranty Fund and assessment
contributions of Clearing Members other
than the Sponsor will not be used
unless the Sponsor is itself in default.
This is consistent with the use of assets
of non-defaulting Clearing Members
generally, and requires that in the first
instance the Sponsor cover losses of its
Sponsored Principals.
Rule 908(b)–(d) and (g) simplify and
consolidate certain references to the
default waterfall by referring to the net
sum calculation under ‘N’ in Rule 906
rather than specific components of that
calculation. Rule 908(e) has been
revised to remove references to
Designated CDS Customer Accounts,
which are no longer offered. Conforming
and clarifying changes are made to
Rules 908(g) and (h) to add the concept
of Sponsored Principal. Rule 908(i)
(which does not apply to CDS contracts)
has been revised to clarify the
application of the default auction
priority as set forth in the relevant F&O
or FX auction procedures.
Rules 909–911, which address the
Clearing House’s assessment rights with
respect to default losses, have been
revised to also address losses resulting
from Sponsored Principals clearing in
the relevant product category, as well as
to update certain cross references and
defined terms.
In Rule 912, new clause (a)(iv) has
been added to address the treatment of
Individually Segregated Sponsored
Accounts (and the joint liability and
entitlement of the Sponsor and
Sponsored Principal in respect of such
accounts) in the case of a Clearing
House default.
Rule 914 (and related definitions in
Rule 913) have been modified such that
variation margin haircutting for the F&O
and FX product categories, if applicable,
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will also apply to variation margin owed
to Sponsored Principals in respect of
Individually Segregated Sponsored
Accounts. Accordingly, terms such as
‘‘Clearing Member Adjustment
Amount’’ and ‘‘Contributing Clearing
Member’’ have been changed to
‘‘Adjustment Amount’’ and
‘‘Contributor,’’ respectively (to cover
both Clearing Members and Sponsored
Principals), and references to Sponsored
Principals have been added as
appropriate throughout the definitions
in Rule 913 and the provisions of Rule
914. Similarly, Rule 916 (relating to
termination of positions in the F&O and
FX product categories) and Rule 917
(relating to cooling-off periods) will
apply to Sponsored Principals. Rule
918, in respect of termination of
membership (including during a
cooling-off period), will also apply to
Sponsored Principals in respect of
Individually Segregated Sponsored
Accounts for F&O and FX contracts.
Pursuant to new Rule 1006, part 10 of
the Rules, relating to disciplinary
matters, applies to Sponsored Principals
to the same extent as Clearing Members
acting for their proprietary accounts.
Rule 1101(c) and 1102(b) have been
revised to state that the Clearing House
would establish minimum parameters
for determining the relevant Guaranty
Funds for the F&O, CDS and FX
businesses to meet the requirements of
Article 42 of EMIR. (This statement does
not affect the Clearing House’s
obligation to comply with other
financial resources requirements under
applicable laws, including the Exchange
Act and Commission rules thereunder
(including Rule 17Ad–22(b)(3)).
Accordingly, the parameters for
determining the Guaranty Funds will
also take into account such other
requirements.) Certain other conforming
and clarifying changes have been made
to Rule 1102 and 1103. Rule 1103(a) and
(b) also have been revised to address the
use of Guaranty Fund contributions to
support borrowings under liquidity
facilities for the purpose of making
payments on cleared contracts, in
accordance with articles 44–45 of
Commission Delegated Regulation 153/
2013 under EMIR, subject to certain
limitations for each product category.
Rule 1103(b) allows the clearing house
to pledge or otherwise transfer any
guaranty fund contributions to support
credit or similar facilities to provide
liquidity for clearing house functions.
Proceeds of such facilities could only be
used for purposes set forth in Rule
1103(a) (that is, paying amounts owed
on cleared contracts and managing
defaults).
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Part 12 of the Rules contains various
conforming changes and updates
relating to its EU settlement finality
system to enhance settlement finality for
payment arrangements, including for
approved financial institutions used in
the payment system, concentration
banks and so-called investment agent
banks used by the clearing house for
holding assets pending investment. The
changes also reflect the new set of
accounts (including the Individually
Segregated Sponsored Accounts) and
amended terminology in the Rules
generally and reflect certain feedback
from its UK regulators.
Part 15 of the Rules, which addresses
clearing of CDS, has been modified to
reflect Individually Segregated
Sponsored Accounts and other
categories of customer accounts and to
make certain other conforming changes.
Rule 1501(kk) has been modified to
provide for the recording of CDS
recorded in Individually Segregated
Sponsored Accounts within the Deriv/
SERV ‘‘tripartite representation’’ system,
which is used by the clearing house,
Clearing Members and customers for the
recording of the details of CDS contracts
as well as for taking certain actions
(such as triggering following
restructuring credit events) with respect
to those contracts. The changes also
reflect updates to defined terms and
certain drafting clarifications. As
discussed above, the provisions in Rules
1516(a)–(b) have been moved to Rule
202(b) et seq. and now apply to all
products, with certain minor
modifications.
As noted above, the Sponsored
Principal model will not be offered at
this time to FCM/BD Clearing Members
or their customers, and changes to Part
16 of the Rules relating to the Sponsored
Principal model will not apply to FCM/
BD Clearing Members at this time. Part
16 of the Rules contains certain other
conforming changes and drafting
improvements that will apply at this
time, including in Rules 1604(b),
1604(e), 1605(d), 1605(h), 1607(d),
1608(a) and 1608(c). These largely relate
to changes in defined terms and crossreferences, references to a Clearing
Member having multiple proprietary
accounts, and certain clarifications with
respect to the CFTC ‘‘Legally
Segregated, Operationally Commingled’’
model for cleared swaps carried through
FCM/BD Clearing Members.
Part 17 of the Rules contains various
conforming changes relating to
Individually Segregated Sponsored
Accounts and other updates to defined
terms. As mentioned above, a number of
modifications to the Rules for FX
contracts (previously in Rules 1701(m),
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1706 and 1709) have been made
applicable to all products and so are
moved from here to other parts of the
rules.
New Part 19 of the Rules has been
added to address various aspects of the
Individually Segregated Sponsored
Account framework. As set forth above,
this framework is not being offered to
U.S. Clearing Members or potential U.S.
Sponsored Principals at this time, and
ICE Clear Europe will adopt a further
rule change if it determines to offer this
framework to such persons. Rule 1901
contains the initial and ongoing
requirements an entity must meet in
order to become a Sponsored Principal,
including signing relevant
documentation, paying relevant fees,
being solvent, meeting operational
requirements, being an ‘‘eligible
contract participant’’ and pre-funding a
specified amount of margin to ICE Clear
Europe. Rule 1901 (and the
requirements set out in it) broadly
reflect those set out in Part 2 of the
Rules for Clearing Members but have
been adapted by ICE Clear Europe for
this class of participant, including to
reflect the different documentation
requirements for Sponsored Principals
and the particular banking relationships
applicable to Sponsored Principals, as
well as the fact that Sponsored
Principals are not required to have the
same level of credit standing as Clearing
Members (given the Clearing House’s
reliance on the Sponsor). Subject to ICE
Clear Europe’s discretion, certain
criteria for obtaining and maintaining
the status of a Sponsored Principal may
be met by the Sponsor or (in the case of
Sponsored Principals that are funds, the
fund manager).
Rule 1902 provides that the relevant
Sponsored Principal and Non-FCM/BD
Clearing Member Sponsor are each
jointly and severally liable, as principal
and without limitation, to ICE Clear
Europe in respect of all obligations and
liabilities arising in connection with the
Individually Segregated Sponsored
Account and all Contracts recorded in
it. A Sponsor may be subject to
increased Guaranty Fund Contribution
requirements as a result of acting as a
Sponsor, on the basis of the Contracts
cleared by its Sponsored Principals.
Rule 1902 also specifies required
arrangements for payments between the
clearing house and a Sponsored
Principal, and allows the Sponsored
Principal and Sponsor to arrange
between them that the Sponsor will
perform certain responsibilities on
behalf of the Sponsored Principal. The
goal is to permit the Sponsor and
Sponsored Principal flexibility as to the
arrangements between them with
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respect to the Individually Segregated
Sponsored Account. The Rule specifies
certain required aspects of the
agreement between the Sponsored
Principal and Sponsor, in order for
obligations to be properly performed as
a matter of the applicable contract law
by all parties on the account. Various
modifications applicable to the back-toback contract between the Sponsor and
Sponsored Principal are set out in Rule
1902(g) so as to ensure that the Sponsor
maintains a flat position and that the
arrangements can be used in the context
of industry standard clearing
documentation. The Standard Terms
annexes, which govern the terms of
back-to-back contracts, are also
separately amended for purposes of the
Sponsored Principal model, as
discussed below.
Rule 1903 sets forth general
modifications to the Rules for
Sponsored Principals, Sponsors and
Individually Segregated Accounts in
order to implement the individual
segregation model for Sponsors that are
Non-FCM/BD Clearing Members and
Non-U.S. Sponsored Principals.
Sponsored Principals do not make
guaranty fund contributions, are not
subject to assessment contributions
pursuant to the default waterfall and are
not responsible for submitting any
pricing data to ICE Clear Europe.
Sponsored Principals may, but are not
required to, participate in default
auctions.15 Rule 1903 also provides that
Sponsored Principals are subject to the
dispute resolution and complaint and
disciplinary procedures otherwise
applicable to Clearing Members under
the Rules and, if relevant, market or
exchange rules.
Rule 1904 addresses termination of a
Sponsored Principal relationship with
its Sponsor. In general, a Sponsored
Principal may terminate its Sponsor on
notice or a Sponsor may terminate its
Sponsored Principal on notice, in either
case only if there are no open Contracts
in the relevant Individually Segregated
Sponsored Account. Following service
of any such notice, neither the
Sponsored Principal nor the Sponsor
may enter into or cause the entry into
of any further Contract for the
Individually Segregated Sponsored
Account, and the Clearing House shall
be entitled to close the Individually
Segregated Sponsored Account. A
Sponsored Principal may change the
Sponsor only if it has established
arrangements with a new Sponsor.
15 Based on Staff’s conversation with ICE Clear
Europe’s counsel on July 2, 2014, ICE Clear
Europe’s counsel has confirmed that a Sponsored
Principal will not be subject to forced allocation of
contracts in the event of a failed auction.
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As noted above, the Sponsored
Principal framework will not be made
available to FCM/BD Clearing Members
or U.S. persons at this time. It is
expected that FCM/BD Clearing
Members will satisfy the requirements
of EMIR to offer individual segregation
to customers by referring such
customers seeking individual
segregation to a Non-FCM/BD Clearing
Member that offers an Individually
Segregated Sponsored Account, to the
extent permitted by law. As a result,
pursuant to the introductory paragraph
of Rule 1905, the remainder of that rule,
and other references to U.S. Sponsored
Principals in the Rules, will be
inapplicable at this time. No U.S. person
will be permitted to become a
Sponsored Principal, Individually
Segregated Sponsored Accounts will not
be available to U.S. Sponsored
Principals, and FCM/BD Clearing
Members will not be permitted to act as
Sponsors, until such time as ICE Clear
Europe adopts a further rule change
(and makes a related rule filing)
implementing the Sponsored Principal
framework for FCM/BD Clearing
Members and U.S. persons and receives
all necessary regulatory approvals in
connection therewith.
Certain changes to the Standard
Terms annex, setting out certain
mandatory terms of back-to-back
contracts between Clearing Members
and Customers, have been made for CDS
contracts. In addition, new Standard
Terms annexes are added for F&O and
FX contracts. (The Standard Terms
annexes only apply to Non-FCM/BD
Clearing Members and their customers.)
The CDS Standard Terms annex has
been modified to incorporate the
Sponsored Principal Model (and
distinguish between provisions
applicable to an Individually Segregated
Sponsored Account and those
applicable to other Customer Accounts).
References to various other categories of
account class have been updated.
Certain procedures concerning
portability of positions and margin in
the case of a Clearing Member default
(including related notice and timing
requirements) have also been added,
consistent with revisions to Rule 904. In
addition, certain provisions are made
governed by English law rather than the
law of any underlying master
agreement, as are the Rules and
Procedures (which are incorporated
here by reference), based on legal advice
received by the clearing house. The new
annexes for F&O and FX products are
based on the Standard Terms annex for
CDS (as modified).
Additional changes are made to
Exhibit 4 to the Rules, which contains
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39437
Settlement and Notices Terms
applicable to customer transactions in
CDS. These provisions generally specify
certain requirements for delivery of
certain notices as between a customer
and its Clearing Member in connection
with a CDS contract, including certain
notices relating to physical settlement,
as well as certain procedures relevant to
settling the Clearing Member to
customer leg of such a transaction if
physical settlement is applicable. The
exhibit has been modified to include
Sponsored Principals and their
Sponsors. The modifications also
distinguish between Non-FCM/BD
Clearing Members, which have a backto-back relationship with their
customers pursuant to a Customer-CM
CDS Transaction, and FCM/BD Clearing
Members, which act on behalf of their
customers, and do not enter into
Customer-CM CDS Transactions.
Various conforming changes to defined
terms and drafting clarifications have
also been made.
b. Statutory Basis
ICE Clear Europe believes that the
proposed rule changes are consistent
with the requirements of Section 17A of
the Act 16 and the regulations
thereunder applicable to it, including
the standards under Rule 17Ad–22.17
Section 17A(b)(3)(F) of the Act 18
requires, among other things, that the
rules of a clearing agency be designed to
promote the prompt and accurate
clearance and settlement of securities
transactions and, to the extent
applicable, derivative agreements,
contracts, and transactions. The
proposed rule changes, which are
intended principally to ensure
compliance by the clearing house with
the requirements of EMIR, implement
new, strengthened options for the
segregation and safeguarding of
customer funds and property to be
available to customers of Non-FCM/BD
Clearing Members. The existing, nonindividually segregated models will also
generally remain available for those
customers that want them. In addition,
the customer account structures and
segregation requirements for FCM/BD
Clearing Members are not being
changed. Accordingly, the proposed
rule changes will enhance, and not
reduce, the level of customer protection
available under the current ICE Clear
Europe rules. As a result, ICE Clear
Europe believes that the proposed rule
changes will contribute to the
safeguarding of funds and securities
16 15
U.S.C. 78q–1.
CFR 240.17Ad–22.
18 15 U.S.C. 78q–1(b)(3)(F).
17 17
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associated with derivative transactions
that are in the custody or control of the
clearing house or for which it is
responsible, as set forth herein, within
the meaning of Section 17(A)(b)(3)(F).19
As discussed above, EMIR requires
that the clearing house offer an
individual segregation model that
Clearing Members may in turn offer to
their customers. Under such a model,
the clearing house is required to
separately account for, and track, the
portfolio of positions of a customer of a
Clearing Member and specific assets
provided to margin such contracts. ICE
Clear Europe has developed its
Individually Segregated Sponsored
Account model to satisfy this
requirement of EMIR. The Individually
Segregated Sponsored Account provides
a separate account for the positions, and
margin, of a particular customer, and
accordingly should be protected in the
event of a default of the sponsoring
Clearing Member or other customers of
the Clearing Member. It also facilitates
the transition to a new Sponsor in the
event of a default of the current
Sponsor. For market participants that
are eligible to use and elect to use the
Individually Segregated Sponsored
Account model, the approach may
provide a higher degree of protection for
customer assets than is currently
available.20
As part of the proposed amendments,
ICE Clear Europe is making other
enhancements to its omnibus
segregation models. As discussed above,
EMIR also permits the use of omnibus
segregation models. The proposed
amendments would, consistent with
EMIR and related UK requirements,
establish separate customer omnibus
account for client money and TTFCA
collateral arrangements. These provide
broadly equivalent protection that
available in ICE Clear Europe’s current
model. The amendments would also
introduce Margin-flow Co-mingled
Accounts, which provide an
intermediate level of segregation and
elimination of certain fellow customer
risks through the separate tracking of
positions and actual assets provided to
cover particular Customer positions, but
19 15
U.S.C. 78q–1(b)(3)(F).
noted above, ICE Clear Europe is not
offering the Sponsored Principal model to FCM/BD
Clearing Members and potential U.S. Sponsored
Principals at this time. ICE Clear Europe expects to
continue to evaluate the demand for such a model
by such persons, including in light of evolving
commercial, regulatory, capital, insolvency and
other considerations applicable to the Clearing
House, FCM/BD Clearing Members and other
market participants. ICE Clear Europe will submit
subsequent rule filings if it determines to offer such
a model to FCM/BD Clearing Members and U.S.
persons.
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20 As
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permits co-mingling of payment flows
for operational convenience. This
provides another option for market
participants that provides a higher level
of protection than is available using
European omnibus accounts, but may
involve less cost and operational
complexity than the full Individually
Segregated Sponsored Account model.
Consistent with EMIR, the proposed
rules also contemplate that Clearing
Members may use multiple types of
these customer accounts, and may
maintain multiple accounts within each
category, as needed in their business
operations. As discussed above, ICE
Clear Europe is not proposing to change
its account framework (and related
customer property protections) for FCM/
BD Clearing Members, which are
consistent with existing U.S. regulatory
requirements (including under the
Exchange Act).21
As such, ICE Clear Europe believes
that the proposed rule changes will
enhance the safeguarding of securities
and funds associated with derivative
transactions that are in the custody or
control of ICE Clear Europe or for which
it is responsible. ICE Clear Europe also
believes that the proposed rule changes
will enhance the stability of the clearing
system, by reducing the risk to market
participants of a default by a Clearing
Member or other customer. As a result,
the proposed changes are, in the
clearing house’s view, consistent with
the requirements of Section 17A(b)(3)(F)
of the Act. The amendments also satisfy
the relevant requirements of Rule 17Ad–
22,22 and in particular implicate the
following provisions thereof, as
discussed in more detail below:
Financial Resources. ICE Clear Europe
believes that the amendments are
consistent with the requirements of Rule
17Ad–22(b)(2–3).23 The proposed rule
changes do not themselves change ICE
Clear Europe’s methodology with
respect to its margin or Guaranty Fund
21 As noted above, ICE Clear Europe has been
advised that EMIR does not require the Individual
Segregation Model to be offered to FCM/BD
Clearing Members or U.S. persons, provided that, to
the extent permitted by applicable law, such
clearing members may refer interested customers to
a Non-FCM/BD Clearing Member able to offer such
an account. The other modified account frameworks
for Non-FCM/BD Clearing Members are not
designed to satisfy the specific requirements of U.S.
law, including those under the Commodity
Exchange Act and CFTC rules as well as the
Exchange Act. As a result, ICE Clear Europe
believes that maintaining the current account
structures for FCM/BD Clearing Members provides
the required level of protection for customers of
such Clearing Members in light of U.S. legal
requirements, and that changes to those structures
would not be appropriate at this time as they are
not mandated by EMIR.
22 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22.
23 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(b)(2)–(3).
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requirements,24 although the
amendments would require Sponsors to
make additional Guaranty Fund
deposits in respect of the individually
segregated accounts of their Sponsored
Principals. The amendments would also
require Sponsored Principals to make
additional margin payments upon a
default of its Sponsor. Accordingly, ICE
Clear Europe does not believe that the
proposed changes will adversely affect
its financial resources that support
clearing operations.
Settlement. ICE Clear Europe believes
that the rule changes are consistent with
the requirements of Rule 17Ad–22(d)(5),
(12) and (15) 25 as to the finality and
accuracy of its daily settlement process
and avoidance of the risk of settlement
failures. In the individual segregation
model, Sponsored Principals will have
the option of direct settlement with the
clearing house, which will enhance the
finality and accuracy of the settlement
process. ICE Clear Europe believes it has
sufficient operational infrastructure to
support these arrangements. Sponsored
Principals who settle through their
Sponsor will be treated in the same
manner, and with the same level of
finality and accuracy, as customers of
Clearing Members under current Rules.
ICE Clear Europe’s existing settlement
model will be used for the various
omnibus customer accounts. As a result,
ICE Clear Europe does not believe that
the proposed amendments will
adversely affect the settlement process,
and believes that the changes are
consistent with the relevant
requirements of Rule 17Ad–22 in this
regard.
Default Procedures. ICE Clear Europe
believes that the amendments enhance
its default management procedures and
its ability to take timely action to
contain losses and liquidity pressures
and to continue meeting its obligations
in the event of insolvencies or defaults,
in accordance with Rule 17Ad–
22(d)(11).26 The amendments further
protect the assets of customer in the
event of a default by a sponsoring
Clearing Member. In particular, the
24 ICE Clear Europe has separately made a filing
with respect to changes in its CDS risk management
and other policies. Based on Staff’s conversation
with ICE Clear Europe’s counsel on July 2, 2014,
ICE Clear Europe’s counsel has confirmed that
notwithstanding the changes made to Rule 1101(c),
ICE Clear Europe currently implements risk
management methodology that takes into account
those parameters required to comply with all
applicable laws, including EMIR and Commission
Rules 17Ad–22(b)(2–3). For the avoidance of any
doubt, ICE Clear Europe intends to continue
maintaining risk management methodology with
respect to margin and the guaranty fund that will
comply with all applicable laws.
25 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(d)(5), (12) and (15).
26 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(d)(11).
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amendments provide a mechanism for
managing the default of a Sponsor and/
or Sponsored Principal, similar to the
existing process for Clearing Member
default. Consistent with the
requirements of EMIR, the proposed
amendments, also enhance the clearing
house’s ability to handle other defaults,
and in particular to provide for transfer
of positions and margin following
default. These changes are thus in
furtherance of the goals of Rule 17Ad–
22 as well.
Although the amendments establish a
number of new categories of accounts in
order to comply with EMIR, ICE Clear
Europe believes that its default
management process is sufficient to
address defaults for each relevant
category. With respect to the new
varieties of omnibus accounts, ICE Clear
Europe does not believe that such
accounts pose any default management
issues different from those presented by
its current omnibus account structure.
With respect to the individually
segregated account structures, ICE Clear
Europe has considered default
management issues and revised its
Rules accordingly to facilitate default
management, consistent with the
requirements of EMIR and the Exchange
Act. In the case of Individually
Segregated Sponsored Accounts in
particular, the Clearing House has
designed its default procedures to
permit, and to incentivize, the Sponsor
to manage the default of a Sponsored
Principal in largely the same manner as
it manages other customer defaults. The
Clearing House also retains the ability to
manage a Sponsored Principal default in
the same manner as it manages Clearing
Member defaults.
Legal Framework. Consistent with the
requirements of EMIR, ICE Clear Europe
has obtained advice of legal counsel in
relevant jurisdictions as to the
enforceability of its Rules and
Procedures, including with respect to
the Sponsored Principal model and
other relevant amendments made in the
proposed Rules. Based on this advice,
ICE Clear Europe believes that the
amendments are consistent with the
requirements of Rule 17Ad–22(d)(1) that
a clearing agency maintain a wellfounded, transparent and enforceable
legal framework for its activities,
including with respect to default
management.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
ICE Clear Europe does not believe the
proposed rule changes would have any
adverse impact, or impose any burden,
on competition not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the
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purposes of the Act. The proposed
amendments are principally intended to
offer new segregation models, and
enhancements to existing segregation
models, for customers of Clearing
Members in order to comply with EMIR
requirements applicable to the clearing
house. The amendments are thus
expected to increase the segregation
choices available to market participants.
In terms of access to the clearing
house, ICE Clear Europe is not
proposing to materially change its
standards for Clearing Membership or
financial requirements for Clearing
Membership. ICE Clear Europe is
permitting a new form of access to the
clearing house, for Sponsored
Principals, and ICE Clear Europe
believes that this development should
facilitate, rather than limit, access to the
clearing house. Although cost models
remain to be developed, use of these
accounts may be more expensive than
use of omnibus accounts, reflecting the
additional operational complexity and
segregation available. It is possible that
these additional costs may deter some
market participants for using the
Individually Segregated Sponsored
Account. The clearing house retains
other, omnibus segregation models,
however, that are based on existing
models and will be available to market
participants that do not elect individual
segregation. The clearing house also
recognizes that the new segregation
models may impose certain additional
costs on Clearing Members, including
potentially additional guaranty fund
contributions, which could raise the
cost of customer clearing. However, ICE
Clear Europe believes that this is the
result of the requirement under EMIR to
offer such models and in any event is
justified by the benefits provided by
such models for those who use them.
ICE Clear Europe also does not believe
the proposed amendments are likely to
adversely affect competition among
Clearing Members. The new segregation
models are (and are required to be)
made available to all Non-FCM/BD
Clearing Members. As noted above, the
new models are not being offered to
FCM/BD Clearing Members, which will
continue to use the account and
segregation frameworks provided under
applicable U.S. law. The ability for
FCM/BD Clearing Members to continue
using the existing framework should
mitigate any competitive impact of the
new models for such Clearing Members.
ICE Clear Europe believes that the new
options will facilitate competition
among Clearing Members as they seek to
offer the segregation models to clients,
consistent with the commercial
requirements of the Clearing Member
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39439
and their customers and the competitive
environment as well as background
regulatory requirements. To the extent
that the new segregation models impose
additional costs and operational
complexity, those will fall on all
Clearing Members that seek to use the
models, and are not designed to favor
one type of Clearing Member over
another.
In terms of the impact on customers
of Clearing Members, the proposed
amendments are intended to provide
those customers a greater range of
choices and protections for margin
assets provided by those customers, as
required under EMIR. Certain models,
such as the individually segregated
model, may impose higher costs on
customers. ICE Clear Europe believes
that such costs are accompanied by the
higher protection to customer assets
afforded by those models and required
under EMIR. In addition, other models,
including omnibus segregation models,
remain available for customers that
prefer such models. As a result, ICE
Clear Europe does not believe that the
proposed amendments will impose a
significant burden on customers seeking
access to clearing.
For similar reasons, ICE Clear Europe
does not believe that the rule
amendments will adversely affect the
ability of market participants to
continue to clear transactions, or
otherwise limit market participants’
choices for clearing derivatives. The
rule changes implement a range of
different models, each with different
costs and benefits to customers. ICE
Clear Europe is also maintaining a
segregation framework analogous to that
available today for customers of
Clearing Members. Furthermore, the
amendments are intended to implement
requirements that will apply to
European clearing houses generally
under EMIR, including the requirement
to offer an individual segregation model.
As a result, ICE Clear Europe expects
that other clearing house will offer a
similar range of clearing segregation
options, and the changes are not
expected to reduce access to clearing or
clearing services.
For the foregoing reasons, ICE Clear
Europe does not believe that the
proposed amendments will impose any
burden on competition not appropriate
in furtherance of the purposes of the
Act.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants or Others
Written comments relating to the rule
changes have been solicited from
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Clearing Members through extensive
discussions with clearing members and
a public consultation. ICE Clear Europe
received various comments during this
consultation and took such comments
into account in making further
modifications to the proposed rules. The
rule changes also reflect comments
received from the Bank of England in
connection with ICE Clear Europe’s
application for EMIR authorization. ICE
Clear Europe will notify the
Commission of any additional written
comments received by ICE Clear Europe.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 45 days of the date of
publication of this notice in the Federal
Register or within such longer period
up to 90 days (i) as the Commission may
designate if it finds such longer period
to be appropriate and publishes its
reasons for so finding or (ii) as to which
the self-regulatory organization
consents, the Commission will:
(A) By order approve or disapprove
the proposed rule change or
(B) institute proceedings to determine
whether the proposed rule change
should be disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
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Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s Internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml) or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File Number SR–
ICEEU–2014–09 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–ICEEU–2014–09. This file
number should be included on the
subject line if email is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the proposed rule
change that are filed with the
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Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for Web site viewing and
printing in the Commission’s Public
Reference Section, 100 F Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20549, on official
business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of such
filings will also be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of ICE Clear Europe and on ICE
Clear Europe’s Web site at https://
www.theice.com/notices/
Notices.shtml?regulatoryFilings.
All comments received will be posted
without change; the Commission does
not edit personal identifying
information from submissions. You
should submit only information that
you wish to make available publicly. All
submissions should refer to File
Number SR–ICEEU–2014–09 and
should be submitted on or before July
31, 2014.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.27
Jill M. Peterson,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2014–16099 Filed 7–9–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–72543; File No. SR–FINRA–
2014–031]
Self-Regulatory Organizations;
Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority, Inc.; Notice of Filing and
Immediate Effectiveness of a Proposed
Rule Change To Amend the Definition
of Hearing Officer To Include Former
FINRA Employees Who Previously
Worked as Hearing Officers
July 3, 2014.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’) 1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on July 2,
2014, Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority, Inc. (‘‘FINRA’’) filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘SEC’’ or ‘‘Commission’’) the proposed
rule change as described in Items I, II,
and III below, which Items have been
prepared by FINRA. The Commission is
publishing this notice to solicit
PO 00000
27 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
1 15
Frm 00077
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
comments on the proposed rule change
from interested persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
FINRA is proposing to amend the
definition of ‘‘Hearing Officer’’ to
include former employees of FINRA
who previously worked as FINRA
hearing officers.
Below is the text of the proposed rule
change. Proposed new language is in
italics.
*
*
*
*
*
9000. CODE OF PROCEDURE
9100. APPLICATION AND PURPOSE
*
*
*
*
*
9120. Definitions
(a) through (q) No Change.
(r) ‘‘Hearing Officer’’
The term ‘‘Hearing Officer’’ means an
employee of FINRA, or former employee
of FINRA who previously acted as a
Hearing Officer, who is an attorney and
who is appointed by the Chief Hearing
Officer to act in an adjudicative role and
fulfill various adjudicative
responsibilities and duties described in
the Rule 9200 Series regarding
disciplinary proceedings, the Rule 9550
Series regarding expedited proceedings,
the Rule 9700 Series relating to
grievances concerning FINRA
automated systems, and the Rule 9800
Series regarding temporary cease and
desist proceedings brought against
members and associated persons.
(s) through (cc) No Change.
*
*
*
*
*
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission,
FINRA included statements concerning
the purpose of and basis for the
proposed rule change and discussed any
comments it received on the proposed
rule change. The text of these statements
may be examined at the places specified
in Item IV below. FINRA has prepared
summaries, set forth in sections A, B,
and C below, of the most significant
aspects of such statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
FINRA is proposing to amend the
definition of Hearing Officer to include
a former employee of FINRA who is a
licensed attorney and who is appointed
E:\FR\FM\10JYN1.SGM
10JYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 132 (Thursday, July 10, 2014)]
[Notices]
[Pages 39429-39440]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-16099]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-72540; File No. SR-ICEEU-2014-09]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; ICE Clear Europe Limited; Notice
of Filing of Proposed Rule Change Relating To EMIR Requirements
July 3, 2014.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(``Act''),\1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ notice is hereby given that
on June 30, 2014, ICE Clear Europe Limited (``ICE Clear Europe'') filed
with the Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'') the
proposed rule changes described in Items I, II and III below, which
Items have been prepared by ICE Clear Europe. The Commission is
publishing this notice to solicit comments on the proposed rule change
from interested persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
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I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
The principal purpose of the proposed changes is to amend the ICE
Clear Europe Clearing Rules in order to comply with requirements under
the European Market Infrastructure Regulation (including regulations
and implementing technical standards thereunder, ``EMIR'') \3\ that
will apply to ICE Clear Europe as an authorized central
counterparty.\4\ Among other changes, the proposed rules would
implement a framework under which Clearing Members may offer to their
clients the ability to have their positions and margin assets
segregated from those of other clients of the Clearing Member
(``Individual Client Segregation'').\5\ The proposed rule changes
include various other amendments to comply with EMIR, as discussed
herein. In addition, certain other aspects of the proposed amendments
are not specifically intended to comply with EMIR, but are designed to
harmonize various rule provisions across different products and to make
various other improvements to the rules. ICE Clear Europe will be
required to be in compliance with EMIR as of the time it receives
authorization as a central counterparty from the European Securities
and Markets Authority (``ESMA'').
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\3\ Regulation (EU) No 648/2012 of the European Parliament and
of the Council of 4 July 2012 on OTC derivatives, central
counterparties and trade repositories, as well as various
implementing regulations and technical standards.
\4\ ICE Clear Europe will separately file certain related
changes to its policies and procedures, including risk management
policies.
\5\ As discussed herein, the Individual Client Segregation model
is not being offered at this time to U.S. clearing members or U.S.
person clients, and certain provisions of the proposed rules are
therefore not applicable to such persons. ICE Clear Europe will make
a subsequent rule filing if it subsequently determines to offer such
model to U.S. clearing members or U.S. persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, ICE Clear Europe included
statements concerning the purpose of and basis for the proposed rule
change and discussed any comments it received on the proposed rule
change. The text of these statements may be examined at the places
specified in Item IV below. ICE Clear Europe has prepared summaries,
set forth in sections A, B, and C below, of the most significant
aspects of these statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
a. Purpose
ICE Clear Europe submitted proposed amendments to its Rules in
order to comply with requirements under EMIR that will apply to ICE
Clear Europe upon its authorization as a central counterparty under
EMIR, and to make certain other improvements to its rules. The
principal change will be to implement changes to the structure of
customer accounts for cleared transactions to enhance segregation
[[Page 39430]]
options for customers of Clearing Members. This includes the adoption
of the Individual Client Segregation framework as well as certain
modifications relating to the existing, omnibus client segregation
model for Non-FCM/BD Clearing Members. (The existing account structure
and segregation framework applicable to FCM/BD Clearing Members will
remain in effect for such clearing members.) The customer clearing
model and commitments being offered by ICE Clear Europe in compliance
with EMIR are being made available for all product categories, subject
to applicable local law.
Pursuant to Article 39(1) to (3) of EMIR, ICE Clear Europe is
required to keep separate records and accounts that will enable it to
distinguish the assets and positions of: (i) One Clearing Member from
those of any other Clearing Member and (ii) either (A) a Clearing
Member from those of its clients (``omnibus segregation'') or (B) a
client of a Clearing Member from any other client of that Clearing
Member (``individual segregation''). In addition, each of ICE Clear
Europe's Clearing Members is required (i) to keep separate records and
accounts that enable them to distinguish in both accounts held with the
clearing house and their own accounts Clearing Member assets and
positions from those of its clients; and (ii) to offer clients a choice
of individual or omnibus segregation at the clearing house. ICE Clear
Europe has revised its segregation models to implement this
requirement, as described herein, to provide both individual
segregation and omnibus segregation options.
The proposed rules would establish two new types of individually
segregated accounts for Non-FCM/BD Clearing Members, Individually
Segregated Margin-flow Co-mingled Accounts and Individually Segregated
Sponsored Accounts. The proposed rules will also establish multiple new
types of omnibus accounts, Segregated Customer Omnibus Accounts
(separately for each product: FX, F&O and CDS) and Segregated TTFCA
Customer Omnibus Accounts (separately for each product: FX, F&O and
CDS) as well as Omnibus Margin-flow Co-mingled Accounts. These new
individually segregated and omnibus accounts will be available only to
non-FCM/BD Clearing Members and their customers. For FCM/BD Clearing
Members and their customers, individual client segregation is not being
offered at this time, and the existing account types and segregation
requirements for client assets (which are required under applicable
law) would be maintained.\6\
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\6\ The Bank of England has advised ICE Clear Europe that the
requirement under EMIR for the Clearing House to offer an individual
segregation model to Clearing Members (and in turn for Clearing
Members to offer individual segregation to their customers) may be
satisfied, in the case of an FCM/BD Clearing Member, if the Clearing
Member introduces such customers to another Clearing Member
(including an affiliate) that can offer an individually segregated
account, to the extent permitted by applicable law. ICE Clear Europe
is not at this time offering its Sponsored Principal Model to U.S.
Clearing Members or potential U.S. Sponsored Principals, and
therefore Rule 1905 and other references in the Rules to U.S.
Sponsored Principals will not apply at this time. ICE Clear Europe
will submit another rule filing if it determines to offer the
Sponsored Principal Model to U.S. Clearing Members or U.S. Sponsored
Principals.
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Each Margin-flow Co-mingled Account constitutes a separate account,
referencing a single client (in the case of an Individually Segregated
Margin-flow Co-mingled Account) or group of clients (in the case of an
Omnibus Margin-flow Co-mingled Account) for which separate records are
kept of both margin and positions. However, margin flows are aggregated
across all Margin-flow Co-mingled Accounts. These accounts are broadly
similar to an LSOC account under CFTC rules in operational terms for
position-keeping but differ in that assets are also tracked per
individual Customer, rather than constituting a shared pool with deemed
interests, allowing Customers to decide (subject to agreeing this with
their Clearing Member) what sort of assets should be used to cover
their individual positions, as is required under EMIR. The Rules
provide for two types of Margin-flow Co-mingled Accounts: Individually
segregated and omnibus segregated. Each Individually Segregated Margin-
flow Co-mingled Account records the margin and positions of a single
customer. An Omnibus Margin-flow Co-mingled Account records the margin
and positions of a group of customers (such as a group of affiliated
customers or funds under common management). In either case, margin
flows are aggregated across all Margin-flow Co-mingled Accounts of a
Clearing Member.
Individually Segregated Sponsored Accounts, from a position-keeping
and margin accounting operational perspective treat a client
(``Sponsored Principal'') in effect as if it were a Clearing Member,
with fully segregated margin, positions and margin flows. The
Individually Segregated Sponsored Account requires the Sponsored
Principal to appoint a Sponsor from among the Clearing Membership to be
fully jointly liable on the account.
Under the revised rules, ICE Clear Europe will also offer several
types of omnibus segregation accounts for customers of non-FCM/BD
Clearing Members, including a segregated customer omnibus account for
each product category (F&O, CDS and FX) (each a ``Segregated Customer
Omnibus Account'') and a segregated title transfer financial collateral
arrangement (``TTFCA'') account for each product category (each, a
``Segregated TTFCA Customer Omnibus Account''). In accordance with the
FSA policy statement on client money and client assets,\7\ Segregated
Customer Omnibus Accounts will be used for customers of non-FCM/BD
Clearing Members who provide assets to their Clearing Members that are
subject to the FCA's client money and client assets regime (or another
legal requirement to segregate which goes beyond that required under
EMIR). In contrast, Segregated TTFCA Customer Omnibus Accounts will be
used for customers of non-FCM/BD Clearing Members who use title
transfer financial collateral arrangements to provide margin to their
Clearing Members (or which are otherwise subjected only to the
requirement to segregate assets under EMIR, and not under any
applicable law, trust or property law based regime). Within each
category, ICE Clear Europe has chosen to set up separate accounts for
each of the different product types cleared by ICE Clear Europe (F&O,
FX and CDS), for purposes of ease of administration and maintaining the
separation of product categories as otherwise provided in the rules.
Consistent with EMIR,\8\ Clearing Members may use multiple different
types of individually segregated and omnibus segregated accounts for
their various customers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ FSA Policy Statement PS12/23: Client Assets Regime: Changes
Following EMIR (Dec. 2012).
\8\ EMIR Article 39.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In terms of individual segregation, as discussed herein, the
proposed rules establish the framework for the relevant new account
structures for Non-FCM/BD Clearing Members. For Individually Segregated
Margin-flow Co-mingled Accounts, new provisions require separate record
keeping and reporting for the account and permit the aggregation of
margin flows across accounts in this class. As discussed in further
detail below, the amendments for Individually Segregated Sponsored
Principal Accounts, among other matters, (i) introduce the concepts of
a ``Sponsored Principal'' (the client whose positions and margin are
being segregated under the Individually
[[Page 39431]]
Segregated Sponsored Account) and a ``Sponsor'' (the Clearing Member
responsible to the clearing house for the Sponsored Principal's
performance in an Individually Segregated Sponsored Account); (ii) set
forth the relationship among the clearing house, Sponsored Principal
and Sponsor; (iii) establish procedures under which ICE Clear Europe
may manage a default by either the Sponsor and/or the Sponsored
Principal under the Rules, (iv) allocate responsibilities and rights as
between a Sponsor and a Sponsored Participant with respect to cleared
contracts; and (v) establish documentation requirements for Sponsored
Principal arrangements.
The proposed rule amendments are described in detail as follows.
In Part 1 of the Rules, various definitions have been added or
modified in order to address the changes required by EMIR in a
consistent manner across all products, including: ``CDS Standard
Terms'', ``Customer-CM CDS Transaction'', Customer-CM F&O
Transaction'', ``Customer-CM FX Transaction'', ``EMIR'', ``Energy'',
``F&O'', ``F&O Standard Terms'', ``FX Standard Terms'', ``FX Trade
Particulars'', ``Individually Segregated Customer'', Individually
Segregated Margin-flow Co-mingled Account'', ``Individually Segregated
Sponsored Account'', ``Margin Account'', ``Position Account'',
``Repository'', ``Segregated Customer Omnibus Account for CDS'',
``Segregated Customer Omnibus Account for F&O'', ``Segregated Customer
Omnibus Account for FX'', Segregated TTFCA Customer'', ``Segregated
TTFCA Customer Omnibus Account for CDS'', ``Segregated TTFCA Customer
Omnibus Account for F&O'', ``Segregated TTFCA Customer Omnibus Account
for FX'', ``Sponsor,'' ``Sponsor Agreement'', ``Sponsored Principal'',
``Sponsored Principal Clearing Agreement'', and ``U.S. Sponsored
Principal''. In addition, conforming changes have been made to numerous
existing definitions in order to incorporate these concepts, including
in particular references to Sponsored Principals in addition to
existing references to Clearing Members. In light of various changes
and expected changes to trade execution requirements in the U.S. and
Europe, revised definitions of ``CDS Trade Execution/Processing
Platform'' and ``FX Trade Execution/Processing Platform'' have been
added, and conforming references have been made throughout the Rules.
Certain defined terms relating to ICE OTC commodity contracts and
certain other definitions have been removed as they are no longer used.
Definitions of the Financial Conduct Authority (``FCA'') and Prudential
Regulatory Authority (``PRA'') (and of their rules) have been added
following the recent separation of regulators in the UK, and references
to the FCA's former name, the Financial Services Authority (the
``FSA''), are deleted. References to the FSA throughout the rules have
been modified accordingly.
The hierarchy of documents in Rule 102(f) has been revised to
include, in relation to an Individually Segregated Sponsored Account,
the Sponsored Principal Clearing Agreement between the Sponsored
Principal and ICE Clear Europe and the Sponsor Agreement between the
relevant Clearing Member Sponsor and ICE Clear Europe. Reference to the
new Standard Terms annexes for FX and F&O customer clearing are also
included. Other clarifications and conforming changes have been made to
the rest of Rule 102(f). Similar changes have been made in Rule 102(l).
New Rule 102(g) requires all Clearing Members providing services to
customers to comply with relevant provisions of EMIR.\9\ Specifically,
Clearing Members must offer customers a choice of individual or omnibus
segregation, to the extent they are permitted to do so under applicable
law, and provide information as to the costs and levels of protection
for various options. Where a Clearing Member is not able under
applicable law to offer such an account, it must, to the extent
permitted under applicable law, offer to introduce the customer to
another Clearing Member that can offer such an account.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ Clearing Members would, of course, also need to comply with
any other applicable law in providing services to Customers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rule 102(j) has been amended to clarify that Sponsors and Sponsored
Principals, in addition to Clearing Members, are responsible for the
conduct of their employees and agents (in addition to their own
conduct) and to reference the new defined terms ``CDS Trade Execution/
Processing Platform'' and ``FX Trade Execution/Processing Platform'' to
account for the current and expected use of such platforms in light of
trade execution requirements under applicable law.
Rule 102(o) clarifies that with respect to a Clearing Member that
is also a Sponsor, the Rules, the Sponsor Agreement, and certain other
specified documents form a contract between ICE Clear Europe, each
Sponsor acting in its capacity as such and each Sponsored Principal for
which such Sponsor acts. Similarly, the Rules, the applicable Sponsored
Principal Clearing Agreement (if any) and other certain other specified
documents also form a contract between ICE Clear Europe, each Sponsored
Principal and the Sponsor for that Sponsored Principal. Other
conforming changes are made in the rest of Rule 102(o) and Rule 102(p).
Rule 102(q) has been revised to clarify certain segregation
requirements with respect to different categories of accounts,
including the limitations on setting off one category of proprietary or
customer account against another category, or otherwise using one
category to cover losses in another category, in light of the
additional types of account classes added under the proposed rules.
Rule 102(r) has been revised to refer to certain of the clearing
house's obligations under EMIR and address certain related interpretive
issues, as well as to add references to Sponsored Principals.
The governing law provision in Rule 102(s) has been revised to
clarify that the choice of English law is intended also to govern non-
contractual obligations arising out of or in connection with the Rules
or any Contract.
New Rule 102(w) addresses a Clearing Member's ability to outsource
performance of its obligations, in particular to allow Clearing Members
to outsource performance to affiliates or third parties of their
obligation with respect to end-of-day settlement price submission,
acceptance of forced allocations and participation in default auctions.
This approach is consistent with EMIR and also reflects the
requirements of CFTC Rule 39.16.
New Rule 102(x) clarifies that persons that are partners of general
partnerships will be jointly and severally liable for the partnership's
obligations under the Rules, and that dissolution of the partnership
will not affect that liability. This provision is not specifically
required under EMIR but is intended to clarify the Clearing House's
rights and obligations when dealing with Sponsored Principals that may
be partnerships, but also is drafted to be applicable in the event that
a partnership applies in future for clearing membership.
Rule 104, which addresses the clearing house's ability to ``invoice
back'' (in effect, termination of a position through creation by the
clearing house of an offsetting contract) or override the price or
other terms of contracts has been revised to provide that the clearing
house may do so only in the case of a force majeure event, illegality
or impossibility and not, as a general matter, as a remedy for a
default by a Clearing Member. Although this
[[Page 39432]]
change is not specifically intended to comply with EMIR, it results
from ongoing discussions with Clearing Members and other market
participants, who have asked that the powers under this provision be
clarified, circumscribed and made consistent across all products. In so
doing, the change has also eliminated uncertainty that these powers
could be used in a default management situation, and thus has clarified
that the Clearing House's default management powers are as set forth in
Part 9 of the Rules. Conforming changes have been made to relevant
definitions, including the addition of a new definition of
``Impossibility''.
Rule 105, which addresses a decision by the clearing house to cease
acting in that capacity, has been revised to clarify that such an
action might be taken if the clearing house loses any regulatory
authorization required to continue its business.
The confidentiality provisions of Rule 106 have been extended to
apply to Sponsored Principals and Sponsors and modified in various
technical respects to ensure compliance with ICE Clear Europe's
confidentiality, reporting and disclosure obligations under EMIR. The
changes also clarify that that the Clearing House may disclose
confidential information in certain circumstances, including in the
case of a breach by the Clearing Member or Sponsored Principal of
membership criteria and certain other disclosure requirements (clause
(a)(ii)), information being provided to a data repository or other
entity for purposes of transaction reporting (clause (a)(iii)),\10\
information concerning an Individually Segregated Sponsored Account to
the relevant Sponsor or Sponsored Principal (clause (a)(xi)) and
information concerning a Customer to the relevant Clearing Member
carrying its account (clause (a)(xii)).
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\10\ Based on Staff's conversation with ICE Clear Europe's
counsel on July 2, 2014, ICE Clear Europe's counsel has confirmed
that the reference to Rule 106(a)(iii) should instead refer to Rule
106(a)(viii).
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The record retention requirements under Rule 108 for Clearing
Members (and other persons, such as Sponsored Principals) that provide
information to the Clearing House has been extended to ten years,
consistent with the record retention requirements applicable to the
Clearing House itself under Article 29 of EMIR. Various conforming
references to Sponsored Principals, Sponsors and other new defined
terms, as well as other clarifying changes, have also been added in
Rules 107-113. In Rules 111(a)(B) and 111(c)(xviii), ``gross
negligence'' is added as an exclusion to exculpatory provisions
relating to ICE Clear Europe's liability, in order to address
enforceability issues with respect to exculpatory provisions that lack
such an exclusion in some continental European jurisdictions, based on
legal advice received by the clearing house.
Rule 114(c) allows for outsourcing by the clearing house, subject
to its retention of liability, consistent with the requirements of
article 35 of EMIR. A clarification has been made to Rule 116 to
require notice of changes to Clearing House business days. Finally, new
Rules 117(p) and (q) have been added to clarify that the dispute
resolution procedures from the Rules apply to disputes in connection
with Sponsored Principals, Sponsors, Sponsored Principal Clearing
Agreements and Sponsor Agreements in the same way the Rules apply to
disputes in connection with Clearing Members and Clearing Membership
Agreements.
A statement has been added to the preamble of Part 2 of the Rules
to clarify that Part 2 (Clearing Membership) does not apply to
Sponsored Principals except to the extent expressly set out in Part 19.
Certain updates and drafting improvements and clarifications to the
Clearing Membership criteria have been made in Rule 201, including the
consolidation into the Rules of various membership criteria previously
in paragraph 2 of the CDS Procedures and paragraph 2 of the FX
Procedures, and other requirements stemming from EMIR or other
applicable law, including requirements as to operational and financial
capacity, compliance with sanctions regimes, and having a well-founded
legal framework to support clearing operations. Rule 201(a)(v) has been
revised to require that a Clearing Member be a user of a designated
repository for purposes of swap data reporting. Rule 201(b) includes a
requirement that additional conditions imposed on Clearing Membership
be proportional to the risk brought by the applicant. Revised Rules
201(c) and (e) contain additional requirements around rejection or
denial of applications.
Rule 202(a) contains certain additional obligations on Clearing
Members driven by requirements in EMIR, including obligations to make
available to the Clearing House certain information for risk management
purposes (including as to client activity) and to participate in
default management exercises and other testing. Rule 202(b)-(e) (which
are based on and replace current Rule 1516(b) for CDS) establish
responsibilities of a Non-FCM/BD Clearing Member for the execution and
content of customer-facing documentation, including to incorporate the
applicable CDS Standard Terms, F&O Standard Terms or FX Standard Terms.
These aspects of customer documentation facilitate the portability of
customer positions following Clearing Member default, consistent with
the requirements of EMIR, among other matters. Provisions concerning
controller guarantees of Clearing Members are moved to Rule 202(f) from
the CDS Procedures and Rule 1709 (FX) so as to apply to all product
categories.
Certain conforming changes relating to Sponsored Principals and the
use of the new set of account classes have been added in Rule 207(a)
and (d). New Rule 207(e) clarifies the obligations of certain Disclosed
Principal Members for which a Clearing Member may act in connection
with the energy business, but which are not treated as customers under
the Rules and to align this provision with the equivalent requirement
for Sponsored Principals.
Rule 301 has been modified to clarify certain matters relating to
its payment banking arrangements. (These generally reflect comments of
and discussions with Clearing Members, and do not specifically relate
to compliance with EMIR.) Rule 301(f), which generally provides that
payments from Clearing Members to ICE Clear Europe are not deemed
received until they have been transferred to the clearing house
concentration account at its concentration bank, has been modified to
provide that if an Approved Financial Institution used by the Clearing
House fails to pay due to a Clearing Member default or similar event,
the Clearing House will first attempt to reinstruct the payment
excluding amounts relevant to the defaulter rather than exercising its
rights to require use of a different Approved Financial Institution
under Rule 301. This accords with the clearing house's existing
practices, and ICE Clear Europe believes it is an appropriate
clarification on its authority under Rule 301(f). Rules 301(m)-(n)
document ICE Clear Europe's existing practice of publishing a list of
Approved Financial Institutions and Concentration Banks, and require
ICE Clear Europe to ensure there is always at least one Concentration
Bank.
Rule 302(a) has been revised to incorporate new rules with respect
to the payment mechanics for the various accounts classes (including as
to whether payments are made on a net basis or, in certain specified
cases, on a gross basis for a particular account). Rules 302(a)(iii)
and (iv) have been revised to provide for net payments to and from the
clearing house in respect of the F&O product category, for either
[[Page 39433]]
Segregated Customer Omnibus Accounts or Segregated TTFCA Customer
Omnibus Accounts. Rules 302(a)(v) and (vi) address the need to have
consolidated settlement with respect to all of a Clearing Member's
Margin-flow Co-mingled Accounts. Rules 302(a)(vii) and (viii) address
settlement of margin transfers for other categories of customer account
(such as for CDS or FX customers), which are calculated on a gross
basis. A conforming change is made in Rule 302(e) for Margin-flow Co-
mingled Accounts.
New Rule 304 applies the payment provisions of Part 3 of the Rules
in the context of Individually Segregated Sponsored Accounts. Pursuant
to Rule 304(a)(ii), Payments are made to and from the clearing house
separately on a net basis for each such account, by the relevant
Sponsored Principal (or the Sponsor if acting as representative of the
Sponsored Principal for making payments). Rule 304(a)(v) clarifies that
ICE Clear Europe is not permitted to exercise rights of set off as
between any obligation, right or liability arising in connection with
an Individually Segregated Sponsored Account and between any
obligation, right or liability arising in connection with any Customer
Account that is not an Individually Segregated Sponsored Account in
respect of which the Sponsored Principal is a Customer. Rule 304 also
disapplies a number of provisions in Part 3 of the Rules, including
Rules 301(k), 302(a), 302(d) and 302(e), as such provisions are more
specifically provided for in Rule 304 in the context of Individually
Segregated Sponsored Accounts. Rule 304(a)(vi) provides that if a
payment is made by the Sponsor in respect of an Individually Segregated
Sponsored Account, that payment discharges the obligation of the
Sponsored Principal. Similarly, if the clearing house makes a payment
to the Sponsor in respect of the Individually Segregated Sponsored
Account, that payment discharges the clearing house's obligation to the
Sponsored Principal. As provided in Rule 304(a)(vii), Sponsored
Principals are not required to make guaranty fund contributions to the
clearing house.
Rule 401, which addresses the formation of a cleared contract, has
been amended to incorporate the concept of Sponsored Principals and
Individually Segregated Sponsored Accounts, as well as the other
categories of customer account and certain other conforming changes
(including the removal of obsolete references to ICE OTC markets that
have been superseded). Specifically, the amendments clarify the
capacity in which the Sponsor or Clearing Member is acting with respect
to any such contracts, and the appropriate account in which such
contracts are to be recorded. Conforming changes that incorporate the
new account classes have also been made. The amendments also include
certain non-EMIR related changes, including harmonization of drafting
of provisions across different products and use of new defined terms
(such as Buying Counterparty and Selling Counterparty, terms introduced
due to the existence of Sponsored Principals as a joint counterparty to
Contracts, in addition to Clearing Members). New Rule 401(l) provides
for the reporting of cleared transactions to a Repository, in
accordance with the requirements of EMIR. Rule 401(n) has been revised
to address customer-CM transactions arising from FX transactions. Rule
401(o) has been revised to reflect the various capacities in which a
Clearing Member or Sponsored Principal may enter into a transaction for
the relevant account category. Conforming changes have been made to
rule 401(p) to reflect the various account categories.
Conforming changes (including addition of references to Sponsored
Principals, use of defined terms for Buying Counterparties and Selling
Counterparties and providing for reporting to Repositories) are made in
Rules 402-408 and 410. Additional conforming changes are made to Rule
405 to address Disclosed Principal Members and use of CDS Trade
Execution/Processing Platforms and FX Trade Execution/Processing
Platforms, as well as other drafting clarifications. Rule 406 contains
additional conforming changes relating to netting of positions and
reporting of net positions to ta Repository. Rule 407 has been amended
to include references to Sponsored Principals and to clarify use of
defined terms. Rule 408 has been revised to address transfer of
positions of a Sponsored Principal as well as a Clearing Member, and to
incorporate certain drafting clarifications.
Rule 502 has been amended with various conforming changes and
clarifications as to the characterization of margin, generally relating
to the additional account classes and revised defined terms. Rule
502(h) has been revised to expand an undertaking on the part of ICE
Clear not to change the legal characterization of pledged collateral
accounts or assets provided with respect thereto. This change is in
response to clearing member requests for additional legal certainty as
to account characterization, but reflects existing practices. Rule
502(i) contains certain drafting improvements as to the manner in which
the clearing house may use pledged collateral for purposes of the net
sum calculation in Part 9 of the Rules and conforms to the rules
governing the return of excess margin for the account of customers set
forth in Part 9 of the Rules. Rules 503(e) and (f) contain various
conforming changes to reflect the use of the new account classes (and
removing references to Designated CDS Customer Accounts, which are no
longer used), as well as the use of various defined terms.
New Rule 503(k) is the principal new rule relating to the operation
of Margin-flow Co-mingled Accounts. In circumstances where the clearing
house permits the use of more than one type of permitted cover, the
rule mandates reporting by Clearing Members on such accounts to allow
the tracking of assets (where more than one account is used and more
than one type of margin is provided), such that assets can be allocated
to particular Customers. The rule also sets out backstop rules for pro
rata allocation across different customers that apply in the event of
reporting failures by the Clearing Member.
Rules 504 and 505 contain various conforming changes, including for
the addition of Sponsored Principals and Individually Segregated
Sponsored Accounts, as well as a clarification of the rights and
obligations of Disclosed Principal Members. Rule 506 sets out
particular procedures for the transfer of margin in the context of
Individually Segregated Sponsored Accounts. As further set out in Rule
1902, the Sponsored Principal may provide margin directly to the
clearing house, or the Sponsor may be operationally responsible for
providing margin to the clearing house on behalf of the Sponsored
Principal. Rule 506 also replaces Rules 504(a), 504(c)(v) and 504(f)
with additional provisions more specifically reflecting the particular
responsibilities of the Sponsored Principal and Sponsor in connection
with the transfer of margin.
Parts 6, 7 and 8 of the Rules contain various conforming changes
that reflect the addition of Individually Sponsored Segregated Accounts
and other categories of customer accounts. These changes also clarify
that the rules in those parts relating to position limits, and
settlement of futures and options apply to Sponsored Principals in
substantially the same manner as Clearing Members.
The Default Rules in Part 9 have been amended to provide for the
management of a default by a Sponsor and/or Sponsored Principal.
Certain
[[Page 39434]]
conforming changes to defined terms and related drafting improvements
and clarifications have also been made, as discussed herein. The
preamble to Part 9 has also been updated to refer to relevant sections
of EMIR and other applicable law.\11\
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\11\ References to particular laws in this preamble are not
intended to be exclusive; nothing in this provision affects any
requirement on ICE Clear Europe to comply with applicable laws not
specifically enumerated.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under new Rule 901(d), a Sponsored Principal may be declared in
default by the Clearing House in the same way as a Clearing Member if
any of the events specified in Rule 901(a) occur, unless, in the case
of a default under Rule 901(a)(i)-(iii), the Sponsor cures the default.
A Sponsored Principal may also be declared in default if it is in
default under any relevant agreement between the Sponsored Principal
and its Sponsor (as notified by the Sponsor to ICE Clear Europe). If
ICE Clear Europe becomes aware of grounds for declaring a Sponsored
Principal to be a Defaulter under Rule 901(a)(i) to (iii) but no Event
of Default is declared, ICE Clear Europe will notify the Sponsor of
details of such grounds and give the Sponsor an opportunity to perform
the obligation prior to declaring a default in respect of the Sponsored
Principal. (As discussed above, the Sponsor is jointly and severally
liable with the Sponsored Principal with respect to the Sponsored
Principal's positions and related obligations in its Individually
Segregated Sponsored Account. In the case of a failure to perform by
the Sponsored Principal, the Clearing House will direct all liabilities
on the Individually Segregated Sponsored Account to be met from the
Sponsor's nominated proprietary bank account, and the Sponsor is liable
to make such payments.) A Sponsor will not be declared a defaulter
solely as a result of a default of a Sponsored Principal, although the
Sponsor can be declared a defaulter as a result of its own default,
including for failure to perform its own obligations (as jointly and
severally liable) with respect to the Individually Segregated Sponsored
Account. Finally, new Rule 901(e) provides for notification to
regulators of Clearing Member or Sponsored Principal default, as
required under article 48(3) of EMIR.
If a Sponsored Principal is declared in default, the clearing house
will have the rights and remedies set forth in Part 9 of the Rules, in
the same manner as if the Sponsored Principal were a defaulting
Clearing Member, as provided in Rule 901(d). Various changes to Rules
902-904 also implement these default rights and remedies. Rules 902 and
903, which address certain remedies following default, adds relevant
references to defaulting Sponsored Principals. Revised Rule 903 also
contains certain changes to defined terms and reflects reporting
requirements to Repositories under applicable law for all relevant
product categories.
The amendments to Rule 904 contain the principal new provisions
addressing remedies of the clearing house in the event of the default
of a Sponsor or a Sponsored Principal. They also make certain other
changes to general provisions relating to transfer of positions and use
of margin, consistent with EMIR requirements.\12\ Rules 904(a) and (b)
contain various changes reflecting new defined terms. Rule 904(c)
clarifies and specifies additional circumstances in which the clearing
house is not obligated to transfer contracts, including where it would
cause a default by the clearing house, require the use of guaranty fund
contributions of non-defaulting Clearing Members or an assessment on
non-defaulting Clearing Members, be contrary to applicable law or lack
any required consent or approval. Consistent with the standards in
EMIR, transfers are required to be fair to both customers and indirect
customers of the defaulter. The provisions in Rule 904 relating to
transfers generally apply to all Clearing Members, including FCM/BD
Clearing Members, subject to any particular requirements of applicable
law or approvals or consents required in order to effect such transfers
(as may be required for the customer account of an FCM/BD Clearing
Member.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ These include the requirement that the central counterparty
contractually commit to trigger the procedures for transfer of
customer positions and assets of a defaulting clearing member. EMIR
Article 48(5-6).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rule 904(d)(v) has been amended to create a payment obligation from
the Clearing Member that will net out the value of any appropriation of
collateral to support porting or direct payments to customers under
EMIR. Rule 904(f) has been revised to remove a former provision that
the clearing house was not obligated to effect any transfers of margin,
which was inconsistent with EMIR Articles 39 and 48. Former Rules
904(j) and (k), which were applicable only to CDS but now apply to all
products, have been removed and combined into a new Rule 904(k) and
(l). Former Rule 904(l) (now renumbered as Rule 904(j)), which
addresses transfers of contracts, has been revised to apply generally
to all product categories and types of customer accounts, and to
contemplate reliance on consents to transfers by customers provided
under standard terms documentation.
Rules 904(m), (p) and (u) include a commitment by ICE Clear Europe
to trigger the process for transfers of customer positions and margin,
as required under Article 48(5-6) of EMIR. Slightly different wording
applies to different types of account, reflecting the requirements of
EMIR for that kind of account and the ability of ICE Clear Europe to
give additional assurances for different account classes. This wording
is supplemented by additional amended provisions around the operational
process for porting notices in the Standard Terms annexes. These
commitments are subject to various conditions precedent to porting set
out in the rules cited above and in Rule 904(c), as discussed above.
Rules 904(n) and (o) address the default of a Sponsor. Under Rule
904(n), upon a default of a Sponsor, the Sponsored Principal must
continue to fulfill its payment and margin obligations on the
Individually Segregated Sponsored Account to ICE Clear Europe and may
be required to pay additional amounts by way of margin (reflecting the
fact that Sponsored Principals do not make Guaranty Fund
Contributions). Pursuant to Rule 904(o), a Sponsored Principal must
within 10 days of a Sponsor default (i) notify ICE Clear Europe of a
new Sponsor, (ii) become a Clearing Member itself or (iii) move its
positions and margin from the Individually Segregated Sponsored Account
to the omnibus Customer Account of another Clearing Member (which would
require the Sponsored Principal to have or to put into place a customer
relationship with that Clearing Member). If one of the above three
steps is not taken within 10 days or such longer time as the Clearing
House at its discretion allows, then the Sponsored Principal itself may
be declared in default under Rule 904(q).
New Rules 904(r)-(s) address the default of a Sponsored Principal,
where the Sponsor is not itself in default.\13\ Pursuant to Rule
904(r), in such a case, the Sponsor will be responsible for performance
of any obligations on the Individually Segregated Sponsored Account.
The Sponsor may manage the default by terminating contracts in the
Individually Segregated Sponsored Account within a time period set by
the clearing house. The Sponsor may also
[[Page 39435]]
transfer positions (and margin) from the Individually Segregated
Sponsored Account to its proprietary account as part of the default
management process. The clearing house is also entitled to manage the
default, using the same rights, remedies and procedures it has for a
Clearing Member default. If the Sponsor elects to manage the default,
the clearing house will give the Sponsor such time as the clearing
house determines reasonable before managing the default itself. Rule
904(s) clarifies the manner in which guaranty fund contributions and
surplus collateral of the Sponsor may be applied to the net sum
calculated for an Individually Segregated Sponsored Account of a
defaulting Sponsored Principal. Rule 904(s) also provides that if the
Sponsor has made payments in respect of the Individually Segregated
Sponsored Account under Rule 901(d) or 904(r), and the net sum on the
account would otherwise be payable in favor of the Sponsored Principal,
it will instead be paid to the Sponsor. Together, Rules 904(r) and (s)
are designed to give the Sponsor an incentive to manage the default
itself (as would be the case for any other customer default), in light
of its ongoing obligations (based on its joint and several liability)
with respect to the Individually Segregated Sponsored Account until the
default management process is completed. In addition, where the Sponsor
manages the default by transferring the relevant positions in the
Individually Segregated Sponsored Account to its own account, it is
entitled to also receive any margin or balance in the account as well
as any net sum payable by the Clearing House on the account in this
situation, which it may potentially apply against other (uncleared)
liabilities of the defaulted Sponsored Principal. By contrast, if the
Clearing House has to manage the default, then any net sum payable by
the Clearing House would be delivered to the Sponsored Principal and
the Sponsor would have to recoup any separate debts owed to it in other
ways.
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\13\ As noted above, the Sponsored Principal model is not being
offered at this time to U.S. Clearing Members or potential U.S.
Sponsored Principals, and accordingly these provisions will not
apply to such persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A new Rule 904(t) addresses the calculation of net sums with
respect to Margin-flow Co-mingled Accounts of a defaulting Clearing
Member.\14\ The Rule sets out a procedure for allocating all assets and
liabilities on the Margin-flow Co-mingled Accounts appropriately and
fairly to each individual account, based on the positions and reports
provided as to permitted cover. (Fallback rules apply if no such
reports or records are available, including providing for pro rata
allocation of certain initial margin based on margin requirements for
each account.) New Rule 904(u) addresses ICE Clear Europe's
responsibility to transfer positions in an Individually Segregated
Margin-flow Co-mingled Account, subject to certain conditions analogous
to those discussed above for Rule 904(c).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ As noted above, these accounts are not applicable to FCM/BD
Clearing Members or their customers, and accordingly Rule 904(t) and
(u) would not apply to such persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Conforming and clarifying changes are made in Rules 905 and 906,
including for Individually Segregated Sponsored Accounts and the
various other new account classes. In particular, Rule 905 has been
amended to include various conforming references to Sponsored
Principals and Individually Segregated Sponsored Accounts. Rule
905(b)(ii) has been revised to harmonize the drafting across different
product categories. Rules 905(b)(viii) and (ix) have also been amended
to clarify the rights of the clearing house over pledged collateral and
the realization and/or valuation of pledged collateral in the case of
set-off following default. In Rule 906(a), new language expressly
clarifies that the respective obligations of the defaulting Clearing
Member and the clearing house that would otherwise be due following
default are to be reduced to the net sum (as was implicit in the
current rule), in order to facilitate close-out netting following
default.
Rule 906(b) has been revised to reflect the calculation of separate
net sums for each of the new account classes. Guaranty Fund
Contributions of the defaulter may be applied to the net sum for any
account, but will be applied first to reduce losses on customer
accounts, on a pro rata basis. Rule 906(c) similarly provides that
where proprietary assets of a defaulter are being used to satisfy
losses in the customer accounts, they must be used on a pro rata basis
across such accounts. Revised Rule 906(d) incorporates requirements
under Article 48 of EMIR as to the payment of net sums owed in respect
of various customer accounts, as applicable, including, where
permissible under applicable law and the Rules, return of a net sum
directly to the relevant customer(s). Certain protections under current
rules for the differences between net and gross Customer Account margin
(old Rule 906(i) and usages of ``Customer Account Gross-Net Amount''
and ``Gross Margin Shortfall'' here and elsewhere) are being removed in
light of the EMIR requirements and the new account classes.
Additional clarifying and conforming changes are made in Rules 907-
918, principally to reference Individually Segregated Sponsored
Accounts as well as remove references to certain former CDS account
concepts that have been deleted as discussed above. Rule 907
incorporates certain default rules for FX contracts. New Rule 907(m)
clarifies that positions in a customer account may, at the request of a
Clearing Member, be moved to the proprietary account of the Clearing
Member in the case of a default of the relevant customer for default
management purposes. (This provision applies equally in the absence of
the declaration of an Event of Default by the Clearing House, and also
applies to a request by a Sponsor to transfer positions of a Sponsored
Principal following a breach or default by the Sponsored Principal.)
Former Rule 908(a)(ix), which referenced Designated CDS Customer
Accounts (which are no longer offered), has been removed and replaced
with a new provision that provides that in case of a Sponsored
Principal default, Guaranty Fund and assessment contributions of
Clearing Members other than the Sponsor will not be used unless the
Sponsor is itself in default. This is consistent with the use of assets
of non-defaulting Clearing Members generally, and requires that in the
first instance the Sponsor cover losses of its Sponsored Principals.
Rule 908(b)-(d) and (g) simplify and consolidate certain references
to the default waterfall by referring to the net sum calculation under
`N' in Rule 906 rather than specific components of that calculation.
Rule 908(e) has been revised to remove references to Designated CDS
Customer Accounts, which are no longer offered. Conforming and
clarifying changes are made to Rules 908(g) and (h) to add the concept
of Sponsored Principal. Rule 908(i) (which does not apply to CDS
contracts) has been revised to clarify the application of the default
auction priority as set forth in the relevant F&O or FX auction
procedures.
Rules 909-911, which address the Clearing House's assessment rights
with respect to default losses, have been revised to also address
losses resulting from Sponsored Principals clearing in the relevant
product category, as well as to update certain cross references and
defined terms.
In Rule 912, new clause (a)(iv) has been added to address the
treatment of Individually Segregated Sponsored Accounts (and the joint
liability and entitlement of the Sponsor and Sponsored Principal in
respect of such accounts) in the case of a Clearing House default.
Rule 914 (and related definitions in Rule 913) have been modified
such that variation margin haircutting for the F&O and FX product
categories, if applicable,
[[Page 39436]]
will also apply to variation margin owed to Sponsored Principals in
respect of Individually Segregated Sponsored Accounts. Accordingly,
terms such as ``Clearing Member Adjustment Amount'' and ``Contributing
Clearing Member'' have been changed to ``Adjustment Amount'' and
``Contributor,'' respectively (to cover both Clearing Members and
Sponsored Principals), and references to Sponsored Principals have been
added as appropriate throughout the definitions in Rule 913 and the
provisions of Rule 914. Similarly, Rule 916 (relating to termination of
positions in the F&O and FX product categories) and Rule 917 (relating
to cooling-off periods) will apply to Sponsored Principals. Rule 918,
in respect of termination of membership (including during a cooling-off
period), will also apply to Sponsored Principals in respect of
Individually Segregated Sponsored Accounts for F&O and FX contracts.
Pursuant to new Rule 1006, part 10 of the Rules, relating to
disciplinary matters, applies to Sponsored Principals to the same
extent as Clearing Members acting for their proprietary accounts.
Rule 1101(c) and 1102(b) have been revised to state that the
Clearing House would establish minimum parameters for determining the
relevant Guaranty Funds for the F&O, CDS and FX businesses to meet the
requirements of Article 42 of EMIR. (This statement does not affect the
Clearing House's obligation to comply with other financial resources
requirements under applicable laws, including the Exchange Act and
Commission rules thereunder (including Rule 17Ad-22(b)(3)).
Accordingly, the parameters for determining the Guaranty Funds will
also take into account such other requirements.) Certain other
conforming and clarifying changes have been made to Rule 1102 and 1103.
Rule 1103(a) and (b) also have been revised to address the use of
Guaranty Fund contributions to support borrowings under liquidity
facilities for the purpose of making payments on cleared contracts, in
accordance with articles 44-45 of Commission Delegated Regulation 153/
2013 under EMIR, subject to certain limitations for each product
category. Rule 1103(b) allows the clearing house to pledge or otherwise
transfer any guaranty fund contributions to support credit or similar
facilities to provide liquidity for clearing house functions. Proceeds
of such facilities could only be used for purposes set forth in Rule
1103(a) (that is, paying amounts owed on cleared contracts and managing
defaults).
Part 12 of the Rules contains various conforming changes and
updates relating to its EU settlement finality system to enhance
settlement finality for payment arrangements, including for approved
financial institutions used in the payment system, concentration banks
and so-called investment agent banks used by the clearing house for
holding assets pending investment. The changes also reflect the new set
of accounts (including the Individually Segregated Sponsored Accounts)
and amended terminology in the Rules generally and reflect certain
feedback from its UK regulators.
Part 15 of the Rules, which addresses clearing of CDS, has been
modified to reflect Individually Segregated Sponsored Accounts and
other categories of customer accounts and to make certain other
conforming changes. Rule 1501(kk) has been modified to provide for the
recording of CDS recorded in Individually Segregated Sponsored Accounts
within the Deriv/SERV ``tripartite representation'' system, which is
used by the clearing house, Clearing Members and customers for the
recording of the details of CDS contracts as well as for taking certain
actions (such as triggering following restructuring credit events) with
respect to those contracts. The changes also reflect updates to defined
terms and certain drafting clarifications. As discussed above, the
provisions in Rules 1516(a)-(b) have been moved to Rule 202(b) et seq.
and now apply to all products, with certain minor modifications.
As noted above, the Sponsored Principal model will not be offered
at this time to FCM/BD Clearing Members or their customers, and changes
to Part 16 of the Rules relating to the Sponsored Principal model will
not apply to FCM/BD Clearing Members at this time. Part 16 of the Rules
contains certain other conforming changes and drafting improvements
that will apply at this time, including in Rules 1604(b), 1604(e),
1605(d), 1605(h), 1607(d), 1608(a) and 1608(c). These largely relate to
changes in defined terms and cross-references, references to a Clearing
Member having multiple proprietary accounts, and certain clarifications
with respect to the CFTC ``Legally Segregated, Operationally
Commingled'' model for cleared swaps carried through FCM/BD Clearing
Members.
Part 17 of the Rules contains various conforming changes relating
to Individually Segregated Sponsored Accounts and other updates to
defined terms. As mentioned above, a number of modifications to the
Rules for FX contracts (previously in Rules 1701(m), 1706 and 1709)
have been made applicable to all products and so are moved from here to
other parts of the rules.
New Part 19 of the Rules has been added to address various aspects
of the Individually Segregated Sponsored Account framework. As set
forth above, this framework is not being offered to U.S. Clearing
Members or potential U.S. Sponsored Principals at this time, and ICE
Clear Europe will adopt a further rule change if it determines to offer
this framework to such persons. Rule 1901 contains the initial and
ongoing requirements an entity must meet in order to become a Sponsored
Principal, including signing relevant documentation, paying relevant
fees, being solvent, meeting operational requirements, being an
``eligible contract participant'' and pre-funding a specified amount of
margin to ICE Clear Europe. Rule 1901 (and the requirements set out in
it) broadly reflect those set out in Part 2 of the Rules for Clearing
Members but have been adapted by ICE Clear Europe for this class of
participant, including to reflect the different documentation
requirements for Sponsored Principals and the particular banking
relationships applicable to Sponsored Principals, as well as the fact
that Sponsored Principals are not required to have the same level of
credit standing as Clearing Members (given the Clearing House's
reliance on the Sponsor). Subject to ICE Clear Europe's discretion,
certain criteria for obtaining and maintaining the status of a
Sponsored Principal may be met by the Sponsor or (in the case of
Sponsored Principals that are funds, the fund manager).
Rule 1902 provides that the relevant Sponsored Principal and Non-
FCM/BD Clearing Member Sponsor are each jointly and severally liable,
as principal and without limitation, to ICE Clear Europe in respect of
all obligations and liabilities arising in connection with the
Individually Segregated Sponsored Account and all Contracts recorded in
it. A Sponsor may be subject to increased Guaranty Fund Contribution
requirements as a result of acting as a Sponsor, on the basis of the
Contracts cleared by its Sponsored Principals. Rule 1902 also specifies
required arrangements for payments between the clearing house and a
Sponsored Principal, and allows the Sponsored Principal and Sponsor to
arrange between them that the Sponsor will perform certain
responsibilities on behalf of the Sponsored Principal. The goal is to
permit the Sponsor and Sponsored Principal flexibility as to the
arrangements between them with
[[Page 39437]]
respect to the Individually Segregated Sponsored Account. The Rule
specifies certain required aspects of the agreement between the
Sponsored Principal and Sponsor, in order for obligations to be
properly performed as a matter of the applicable contract law by all
parties on the account. Various modifications applicable to the back-
to-back contract between the Sponsor and Sponsored Principal are set
out in Rule 1902(g) so as to ensure that the Sponsor maintains a flat
position and that the arrangements can be used in the context of
industry standard clearing documentation. The Standard Terms annexes,
which govern the terms of back-to-back contracts, are also separately
amended for purposes of the Sponsored Principal model, as discussed
below.
Rule 1903 sets forth general modifications to the Rules for
Sponsored Principals, Sponsors and Individually Segregated Accounts in
order to implement the individual segregation model for Sponsors that
are Non-FCM/BD Clearing Members and Non-U.S. Sponsored Principals.
Sponsored Principals do not make guaranty fund contributions, are not
subject to assessment contributions pursuant to the default waterfall
and are not responsible for submitting any pricing data to ICE Clear
Europe. Sponsored Principals may, but are not required to, participate
in default auctions.\15\ Rule 1903 also provides that Sponsored
Principals are subject to the dispute resolution and complaint and
disciplinary procedures otherwise applicable to Clearing Members under
the Rules and, if relevant, market or exchange rules.
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\15\ Based on Staff's conversation with ICE Clear Europe's
counsel on July 2, 2014, ICE Clear Europe's counsel has confirmed
that a Sponsored Principal will not be subject to forced allocation
of contracts in the event of a failed auction.
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Rule 1904 addresses termination of a Sponsored Principal
relationship with its Sponsor. In general, a Sponsored Principal may
terminate its Sponsor on notice or a Sponsor may terminate its
Sponsored Principal on notice, in either case only if there are no open
Contracts in the relevant Individually Segregated Sponsored Account.
Following service of any such notice, neither the Sponsored Principal
nor the Sponsor may enter into or cause the entry into of any further
Contract for the Individually Segregated Sponsored Account, and the
Clearing House shall be entitled to close the Individually Segregated
Sponsored Account. A Sponsored Principal may change the Sponsor only if
it has established arrangements with a new Sponsor.
As noted above, the Sponsored Principal framework will not be made
available to FCM/BD Clearing Members or U.S. persons at this time. It
is expected that FCM/BD Clearing Members will satisfy the requirements
of EMIR to offer individual segregation to customers by referring such
customers seeking individual segregation to a Non-FCM/BD Clearing
Member that offers an Individually Segregated Sponsored Account, to the
extent permitted by law. As a result, pursuant to the introductory
paragraph of Rule 1905, the remainder of that rule, and other
references to U.S. Sponsored Principals in the Rules, will be
inapplicable at this time. No U.S. person will be permitted to become a
Sponsored Principal, Individually Segregated Sponsored Accounts will
not be available to U.S. Sponsored Principals, and FCM/BD Clearing
Members will not be permitted to act as Sponsors, until such time as
ICE Clear Europe adopts a further rule change (and makes a related rule
filing) implementing the Sponsored Principal framework for FCM/BD
Clearing Members and U.S. persons and receives all necessary regulatory
approvals in connection therewith.
Certain changes to the Standard Terms annex, setting out certain
mandatory terms of back-to-back contracts between Clearing Members and
Customers, have been made for CDS contracts. In addition, new Standard
Terms annexes are added for F&O and FX contracts. (The Standard Terms
annexes only apply to Non-FCM/BD Clearing Members and their customers.)
The CDS Standard Terms annex has been modified to incorporate the
Sponsored Principal Model (and distinguish between provisions
applicable to an Individually Segregated Sponsored Account and those
applicable to other Customer Accounts). References to various other
categories of account class have been updated. Certain procedures
concerning portability of positions and margin in the case of a
Clearing Member default (including related notice and timing
requirements) have also been added, consistent with revisions to Rule
904. In addition, certain provisions are made governed by English law
rather than the law of any underlying master agreement, as are the
Rules and Procedures (which are incorporated here by reference), based
on legal advice received by the clearing house. The new annexes for F&O
and FX products are based on the Standard Terms annex for CDS (as
modified).
Additional changes are made to Exhibit 4 to the Rules, which
contains Settlement and Notices Terms applicable to customer
transactions in CDS. These provisions generally specify certain
requirements for delivery of certain notices as between a customer and
its Clearing Member in connection with a CDS contract, including
certain notices relating to physical settlement, as well as certain
procedures relevant to settling the Clearing Member to customer leg of
such a transaction if physical settlement is applicable. The exhibit
has been modified to include Sponsored Principals and their Sponsors.
The modifications also distinguish between Non-FCM/BD Clearing Members,
which have a back-to-back relationship with their customers pursuant to
a Customer-CM CDS Transaction, and FCM/BD Clearing Members, which act
on behalf of their customers, and do not enter into Customer-CM CDS
Transactions. Various conforming changes to defined terms and drafting
clarifications have also been made.
b. Statutory Basis
ICE Clear Europe believes that the proposed rule changes are
consistent with the requirements of Section 17A of the Act \16\ and the
regulations thereunder applicable to it, including the standards under
Rule 17Ad-22.\17\ Section 17A(b)(3)(F) of the Act \18\ requires, among
other things, that the rules of a clearing agency be designed to
promote the prompt and accurate clearance and settlement of securities
transactions and, to the extent applicable, derivative agreements,
contracts, and transactions. The proposed rule changes, which are
intended principally to ensure compliance by the clearing house with
the requirements of EMIR, implement new, strengthened options for the
segregation and safeguarding of customer funds and property to be
available to customers of Non-FCM/BD Clearing Members. The existing,
non-individually segregated models will also generally remain available
for those customers that want them. In addition, the customer account
structures and segregation requirements for FCM/BD Clearing Members are
not being changed. Accordingly, the proposed rule changes will enhance,
and not reduce, the level of customer protection available under the
current ICE Clear Europe rules. As a result, ICE Clear Europe believes
that the proposed rule changes will contribute to the safeguarding of
funds and securities
[[Page 39438]]
associated with derivative transactions that are in the custody or
control of the clearing house or for which it is responsible, as set
forth herein, within the meaning of Section 17(A)(b)(3)(F).\19\
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\16\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1.
\17\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22.
\18\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1(b)(3)(F).
\19\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1(b)(3)(F).
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As discussed above, EMIR requires that the clearing house offer an
individual segregation model that Clearing Members may in turn offer to
their customers. Under such a model, the clearing house is required to
separately account for, and track, the portfolio of positions of a
customer of a Clearing Member and specific assets provided to margin
such contracts. ICE Clear Europe has developed its Individually
Segregated Sponsored Account model to satisfy this requirement of EMIR.
The Individually Segregated Sponsored Account provides a separate
account for the positions, and margin, of a particular customer, and
accordingly should be protected in the event of a default of the
sponsoring Clearing Member or other customers of the Clearing Member.
It also facilitates the transition to a new Sponsor in the event of a
default of the current Sponsor. For market participants that are
eligible to use and elect to use the Individually Segregated Sponsored
Account model, the approach may provide a higher degree of protection
for customer assets than is currently available.\20\
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\20\ As noted above, ICE Clear Europe is not offering the
Sponsored Principal model to FCM/BD Clearing Members and potential
U.S. Sponsored Principals at this time. ICE Clear Europe expects to
continue to evaluate the demand for such a model by such persons,
including in light of evolving commercial, regulatory, capital,
insolvency and other considerations applicable to the Clearing
House, FCM/BD Clearing Members and other market participants. ICE
Clear Europe will submit subsequent rule filings if it determines to
offer such a model to FCM/BD Clearing Members and U.S. persons.
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As part of the proposed amendments, ICE Clear Europe is making
other enhancements to its omnibus segregation models. As discussed
above, EMIR also permits the use of omnibus segregation models. The
proposed amendments would, consistent with EMIR and related UK
requirements, establish separate customer omnibus account for client
money and TTFCA collateral arrangements. These provide broadly
equivalent protection that available in ICE Clear Europe's current
model. The amendments would also introduce Margin-flow Co-mingled
Accounts, which provide an intermediate level of segregation and
elimination of certain fellow customer risks through the separate
tracking of positions and actual assets provided to cover particular
Customer positions, but permits co-mingling of payment flows for
operational convenience. This provides another option for market
participants that provides a higher level of protection than is
available using European omnibus accounts, but may involve less cost
and operational complexity than the full Individually Segregated
Sponsored Account model. Consistent with EMIR, the proposed rules also
contemplate that Clearing Members may use multiple types of these
customer accounts, and may maintain multiple accounts within each
category, as needed in their business operations. As discussed above,
ICE Clear Europe is not proposing to change its account framework (and
related customer property protections) for FCM/BD Clearing Members,
which are consistent with existing U.S. regulatory requirements
(including under the Exchange Act).\21\
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\21\ As noted above, ICE Clear Europe has been advised that EMIR
does not require the Individual Segregation Model to be offered to
FCM/BD Clearing Members or U.S. persons, provided that, to the
extent permitted by applicable law, such clearing members may refer
interested customers to a Non-FCM/BD Clearing Member able to offer
such an account. The other modified account frameworks for Non-FCM/
BD Clearing Members are not designed to satisfy the specific
requirements of U.S. law, including those under the Commodity
Exchange Act and CFTC rules as well as the Exchange Act. As a
result, ICE Clear Europe believes that maintaining the current
account structures for FCM/BD Clearing Members provides the required
level of protection for customers of such Clearing Members in light
of U.S. legal requirements, and that changes to those structures
would not be appropriate at this time as they are not mandated by
EMIR.
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As such, ICE Clear Europe believes that the proposed rule changes
will enhance the safeguarding of securities and funds associated with
derivative transactions that are in the custody or control of ICE Clear
Europe or for which it is responsible. ICE Clear Europe also believes
that the proposed rule changes will enhance the stability of the
clearing system, by reducing the risk to market participants of a
default by a Clearing Member or other customer. As a result, the
proposed changes are, in the clearing house's view, consistent with the
requirements of Section 17A(b)(3)(F) of the Act. The amendments also
satisfy the relevant requirements of Rule 17Ad-22,\22\ and in
particular implicate the following provisions thereof, as discussed in
more detail below:
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\22\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22.
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Financial Resources. ICE Clear Europe believes that the amendments
are consistent with the requirements of Rule 17Ad-22(b)(2-3).\23\ The
proposed rule changes do not themselves change ICE Clear Europe's
methodology with respect to its margin or Guaranty Fund
requirements,\24\ although the amendments would require Sponsors to
make additional Guaranty Fund deposits in respect of the individually
segregated accounts of their Sponsored Principals. The amendments would
also require Sponsored Principals to make additional margin payments
upon a default of its Sponsor. Accordingly, ICE Clear Europe does not
believe that the proposed changes will adversely affect its financial
resources that support clearing operations.
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\23\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(b)(2)-(3).
\24\ ICE Clear Europe has separately made a filing with respect
to changes in its CDS risk management and other policies. Based on
Staff's conversation with ICE Clear Europe's counsel on July 2,
2014, ICE Clear Europe's counsel has confirmed that notwithstanding
the changes made to Rule 1101(c), ICE Clear Europe currently
implements risk management methodology that takes into account those
parameters required to comply with all applicable laws, including
EMIR and Commission Rules 17Ad-22(b)(2-3). For the avoidance of any
doubt, ICE Clear Europe intends to continue maintaining risk
management methodology with respect to margin and the guaranty fund
that will comply with all applicable laws.
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Settlement. ICE Clear Europe believes that the rule changes are
consistent with the requirements of Rule 17Ad-22(d)(5), (12) and (15)
\25\ as to the finality and accuracy of its daily settlement process
and avoidance of the risk of settlement failures. In the individual
segregation model, Sponsored Principals will have the option of direct
settlement with the clearing house, which will enhance the finality and
accuracy of the settlement process. ICE Clear Europe believes it has
sufficient operational infrastructure to support these arrangements.
Sponsored Principals who settle through their Sponsor will be treated
in the same manner, and with the same level of finality and accuracy,
as customers of Clearing Members under current Rules. ICE Clear
Europe's existing settlement model will be used for the various omnibus
customer accounts. As a result, ICE Clear Europe does not believe that
the proposed amendments will adversely affect the settlement process,
and believes that the changes are consistent with the relevant
requirements of Rule 17Ad-22 in this regard.
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\25\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(d)(5), (12) and (15).
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Default Procedures. ICE Clear Europe believes that the amendments
enhance its default management procedures and its ability to take
timely action to contain losses and liquidity pressures and to continue
meeting its obligations in the event of insolvencies or defaults, in
accordance with Rule 17Ad-22(d)(11).\26\ The amendments further protect
the assets of customer in the event of a default by a sponsoring
Clearing Member. In particular, the
[[Page 39439]]
amendments provide a mechanism for managing the default of a Sponsor
and/or Sponsored Principal, similar to the existing process for
Clearing Member default. Consistent with the requirements of EMIR, the
proposed amendments, also enhance the clearing house's ability to
handle other defaults, and in particular to provide for transfer of
positions and margin following default. These changes are thus in
furtherance of the goals of Rule 17Ad-22 as well.
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\26\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(d)(11).
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Although the amendments establish a number of new categories of
accounts in order to comply with EMIR, ICE Clear Europe believes that
its default management process is sufficient to address defaults for
each relevant category. With respect to the new varieties of omnibus
accounts, ICE Clear Europe does not believe that such accounts pose any
default management issues different from those presented by its current
omnibus account structure. With respect to the individually segregated
account structures, ICE Clear Europe has considered default management
issues and revised its Rules accordingly to facilitate default
management, consistent with the requirements of EMIR and the Exchange
Act. In the case of Individually Segregated Sponsored Accounts in
particular, the Clearing House has designed its default procedures to
permit, and to incentivize, the Sponsor to manage the default of a
Sponsored Principal in largely the same manner as it manages other
customer defaults. The Clearing House also retains the ability to
manage a Sponsored Principal default in the same manner as it manages
Clearing Member defaults.
Legal Framework. Consistent with the requirements of EMIR, ICE
Clear Europe has obtained advice of legal counsel in relevant
jurisdictions as to the enforceability of its Rules and Procedures,
including with respect to the Sponsored Principal model and other
relevant amendments made in the proposed Rules. Based on this advice,
ICE Clear Europe believes that the amendments are consistent with the
requirements of Rule 17Ad-22(d)(1) that a clearing agency maintain a
well-founded, transparent and enforceable legal framework for its
activities, including with respect to default management.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition
ICE Clear Europe does not believe the proposed rule changes would
have any adverse impact, or impose any burden, on competition not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance of the purposes of the Act. The
proposed amendments are principally intended to offer new segregation
models, and enhancements to existing segregation models, for customers
of Clearing Members in order to comply with EMIR requirements
applicable to the clearing house. The amendments are thus expected to
increase the segregation choices available to market participants.
In terms of access to the clearing house, ICE Clear Europe is not
proposing to materially change its standards for Clearing Membership or
financial requirements for Clearing Membership. ICE Clear Europe is
permitting a new form of access to the clearing house, for Sponsored
Principals, and ICE Clear Europe believes that this development should
facilitate, rather than limit, access to the clearing house. Although
cost models remain to be developed, use of these accounts may be more
expensive than use of omnibus accounts, reflecting the additional
operational complexity and segregation available. It is possible that
these additional costs may deter some market participants for using the
Individually Segregated Sponsored Account. The clearing house retains
other, omnibus segregation models, however, that are based on existing
models and will be available to market participants that do not elect
individual segregation. The clearing house also recognizes that the new
segregation models may impose certain additional costs on Clearing
Members, including potentially additional guaranty fund contributions,
which could raise the cost of customer clearing. However, ICE Clear
Europe believes that this is the result of the requirement under EMIR
to offer such models and in any event is justified by the benefits
provided by such models for those who use them.
ICE Clear Europe also does not believe the proposed amendments are
likely to adversely affect competition among Clearing Members. The new
segregation models are (and are required to be) made available to all
Non-FCM/BD Clearing Members. As noted above, the new models are not
being offered to FCM/BD Clearing Members, which will continue to use
the account and segregation frameworks provided under applicable U.S.
law. The ability for FCM/BD Clearing Members to continue using the
existing framework should mitigate any competitive impact of the new
models for such Clearing Members. ICE Clear Europe believes that the
new options will facilitate competition among Clearing Members as they
seek to offer the segregation models to clients, consistent with the
commercial requirements of the Clearing Member and their customers and
the competitive environment as well as background regulatory
requirements. To the extent that the new segregation models impose
additional costs and operational complexity, those will fall on all
Clearing Members that seek to use the models, and are not designed to
favor one type of Clearing Member over another.
In terms of the impact on customers of Clearing Members, the
proposed amendments are intended to provide those customers a greater
range of choices and protections for margin assets provided by those
customers, as required under EMIR. Certain models, such as the
individually segregated model, may impose higher costs on customers.
ICE Clear Europe believes that such costs are accompanied by the higher
protection to customer assets afforded by those models and required
under EMIR. In addition, other models, including omnibus segregation
models, remain available for customers that prefer such models. As a
result, ICE Clear Europe does not believe that the proposed amendments
will impose a significant burden on customers seeking access to
clearing.
For similar reasons, ICE Clear Europe does not believe that the
rule amendments will adversely affect the ability of market
participants to continue to clear transactions, or otherwise limit
market participants' choices for clearing derivatives. The rule changes
implement a range of different models, each with different costs and
benefits to customers. ICE Clear Europe is also maintaining a
segregation framework analogous to that available today for customers
of Clearing Members. Furthermore, the amendments are intended to
implement requirements that will apply to European clearing houses
generally under EMIR, including the requirement to offer an individual
segregation model. As a result, ICE Clear Europe expects that other
clearing house will offer a similar range of clearing segregation
options, and the changes are not expected to reduce access to clearing
or clearing services.
For the foregoing reasons, ICE Clear Europe does not believe that
the proposed amendments will impose any burden on competition not
appropriate in furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants or Others
Written comments relating to the rule changes have been solicited
from
[[Page 39440]]
Clearing Members through extensive discussions with clearing members
and a public consultation. ICE Clear Europe received various comments
during this consultation and took such comments into account in making
further modifications to the proposed rules. The rule changes also
reflect comments received from the Bank of England in connection with
ICE Clear Europe's application for EMIR authorization. ICE Clear Europe
will notify the Commission of any additional written comments received
by ICE Clear Europe.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 45 days of the date of publication of this notice in the
Federal Register or within such longer period up to 90 days (i) as the
Commission may designate if it finds such longer period to be
appropriate and publishes its reasons for so finding or (ii) as to
which the self-regulatory organization consents, the Commission will:
(A) By order approve or disapprove the proposed rule change or
(B) institute proceedings to determine whether the proposed rule
change should be disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act. Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's Internet comment form (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml) or
Send an email to rule-comments@sec.gov. Please include
File Number SR-ICEEU-2014-09 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Secretary, Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE., Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-ICEEU-2014-09. This
file number should be included on the subject line if email is used. To
help the Commission process and review your comments more efficiently,
please use only one method. The Commission will post all comments on
the Commission's Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments, all
written statements with respect to the proposed rule change that are
filed with the Commission, and all written communications relating to
the proposed rule change between the Commission and any person, other
than those that may be withheld from the public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be available for Web site viewing and
printing in the Commission's Public Reference Section, 100 F Street
NE., Washington, DC 20549, on official business days between the hours
of 10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of such filings will also be
available for inspection and copying at the principal office of ICE
Clear Europe and on ICE Clear Europe's Web site at https://www.theice.com/notices/Notices.shtml?regulatoryFilings.
All comments received will be posted without change; the Commission
does not edit personal identifying information from submissions. You
should submit only information that you wish to make available
publicly. All submissions should refer to File Number SR-ICEEU-2014-09
and should be submitted on or before July 31, 2014.
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\27\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\27\
Jill M. Peterson,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2014-16099 Filed 7-9-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P